The Arizona Republic

Police: Workers recorded obscene video at day care

- URIEL J. GARCIA

Chandler officers on Wednesday arrested two day-care workers suspected of making a video of themselves at a daycare center making obscene gestures in the presence of a child and posting it on social media, a police spokesman said.

In the video, Gabriella Del Carmen Garcia, 25, is seen giving a sex toy to a child. Fatina Sawyer, 24, is accused of recording the incident. The video was posted to Snapchat on Monday, sparking an investigat­ion. Police said Garcia turned herself into Chandler police and Sawyer was arrested by Mesa police.

A co-worker, Janae Peterson, 21, was booked into jail Tuesday night on suspicion of failure to report the incident. She has since been released.

Police said the video shows Garcia making obscene gestures with a sex toy and then handing it to a boy enrolled at Superkids day-care center, near Warner and Alma School roads. Police say Sawyer recorded the incident.

It was unclear who uploaded the video to the Snapchat smartphone app. Police said someone reported the video, and officers began a criminal investigat­ion on Monday.

Police have not detailed what charges they are pursuing against Garcia or Sawyer. Someone at the day-care center emailed azcentral.com and The Arizona Republic a statement, which was also posted on the business Facebook page, that said the employees involved in the incident were fired.

“It has been brought to our attention that some teachers behaved inappropri­ately yesterday at our child care center,” the statement read. “We immediatel­y contacted the police and state authoritie­s about this incident. Police are currently investigat­ing the incident and we will fully cooperate with them. We are in the process of informing the parents about the incident. The teachers involved in this incident have been terminated effective immediatel­y.”

The state Department of Health Services said officials have coordinate­d with police and will conduct its own investigat­ion.

Nicole Capone, a spokeswoma­n for Health Services, said in an email that “based on the severity and scope of violations (the department) can either issue civil money penalties, suspend or revoke the license.”

Since 2014, people have filed 11 reports of violations involving the daycare center, according to Health Services records. However, not all of the complaints have been substantia­ted.

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