Virginia — When a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse allegedly broke the bones of premature babies, the Virginia Department of Health concluded that the hospital had “failed to prevent abuse.”
Erin Elizabeth Ann Strotman, 26, was charged in January with felony child abuse and malicious wounding in relation to an incident that happened in November at Henrico Doctors’ Hospital in Richmond. The DOH released the report this month.
The local CBS affiliate, WTVR, posted a copy of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ DOH report. It describes the alleged mistreatment of the baby by Strotman. According to the TV station, Strotman is listed as EMP11 in the report.
On November 10, executives and employees watched videos of Strotman caring for the child in question. According to the video, Strotman is seen “forcefully” pushing the baby’s legs in the direction of the infant’s face and chest. According to the report, she released the legs and did it again.
The child was allegedly subjected to similar abuse by Strotman on October 29 and November 13. Furthermore, according to the report, she only held the baby by the head and leg and appeared to push the baby’s head against their chest.
According to the report, the baby’s elevated heart rate and lowered oxygen levels were clear indicators that Strotman’s actions had an effect on the child.
According to the report, the now-former nurse also broke other hospital rules by using one hand to hold the baby and failing to install rails on cribs when she wasn’t watching over them.
Following their viewing of the videos, hospital staff appeared astonished.
One employee told state investigators, “We don’t know why [EMP11] is doing anything [EMP11] is doing.”
According to other videos, Strotman attempted to intubate the infant by “forcefully” putting a suction device into the baby’s nostril. But according to the report, nurses who watched the videos claimed Strotman was using the incorrect device.
According to the findings of state investigators, the hospital “failed to report and investigate injuries of unknown origin; identify injuries of unknown origin as indicators of potential abuse or neglect; and prevent abuse.”
The report also mentioned that Strotman and another nurse had previously been disciplined in September 2023 for the fractures of four babies. According to the report, Strotman was given a week of admirative leave and then permitted to return following training.
The following statement was issued to local media outlets by Henrico Doctors’ Hospital:
The CMS report identified some areas that did not meet the standard of care that we expect and that our patients deserve. We worked diligently to address the findings and CMS has accepted our action plan. We have been closely collaborating with regulators to further improve our NICU by increasing our training, implementing new security measures and changing our reporting protocols. We appreciate the regulators’ commitment to safety and the dedication of our colleagues who have helped our hospital care for our community for more than 50 years.
As previously reported by Law&Crime, Strotman was indicted this week on six new felony child abuse and neglect charges, according to court records. According to local CBS affiliate WTVR, the charges stem from her treatment of four babies between 2022 and 2024. The neglect charge stems from her treatment of a fifth infant, who was not injured.
Commonwealth’s Attorney Shannon Taylor told reporters Tuesday, following Strotman’s first round of charges, that a family’s attorney informed her office of an assault in 2022. No one reported the assault to authorities at the time, she said.
“Certainly when you’re talking about a process where mandated reporters are supposed to notify the agency who oversees whatever area we are covering, and there is a failure to do that, that is always concerning,” she pointed out.
Taylor said authorities are still looking into allegations that Strotman assaulted four other infants. She has not been charged in those cases.
Strotman allegedly injured several children. According to the hospital, three babies experienced “unexplained fractures” in November 2024. According to the hospital, four other babies sustained similar injuries during the summer of 2023.
Investigators from the Henrico County Police Division reviewed dozens of videos from inside the NICU and identified Strotman. Detectives continue to sift through evidence, including “hundreds of hours of footage,” in the hopes of bringing justice to each baby who was abused.
“We appreciate the families’ and public’s patience as we work as thoroughly and expeditiously as possible to investigate every piece of evidence in connection with these cases,” Henrico Police Chief Eric D. English said in a statement.
In a press release, the hospital referred to Strotman as a “former employee.” As a precaution, the medical center shut down its NICU while the investigation was ongoing. It reopened in February.
“We are both shocked and saddened by this development in the investigation and are focused on continuing to care for our patients and providing support to our colleagues who have been deeply and personally impacted by this investigation,” according to a statement. “We are grateful to those colleagues, who have dedicated their professional lives to the care and safety of our patients, as well as to law enforcement and the other agencies who have worked aggressively and tirelessly with us on this investigation.”
Noah Hackey, one of the babies alleged to have been abused in the summer of 2023, suffered a broken tibia. Noah’s father, Dominque Hackey, told WTVR that Noah and his twin Micah were born prematurely at the hospital in August 2023 and spent time in the NICU.
When Noah was about two weeks old, they noticed some discoloration on his left leg. An X-ray revealed a fracture of the tibia. The family filed a report with Child Protective Services, which determined that an employee was responsible for breaking the boy’s leg but did not specify which employee.
Hackey was taken aback to learn that his son was not the only one who had allegedly been abused.
“They failed strictly on multiple levels with multiple different families, and they need to be held accountable as well because that shouldn’t have happened,” according to him. “If they were suspicious enough to let someone go, they should not have returned them. Simply put, they failed.
Prosecutors also obtained Strotman’s text messages, which they claim provided insight into her mindset.
During a bond hearing earlier this year, prosecutors added some of Strotman’s text messages to the record, according to a courtroom report from Richmond CBS affiliate WTVR.
She allegedly said she had been pacing and felt like she had taken “cocaine again” in a text message from October 2023, despite the fact that she hadn’t. She also stated that she believed she had a personality disorder.
“I feel manic,” she wrote. “I have to have all my strength not to start s—”
The day before her arrest, she allegedly texted that she was “five seconds away from checking myself into crisis.”
On bond, Strotman is still free.