Where is the evidence. It’s all circumstantial. This was a very complex case for jurors, because of the difficulty and understanding of neonatal care. That unit had been criticised before. It seems to me it needs to be reopened, as there is no specific instance where she was found to kill a baby. Sounds like she has been made a scape goat for what could be incompetences of this unit. The fact that there was no evidence that any of these babies were murdered. It’s not true that she was always there when babies or neonates died. This case needs further investigation. What he says is true. It was never proven beyond reasonable doubt.
@James-RJM4 ай бұрын
Doesn't the entire premise of a jury of 12 "average humans," concern people anyhow 😮 Plenty of alleged criminals- later found NOT guilty and, likely, only a wedge of the true situation 🤨 Nowadays, many situations are actually a trial by MEDIA, pre any legal court cases 😢 Derek chauvin and colleagues, a perfect example, pushed further by firstly paranoia of alleged racism, Trump then in power but clearly too close to the election to be concerned vs votes 🤑🤮🤮 and the Democrats shortly afterwards and during the trial, A LOST CAUSE at this point- due to the WOKEYCOKEY 🤨😡
@Mikados_Advark124 ай бұрын
Circumstantial evidence is good evidence. You don’t seem to understand criminal evidence at all
@Mikados_Advark124 ай бұрын
@@Ode-to-Odysseusyou don’t have a grasp of evidence
@austinbux4 ай бұрын
@@Mikados_Advark12 Who told you circumstantial evidence is good evidence?
@orsoncart94414 ай бұрын
@@Mikados_Advark12 It's you that does not understand the rules of evidence. "Circumstantial evidence good evidence" LOL.
@wizeyin5 ай бұрын
The judge said to the jury 'Use your common sense' he was imploring them to bring back a guilty verdict. Thus alone should be cause for a retrial. And if it's true that the judge said 'even if they (the jury) were not sure about the cause of death, they could still find Letby guilty.' This is irrational and illogical advice that should have the judge disbarred. Lucy's conviction should be overturned immediately as a result of the Judges interference in the verdict. The cause of the babies deaths was paramount to Lucy being guilty. If the cause could not be determined as murder, then there is a high likelihood it wasn't murder, but a ridiculous case of speculation all round.
@michael421582 ай бұрын
Maybe things would be different if she didn't look like us.
@ruthbashford317615 күн бұрын
@@michael42158 Maybe things would be different if Lucy had a fair trial
@RobertMustoe4 ай бұрын
This trial stinks of a NHS cover up
@markennyee4 ай бұрын
I have been the subject of an HNS cover up for 25 years after an accident I had they have covered up the true extent of my injuries its shocking what people behind the scenes can do
@imperishablestars334 ай бұрын
@@markennyee Sad. My aunty died on a dialysis machine at St. Mary's in 2003, witnesses said she wasn't ready to go on, she usually got comfortable first, and prepared herself, but the nurse shoved her on it, and she ended up having a heart attack and died. When my uncle went to the hospital, one of the other nurses said 'the body is in there' and my uncle said 'she may be a body to you but that's my wife'... sadly, nothing came of it, the investigation was stopped before it could start.
@colinjava84474 ай бұрын
@@RobertMustoe it is a cover up, a cover up of her murders which they tried to sweep under the carpet.
@Mikados_Advark124 ай бұрын
@@RobertMustoe why?
@markennyee4 ай бұрын
@@imperishablestars33 that is awful but it happens far too often even my mums death was suspicious she went in for treatment and never came out alive cover ups are rife but what I do know and certain of is that that young lady needs to be cleared
@stevegregson43576 ай бұрын
I’m retired child protection detective of 25 years I too was extremely surprised by the verdict and the lack of medical opinion to counteract the evidence from the prosecution In my time I’ve never had a case so serious succeed in mere circumstantial evidences Wether she did it or not there is insufficient evidence to prove beyond doubt clearly
@garyphisher73756 ай бұрын
Letby's Lawyers only produced 2 witnesses. One was the Hospital Plumber, the other was Letby herself. How on Earth did they not produce expert witnesses to counter the testimony given by the Prosecution's witnesses? The main Prosecution Witness, Dr. Dewi Evans, twice cited a paper on Insulin overdoses in babies - the Author of that paper has come forward to state that Dr. Evans was wrong. Never mind that Autopsies on both babies didn't find evidence of Insulin overdoses - and the test needed to determine whether there was an Insulin overdose, was never performed. Her Lawyers need to explain themselves.
@ellea25416 ай бұрын
Go to CrimeScene2Courtroom channel on KZbin and start listening from the video 'Lucy Letby - The Police Search' onwards. These videos are a reenactment of the original trial based on the actual court transcripts purchased by someone who actually attended most days of the trial so he was able to demonstrate times when there was a dramatic pause or what her tone of voice was when she said certain things. These videos will take you through all 17 cases in the trial and then you will understand why she was found guilty of some counts, not guilty of others, and no verdict reached for others. I think there is an assumption that this was a blanket verdict and she was found guilty of everything, but that isn't true. The jury took their time to go through each case one by one.
@Leon-lt5gv6 ай бұрын
@@stevegregson4357 do you know who her father is ' fred west ' yep ' how do i know this ' becsuse im mr armchair detective ' by the way ' shes is guilty as fred ' & as sin ☠️
@janlittle21486 ай бұрын
Corcumstantial evidence IS evidence
@Leon-lt5gv6 ай бұрын
@@janlittle2148 & there was alot 👍 guilty in my book
@marydsmyth4 ай бұрын
Well done Mr Hitchens. One of the problems with this whole debacle is that we don't have enough good men (and women) like yourself who are prepared to square up to the misguided public and talk facts about a glaring miscarriage of justice.
@WesleyWattley-xy4fg4 ай бұрын
& educated with a law degree Ithink 🇬🇧 !😮
@ts78444 ай бұрын
@@marydsmyth you need to go and look at the facts of this case before making up utter rubbish.
@marydsmyth4 ай бұрын
@@ts7844 I've looked at the facts. That's why I know she is innocent. Put your dummy back in.
@KingBee246 ай бұрын
This presenter ... and lots of the posts here ... are missing the point completely. They all say "Were you in court ? The jury were and they heard all the evidence". A jury is comprised of regular people ... plumbers, teachers, lorry drivers, accountants ... not people with medical experience. Therefore, they have no option but to base their verdict on the evidence presented to them by the 'expert witness'. Lots of doctors and scientists have said that his evidence was seriously flawed ... and leading statisticians have ridiculed the spreadsheet that was presented as being worthless. All the stuff about facebook searches and taking notes home etc are red herrings. This case most definitely needs to be re-examined.
@georger-c46456 ай бұрын
I think "were you in court" is the crux of the problem. They were confined to a court whereby crucial information may not have been available to them.
@stevepi16 ай бұрын
@@georger-c4645 Absolutely agree. The Judge can influence a trial enormously with rulings on what is or not admissible etc etc etc. Also if video/tv were allowed in court then we could at least say "well I wasn't in court but I did watch it".....not perfect but much better than the current 'no peeking' situation we have now.
@castlerock586 ай бұрын
I was not in court during the OJ murder trial but I am convinced that the jury reached the wrong verdict. I am not alone.
@ukguy6 ай бұрын
@castlerock58 well members of the jury in the OJ case have even since came forward and admitted they knew he was guilty but found him not guilty because of some sort of retribution for the Rodney King police brutality.
@homeskillet98026 ай бұрын
@@KingBee24 I have sat on a jury and it's scary how that incapable some of them are to make such important decisions. One woman on our jury was convinced of guilt because "her husband had been a victim of a similar crime". The evidence wasn't important to her AT ALL!
@trevorchap216 ай бұрын
Lucy had no choice but to agree that two babies were harmed with insulin because her defence counsel inexplicably agreed before the first trial that this was the case even though there was no credible evidence to support this.The two babies alledgedly harmed are alive and well eight years on.The police were only called in after Lucy won a grievance procedure against doctors and an RCPCH investigation in 2016 cleared Lucy and criticised doctors and consultants for the atrocious conditions on the neonatal unit.
@Yoohooyooohoooo6 ай бұрын
@@trevorchap21 correct 👍🏼
@KingBee246 ай бұрын
It was one consultant ... his colleagues then fell into line.
@b.alexanderjohnstone97746 ай бұрын
Well that's more detail than Peter gives. Thanks.
@niriop6 ай бұрын
@@trevorchap21 She shouldn’t have agreed then.
@niriop6 ай бұрын
@@JohnPretty1 Then Letby’s a fool for allowing it.
@pamwilson40506 ай бұрын
Many years ago someone I worked with was on a jury for a serious case. She was a very intelligent person and was horrified that the jury convicted the guy, with her being the only one standing against the guilty verdict. She said all the evidence was unsafe and speculative but that the others who also thought it unsafe agreed to go with the majority. Its frightening that this can happen.
@jono1457-qd9ft6 ай бұрын
This has been bothering me since I was 8 years old. The fact that majority opinion can be a herd mentality of closed mindedness leading to injustice.
@KarlHamilton6 ай бұрын
@@pamwilson4050 terrifying
@elainewojnicki96106 ай бұрын
Yes, i too have witnessed first hand Jury members kajoling other to change there mind and give a guilty verdict, however, i did stand my ground and refused to budge and said for me there was not sufficient evidence to find the defendant guilty. I also informed the 2 main instigaters on the Jury if they did not stop the intimidation i would inform the court usher.
@ScruffyTubbles6 ай бұрын
A relative of mine was in the coppers and called (when retired). She gave verdict on a Rape case. at least two of the members didn't wan too be there and wanted to get home so that they could see shiot on the TV in one case and go to a party in the other (very young). Of the rest at least one of the blokes was bigoted racist and sexist. The evidence thankfully she said was indeed crap - and of course the CPS have to bring cases of rape now whether there is a real prospect of them being thrown out (which I sone of the reasons there is such a back log and severe resourcing problems) - and of course Prosecutors now would be very brave to drop them. Anyway the case was thrown out - but imagine if she had been in the minority for an acquittal.
@userxyz646 ай бұрын
@@elainewojnicki9610that sounds dreadful that there was intimidation going on. What was in for the instigators what way you voted?
@Nonchefkev6 ай бұрын
I do wish people would actually listen to what Mr Hitchens said . He said he has no opinion on her guilt or innocence but believes strongly that there wasn’t enough evidence in his eyes to convict and that a retrial or appeal should be granted . I agree with him
@Maisiewuppp6 ай бұрын
@@Nonchefkev Then in that case what he is arguing is that trial by jury is not a viable system. The jury alone can decide if the evidence suffices. Not journalists and social media.
@Nonchefkev6 ай бұрын
@@Maisiewuppp well he says he believes in trial by jury but has had his reservations of late . I must admit I do wonder how in some of these super high profile cases the jury remain unbiased . I’m aware they are supposed to listen to the evidence only but I’m not entirely sure that’s human nature .
@pedrinho76 ай бұрын
@@Maisiewuppp The jury isn't really the problem; the problem is the judge who should've been far more stringent as to what evidence could be adduced - allowing the prosecution to use such cherry-picked data and an expert witness who applied for the position rather than being approached as a true neutral is inexcusable. In the first example, I don't suppose the judge even had the knowledge of statistics to know that... unfortunately the judiciary think they're far cleverer than they are... in the second example, he really should've known better...
@miacat17276 ай бұрын
Hitchens also said, the case made him feel uncomfortable, was unsafe. Many people have that same feeling about this trial & how it was conducted. Fair play to him for having the guts to disagree with the narrative & not be brainwashed by the system.
@lesley99896 ай бұрын
@@pedrinho7 then the Defence could easily have produced their own expert witness to refute the Prosecution EW and case and they didn't. There's no way the Prosecution would have secured Evans unless they thought his evidence was going to be excluded and they were correct. Back up your cherry-picking statement and please don't say they only investigated cases when Letby was on duty unless you were part of Operation Humingbird and can say other deaths weren't looked. I can't promise they were because I wasn't part of the taskforce, so please explain how you know other cases were not investigated. Back up your cherry picking statement and prove the other deaths were not eliminated. The police don't work in the way you're trying to imply. They don't just go along with people saying another person has done something wrong.
@nuuky4 ай бұрын
There are people in life who aren't listened to but who should be - Peter is one of those people!
@firecrest276 ай бұрын
I heard there was 23 babies died on the ward, but they only investigated the ones she was on shift for, which was 13. Even if they remove those 13 from the list they are still well above average, so why hasn't the ward been investigated. It's possible to have a serial killer AND negligence on the same ward. It's also possible it was all negligence.
@rolandhawken66286 ай бұрын
There was another nurse who was on duty and five deaths occurred she was not investigated
@innocentman33466 ай бұрын
@firecrest27 I bet its easy to set a colleague up in that game.
@Leon-lt5gv6 ай бұрын
FAKE NEWS 🤫
@Dogfacedbloke6 ай бұрын
@@innocentman3346 Ah, so it's a set up. It's the colleague against whom there is no evidence who is guilty, and the woman against whom the evidence was so extensive it took 21 months to present who is innocent.
@andnowi6 ай бұрын
@@Dogfacedbloke no-one said that
@julieyates405Ай бұрын
Thank you Peter for being a voice of reason
@Blacktigga25 ай бұрын
The way justice is delivered nowadays in Britain is getting more and more complicated. UK judges need to be reminded of their duty to be completely independent.
@fx71055 ай бұрын
it's so interesting to see this case go from "she's a literal witch and worst person on earth who is 100% a baby killer" to this
@CherryDreamer965 ай бұрын
Yep, now there's even going to be a documentary on MSM titled something like "Did she really do it". They changed gears fast
@HRHooChicken4 ай бұрын
Milking the story and herd mentality.
@samsung634 ай бұрын
Absolutely, I'm surprised it's been slow, for this stance to arise. At the time of verdict, there wasn't an uproar.
@samsung634 ай бұрын
People believe what they hear!
@p.thomas78434 ай бұрын
@@samsung63 some did I questioned a journalist Shaun somebody and stated she would have had a fairer trial in USA which he didn't like Herd mentality very prevalent in UK these days
@marqbeatty26946 ай бұрын
We were told the Fujitsu 'Horizon' IT system installed nationwide by the Post Office was perfect, infallible and could not produce errors and false accounting. Therefore we were told we must believe that all sub-postmaster fraud convictions were 'safe and effective'.
@paulis81075 ай бұрын
@marqbeatty2694 what's parcel's gotta do with anything relating to letby?
@hharrison-parker16065 ай бұрын
@@paulis8107 Grow a brain or don't comment.
@S.Trades5 ай бұрын
@@marqbeatty2694 how many dead babies 👶 was it blamed for?
@SarcasticPlotRecaps5 ай бұрын
And that there was no fraud in the 2020 US election 😅🤦 All of these systems are incompetant these days...
@elainebutterworth80515 ай бұрын
@@paulis8107 You clearly know nothing about the Post Office misdemeanours.
@David-hl6mr6 ай бұрын
I was a Nurse for 25 years working in ICU ( Adult not Paediatrics). I followed the trial very closely and was shocked at the conviction.Hitchens is correct about her defence team who time after time missed many opportunities when questioning the prosecution witnesses. If I recall the only witness the defence called was the hospital plumber. A retrial will in time be called.
@steve35856 ай бұрын
I sincerely hope so…but not enough outcry is happening
@richardfletcher47046 ай бұрын
The defence had to go admit that someone was killing children in the hospital. The prosecution did the most forensic investigation I have ever seen. It is far beyond reasonable doubt.
@strippins6 ай бұрын
They may have admitted that, but they did not have to. Nothing the prosecution said could only be explained by a serial killer hypothesis . Indeed, that is now becoming clear more widely.
@askidbarrett6 ай бұрын
my wife too is a senior nurse and has serious concerns having read the New Yorker piece
@carad20086 ай бұрын
Now that I realise that no one can comment publicly on the trial while it is going on I can see how the narrative can be skewed in one particular direction. A trial is a process and all processes are subject to human error therefore if a trial is investigated and found to contain errors then the result should be appealed and a retrial should take place especially when a person is sent to prison for the rest of their life. I think that Mr Hitchems puts forward a very good argument and he has a keen conscience.
@DavidJamesquoracy4 ай бұрын
We used to be convicted by a jury of our peers, but now we are convicted by a jury of our Piers Morgans.
@itchytastyurr4 ай бұрын
I like puns. If i listen to him i'm getting my ears piersed! Sounds post master to me- if the system is at fault blame the front of house staff? And why is this channel blank? are you A.I?
@DavidJamesquoracy4 ай бұрын
@@itchytastyurr Nope. My full channel is the one with Huliganov on it. Huli recommended.
@rboot16215 ай бұрын
I have a bad feeling about this......
@beammeup84585 ай бұрын
Well said Peter !
@PhilPrewett6 ай бұрын
LL had made 17 complaints about the conditions and poor treatment of babies from doctors on unit. The consultants didn't like her a mere nurse embarrassing them, so they made a counter complaint, which management investigated and unusually actually vindicated Letby, and they made the consultants write a letter of apology to Letby. It seems they wanted rid of her, so they ganged up again against her...I believe they had intended to just force her out, but once the police became involved they couldn't back down, and ot snowballed out of control. Seeing one of the consultants being interviewed on TV after the case, the interviewer stated that the doctor was a hero...he very nearly broke down in tears, I think that was because he realised he eas far from being a hero, if fact he'd just helped put a conscientious young nurse in prison for the rest of her life.
@Ida_Dunne_Moore6 ай бұрын
@@PhilPrewett are you on Twitter? Really good to see the change of heart that's happening all around us.
@lesley99896 ай бұрын
@@PhilPrewett were are the 17 complaints and were the documents read out by the Defence?
@markennyee6 ай бұрын
and have you seen those consultants giving interviews ? clearly lying
@S.Trades5 ай бұрын
@@PhilPrewett 🥱
@paulis81075 ай бұрын
@@markennyee Clearly lying? Prove it.
@vincent-r5iАй бұрын
NOT PROVEN GUILTY, therefore INNOCENT.
@Curryking320006 ай бұрын
Having been a victim of an NHS stitch up myself when I worked in an NHS trust, I can completely concur with what Peter has said. When something goes wrong, often they look for a scapegoat as they're so afraid of the repercussions. I like Peter Hitchens, he says it as it is and agree with him on many things.
@David-hl6mr6 ай бұрын
As a Nurse I've never been stitched up myself but I have witnessed Nurses who have been. If questions arise around poor Drs. practices I've witnessed them close ranks to prevent scrutiny of their profession.
@darrenambrosia6 ай бұрын
Completely irrelevant
@Fred-rj3er6 ай бұрын
@@Curryking32000 Well said. I was stitched up with a diagnosis where a supposed expert wanted to amputate my leg above the knee and got others to join in, after a scan to find the cause of a leg ulcer. The bloke didn't believe me that the "unusual bone formation" was actually a bone graft and commited his diagnosis to record before I had chance to contest it. They seriously do close ranks.
@darrenambrosia6 ай бұрын
@@JohnPretty1 she wasn’t stitched up, you seeing a stitch up in the NHS (allegedly) is irrelevant her conviction She is guilty. That is obvious
@Triz-c2j6 ай бұрын
@@darrenambrosiaWhat specific evidence 'proved' this for you?
@hamerhayes6 ай бұрын
You can thank Anthony James B-Liar for cases like these because of the changes he made to the uk equivalent of miranda rights to make it easier for the UK courts to convict people. He changed the law so you can't use anything you didn't disclose during the time of your arrest and during the interview to be inadmissible as evidence if you introduce it later. In other words, if you say no-comment, when you are interviewed by the police, the UK courts take this as an indication of culpability. That is to say, if you reserve your legal right not to incriminate yourself by declining to answer a question, the courts can take that as a tacit admission of guilt. Where is the justice in that?
@yingyang10086 ай бұрын
What do you mean? Surely she can say nothing when arrested, and then still defend her self in court?
@yetidodger66504 ай бұрын
you've complete over simplified that tbh.
@2msvalkyrie5294 ай бұрын
Complete drivel....!!
@hamerhayes4 ай бұрын
@@2msvalkyrie529 Really. How so?
@TheLucanicLord4 ай бұрын
@@yingyang1008 You can. He's lying.
@antonrudenham32596 ай бұрын
I fear that as the NHS deteriorates further and more and more patients die we will see more trials of this type as managers try to cover their incompetence. I don't know if she's guilty but we'll see more of this.
@miacat17276 ай бұрын
Agree, the case sets a presidence of unlawful findings to protect the medical establishment. Questions, who will be next. Frightening.
@fainitesbarley22456 ай бұрын
Like the post office
@darrenambrosia6 ай бұрын
you don’t want to see more murderers being convicted? Strange take
@darrenambrosia6 ай бұрын
@@fainitesbarley2245how many were murdered in the post office scandal?
@tonyoliver27506 ай бұрын
@@darrenambrosia That's your take on what he said, I fail to see how you can draw that inference.
@julieyates405Ай бұрын
The biggest problem with this case is the expert medical evidence does not stand up to robust scientific scrutiny from a credible international professional community. In relation to insulin evidence, Lucy indicated if the experts said the blood results shower insulin had been given, that must be the case, but it wasn’t her. A little different to her simply agreeing babies had been given insulin. The test results are not of forensic quality and may be unreliable or misinterpreted. It’s widely documented the care provided by the doctors was not always good enough, and consultants were largely absent as they were paediatricians not neonatologists, covering five areas, paediatrics, out patients, A&E, Delivery Suite and the Neonatal Unit. One doctor was off site filming periodically. Lucy was there most often because she worked overtime and was a full time employee, with specialist tracing, so most likely to be looking after the sickest babies, and called in to help to look after the most high risk vulnerable babies. A good nurse working with a poor medical team. The unit was an infection control nightmare, with raw sewage dripping through the ceiling and coming up the sink. Something that would have closed most units due to the risk of harm to patients. The way Lucy was treated in court by the prosecution barrister, was distressing to observe. Obtaining guilty verdicts with such questionable tactics is wrong, as is causing distress due to hostile abusive behaviour. This would have potential to influence a jury and shouldn’t be tolerated in a civilised society.
@SanchaHaskins-hl6ng6 ай бұрын
I use to work in a neonatal unit and I can come up with another reason why those babies died and it has nothing to do with Lucy Letby. I also am not comfortable with this trail because I personally think she is being scapegoated for someone else's incompetence. I don't think anyone deliberately set out to kill babies on that unit but someone's incompetence did.
@patpat43176 ай бұрын
I was very uncomfortable with the verdict after hearing some dubious witness statements. I would love to know your reasons, especially as you had first hand knowledge of neonates.
@SanchaHaskins-hl6ng6 ай бұрын
@@patpat4317 it's because I have worked at a neonatal unit I am uncomfortable with the trail. From what I have listened to about the unit Lucy worked in it sounds like bad management, poor leadership and incompetence killed those babies.
@SanchaHaskins-hl6ng6 ай бұрын
The unit sounded very understaffed and they kept taking in very sick babies instead of transferring them out when they knew they didn't have the nursing staff to safely care for these babies. In my unit we would have phoned round other units if we couldn't safely provide care. Also they should have reduced the number of cots, which is what a responsible unit manager would have done and put a contingency plan in place. That wasn't done and these babies were put at risk as a result. No one questioned the management of the unit. The whole blame for the deaths was put onto Lucy. Of course she was on duty when most of the deaths occurred. When you work full-time and do extra shifts the chances of you being on duty when these babies died is quite high but that wasn't considered. I have had experience of children and babies becoming unwell after I've nursed them on a shift, and come in the next shift only to realise that and I have went over my care with a fine tooth comb to see did I miss something. Her writing notes saying she is evil and she did this, I understand that. You do a lot of soul searching when a child or baby dies in your care and it is a horrible experience, you question everything you did, I've done that with one child I can imagine what was going through her head when a number of babies died on her shift, esp if she was looking after them. Some of the things the prosecution were saying about them being well babies, these babies were not well. They were in a neonatal unit. The one about injecting air into a babies tummy via ngt and causing air in the gut that killed the baby. That sounds more like Nec and because can kill a baby from birth to 3 months. Premature babies are more at risk of neck as are sick neonates. I have never put 10mls of air down a baby's ngt but I have aspirated 10mls of air from them. If a baby has a lot of air in it's tummy it will be uncomfortable and it will vomit. I could go on but I will stop there. It's just a few things that make me query this whole trail and it's verdict.
@HumanimalChannel6 ай бұрын
The way she would be caring for certain babies she wasn't assigned to, and pushing otberstaff away to take over care... is really concerning
@SanchaHaskins-hl6ng6 ай бұрын
@@HumanimalChannel not really. When staff go on break you take over their babies also maybe the nurse looking after those babies didn't really know what to do and she did, esp in an emergency situation. This happens in all units staff with more experience take over from staff with little neonatal experience. That could be all that was happening there but it has been protrayed a different way. Some of those staff may not have liked the way she took over from them. Also she could have been helping them look after their sick babies if she saw that they were out of their depth with them. Esp if they were new staff with very little neonatal experience.
@PedrSion6 ай бұрын
The judge told the jury that even if they were not sure about the cause of death, they could still find Letby guilty.
@aoae-hf3rz5 ай бұрын
The judge was emotionally biased and came across as a sadist.
@miacat17275 ай бұрын
@@aoae-hf3rz Your right The judge delighted in sentencing her to life without parol, a morbid sense of personal victory.
@lesley99895 ай бұрын
@@aoae-hf3rz you're just saying that because you think she's innocent! 😂 Evidence of sadism please.
@lesley99895 ай бұрын
@@PedrSion please give the whole summing up and context, because we all know you NG people hate "cherry-picking" but keep doing it.
@lesley99895 ай бұрын
@@miacat1727 I saw the video. Is that what a delighted person looks like? You're delusional if you believe that looks like delight. Tell me at what point he looked delightful. His expression was the same throughout delivering the sentencing
@SmugSallie6 ай бұрын
Having worked for the NHS for the whole of my career, and I’m now able to retire, I can say with absolute conviction that Lucy has been scapegoated for systemic failings of the CoC Hospital. The sewage that contaminated the pipes and sinks etc would have undoubtably left bacteria in the water that staff washed their hands in, prior to undertaking invasive procedures such as the insertion of an umbilical venous catheter. They were caring for babies that they weren’t staffed or equipped to care for - babies that were severely premature with the odds of survival stacked against them. I’m still mystified as to why Ben Myers KC did not call the pathologists who conducted the postmortems to give evidence and challenge the presumptions of Dewi Evans - who only had the medical notes with which to draw his conclusions and dismiss the findings of several pathologists. And the statistical evidence only serves to prove that Lucy was 100% on duty when she was meant to be. Why, oh why, did the defence not call a statistician to the witness box? Imagine the litigation and the compensation, for all the families whose babies died, if Lucy had been rightly found innocent and an inquiry found the trust had been negligent and failed in its duty of care. The NHS couldn’t allow that, now could it?
@KingBee246 ай бұрын
Statistician Richard Gill offered his services and was threatened with legal action by the police.
@SmugSallie6 ай бұрын
@@KingBee24 that is absolutely contemptible! There seems to be a lot of underhand goings-on. The fact the defence only had one witness. Just appalling
@giakolou28766 ай бұрын
Yes it’s likely, follow the money
@davidjma72266 ай бұрын
Spot on. Government and it's agencies can never be seen to be wrong - include the police, the NHS etc. So they cover up. Remember Hillsborough??
@vinparaffin60826 ай бұрын
Smug..............if Lucy Letby was found to be innocent, the government at that time would be culpable, and we can't have that, can we?!!!
@ApacheMagic6 ай бұрын
Peter, I would love if you investigate this case and write a book about it. If she’s innocent, that would help.
@lenkapenka69765 ай бұрын
100%
@Oceansgreen4 ай бұрын
I have been thinking about this case and I really don’t think she killed those babies. The post it’s where she write… “I am evil,I did this” personally I think that that was written through guilt yes… but guilt because she couldn’t save them…she was punishing herself because they died not because she killed them. If there was no positive proof that Lucy killed those babies then I don’t think she should be in jail. I believe she was a scapegoat for their incompetence.
@annbumfrey68124 ай бұрын
He's just said he's not going to say she's not guilty....its upto the crown ....to prove guilt which they have .Just waffling on and on He keeps going back and changing his mind
@annbumfrey68124 ай бұрын
@@Oceansgreenl am just so glad she's been stopped
@craigshackleton16525 ай бұрын
This case has stunk from the beginning. many of you may have seen her initial arrest but what you will not have seen is the way the police dug up her garden to make her look like Fred and Rose West. Perception is everything. It was clearly a stunt to make local people think she must be guilty if they are going to such lengths. In this case the jury has been led totally by expert witnesses and emotion of the victims being babies. We all now know how expert witnesses can be. Pompous old men with a lot of power in their hands who think they know everything like Gareth Jenkins who decided by himself the failures in his system didn't apply to all the sub-postmasters he was working to convict.
@lecochonbleu5 ай бұрын
"We all now know how expert witnesses can be. Pompous old men with a lot of power in their hands who think they know everything" Unfortunately the situation is a great deal worse than that and has been for a very long time. It's often enough not much, to extents even not essentially, about professionals and professional and personal ego over balance and reason. It's so much worse, often. It is about money. Money, money, money, money, money. In such a high profile case a so-called expert - often an expert who is ready to do not too far away from anything to help one or the other side in a trial - is simply not going to offer "expertise" on which the whole case more or less depends for their standard fee of £20,000-£50,000. With such a high profile case with a lot of emotional baggage in the population experts are likely to cost at least £100,000 but easily may charge hundreds of thousands. (From the public purse as the Prosecution is paying it.) There are experts whose very well remunerated livelihoods depend mostly upon trials income - basically professional court trials appearers, many of whom are ready to provide "expertise" for and also against the accident in a case depending on who is asking - and paying - defence or prosecution. For accused persons who have to pay to defend themselves their counsel may not be able to afford much to investigate and rebut expensive prosecution "experts" who are themselves paid handsomely by taxpayers. No, if only court expert testimony were just a situation about genuine farts who love the sounds of their own voices and over-value their professional opinions. At the end of the day a lot of court experts, often these who have appeared many times, are people who have spent quite a lot of time practising how to say, how to pass off convincingly, that what they say is valuable and important information. There is a lot of money in it for them.
@corirenata65415 ай бұрын
Totally agree
@ncooper84385 ай бұрын
Don't forget about the two doctors in this case, they were influential in starting it.
@corirenata65415 ай бұрын
@@ncooper8438 absolutely. A similar sort of thing happened to my friend’s mother. If you talk about a masonic stitch up involving police, doctors, lawyers you're labelled a conspiracy theorist……if Lucy Letby isnt a scapegoat, I don’t know who is?
@NGCS-ej4lz5 ай бұрын
"It was clearly a stunt to make local people think she must be guilty if they are going to such lengths" Completely false. Also if they suspected strong she maybe a serial killer, its pretty protocol to do such things. "Pompous old men with a lot of power in their hands" It would appear that getting this women out of jail has (by the recent rhetoric flooding everything) become the War of the extremist Left.
@backslang4 ай бұрын
UNSAFE CONVICTION...typical of NHS scape goating....case needs reexamining before she is left to rot in jail. Seen too many cases in NHS where they avoid blame to senior staff.
@WesleyWattley-xy4fg4 ай бұрын
Or Harmed !!! 🇬🇧
@chesshead6 ай бұрын
Peter does a good job of articulating our 'conspiracy theories' around this case. He doesn't know if she is guilty or innocent. He feels uncomfortable enough about the conviction to ask whether or not justice has been served. We didn't spend 10 months listening to the evidence in court, like the jury did, but we have seen the 'smoking gun' evidence of the roster data, confession note and insulin analysis, and we have pulled it apart with very little effort. If the best evidence is flimsy, why can't we assume that all the other evidence is worse?
@magenta67546 ай бұрын
Was the one consultant who repeatedly pointed the finger at Letby ever investigated himself or were the doctors above suspicion?
@mdaddy7756 ай бұрын
So it's the theories of a tabloid journalist against a mountain of evidence that a jury agreed with....
@RC-gh7os5 ай бұрын
@magenta6754 nobody else was ever investigated on the ward. The doctors blamed her fairly early on and by all accounts the police ran with it- classic texas sharpshooter fallacy. Therefore everything from her text messages to her Facebook searches were viewed from the angle of that she was a killer and sold to the media as such.
@miacat17276 ай бұрын
The entire case was based on suspicion & conviction based on circumstantial evidence. A trial of LL v system. unreasonable doubt, scapegoat verdict.
@richardfletcher47046 ай бұрын
If you had watched the trail, the defence admitted someone was murderering babies on this unit. They didn’t dispute it. There argument was it wasn’t her. It was utterly forensic.
@jamesrobinson91676 ай бұрын
What do you think it means that "the defence admitted someone was killing babies". If I'm not a serial killer how could I be in a position to "admit" that someone was killing babies.
@itsmeagain78256 ай бұрын
@@jamesrobinson9167when the police announced there was a serial killer on the loose in Yorkshire was it the police doing the killing and not Peter Sutcliffe?
@BonusHole6 ай бұрын
It's not as if we have recently seen a vicious cover up by the Post Office, Government and Judicial System that led to wrongful convictions of innocent people is it?
@darrenambrosia6 ай бұрын
The conviction is not being claimed unsafe because the evidence is circumstantial. Most convictions are based on circumstantial evidence
@marionreynolds70806 ай бұрын
I was uneasy about this case very early on and I’m reassured that there is significant apprehensiveness emerging about the verdict and court process. Thank you Peter Hitchens.
@ellea25416 ай бұрын
Go to CrimeScene2Courtroom channel on KZbin and start listening from the video 'Lucy Letby - The Police Search' onwards. These videos are a reenactment of the original trial based on the actual court transcripts purchased by someone who actually attended most days of the trial so he was able to demonstrate times when there was a dramatic pause or what her tone of voice was when she said certain things. These videos will take you through all 17 cases in the trial and then you will understand why she was found guilty of some counts, not guilty of others, and no verdict reached for others. I think there is an assumption that this was a blanket verdict and she was found guilty of everything, but that isn't true. The jury took their time to go through each case one by one.
@ts78444 ай бұрын
Dear god. Please get your facts straight before listening to this scam artist trying to get his 5 minutes of fame.
@lauraj84294 ай бұрын
I never thought I’d see the day where I’d agree with Peter Hitchens
@hazeljoy93196 ай бұрын
I think the verdict should be questioned for sure! It doesn't sit right at all for lots of reasons.
@davidc38396 ай бұрын
What was the problem with the conviction?
@markennyee6 ай бұрын
@@davidc3839 it clearly is unsafe which bit of that do you not get ?
@davidc38396 ай бұрын
@@markennyee I don't get people like you who hang onto conspiracy theories. I bet you have a whole list of them.
@markennyee6 ай бұрын
@@davidc3839 will you eat your boots when you are proved wrong ??
@yamadakenji41436 ай бұрын
You mean she doesn't have the serial killer looks and demeanour you're used to from the telly
@Oddballthegreat4066 ай бұрын
You can't talk about patterns of babies deaths following Lucy's shift patterns when you cherry pick the cases she was charged with. There were 10 other deaths on the unit in the same time period. When they are included into the statistical data the pattern will disappear because crucially there would then be context of the performance of the hospital unit in its entirety.
@jono1457-qd9ft6 ай бұрын
31 deaths in all, before the ward was demolished because it was very old an unsanitary.
@Heligany4 ай бұрын
@@jono1457-qd9ft Wow they kept that bit quiet
@jono1457-qd9ft4 ай бұрын
@@Heligany I read the same information from several sources, but yes, it seems poir Lucy took the blame.
@KeithFoad12 күн бұрын
The court of appeal won't grant her her appeal. I think they should on the grounds that apparently the convictions are not safe, being that her defence solicitor has stated new evidence which suposes her innocents. So let's give her a new trial once and for all and see whether she is innocent or guilty.
@florianbiermann21296 ай бұрын
The interviewing journalist does not understand that if you arbitrarily select those children you consider "murdered", then you can create a table like the Letby rooster table for every person on the ward (including the consultants who were, strangely, not considered as suspects and even worked together with the expert to make the case against Letby). There is really no statistical evidence whatsoever that Letby killed any baby, and, according to what I have read, the medical evidence is also flimsy. As it is a priori extremely unlikely that a nurse kills babies, Bayesian reasoning suggests that Lucy Letby has almost surely never killed any baby. Hitchens is still too reserved about this.
@Flash-sr8hm6 ай бұрын
It was not arbitrary. it was those children whose collapsed were unexpected or unexplained.
@florianbiermann21296 ай бұрын
@@Flash-sr8hm As far as I understand, there were no criteria that were decided on before the Letby trial started. The decision which children were included and which weren't was made by the prosecution. As a matter of fact, all of these children were originally, years earlier, considered to be natural deaths. There were another 17 babies in the same time frame which were not included. I think even Dewi Evans said at some point that he did not understand why other children he had assessed were not included. The approach taken by the prosecutors would work if they had some objective criterion which children were suspicious and which weren't. Moreover, they would have to control for confounding factors, e.g., how many shifts were done by Lucy Letby and how much by other nurses. Apparently, she was working more than the average hours.
@florianbiermann21296 ай бұрын
@@JohnPretty1 Well, maybe. But he was in that way also misleading the audience about the facts of the case.
@backintimealwyn57366 ай бұрын
The case almost only rests on one pediatricians "insight". He notices the number of deaths, , then he selects which deaths are suspect, then he convinces the rest of the staff that Letby is here everytime an abnormal death occurs,then he's the only witness of Letby harming a child , then he's the wistleblower, and now he's the hero. From his testimony all the evidence could be seen as confirmation bias from what his own accusations.
@KingBee246 ай бұрын
@@backintimealwyn5736 ...he reported her to management, who investigated and found no wrongdoing by LL and made him apologize ... and he then went to the police ... and his evidence is inconsistent !
@ManForToday6 ай бұрын
I see no good argument at all in not wanting to confirm the initial verdict and examine all the evidence and arguments. Those wanting to double down on the conviction can make sure it’s right. What are they afraid of? Wouldn’t they want to get it absolutely right?
@peteblanco76406 ай бұрын
How many babies have died suspisiously since Letby was imprisoned I wonder.
@pasta84706 ай бұрын
That's a question you're simply not allowed to ask. It goes against the required narrative.
@carolinejohn45376 ай бұрын
EXACTLY MY QUESTION! If they increased on her watch and nowhere else, if they have gone back to 'normal' figures since she was removed- doesn't THAT speak volumes ?!
@stevemcha71296 ай бұрын
@@peteblanco7640 Don’t you think the fact that the unit was down graded and took on far fewer cases of seriously at risk babies coupled with the fact that the authorities would be desperately making sure that nothing was going wrong and covering their own backside would ensure that things improved after Letby was removed. Suspicion, dubious interpretation of statistics, and the authorities desperate need to find ‘someone’ responsible played a part in things. Stats will tell you anything you want to believe and circumstantial evidence has been found to be suspect and even downright wrong in too many cases in the past. Just imagine going to prison for the rest of your life if there was no incontrovertible evidence to convict you, particularly if you were innocent.
@strippins6 ай бұрын
Shortly before the deaths started the unit started accepting much younger and sicker babies. During the period in question, the number of neonatal deaths that also happened when letby wasn’t on shift was also significantly above expectation. Following this period the unit stopped accepting babies as young and as sick. The common factor is the inability to look after babies that young and that sick, not letby
@strippins6 ай бұрын
@@carolinejohn4537it doesn’t if you see my response below
@AmandaPotter-i2z6 ай бұрын
I followed the trial and was not convinced by the evidence and was flabbergasted when the jury came to a guilty verdict. I feel that the media and social media influenced the jury .Her guilt was not proven beyond reasonable doubt
@sarahyourston21736 ай бұрын
totally agree.
@BigBlue18956 ай бұрын
Just after the verdict on the first trial I was sat next to a criminal barrister on a plane. We discussed the case. His arrogance was awful. His point was that she was found guilty and therefore was guilty he just didn't accept that the courts ever got things wrong. I went on to list some but it made no difference to his closed mind.
@languageoffootball6 ай бұрын
@@AmandaPotter-i2z the test is beyond a reasonable doubt in criminal cases and she was found guilty. Therefore it has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt. The Jury saw the entire trial.
@BigBlue18956 ай бұрын
An acquaintance of mind was jailed for 8 years for rape which he probably didn't commit. I was a witness at the trial in that the accuser initially came on to me in a bar in front of my wife. To be specific she asked if I could be her sugar daddy and that she gave excellent BJs. No kid. I asked the friend (not the accused) who'd brought the woman into the bar to take her away and this he did. Unfortunately, in doing so he introduced her to the man she ended up accusing of rape. I knew the accused because he'd done some building work for me and I said I'd help him. He gave me the bundle of evidence and one thing immediately stuck out as a lie by the woman which was that she claimed that she'd gone to a bar with her boss after work and they'd drunk two bottles of wine before she got the tram home. The point of this was to say that she didn't know what she was doing when she invited the accused into her bed that night. However, this wine consumption couldn't have been possible because her statement gave the time she left her workplace and there was irrefutable evidence as to the time she got on the tram. For this all to be correct, she would have had to down a bottle of wine in 5 minutes flat. I met her 10 minutes after she'd got off the tram and she seemed stone cold sober. There was no forensic evidence presented in this trial. In a rape trial, it's often the case that there is very little actual evidence other than one word against another and so the credibility of the accused and the accuser is vital. If one side can show that the other side is lying about one thing then the jury might conclude that they were also lying about the rape itself. I pointed this out to the accused's solicitors and fully expected them to make a big thing of it at the trial because the accuser's boss testified in court as to the bar evidence. But the accused's legal team made no reference to it when the boss was on the stand. It would have been game, set and match for the defence but it just wasn't raised and the verdict was guilty. There were another couple of major inconsistencies that weren't pointed out by the defence that I won't go into here. The builder, just like Letby, had been terribly let down by his legal team. I consulted one of my oldest friends, a criminal barrister about what to do next. He advised that in the absence of further evidence that his only ground for appeal was that his defence team had misrepresented him and that he should use a specialist firm of appeals solicitors for this. I conveyed this to him. What did he do next? He only asked the existing legal team to give him their opinion as to if THEY had misrepresented him. Of course, they concluded that they hadn't. He didn't even get as far as that appeal and he served half his 8 year sentence in a cell next door but one to Rolf Harris. And when I read that Letby's appeal was being handled by the very same useless legal team that had let her down so badly in the first place, the memories came flooding back. Post script. The accuser's ex partner approached the builder in a local pub after his release. He sympathised with him and told him that he was her fourth victim.
@alex123case6 ай бұрын
How do you explain the insulin?
@beverlyjones8156Ай бұрын
I think there has been a cover-up and she has been made the scapegoat for everything that has gone wrong on that ward. I've thought this from the very start and I'm not 100% convinced that she is responsible for all the deaths she has been convicted for!
@jackieemslie5 ай бұрын
My gut feeling has always been she didn’t do it and definitely didn’t get a fair trial
@colinjava84474 ай бұрын
Who did it then? She even wrote she killed them, what else do you need?
@danien82224 ай бұрын
your gut is wrong. and fortunately your gut does not decide who is innocent and guilty in a court of law.
@2msvalkyrie5294 ай бұрын
Have you told the Appeal Court Judges of your " gut feeling "...?? They'd probably change their minds...??
@L.OB-14 ай бұрын
T@@colinjava8447 she felt she had made some clinical error
@ElSiv844 ай бұрын
@@colinjava8447 Well, one died of sepsis. Maybe the others were natural causes, as they were very sickly premature babies in an underfunded and understaffed hospital (apparently doctors only did rounds once a week and in that environment it should be daily). On the same piece of paper that she wrote she killed them she also wrote "I am innocent". Just imagine for a moment she was innocent - she randomly gets hauled in to the police station and accused of killing 7 babies and attempting to kill 6 others. Perhaps, as a medical person, her reaction is to question her own clinical competence and think that medical negligence on her part caused the deaths. In that light, "I killed them" makes sense. Perhaps the notes were the ramblings of a highly distressed and emotional nurse.
@mickilin995 ай бұрын
The interviewer's closed mind is quite concerning. He wants faith in the system. Does he really believe that there are no miscarriages of justice?
@browns88sb4 ай бұрын
The interviewer is just doing his job.
@niriop6 ай бұрын
Letby was observed on duty standing over an infant in respiratory distress and doing nothing. And don’t forget the notebook of rambled psychotic confessions and keeping medical papers and logs as mementos beneath her bed. You can’t ignore these things.
@bradleyday58296 ай бұрын
@niriop So if she had her hands in the incubator, they could've said she was tampering or attacking the baby! She can't win can she?!! Lucy said they are taught as nurses about "self correcting" but Jayaram, a man that changes his mind, more times than I change my underpants obviously disputed this. For Christ's sake, he said the alarms weren't sounding, yet another nurse said they was!! He should've been toast on that witness stand
@niriop6 ай бұрын
@@bradleyday5829 Listen to me: she stood over the infant’s bed while it was in respiratory distress and was observed doing nothing for close to a minute. Why did she do that?
@jackbebad6 ай бұрын
There was rambles certainly but no confession. Go back and look at the actual evidence and stop making it fit your already made up mind.
@bradleyday58296 ай бұрын
@@niriop I've just told you why Read my reply again
@niriop6 ай бұрын
@@bradleyday5829 I did. It makes no sense: why did an experienced neonatal nurse just stand there?
@royalirishranger19316 ай бұрын
I agree , there is something uneasy about this whole case!
@leemurray7240Ай бұрын
Faith is for god and faith is for the unknowable. Great response to the interviewer ..
@mercuryrising5474 ай бұрын
Our court system is a complete con
@markennyee4 ай бұрын
Lazy defence barristers and solicitors encourage taking plea deals even when you have done nothing wrong its a sham
@markennyee4 ай бұрын
@@Ode-to-Odysseus in my personal experience of personal injury solicitors and barristers is that they are the most hated and despised people on the planet pure greed
@d-rex82236 ай бұрын
Can't blame the jury as they could only judge based upon the evidence they were presented. However, there was no expert medical witness for the defence to balance that of the prosecution, Dr Dewi Evans, a long-retired paediatrician whose speculative theories are now coming under fire. The Justice system needs a set of standards for scientific/medical expert witnesses. The defence did apply to have Evans' removed as an expert witness based on his unsuitability but this was rejected by the judge saying that it was up to the jury how much faith to put in his testimony.
@KingBee246 ай бұрын
A judge in a previous case threw him out 'cos in layman's terms he was talking nonsense. He should never have been accepted as an 'expert witness'
@fulham19586 ай бұрын
What evidence 🤷🏼
@carolynellis3876 ай бұрын
@KingBee24 Agreed, Dewi Evans wasn't even a neonatal qualified, or expert in this field, only a long retired, paediatrician
@d-rex82236 ай бұрын
@@fulham1958 Good point! The court took as "evidence" the testimony of a man, retired for over 10 years and who said there were symptoms described which he'd never seen before during many years of NOT being a neonatologist, so the only possible explanation in his mind was a serial killer nurse, ignoring all other factors. I've seen him being interviewed and the arrogance of the man is astounding, assuming guilt and making up hypotheses to fit. He needs to be exposed and soon.
@michaeldoolan75956 ай бұрын
That sounds ropey to start with. Why would a judge do that? Our judiciary are becoming politicised.
@QueenioTrack6 ай бұрын
I swear I'm having deja vu. I can recall the huge uproar when beverley allitt was charged....the very idea that a sweet nurse would intentionally harm anyone was unfathomable. I can remember 'expert witnesses' complaining her trial wasn't fair, right down to wanting the whole conviction quashed on the basis she was tried in absence due to her being in a hospital for an eating disorder. Even after she confessed she still had people proclaiming her innocence. Her trial was all circumstantial evidence too but they were right.
@David-hl6mr6 ай бұрын
Good point. However there have been cases, one in particular that Hitchens mentions of a Nurse who was wrongly convicted of a more than similar crime.You may well be familiar with the case of Lucia de Berk, if not then you may discover there is a counter argument to your take.
@ruthbashford31766 ай бұрын
Lucy's conviction should be quashed as the medical evidence is "utter crap" The babies Lucy was supposed to have murdered had post mortems and were found to have died from natural causes. Unless, of course, you prefer to believe the long retired, discredited paediatrician, Dewi Evans, who fantasized about air embolisms and insulin poisoning. And whoever put that bogus spreadsheet together should be prosecuted for fraud. The level of negligence and incompetence on that unqualified neonatal unit was breathtaking This is going to be one of the biggest miscarriages of justice this country has seen.
@johntgw6 ай бұрын
I doubt anyone would be defending a male nurse in this situation. The fact she's a reasonably pretty young woman makes people rush to her defence.
@QueenioTrack6 ай бұрын
@@johntgw I don't remember Ben Geen or Colin Norris attracting this many defenders
@KingBee246 ай бұрын
@@johntgw What a puerile argument !
@nickdandel531411 күн бұрын
After many months looking around I can see that in every channel and every conversation the vast majoriry of people who comment clearly say that LL is innocent and she has been framed. All you need to do is to take a look in the many channels that cover this story. I have never seen so much doubt and a clear majority where people openly question the verdict. Starting with this channel and this interview.
@13thnotehifireviews75 ай бұрын
If the defence medical experts are not going to want to be called in court to challenge experts acting for the prosecution for fear to their reputation of defending Lucy Letby, then the judge really ought to compel experts to be present that can be challenged as otherwise this is not a fair trial. We saw that in shaken baby syndrome cases and the experts for the prosecution were wrong. To me this case smacks of an NHS trust protecting itself by using a scape-goat and not one occasion of Letby caught in the act but pseudo-statistics.
@HENNAtabasun19905 ай бұрын
And also pass case NHS miscarriages of justice of how NHS managements treat, lie and block the truth from ever coming about. And why did 2 of the lead managers from that hospital retire with full pension before it went to court and have never had to answer important questions that have never been answered, and the over 2 Nursing managers were able to side step to do the same job in a different hospital and then all NHS employees were taken in to group meeting to told if they talk to anyone about it they will be fired, they made Lucy Letby an scapegoat end off.
@1977ajax6 ай бұрын
The hospital avoided dozens of legal suits for gross negligence by framing one 'lone maniac', and they pressured sufficient gutless careerists on the staff, and hired for huge sums of money sufficient 'experts' to make it stick. How long will it take for this to be recognized widely.
@Flash-sr8hm6 ай бұрын
The hospital has avoided nothing. They defended her initially. How can she be framed when the hospital was in fact negligent for not removing her? Your theory is contradictory.
@1977ajax6 ай бұрын
@@Flash-sr8hm Not at all. You should examine the time line.
@jono1457-qd9ft6 ай бұрын
@@Flash-sr8hm Listen to what Peter Hitchens said.
@traceylok6756 ай бұрын
I've been listening to the court transcripts for a long time, the circumstantial evidence was enormous and police were very thorough, working for at least four years on this. Lucy herself was her worst enemy, lying unnecessarily and being very cold.
@ScruffyTubbles6 ай бұрын
You haven't been listening to the Court Transcripts - they have only just been obtained.
@S.Trades4 ай бұрын
@@traceylok675 And killing babies. You forgot that.
@philholding69053 ай бұрын
was it an hypothesis that she actually lied ? You interpreted her demeaner/ behaviour as 'being very cold'. That was not a fact.
@traceylok6753 ай бұрын
@@philholding6905 Listen to the transcripts and police interviews; she did lie quite a bit. It's my subjective opinion that her reaction was cold, you can disagree but I wouldn't say she was emotional by any stretch of the imagination, would you?
@douglas24376 ай бұрын
Interviewer is very sharp. Good job.
@Roseenmarie4 ай бұрын
the Rachel Aviv article is once again unobtainable in the UK, must have been pretty damning
@lechenaultia58636 ай бұрын
Things can go badly wrong with judge only trials too. Has Hitchens actually read the entire transcript? Or has he simply read articles in the Guardian and New Yorker and formed his views on that basis? Can I suggest you obtain the opinion of senior counsel rather than journalists?
@David-hl6mr6 ай бұрын
P.Hitchens does make that point.
@evolassunglasses46736 ай бұрын
These issues first come to light through the media. Now brave people need to step forward and have a look.
@ChrisPBacon-iu8my6 ай бұрын
@scabthecatDid you actually listen to what he said? The New Yorker had the transcript of the entire trial and published it so he read it all not just a few bits.
@Oddballthegreat4066 ай бұрын
If the statistical evidence is worthless the medical evidence unsound and without an evidential basis and the insulin test data gathered by a non forensic level test then the whole case collapses. It's not necessary to know every word spoken in 10 months. The foundation of the prosecution's case is crumbling because it is speculation not science
@darrenambrosia6 ай бұрын
Both articles were also misinformed and poorly written
@pjcnet6 ай бұрын
I have studied many the transcripts of the case including her cross examination, from the evidence she is definitely guilty beyond reasonable doubt.
@PORRRIDGE_GUN6 ай бұрын
Don't lie. You haven't studied anything but shitsheet tabloids
@Ida_Dunne_Moore6 ай бұрын
@@pjcnet where did you get the transcripts??
@cjtyson54786 ай бұрын
I implore anyone who thinks she may be innocent to read the full court of appeal 42 page report online before making that judgement. The evidence against her is in fact overwhelming
@nt53666 ай бұрын
Yes, but is the evidence against her reliable, is the question? From what I've read, and it may be wrong, there are serious issues with it. I'm intrigued. I'm going to keep on digging. Below is what I've read. Following the verdicts, it was revealed that Lucy Letby's Barrister, Benjamin Myers, KC, sought to have the expert witness evidence of Dr Dewi Evans dismissed from the case. The Judge presiding over the case denied the Barrister's application stating that it is for the jury "to determine, as with any witness, his reliability, having regard to all the evidence in the case." This decision to permit Dr Evans evidence is controversial, as permitting the jury to evaluate expert witness testimony is distinct from that of a general witness. It was previously found that, “In determining the issue of admissibility, the court must be satisfied that there is a sufficiently reliable scientific basis for the evidence to be admitted. If there is then the court leaves the opposing views to be tested before the jury.” R v Dlugosz [2013] EWCA Crim 2, [2013] 1 Cr App R 32 at [11]” At issue is the reliability of the evidence on a scientific basis. It is evident that none of the normal practices used to determine air embolism as a cause of death were applied by Dr Evans, and the one publication he referred to does not relate to air embolism through ambient air entrainment in the vasculature. Dr Evans determined that the infants died due to air embolism by referring to a 1989 research paper, which described gas embolism, due to the usage of high ventilation pressures which is a practice no longer applied to neonates. None of the findings on autopsy suggest the children died due to air embolism. It is apparent that a crucial element in the Lucy Letby case is the reliability of the original investigation. It is of great concern that Dr Evans conducted the investigation with the assistance of the consultants who were present on the ward at the time of death, and where, in any other setting, such individuals should have been treated as suspects. A further factor is whether Dr Evans was qualified to conduct any investigation given that he is neither a forensic scientist, nor a pathologist. Dr Evans has no formal training or background in the principles of scientific research. It is highly irregular for a group of medical doctors to play a primary role in carrying out a criminal investigation. In most other jurisdictions such activity would not constitute an independent investigation.
@chrisdude96416 ай бұрын
That's means the Letby fan's would have to do actual research and reading!
@ellea25416 ай бұрын
And if they are too lazy to read, then they should listen: Go to CrimeScene2Courtroom channel on KZbin and start listening from the video 'Lucy Letby - The Police Search' onwards. These videos are a reenactment of the original trial based on the actual court transcripts purchased by someone who actually attended most days of the trial so he was able to demonstrate times when there was a dramatic pause or what her tone of voice was when she said certain things. These videos will take you through all 17 cases in the trial and then you will understand why she was found guilty of some counts, not guilty of others, and no verdict reached for others. I think there is an assumption that this was a blanket verdict and she was found guilty of everything, but that isn't true. The jury took their time to go through each case one by one.
@yingyang10086 ай бұрын
Did you also read the Birmingham 6 appeal?
@noooowaydaddyo5 ай бұрын
You’re missing the point entirely. People are questioning whether the trial was fair. The fact is the trial heard speculation that was purported as proof and doesn’t stand up to scientific scrutiny. The defence failed in their duty. Reading flawed arguments doesn’t help to clarify anything other than it was flawed
@chrisdude96416 ай бұрын
I was interested in this case and I listened to the court transcripts that have been transcribed online. I spent hours. She's guilty. The prosecution went into detail of each event of fowl play that occurred. She was exposed as a sadistic killer. Hence why no members of the victims families are defending her.
@autoclearanceuk71916 ай бұрын
Please tell more.
@chrisdude96416 ай бұрын
Look up the cross examination.
@autoclearanceuk71916 ай бұрын
@@chrisdude9641 - link ?
@ellea25416 ай бұрын
@@autoclearanceuk7191 Go to CrimeScene2Courtroom channel on KZbin and start listening from the video 'Lucy Letby - The Police Search' onwards so you can hear for yourself what Lucy's explanations were. These videos are a reenactment of the original trial based on the actual court transcripts purchased by someone who actually attended most days of the trial so he was able to demonstrate times when there was a dramatic pause or what her tone of voice was when she said certain things. These videos will take you through all 17 cases in the trial and then you will understand why she was found guilty of some counts, not guilty of others, and no verdict reached for others. I think there is an assumption that this was a blanket verdict and she was found guilty of everything, but that isn't true. The jury took their time to go through each case one by one.
@ScruffyTubbles6 ай бұрын
You listened to the Court reports nit the transcripts.
@robbie_6 ай бұрын
Yes, I was also troubled by the things I read about this trial.
@annbumfrey68125 ай бұрын
@@robbie_ not half as troubled as those poor parents knowing an evil monster like letby was looking after their tiny babies.Go away and find something else to be troubled about
@robbie_5 ай бұрын
@@annbumfrey6812 What you need to do is called "updating your priors". That means you need to re-evaluate what you "know" to be true based on new evidence. And don't moan at me. Moan at the Royal Statistical Society, who pointed out one of the glaring errors in the prosecution.
@justice100forwin26 ай бұрын
If a case as strong as this can't be considered a guilty verdict , then we would struggle to find most people guilty. Peter says he believes in the jury system yet then says they are not experts. No they are not , that's why expert witnesses give evidence , and as much as possible try to bring understanding of the subject to the common man / woman , who would be on a jury.
@KingBee246 ай бұрын
You're not keeping up ! Dozens of doctors and scientists have said that the 'expert witness' presented the jury with incorrect information.
@JohnnyWednesday6 ай бұрын
Because it's more important that somebody is guilty than the right person being guilty?
@ShawnGitahi6 ай бұрын
How is this case strong,noone saw her do it,,,the post mortems done on all the babies did not prove their theories,,,nothing linked her to the murders apart from the fact that she was the nurse on shift and don't forget that those weren't the only children who died,another nurse had 5kids die on her,why isn't she in prison
@corirenata65415 ай бұрын
If you know anything about the rule of law then you’ll know this case is not strong
@johnholmes9125 ай бұрын
How was this a strong case ?
@donalobrien75826 ай бұрын
Mr Hitchens Is not on his Own, relating to this Lady's Sentence. Experts from the Following Universities such as Edinburgh, Harvard,Bristol & members of the Royal Statistical Society are questioning the way Crucial Evidence was Presented in Court. One of the Scientists who's Paper was cited in the Original case has suggested that his Work was Misinterpreted. Other have gone as Far as to Suggest that, rather then being a Calculated Killer LETBY is a Victim of NHS failings. BRITAIN WAKE UP.
@renszatrapp96396 ай бұрын
@donalobrien7582 do stop saying "WAKE UP".That phrase is so old and overused since Brexit, Covid ,BLM, Me Too,it's dragged out every time.
@louisejeffries71556 ай бұрын
Thank you Mr Hitchensen for speaking up for Lucy
@jillrossiter87576 ай бұрын
Yes, many of my nursing colleagues feel the same.
@markennyee4 ай бұрын
she never done this the lying consultants and managers have done this
@louisejeffries71554 ай бұрын
@@markennyee to be fair the managers tried to stand up for her Once they made the consultant write a letter of apology he went straight to police that day (and not before I might add) Once police and the quack evens with his bogus theories and his bullying coroners got involved it was a done deal Millions of pounds and cushy jobs for all those involved Disgusting
@markennyee4 ай бұрын
@@louisejeffries7155 too much corruption in high power justice she never did this there must be a way for her to clear her name and those liars responsible face justice
@jillrossiter87574 ай бұрын
@@markennyee Me thinks this may come out.Bless the media and the brave souls who have dared to speak out.Stories I could tell---
@michaellarocca83996 ай бұрын
The conviction is safe. The prosecution was required to prove that Lucy Letby had killed or attempted to kill a baby by a deliberate and unlawful act or acts. Expert evidence was given as to the nature of the harm, or combinations of harm, which Letby was alleged deliberately to have inflicted or attempted to inflict in each case: for example, the causing of an air embolus, or the damaging of a baby's liver, or the administration of insulin. The prosecution relied also on other relevant facts and circumstances, such as Letby’s writing of a note which appeared to be a confession, her retention of "trophies" and confidential documents, her presence at the time and place when most of the sudden collapses occurred, the fact that a number of the babies concerned suffered a catastrophic collapse only a very short time after their designated nurse had briefly left the room, and the fact that siblings suffered harm at or about the same time as each other. The defence to each charge was a denial that Letby had deliberately committed any unlawful act which caused, or attempted to cause, fatal harm. The defence raised - but adduced no affirmative evidence of - other possible explanations for the collapse or death. The jury were directed as to the need to exclude those other possibilities before they could convict. The prosecution maintained that Letby’s responsibility for the deaths and sudden collapses of the babies could be inferred from a raft of circumstantial evidence. Letby alone was present on the unit at the time of all of the deteriorations and deaths and was the common factor in all of the cases. She appeared to be fixated with being involved in events in the intensive care nursery and involved herself unnecessarily with babies who had been designated to other nurses. She created, it was alleged, false entries on certain documents to hide her activities, to provide her with an alibi or lay the ground for invented explanations. She retained and took home a large number of handover sheets as "trophies" of her crimes. These handover sheets were confidential documents and should not have been removed from the unit. Over 200 were found hidden under Letby’s bed. After the collapse or death, she searched for the names of some of the babies on the indictment and searched out their families on Facebook. Various handwritten notes were found at her home. One of those notes said “I’m evil I did this”, which the prosecution argued amounted to a confession.
@ruthbashford31766 ай бұрын
The conviction is certainly not safe. The babies Lucy was supposed to have murdered had post mortems and were found to have died from natural causes. Unless, of course you prefer to believe the discredited, long retired, paediatrician Dewi Evans who fantasized about air embolisms and insulin poisoning. The medical evidence has been so thoroughly discredited that it almost appears to have been conjured up out of thin air. And who or what killed the other 10 babies that died over the same time period? Babies also collapsed when Lucy wasn't in the hospital. And whoever created that bogus spreadsheet should be prosecuted for fraud. Saying Lucy retained and took home large number of handover sheets as "trophies" is pure speculation. There is no evidence for it. Likewise searching for families and babies on facebook is not evidence of mass murder. Notes written in the depths of despair are not proof of murder either. Lucy also wrote I did nothing wrong and I'm being persecuted. The level of negligence and incompetence on that unqualified neonatal unit was breathtaking. That is the only crime committed.
@KingBee246 ай бұрын
You've obviously not been following the case. Read any of the recent articles in 'The New Yorker', 'The Guardian' or 'The Telegraph' ...
@DeeLee-p8c6 ай бұрын
Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
@GeorginaJett6 ай бұрын
WRONG.
@michaellarocca83996 ай бұрын
@@KingBee24 I’ve read all the recent DT articles, including the ‘Special Report’ that questions the statistical evidence. I’ve also read the New Yorker article. I have not read the recent Guardian article, though from what I understand it covers most of the same territory as the DT report.
@normanstanbury338712 күн бұрын
she was a scape goat for the NHS
@TotesEmoshVibes2 ай бұрын
Am I missing something here?.Genuinely. The deaths literally followed her from her night time shifts, to her day time shifts. They stopped when she went on holiday. Fine, call it circumstantial evidence all you want but if she's innocent she must be the most unluckiest person in the UK.
@clairedavison56072 ай бұрын
I’m not sure how true that is. One of the baby’s died when she wasn’t even in the hospital that day, I also heard that they marked her present on the chart if she had been on the shift the before the baby died. But they didn’t do that with the other nurses. How can that be fair? It seems that everything was geared up to make her guilty as possible. They also got rid of the statistician when she came up with the fact that other nurses could also be portrayed in the same way. So it appears they weren’t (the police) willing to look for alternative explanations to the babies’ deaths and that doesn’t constitute a fair trial.
@thisismetoday6 ай бұрын
I’m confused - why are we talking about her potentially being innocent when nothing coming out in the 10-month long trial suggests this?
@robinhood46406 ай бұрын
It's because everything in the 10-month trial, only suggests she is guilty, nothing came out that actually proves it.
@DJWESG16 ай бұрын
its part of a wider agenda to undermine our systems in the uk. hithcens is part of that problem.
@peterhitchens42406 ай бұрын
Because the evdience of her guilt is so weak and full of holes. English courts do seek to prove innocence. They attempt to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
@blzebub26 ай бұрын
@@peterhitchens4240 Bullshit.
@johnholmes9126 ай бұрын
Nothing suggested her guilt either
@anonnemo25046 ай бұрын
Whether or not one agrees with Mr. Hitchens on a particular issue (on this one, I am neutral), his great powers of reasoning always make him well worth listening to.
@whimsicalamoeba54656 ай бұрын
He is however, prone to rash conclusions based off naught but anecdotal experience or testimony. I'd argue his reasoning deeply compromised as a result. He's a contrarian, which is the real reason he gets wheeled out over myriad topics.
@castelodeossos39476 ай бұрын
@@whimsicalamoeba5465 To call someone a contrarian simply because he often is in disagreement with what most people think is perhaps the most condescending and distrustful thing one can say about another person. It presumes that the person is dishonest and doesn't mean what s/he says. It is only reasonable to presume that anyone who makes such presumptions is her-/himself dishonest and doesn't mean what s/he says. The liar always thinks everyone else is a liar.
@bluebellbeatnik49456 ай бұрын
@@whimsicalamoeba5465 like his brother.
@AndrewOTodd6 ай бұрын
@@castelodeossos3947that’s not the meaning of contrarian. Contrarian describes a person’s disposition, not their motives, which, in any case, are likely to be multifaceted. It’s clearly Peter’s disposition to run against the herd. Like any disposition it can have advantages and disadvantages.
@tommymorrison64786 ай бұрын
Powers of reasoning on their own are worthless. It's the basic premises that make the man.
@1oldgit4 ай бұрын
Be interesting to know what the mortality rate on that unit has been since Letby. Nobody has mentioned the scribblings that were found which ,if nothing else, showed some psychological issues.
@ElSiv844 ай бұрын
It dropped significantly, which at first glance looks damning to Letby. But then one must consider that around the time she was taken off the ward the hospital was downgraded to no longer look after the sickest babies. So really it could be either: a) A killer was taken off the ward so the death count dropped. Or... b) An underfunded and potentially unsafe hospital that was unfit to care for the sickest babies was downgraded so no longer had any to kill through their incompetence. Worth noting that there was a number of deaths that took place during 2015 and 2016, the same time as the ones Letby was charged for, which she wasn't investigated for and weren't on the spreadsheet the jury were shown. And them alone, the ones she wasn't involved with, represented quite a spike in baby deaths. I do start to wonder if it the real problem was the quality of the hospital itself and that Letby was a scapegoat.
@lulusportal40186 ай бұрын
I’m really uncomfortable with this. We need to have this reviewed
@ellea25416 ай бұрын
Are you uncomfortable having already done your due diliigence by reading/listening to the court transcripts and what was actually said by Lucy herself? If not, please do the 10-20 hours of homework before concluding that you don't understand the topic: Go to CrimeScene2Courtroom channel on KZbin and start listening from the video 'Lucy Letby - The Police Search' onwards. These videos are a reenactment of the original trial based on the actual court transcripts purchased by someone who actually attended most days of the trial so he was able to demonstrate times when there was a dramatic pause or what her tone of voice was when she said certain things. These videos will take you through all 17 cases in the trial and then you will understand why she was found guilty of some counts, not guilty of others, and no verdict reached for others. I think there is an assumption that this was a blanket verdict and she was found guilty of everything, but that isn't true. The jury took their time to go through each case one by one.
@allyy2105 ай бұрын
1. There is NO WAY IN HELL Lucy Letby would be such a prolific killer and leave absolutely ZERO physical evidence or not been caught at least in part trying to commit the murder.. She just ISNT such a masterful killer. Killers learn and take years to get that good and evn they ALWAYS leave something behind or slip somewhere. She is too young and not enough time between murders for her to grow and learn so proficiently top make no mstakes. 2. UNLESS she is completely psychopathic and has ZERO empathy, her adrenalin after each murder would have been evident in her behaviours straight after the murders. 3. Neonatal babies fall ill and can escalate extremely fast. These babies were being checked by consulktants once a week on average, babies need at least daily checks. Perhaps on paper it has been said that they weren't that ill on the chats, BUT what if that is based on consultants checking them days before they passed (RIP) and the sudden decline was when LL was with them, but they were decling ealier without being examined, therefore the guilt falls to LL instead of negligent consultants. 4. She seems low on the narcicissm chart, but there are some in this case that fall very close to NPD and who would have more to lose if found neglignet and a therefore a higher image management to maintain I dont know or have a bias about her innocence/guilt, but these 4 issues pose a problem for me with her being guilty.
@HENNAtabasun19905 ай бұрын
Completely agree, Lucy Letby is definitely innocent.
@karlunknown46576 ай бұрын
Hitchens whistling when he speaks is really annoying me
@peterhitchens42406 ай бұрын
Then get a new hearing aid.
@hitterandrewpickles46496 ай бұрын
wow. i can't unhear it now.
@edelgyn26996 ай бұрын
That's why his dream career in adult phone chat dived. 😜
@karlunknown46576 ай бұрын
@@edelgyn2699 🤣😂
@liamcarroll54416 ай бұрын
I would imagine everything annoys you.
@ivywild6286 ай бұрын
A few months ago a family recieved a £30 million pay out due to negligence in the baby's care in icu. Now Lucy is a lot cheaper. Because criminal payouts are capped in the thousands. This is criminal.
@ianmcdonald30536 ай бұрын
Bingo!
@Heligany5 ай бұрын
omg that makes so much sense
@benmadill48485 ай бұрын
Makes me laugh that the starting point for all these arguments is that the judiciary system is primarily motivated by achieving justice. Ironically, nothing could be further from the truth.
@gilliangourley75586 ай бұрын
Maternity wards are failing mothers everyday., up and down the country look st the consultant who accused her. He said he caught ger virtually red handed . He ether did or didnt. Which one is it
@KingBee246 ай бұрын
... and this consultants 'evidence' is inconsistent ...
@gilliangourley75586 ай бұрын
@@steveblundell7766 I have had experience of the nhs at its worst. One big cover up
@55tranquility24 күн бұрын
Well, turns out the 'expert witness' has changed his mind... thus making every conviction unsound. Turns out yet again, the minority of people calling out the utter ridiculousness and absurdity of this case an who were slandered are after all correct - because they have more than half a brain cell and can see none of the case against LL made any sense whatsoever and stank of a stitch up. I hope LL is awarded billions in damages - and I hope every journalist who failed to look into this in any depth and simply believed the nonsense of incompetent police and a charlatan 'expert' witness and terrible stats quit their jobs - because journalists they ain't. Journalists used to be the adversaries of authority, the establishment and politicians now they just parrot along and are the establishment.
@S.Trades6 ай бұрын
I wonder how much evidence it would take to persuade him. She's been caught out and she's been put away for life. Rightly so.
@Ida_Dunne_Moore6 ай бұрын
@@S.Trades when was she caught out?
@poppyland746 ай бұрын
Definitely want all trials conducted in the KZbin comments and the pages of the Daily Mail. Much more reliable than in a court with a judge and jury.
@carbonicoyster59076 ай бұрын
"should we not have more faith in our jury system"... How on earth is allowing an appeal not having faith in exactly the same system? This kids are borderline disabled.
@Jay-hw7dq6 ай бұрын
If this were a male nurse absolutely no one would be questioning his guilt. No one questioned Harold Shipman's "circumstancial evidence" conviction. Women can be capable of horrific crimes too.
@Bigshrimps6 ай бұрын
I absolutely agree everybody questioning this case is annoying she did it, i don’t care about all the moaning they are doing about circumstantial evidence and beyond reasonable doubt sometimes they are just guilty and she is guilty she had a motive she wrote a note calling herself evil and she looks guilty because she is also the numbers don’t lie
@JonSmith-cx7gr6 ай бұрын
Absolutely completely true. But a dodgy conviction is a dodgy conviction regardless.
@garyphisher73756 ай бұрын
@@Bigshrimps Have you read the New Yorker article?
@ileanamuntean73386 ай бұрын
Beverly Allitt.
@standardtuning4guitars4235 ай бұрын
@@garyphisher7375 i just read some of the aritcle. It is very very long. It does mention the handwritten notes. The article doesnt provide any explanation for why she wrote it or put forward any defence for it.
@jonyasou4 ай бұрын
Have you heard the news of the lethal bacteria infection that was in those baby units that no one reportedly mentioned at the trials? What can one do for Lucy? Surely, when such evidence comes to light her conviction could be overturned superfast??? Please help her if it's in your power.
@ts78444 ай бұрын
Dear god, please get your facts straight. You need to educate yourself on this case before making such ridiculous claims.
@timedwards57345 ай бұрын
I looked closely at this case and i had grave concerns about the outcome. In my opinion this conviction was NOT beyond areasonable doubt and i felt the Judge approached this case presuming she was guilty and needed to prove her innocence. That is NOT how the law works, you walk into the dock as an innocent individual, then the crown must prove your guilt. A whole life tariff is the most severe sentence in British law, because of this i believe an appeal should be mandatory. This is probably the ONLY time i have agreed with Peter Hitchens!!
@TheMoonatDawn6 ай бұрын
I don't know the ins and outs of all of this but I've seen some of the comments she said to parents whilst their baby was dying or in the immediate time afterwards and it was I felt, sadistically cruel. I actually started crying imaging how the mother (any mother) would have felt in one instance so mean was the interaction. This doesn't mean she did it of course but it adds to the picture for me.
@yingyang10086 ай бұрын
No one cares about your feelings - we care about evidence
@ShawnGitahi6 ай бұрын
Did they report those words then or has it just come up in trial
@manofkent44726 ай бұрын
Simon Webb (history debunked on youtube) has a very interesting view on this as he used to write a lot on true crime. Issues with this case revolve around the Judge's comments in both cases & conduct of the defence team.
@niriop6 ай бұрын
@@manofkent4472 Webb compared it to a different case and then dismissed the guilty conviction because it shared a similarity, ignoring all of the additional evidence and witness testimony.
@mercuryrising5474 ай бұрын
This case was dodgy from day one. The consultants need to be hauled into court
@markennyee4 ай бұрын
they are guilty but they will all disappear to the countries they originate from to avoid justice
@jjsmallpiece92344 ай бұрын
The jury can only make a decision on the evidence presented. If the evidence was incorrect or false analysis and conclusions reached then questions need to be asked. I don't know if Letby is guilty or not but the from what evidence is in the public domain seems very open to question.
@Samuel-hd3cp4 ай бұрын
I think it says a lot that that particular hospital no longer admits babies with serious health problems. 30 babies died on that ward during that time. Letby wasn't there for 21 of them. But the court was only shown spreadsheet that showed details for the 9 babies, not the others.
@lennymice22614 ай бұрын
What is your source for 30 babies?
@lauraj84294 ай бұрын
This is interesting, please could you give your source?
@waterloosunset45596 ай бұрын
I know those paediatricians and used to do a study on those babies. I believe she’s guilty and so did the jury.
@lynnbraben766 ай бұрын
The New Yorker article STILL isn't available in the UK
@slyox666 ай бұрын
Try using a VPN , it's blocked in this country which kind of speaks volumes about the case. The link is still active, check it out, you'll be shaking your head in disbelief like I was
@lauraj84294 ай бұрын
You can read it on the app.
@philholding69053 ай бұрын
@@lauraj8429 many thanks!
@KZgun4hire6 ай бұрын
It's all all about been beyond reasonable doubt. So how do I eliminate the doubt created by the evidence the autopsies showed no foul play. If I fail to remove that reasonable doubt then how can I in good conscience reach any conclusion.
@cupofteawithpoetry4 ай бұрын
Also the author of the air embolism article used by the prosecution; Dr Shoo Lee, came forward at the court of appeal to say his article had been misinterpreted - but again, was told this was not a relevant new piece of evidence due to the defence not raising it at the trial. I wonder how many more pieces of new evidence will get dismissed in this way. It's beginning to feel like the second time Lucy has been in a no win situation - first when she had to defend being a killer, when there's a possibility there was no killer in the first place - and now have new pieces of evidence dismissed by the court of appeal. Where is the fairness in that? And yes I do care about the babies and their families, but I also believe everyone deserves a fair trial.
@deldia6 ай бұрын
In a world of millions and millions of nurses, how unlucky does one have to be to have a spike of infant deaths and coordinated with your shifts? I’ve not looked into the raw numbers.
@ames876i36 ай бұрын
@@deldia further awful luck that in short few-minute windows of time right she's aline with the babies that they have a sudden and unexpected collapse!
@garyphisher73756 ай бұрын
@@ames876i3 Lucy was one of only two Nurses who worked on that ward, that had advanced training. That's why she was present. There were another 9 deaths which occurred when she wasn't present. At the very same time, the Maternity ward at the same hospital had a spike in Stillborns - should we blame Lucy for them too?
@Calidore16 ай бұрын
They counted bad data, they made up events to suit their narrative
@deldia6 ай бұрын
@@ames876i3 that happens sometimes, right?
@aydan01614 ай бұрын
@@ames876i3 wow another person with zero grasp of statistics. It’s embarrassing how you people talk with such arrogance.
@XPLAlN6 ай бұрын
Please spare us from jurors with the mentality of this host. This is the problem with statistical ‘evidence’ and the general public. The deaths on Letby’s watch were not the ONLY deaths. If you cherry pick from the total mortality you can implicate, most likely, multiple staff on the unit, by coincidence. In each case, when the individual “moves from the day shift to the night shift the deaths move with her”. If you are fool enough to cherry pick at the data, or simply prefer a conviction to statistical rigour, such coincidence is inevitable. OTOH there probably wasn’t a single member of staff on duty for every death during the period of the cluster. Letby, as a matter of fact, wasn’t. You are then left trying to discriminate which deaths were suspicious enough to include in the data and run into another problem - of the PMs at the time, none were flagged as suspicious. This trial did not convince me that there was anything other than a cluster of deaths which was entirely plausible given the unit WAS assessed as deficient in standard of care at that time.
@evolassunglasses46736 ай бұрын
Mainstream media were very slow on this one.
@Vince-um5nq6 ай бұрын
They legally couldn’t comment on the case while there was an ongoing legal proceeding
@strippins6 ай бұрын
They should have had free rein to do so after the verdict last summer. It seems quote clear the primary purpose of the retrial was the maintain the reporting restrictions themselves. It is not surprising and was clear to most concerned health care professionals information and concern of this kind would emerge shortly after the lifting of restrictions.
@solitarianihilista14546 ай бұрын
Actually they've been very quick. She was convicted less than a year ago and already there has been one very long and detailed article in the New Yorker followed by two major stories in both the Guardian and the Telegraph and now contributions from Peter Hitchens and others. Expect a lot more to follow.
@Hickalum6 ай бұрын
The purpose of mainstream media is to obscure the truth … And if you can’t see that then they are doing a very good job of it.
@jono1457-qd9ft6 ай бұрын
@@cupofteawithpoetry Damning headlines and broadcasts around the world, relentlessly.
@freemindthinkerezrapound50716 ай бұрын
Peter is 100% correct nowadays people are judging by emotions or being uncomfortable rather than evidence presented or not presented we see people saying auditors are making them uncomfortable and it's illegal
@CherryDreamer965 ай бұрын
I remember hearing about this story before it "broke" in the media. From day one there were people adamant that Lucy was being used as a scapegoat for major hospital failings. I have no idea what is true and what is not, But it has to be said there is more to this than meets the eye. Like most news stories.
@CherryDreamer965 ай бұрын
Interestingly, Those people named here before it went public
@terryb45475 ай бұрын
The neonatal ward where she worked babies died every day all were very ill, but the prosecutor made the case of the babies that died were only on the days she worked, babies that died whilst she was on holiday were never mentioned basically her defense lawyer was useless, also the judge was biased he'd already decided she was guilty without the jury.
@stumagoo23954 ай бұрын
@@terryb4547 The defence assisted the.prosecution imo. The jury were presented with only circumstantial evidence, a pitiful defence barrister and very biased media coverage.
@Killerwhale-s4y6 ай бұрын
She had written confessions in her handwriting , she had medical notes under her bed relating to all victims She searched the bereaved parents thousands of times on social media She was on shift every occasion She was completely detached from any emotions during the trial. She changed her nursing documentation she changed her statements and she changed her story to fit narratives It’s hard to comprehend such evil given her career and innocent looks but she is undoubtedly guilty in my mind and justice is served
@Steven-ze2zk6 ай бұрын
Facts.
@Killerwhale-s4y6 ай бұрын
@therian_forever12 it can’t be refuted it’s factual. We can all have opinions and yes I concur that the physical evidence is lacking but the circumstantial evidence is enough.
@bornagraphicversuspornagraphic6 ай бұрын
@@Killerwhale-s4y You clearly don't know what a fact is.
@Killerwhale-s4y6 ай бұрын
@@bornagraphicversuspornagraphic yeah alright. Ain’t gonna get into an argument with a stranger on the internet. You have your beliefs I have mine
@bornagraphicversuspornagraphic6 ай бұрын
@@Killerwhale-s4y So it's all about belief now is it? Not facts then.