New Hampshire daycare worker who secretly gave kids melatonin spared jail

According to a court sentence on Monday, a New Hampshire daily care worker who numbed children by binding their food with melatonin will not be sentenced to imprisonment.
According to the Hillsborough North Supreme Court document by FOX News Digital, 53 -year -old Dreckmann was found guilty of falsifying physical evidence and reckless behavior.
Judge Amy Messer was sentenced to up to seven years.
Messer prevented Drectmann from operating or working in any daily care, and from his own family to establish uncontrolled contact with children under 18 years of age.
The Texas woman was accused of planning the murder of the ex -husband under the indictment with chocolates with fentanyl laced chocolate
In addition, he was ordered to refund, complete 100 hours of community service and avoid all contact with victims and their families.
The shocking case dates back to November 2023. Manchester police Amory Street received a report on insecure applications in daily care.
The detectives found that melaton, who had a sleeping aid on the counter, was sprinkled with foods given to children.
Police said that no child is seriously ill, but melatonin poses serious health risks.
Former Physical Education Teacher accused of more than one sexual crime against 3 children
“It is very interested to give children to children without the knowledge or consent of parents,” Manchester Police Department His spokesman Heather Hamel at the time.
Following an investigation, Drectmann and three employees were arrested in May 2024: Traci Innie, 51; Kaitlin Phardo, 23; and Jessica Foster, 23.
All four were accused of endangering a child’s welfare.
Initially, Dreckmann, accused of more than 30 accusations, including child danger, attack and evidence, accepted a defense agreement that led to a suspended sentence.
Colombian woman accused of illegal votes in 2024 stole 400,000 dollars financed by the taxpayer
Prosecutor Shawn Sweeney said the case emphasized a dangerous gap in the New Hampshire Law Boston.com.
Sweeney said after out and explained that a child’s welfare was not always treated as a crime.
In May, a bill of law to strengthen the charter was worried by local deputies that he would blame the ordinary parent mistakes.
Sweeney added without legislative changes, lighter sentences are often inevitable: “We get what we get without laws to support us,” he said.
Fox News Digital, spokesman, “We do not comment on individual cases,” he said.