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Alexandre Pallares Seán McCárthaigh

Creche worker jailed for 21 months for assault on 19-month-old toddler

The child suffered bruising to his forehead and cheek which showed scarring from indentation with bricks.

A CRECHE WORKER who pushed the face of a 19-month-old toddler under his care into a Duplo brick with force in the act of throwing him to the ground has been sentenced to 21 months in prison.

Alexandre Pallares (27) of Maynooth Road, Celbridge, Co Kildare pleaded guilty at a sitting of Naas Circuit Criminal Court to a charge of assault causing harm to the baby boy, contrary to Section 3 of the Non-Fatal Offences Against the Act.

The Spanish national was also accused of a charge of child cruelty, contrary to Section 246 of the Children Act 2001, in relation to the same incident at the Giraffe creche where he worked on 22 October, 2024.

The court heard Pallares grabbed and threw the toddler to the ground after he became frustrated at toys and boxes being strewn around the floor of a playroom.

The child suffered bruising to his forehead and cheek which showed scarring from indentation with bricks.

Detective Garda Padraig Murphy said the toddler’s mother had received a call at 11.36am on the day from the creche to inform her that her son had injured himself after losing his balance and falling on some Duplo bricks.

He said the boy’s mother was told there was no need to get a doctor as her son was in good form and to pick him up whenever she was able to.

Det Garda Murphy said both the toddler’s parents collected their son from the creche at 1.50pm where they were told by a manager that “these things happen” as kids were “at that stage.”

The manager said that Pallares had said he was sorry for the incident and that it was his fault.

The court heard that the boy’s parents received another call from Giraffe two days later to inform them that following a review of CCTV footage that their son had actually been assaulted.

Det Garda Murphy said the creche manager had looked at the footage because she was concerned about a lack of supervision because she suspected Pallares had been on his mobile phone.

He told counsel for the DPP, Daniel Boland BL, that Pallares had not reported the incident to his manager for a number of hours and had falsely claimed that he helped the crying child by bringing him to a kitchen to place an icepack on his forehead.

Following his arrest, Det Garda Murphy, said the accused claimed he had got nervous about what had happened and “misspoke some words” due to translation issues.

The court heard that Pallares, who has qualifications in childcare from Spain, had been working in the creche since June 2024 after having previously worked there for a 12-month period around 2021.

He told gardaí that he did not believe he had used a lot of force with the child but referred to the fact that he had some problems at the time with his family in Spain and had trouble sleeping.

Asked why he had lied about the incident, Pallares said because he thought the toddler “was OK” but acknowledged he would be “disappointed” if the same thing had happened to his own son.

Det Garda Murphy also remarked at how the accused had shown “no emotion and no empathy” during an interview with gardaí.

“I thought he would be upset but his demeanour never changed,” he added.

Pleading for the defendant to be given a fully suspended sentence, counsel for Pallares, Damien Colgan SC, said he had no previous convictions and had entered an early guilty plea.

Mr Colgan said he had lost his job at the Giraffe creche and was now working in a restaurant and wished to remain in Ireland.

He said Pallares had also brought €5,000 to court as a token of his remorse.

The barrister said the accused recognised that he would never work with children again and would have to live with the consequences of his “moment of frustration.”

‘Falsehood’

Judge Elva Duffy said she did not accept that Pallares’ original explanation of the child’s injuries being due to a fall was down to his poor English.

“It was a falsehood,” the judge observed.

In a victim impact statement, the child’s father described the incident as “an act of wickedness, evil and extreme cowardice.”

“The CCTV images of that incident live with me and haunt me every day,” he said.

The father said the footage interrupts his train of thinking at social events and crosses his mind at inopportune times in his professional life.

He said what happened had a lasting and profoundly negative impact on him and his family and had made it difficult to trust people in positions of care.

“It has led to regular feelings of worry, anxiety, hopelessness and isolation,” he added.

The father also criticised “the disgraceful lack of concern and lack of willingness to help the innocent child victim of this crime” by Giraffe and Tusla.

“It is extremely difficult to trust that appropriate apparatuses are in place to support and protect any future unfortunate victims of such a crime,” he observed.

The court heard his son still suffers from anxiety and night terrors and has developed a natural fear of most adult males.

Judge Duffy said the CCTV footage had shown a completely different version of what happened to what Pallares claimed had occurred as he had “driven” the toddler into the ground.

“He was upended and forced into a Duplo brick with force,” the judge remarked.

She added: “It was out of all concepts with any form of any normal level of frustration.”

The judge said his “appalling conduct” did not stop with the incident itself as he did not report it for a number of hours.

She said Pallares had engaged in “a self-serving attempt” to get himself out of trouble.

The judge said his actions were very surprising and concerning because they “came out of nowhere” and were “very fast and very furious” as his victim had not been misbehaving but engaging in normal innocent child play.

She claimed an aggravating factor was that the creche worker was trusted with the care of babies.

Judge Duffy said the gravity of the offence was too serious to suspend any sentence in full.

Sentencing Pallares to three years in prison, the judge suspended the final 15 months on condition that the defendant places himself under the supervision of the Probation Service for two years on his release and address his offending behaviour by complying with conditions detailed in a probation report.

The judge expressed hope that the child’s parents would get some closure from her ruling and also directed that the €5,000 be either given to them or to Barnardos if they did not wish to accept the gesture from the accused.

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