Austin American-Statesman

Lawsuit claims YMCA worker hurt child

Employee faces felony charges involving 3 kids at day care site

- Claire Osborn Austin American-Statesman USA TODAY NETWORK

The YMCA of Central Texas faces a lawsuit claiming that one of its day care workers injured a 2-year-old boy.

The day care worker named in the lawsuit, 45year-old Geraline Browning, was charged this month with four counts of injury to a child and one count of assault in connection to hurting at least three children at a day care site in North Austin, according to arrest affidavits.

All the charges are third-degree felonies punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

The day care facility is operated by the YMCA for full-time staff members of the Pflugerville school district, according to a district website.

It said child care is provided for children from age 8 weeks up to 4 years old.

One of the criminal charges against Browning includes abuse against the 2-year-old in the lawsuit, said Joe Caputo, the lawyer representi­ng the boy’s mother. The lawsuit was filed Friday and seeks more than $1 million in damages.

The YMCA does not comment on pending litigation, said Dana Driver, a spokeswoma­n for the organizati­on.

Browning has been fired, said Laura Arredondo, the YMCA chief marketing officer.

“We have terminated an employee after reviewing evidence of physical aggression directed at several of our students,” Arredondo said.

“We immediatel­y alerted the parents, CPS and the local authoritie­s. The well-being of our students is our utmost priority and fortunatel­y, these children are safe. We follow the state’s guidelines on safety and run extensive background checks before hiring employees. The YMCA of Central

Texas is committed to ensuring the safest possible environmen­t for our families and will work tirelessly to that end.”

Caputo said Browning chased the 2-year-old boy around the day care facility and placed hands around his neck in a “choking fashion.” Police began investigat­ing Browning after a Pflugerville school district employee began watching surveillan­ce video of the day care site in February because she was looking for a missing pair of shoes, one of the affidavits said.

She saw Browning on a video on Feb. 21 choking a child, the affidavit said. The day care facility is at Northwest Elementary School, 14014 Thermal

Drive, in North Austin, which is in the Pflugerville school district.

The video also showed Browning grabbing a girl by the arm and shaking her, according to the affidavit. Browning later told a Pflugerville police detective she was anxious and “overreacte­d,” the affidavit said.

Other video surveillan­ce from the day care site showed Browning grabbing another child from behind by the neck and spinning the child around before forcing the child to the floor on Feb. 12, an affidavit said. Browning also was seen on Feb. 7 in a video grabbing a child around the neck and chest, according to an affidavit.

More videos in February

showed Browning grabbing a 2-year-old girl by the neck and collarbone and putting her on the floor, and also walking into the same girl causing the child to hit her forehead on a cabinet, an affidavit said. Another video from January showed Browning yanking the same girl off a stool by her arm, according to an affidavit.

Caputo called the facts in the Browning case “troubling.”

“Families in this community trust that the YMCA will care for their children,” Caputo said. “The YMCA facility betrayed that trust. We intend to get to the bottom of what happened so that this never happens again.”

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