Babysitter Caught on Camera Abusing Children with Belt in Disturbing Footage
The raw brutality of a trusted caregiver becoming the source of trauma is a devastating betrayal, especially for those little souls who depend on protection and love.
The horror captured on that surveillance footage, children beaten nearly 60 times, scared into submission by a belt, threatened with grotesque costumes is a brutal awakening to the failures lurking within systems that are supposed to shield the vulnerable. What’s almost as chilling is the paralysis that follows: despite clear evidence and police involvement, weeks pass with no arrest. A failure not just of one person, but of the entire safety net that’s supposed to catch families in crisis.
The family’s experience echoes a cruel irony the help meant to heal a trauma from domestic violence instead became a source of deeper scars. And then the added insult of the city’s agency turning scrutiny back on the mother instead of the abuser? It’s a painful reminder that bureaucracies sometimes protect themselves better than they protect those they serve.
The children’s changed behavior the fear of simple things like taking off clothes or using the bathroom, the erupting aggression among siblings—are the silent screams of trauma etched on their tiny psyches. These aren’t just bruises on the skin; these are wounds on their innocence, echoing long after the belt is put away.
And the dismissive defense from Jackson’s brother? That toxic justification—that “this happens in black families”—is not just ignorant, it’s a dangerous narrative that obscures abuse behind cultural stereotypes, making it even harder for victims to be heard and believed.
This story demands more than sympathy—it calls for relentless action. Accountability must ripple through every layer—from the individual babysitter to the agencies and officials entrusted with oversight. The law, the system, and society must refuse to turn a blind eye.

An image of La’keysha Jackson
If there’s a lesson here, it’s a brutal one: trust is precious but fragile. Even when you think you’ve done everything right—background checks, cameras, agencies—monsters can slip in. Vigilance isn’t just prudent; it’s essential. And when failures happen, justice must not wait.
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