Lucy Letby’s verdict is ‘unsafe’ after ‘entirely hypothetical’ case against her | Peter Hitchens

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  • Опубликовано: 25 янв 2025

Комментарии • 2,4 тыс.

  • @mortuaryartist
    @mortuaryartist 5 месяцев назад +114

    Having worked for the NHS, there are no limits to what these people will cover up, and will throw anyone under the bus.

    • @christinedavis5813
      @christinedavis5813 5 месяцев назад

      Yes I came up against them and they Lie and Lie to save them self's, Doctors to they Lie a lot , a lot of them that I came across anyway, and PAL they are in the Pockets Of the NHS management more than fighting for the Patients from my experience, I feel they threw Lucy under the Buss

    • @grrinc
      @grrinc 4 месяца назад +9

      I can personally attest to this. That’s why my immediate impulse was to assume LL was innocent all those years ago.

    • @bwilliamson3887
      @bwilliamson3887 3 месяца назад +1

      They tries to cover it for so long but she's guilty

  • @MikeS-hs4vh
    @MikeS-hs4vh 5 месяцев назад +70

    Trust me, until you have stood trial, you will never appreciate how flawed the criminal justice system is, relying as it does on the general ignorance of the public who process information emotionally not intellectually.

    • @annbumfrey6812
      @annbumfrey6812 4 месяца назад

      @@MikeS-hs4vh how do you know

    • @MikeS-hs4vh
      @MikeS-hs4vh 4 месяца назад +6

      @annbumfrey6812 I've been there. Enough said. It's a different world. It's a less efficient, less respectable, less intellectually-informed, less sophisticated arena than people realise. It's far less about truth and reason, than it is about simply winning with a sophistry of debate constricted by arcane rules.

    • @goatlps
      @goatlps 4 месяца назад

      @@MikeS-hs4vh yeah, but you were guilty, right? 99% of crimes don't go to trial, so when it does you're usually guilty as sin. Also, most serious crimes are proven beyond doubt with DNA.

    • @stephenswift9896
      @stephenswift9896 4 месяца назад +5

      ​@@goatlps where did you get that from?

    • @pixiedragon83
      @pixiedragon83 4 месяца назад

      ​@@annbumfrey6812I have also experienced this...as a result I have zero faith in jurys, the legal system as a whole, and the idea of "justice"...there is no justice...guilty people walk free while innocent people are punished...the system is f**ked...anyone who think otherwise is either completely naive, deluded, or part of it... 👍

  • @sarahgriffiths3419
    @sarahgriffiths3419 5 месяцев назад +185

    The NHS does everything in its power to cover-up bad practice, neglect, laziness, arrogance and ignorance, and I believe strongly that doctors and those in charge would rather blame a single person than admit their hospital is failing. I know many people who have been made seriously ill, and others who have died, because of poor practice, and it was all admitted, yet the hospital fought to the very end, so they wouldn't have to pay out. A solicitor told us the NHS has deep pockets and will fight until the person has run out of money. The whole NHS system is corrupt.

    • @Cepheidvariable
      @Cepheidvariable 5 месяцев назад +5

      Yes.

    • @generalwasteman
      @generalwasteman 5 месяцев назад +21

      The NHS could be saved instantly by stripping out 4-5 levels of middle management, they provide the cover between the actual productive staff on the front line (coupled with the public) for the political appointees at the top.

    • @denisberarie1912
      @denisberarie1912 5 месяцев назад

      @@sarahgriffiths3419 I can attest to this. By the way did you know during Covid-19 there was a hospital directive not to report Covid-19 as the cause of death? Did you know Doctor deliberately admitted vulnerable patients to hospital during Covid and resulted in patients contracted Covid and die? One particular patient could have been rehydrated at home with a giving set! Did you know I quit nursing because I did not feel comfortable with what I was observing but bound by Confidentiality policy? Did you know that I have observed many people made into a scapegoat within the NHS? Did you know the corruption that takes place within the NHS?

    • @deedee46x
      @deedee46x 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@generalwastemanI agree with you and bring back crown indemnity and Immunity

    • @laremabella
      @laremabella 5 месяцев назад +5

      But those are single cases, you've never heard of babies dying in quick succession of eachother with ONE COMMON FACTOR- Lucy Letby. If she didn't look as "normal" as she does, you'd believe in what she did to those babies.

  • @williamoram6969
    @williamoram6969 5 месяцев назад +34

    There’s a nasty smell surrounding this case….irresponsible press reporting caused the public to assume her guilt & then tough sentencing followed.For those that dug a little deeper the evidence is questionable at best, vital evidence was withheld, & those on prosecution side circled the wagons in a effort to give the public the result they wanted.

    • @ep1929
      @ep1929 4 месяца назад +1

      @@williamoram6969 tough sentencing followed? She was found guilty of multiple murders and multiple attempted murders.
      What "sentence" do you suggest?

    • @goatlps
      @goatlps 4 месяца назад

      She wrote she did it! LOL

  • @borntobewild8905
    @borntobewild8905 5 месяцев назад +8

    Been saying this since it all began she is innocent!

    • @John-p7i5g
      @John-p7i5g 5 месяцев назад +3

      Same. I thought she was guilty for about 3 days after the initial verdict. Then I did some further reading the contradictions started appearing.

  • @MsDormy
    @MsDormy 4 месяца назад +6

    I hope Lucy gets a new, fair trial, with a good defence.

  • @frankjaeger393
    @frankjaeger393 5 месяцев назад +77

    The main stream media really destroyed this poor woman, it was a witch hunt, they decided she was a monster and she never stood a chance.

    • @derry1423
      @derry1423 5 месяцев назад +10

      ❤ I have said that from day one

    • @scottaznavourian3720
      @scottaznavourian3720 4 месяца назад +3

      ​@@derry1423 a 21st century lindy chamberlin

    • @ledzebulon6235
      @ledzebulon6235 4 месяца назад

      A government spokesperson stated 30 years ago."At least 5% of convicted prisoners in prison today are statically totally innocent!!"
      I believe this woman is innocent. The prosecution can say anything in court against this bewildered woman but there are major discrepancies in the evidence presented in her trial!!
      That's the bottom line!

    • @jrobertson9796
      @jrobertson9796 4 месяца назад +3

      In the case of solicitor Sally Clark who was falsely accused of murdering her baby, the jury were swayed by statistics presented by paediatrician Meadow and ‘Meadow’s Law’. He used statistics erroneously and moreover statistics was not his area of expertise. Sally Clark spent three years in prison before her conviction was overturned. Paediatricians Meadow and Southall were very well paid expert witnesses used by the crown prosecution in cases where babies had died and where it might be in the interests of the NHS to obscure the reasons why. In the case of Sally Clark, for instance, she had had two previous babies die, apparently for reasons unknown. When a third died Meadow popped up. Sally’s babies had been born early and received their vaccines with no account taken of this. The jury, however, were told that vaccines should be ruled out as having anything to do with the deaths. This is illogical. But nothing can be allowed to threaten sacred cows, can it? Whether they be wars (Ian Huntley miscarriage of justice) vaccine damage (Sally Clark and others) or child abuse by the state (eg - children in care homes).

    • @scottaznavourian3720
      @scottaznavourian3720 4 месяца назад +2

      @jrobertson9796 I j just watched about Sally Clark and it seemed both deaths (two mot 3 ) could be natural and all the 'injuries' we due to cpr attempts...sadly sally drank herself to death after she was exonerated

  • @angelahenry1511
    @angelahenry1511 5 месяцев назад +12

    Bottom line ..if evidence was kept away from court then needs a retrial !

  • @ianbarnes8593
    @ianbarnes8593 5 месяцев назад +210

    I listened to the trial of Lucy Letby podcast at the time. Newspaper and online media articles were sensationalising her for the most part. I have to say that at the conclusion of the trial and her conviction I was less than convinced she was guilty. Her testimony during the trial and in police interviews remained very consistent and unambiguous. She didn’t make up stories or have wild theories for the causes of these deaths. Not exactly the actions of a cold calculating serial killer, as the media have painted her. My impression of her was more of a rabbit caught in the headlights. My opinion doesn’t count for nothing of course but I’ve shared it here anyway.

    • @onepartyroule
      @onepartyroule 5 месяцев назад +6

      Did you mean “count for nothing” or “count for anything “?

    • @ianbarnes8593
      @ianbarnes8593 5 месяцев назад +22

      @@onepartyroule Ahh, my 70’s secondary school education laid bare… ‘anything’ is the correct grammar.

    • @Swansong321
      @Swansong321 5 месяцев назад

      Newspapers do that to the defendant in ALL criminal cases..they use sensationalist journalism and only give the prosecution story..WHY not worry about ALL those cases?

    • @rossisempre86
      @rossisempre86 5 месяцев назад +27

      If you ignore the mountains of evidence against her and the constant coincidences. Sure she’s innocent. 🙄

    • @Play-gl2yw
      @Play-gl2yw 5 месяцев назад +10

      @@rossisempre86 just to be on the safe side, I wouldn’t want her coming round to my house and babysitting for my godchildren

  • @annabelgalt4616
    @annabelgalt4616 5 месяцев назад +289

    The Post Office scandal seemed unbelievable too. Convicted on evidence.
    A trusted organisation that people cannot believe would allow gross miscarriages of justice.
    When the weight of these systems comes down on you, an innocent person doesn't stand a chance.

    • @puclopuclik4108
      @puclopuclik4108 5 месяцев назад +6

      Actually there was no evidence in the post office scandal.

    • @annabelgalt4616
      @annabelgalt4616 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@puclopuclik4108 Horizon. Then the people who testified it couldn't make mistakes. The people who lied and said it couldn't be manipulated.

    • @ExecutionerHopkins
      @ExecutionerHopkins 5 месяцев назад

      Yet you still participate in the very same system. You are part of the corruption.

    • @darcyperkins7041
      @darcyperkins7041 5 месяцев назад +14

      ​@@puclopuclik4108No evidence!? Maybe rather that it was flawed and incorrect because of faulty software.

    • @puclopuclik4108
      @puclopuclik4108 5 месяцев назад

      @darcyperkins7041 They had no evidence to convince them of the fraud. Even when the software showed missing money, those money never existed. It has never been taken away. The post office was pure fraud. Lucy Letby is a different story.

  • @johnkeating4221
    @johnkeating4221 5 месяцев назад +12

    It does not take ten months to convict a guilty person but it does to throw blame on an innocent person and convict them.

    • @John-p7i5g
      @John-p7i5g 5 месяцев назад +4

      And also the police took a very long time to decide whether to proceed or not.

    • @EcoSailor
      @EcoSailor 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@John-p7i5git took them ages to fabricate a case against Lucy and find their "expert" witness, Evans, who is a discredited charlatan.

    • @GRMLS5
      @GRMLS5 5 месяцев назад +1

      What rot.

    • @watnamecaniuseforfs
      @watnamecaniuseforfs 20 дней назад

      ​@@John-p7i5g
      I think the consulant suddenly remembered catching Lucy virtually red-handed 13 months ago.....and told the police.

  • @jaywalker3087
    @jaywalker3087 5 месяцев назад +51

    I'm a retired Nurse...
    I've been following this since the start.
    I've always thought that the whole affair was Dodgy...
    It's not been clear enough with too much taken for granted....
    This needs investigating properly.....

    • @lucypalmer5228
      @lucypalmer5228 5 месяцев назад +3

      It has been - that's what 2 separate criminal trials are for. Both found her guilty. The Court of Appeal found no problems. The NMC struck her off. Do you not believe in the criminal justice system or your former professional regulator?

    • @John-p7i5g
      @John-p7i5g 5 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@lucypalmer5228 case was investigated but not thoroughly, and the parameters for both favoured the prosecution.
      Institutions have vested interests and can get things wrong. So can authorities.

    • @lucypalmer5228
      @lucypalmer5228 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@John-p7i5g Well there has been 2 trials with different judges and juries and a court of appeal hearing. There has been an NMC hearing. They all concluded the same thing. So every system must be bent according to you from the criminal courts, to the ordinary people like you and me who are called to sit on juries, to a professional nursing regulator. Or it could be that she was totally guilty and they were all doing their job properly and protecting the public from her? Funny how the deaths didn't happen before she turned up, and haven't since she stopped working there. Funny how she called herself evil. Funny how she is apparently friendly with other child killers in prison. Funny how her own parents didn't even turn up at her second trial.

    • @John-p7i5g
      @John-p7i5g 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@lucypalmer5228 both trials under identical parameters. The second trial was a formality. There's been no appeal - it was rejected.
      The spike in deaths coincided precisely with CoCH being raised to a level 2. The spike ended when it was lowered to a level 1. Which nicely coincided with LL being taken off ward.
      The diary entries' validity as evidence has been comprehensively debunked. They are useless evidence.
      And parents not turning up at trial is completely irrelevant.
      The case rests on flawed statistical methods and all the rest is circumstantial.
      A profoundly unsafe judgement in my view. You can't just lock someone up on a flawed hypothesis, groupthink, confirmation bias and 'feels'.

    • @lucypalmer5228
      @lucypalmer5228 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@John-p7i5g Nonsense. You're not a lawyer, just a conspiracy theorist. Would you want her looking after your baby? And the 2nd trial was all about the evidence of a doctor who caught her red-handed. So he's all part of the bent system too is he? The jury should have believed a nurse who called herself evil, a nurse who was involved in a very large number of infant deaths over a doctor who was just there to report what he had caught her doing?

  • @douglascrockatt3101
    @douglascrockatt3101 5 месяцев назад +264

    The British police and Judicial system are in a very poor place

    • @nvcn86
      @nvcn86 5 месяцев назад +3

      so is your dad

    • @JaziRedz
      @JaziRedz 5 месяцев назад +16

      It's a two tier policing and judical system now... certain demographics get favourable treatment/lesser sentences, they also get more training and support off the government. Look at the sentences for the rioters, some have been put behind bars for literally chanting... whereas someone smashing a bus cabin and threatening the driver with a 24 inch zombie sword whilst horrified passengers watched in fear received a suspended sentence and employment training.

    • @20quid
      @20quid 5 месяцев назад +9

      Years of Conservative underfunding have left it this way.

    • @jaijai5250
      @jaijai5250 5 месяцев назад

      @@20quidof course it’s down to government police’s, but the rioters will insist it’s black people and immigrants who cause all the problems in the UK.

    • @Adamstandbythejams
      @Adamstandbythejams 5 месяцев назад +12

      ​@@nvcn86strange man you are

  • @thefloatingapothecaryroman16
    @thefloatingapothecaryroman16 5 месяцев назад +41

    How do you silence people? You put them in jail or into an asylum.

  • @ashleymartin4512
    @ashleymartin4512 5 месяцев назад +59

    how the ramblings of a distressed nurse whose had the trauma of witnessing lots of babies dying(from things that they have no control over)is evidence there guilty..................is frankly beyond me....and unless i see evidence that says otherwise it makes her conviction"extremely unsafe".......

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe 5 месяцев назад +2

      Ashlee, this is depressing as heck and i actually believed all the papers that insisted she was this cold heartless monster.

    • @Merlin3189
      @Merlin3189 5 месяцев назад +1

      @Ashleymartin - So true and I think this aspect was not sufficiently acknowledged at the trial.

    • @FC-PeakVersatility
      @FC-PeakVersatility 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@PHlophe this is how the mainstream media control the thoughts in the minds of their readers.

    • @birdsongandblood
      @birdsongandblood 5 месяцев назад

      How did those babies overdose on insulin under her care? Hmmmmmmm

    • @birdsongandblood
      @birdsongandblood 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@PHlopheshe is 🙄

  • @mattlion4725
    @mattlion4725 5 месяцев назад +41

    The system is supposed to allow for an appeal? She has not been allowed an appeal? If the system is so amazingly accurate (it is not) then letting her appeal should be no problem. This is about the conviction being sound not about guilt. This needs readdressing

    • @Zerpentsa6598
      @Zerpentsa6598 5 месяцев назад +1

      Rigged.

    • @ruthbashford3176
      @ruthbashford3176 5 месяцев назад

      @@steveblundell7766 Just being innocent is not good enough. Until this case I still had some faith in our justice system but not anymore. Lucy's trials were like 17th Century witch trials. The discredited, long retired Dr Dewi Evans is the new Witchfinder General.

    • @S.Trades
      @S.Trades 2 месяца назад

      Her grounds for appeal were examined by three judges over a 4 day hearing. It was rejected. That's why she can't appeal.

  • @reggiesmith3866
    @reggiesmith3866 5 месяцев назад +330

    If there is the slightest chance that Lucy Letby has not done the horrific things she was convicted for there MUST be an independent investigation.

    • @jmum189
      @jmum189 5 месяцев назад +44

      Her legal team passed over making several arguments for some bizarre reason. The prosecution cherry picked those deaths with which she was present, and those deaths are high in number. But what is also high in number are those deaths when she wasn`t even there. There is something odd going on at that hospital. I think she is the fall woman. And that leaves the question of who was there during most of the deaths, both those cherry picked and those not?

    • @janicelewin447
      @janicelewin447 5 месяцев назад +15

      She did it

    • @reggiesmith3866
      @reggiesmith3866 5 месяцев назад +25

      @@janicelewin447 She probably did but if serious doubts exist more investigations are needed.

    • @elmztana1201
      @elmztana1201 5 месяцев назад +24

      ​@@jmum189man stop , if she was another ethnicity you guys wouldn't talk like this

    • @Teribus13
      @Teribus13 5 месяцев назад +19

      We wouldn't be hearing any of this if we were discussing a male nurse.

  • @gerhardris
    @gerhardris 5 месяцев назад +8

    As a former Dutch DA, penal judge and barrister with thirty years experience in courts of law I'm deeply shocked by the medieval level of the law in England.
    Even though the Dutch legal system like most legal systems in the world is seriously flawed at least the law that derives from the French Code Penal and procedures is in order.
    It seems to me to be so bad that if possible England should be expelled from the European Convention of Human Rights. It's a bloody legal witch hunt trial.
    If I understand it correctly the judge, prosecution, and defence decide pre trial what evidence is admissible. They must thus be telepathic.
    Thus the jury isn't shown the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth when as in this case during the trial expert opinions in their respective fields of expertise are brought to the attention of all parties except Lucy Letby and the jury!
    The so called free independent press accepts a gag order during what was it 7 or more months of a trial that with any competent judge would have been thrown out of court for lack of evidence. It shouldn't even have come to trial.
    For me the first time a saw some evidence of the case the what was it writing by Lucy Letby in which she stated to be a bad person is convincing evidence of someone who is innocent even though for people who don't have much experience how certain personality types react to the pressures and feelings of guilt having failed to save the babies in such a way being openly scape goated by writing it down is coping behavior I've witnessed several times in different cases.
    The jury should have been presented with the expert opinions based on broadly held consensus in the respective fields of expertise including the methods of research. On several key points this hasn't been the case. Leading also to a trial by media. Boy oh boy.

    • @lucypalmer5228
      @lucypalmer5228 4 месяца назад

      You don't know what you are talking about.

    • @FINEFELINE333
      @FINEFELINE333 4 месяца назад +1

      I have to agree with you. The continental legal system is a search for the truth whereas our system unfortunately is an adversarial one, a contest where the best performance wins and truth is often the casualty. To quote Peter Hitchens, the case is entirely based on hypotheses. To that I would add that the sheer wight of theories, speculation and absence of any proof undoubtedly make this an unsafe conviction and should arguably have been thrown out of court.

  • @Aspartame69
    @Aspartame69 5 месяцев назад +83

    It was bad enough when she was convicted by algorithm, but it turns out the imputed data into that algorithm was faulty too? Madness.

    • @morganitEm00NrAVEN
      @morganitEm00NrAVEN 5 месяцев назад +4

      There's a video on RUclips that explains how a man in America was falsely accused and convicted by an algorithm as well. He was eventually acquitted but it took years to prove his innocence.

    • @PatrickMcAsey
      @PatrickMcAsey 5 месяцев назад +4

      @@Aspartame69 What on earth are you talking about? Lucy Letby was not convicted 'by algorithm'. This sounds like - and is - utter nonsense.

    • @Aspartame69
      @Aspartame69 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@PatrickMcAsey She was convicted based on her proximity to the events. To do that you would have to put peoples clock card activity into a model and reach a number where 0 means a nurse was never present and 1 means the nurse was always present. Thats basically all the evidence they had. By this standard, they should check all nurses in the UK and for any of them with a score of 0.9 or higher, they should throw them all in jail for life.

    • @PatrickMcAsey
      @PatrickMcAsey 5 месяцев назад +4

      @@Aspartame69 Lucy Letby was not convicted 'based on her proximity to the events' . She was convicted on a number of pieces of evidence, of which 'proximity to events' (whatever that means) was onlly one. I admit that there might be certain points in this case which may need to be looked at again. However, one should take no account of 'armchair experts' such as you, who did not spend one second in what was an extremely long and complex trial, but who somehow knows more than those who were.

    • @goatlps
      @goatlps 4 месяца назад

      What about the “I killed them on purpose because I am not good enough to care for them and I am a horrible evil person” data?

  • @BarryBollox.
    @BarryBollox. 5 месяцев назад +129

    So he's saying its a possibility that Letby was a scapegoat for poor NHS service?

    • @ibrstellar1080
      @ibrstellar1080 5 месяцев назад +29

      There was raw sewage leaking in those wards and other issues with cleanliness.

    • @louisehogg8472
      @louisehogg8472 5 месяцев назад +48

      Put it this way, in my lifetime I've seen both:
      1. Harold Shipman and Jimmy Saville effectively get away with glaringly horrific behaviour
      AND
      2. The whole generation of mothers who were falsely accused of battering and murdering their babies, when the babies had died of Infant Sudden Death Syndrome caused mainly by bad NHS advice to sleep them on their stomachs, and bacterial respiratory infections.
      So we know that when 'bad' things happen, people, especially in crowds and institutions, can resort to willful blindness AND scapegoating.

    • @ExplorewithSarahlouise
      @ExplorewithSarahlouise 5 месяцев назад +15

      Imagine if it comes out as an nhs cover up the whole system will collapse

    • @louisehogg8472
      @louisehogg8472 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@ExplorewithSarahlouise not necessarily, if the 'cover up' aspect only applies to a small group of consultants at one hospital.
      With a wider group of detectives, jury and perhaps even some hospital management misled early into a conviction that she was guilty.
      For example by a cherry-picked list of 'incidents', under-awareness of the normality of statistical clustering and misdirection from local senior staff hiding their own failings.
      Look at the Tavistock, after all. Horrendous evidence, yet only one unit belatedly closed.
      Depends how much contagion there is, and how justified such contagion would be.

    • @ExplorewithSarahlouise
      @ExplorewithSarahlouise 5 месяцев назад

      @@louisehogg8472 I don’t know I think the trust in the nhs is so low if it’s found to be a cover up by senior officials there it will be a huge incident. Prob we will see riots then.

  • @John-p7i5g
    @John-p7i5g 5 месяцев назад +24

    Convicted on zero evidence, and faked heavily biased statistics.
    The first serial killer in history to use multiple MOs, have zero past form, and zero motive.

    • @any1younger
      @any1younger 5 месяцев назад +4

      @@John-p7i5g Conveniently forgetting Beverly Allett………………

    • @absinthephrenz
      @absinthephrenz 4 месяца назад +1

      Plenty of motive...

    • @John-p7i5g
      @John-p7i5g 4 месяца назад +3

      @@absinthephrenz ...not to do anything of the sort
      Her lifelong career
      Her mortgage
      Her family and friends
      Her rigorous sense of duty and following procedures to the letter
      Many many reasons not to do what she is accused of.

    • @fitprotunes
      @fitprotunes 4 месяца назад

      @@absinthephrenz please elaborate

  • @hermancharlesserrano1489
    @hermancharlesserrano1489 5 месяцев назад +53

    I have had a terrible thought with this case, one that I cannot shake, that a nurse under the psychological duress of losing babies under her care might come to believe that she is cursed, that somehow, in her failure to save them, had come to believe she caused them.
    This is partly based in psychology, but also my inability to comprehend how someone who has spent their life caring for newborns could do the opposite

    • @louisehogg8472
      @louisehogg8472 5 месяцев назад +15

      Exactly. Well known psychological phenomenon that depressed people have more accurate risk perception. Well people underestimate and miss warning signs. So she hangs around the babies she's noticed don't seem quite right, trying to help them. And then, they all seem to die on her! Who's everyone going to blame? Her. Who's SHE going to blame? Herself!
      Could be that she was the best nurse on the premises! For all we know. While everyone else wandered past in hurrying, blinkered, tunnel vision, missing the distress signals of the dying.

    • @morganitEm00NrAVEN
      @morganitEm00NrAVEN 5 месяцев назад +3

      ​@louisehogg8472 it's very possible. No good deed goes unpunished

    • @annabelgalt4616
      @annabelgalt4616 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@hermancharlesserrano1489 yes someone with empathy and an over developed conscience, would blame themselves. And feel why couldn't i save them, to feel guilty etc is in fact normal.

    • @rolandhawken6628
      @rolandhawken6628 5 месяцев назад +5

      Good point on a funny note she did not display any of the criminal attributes or damaged upbringing that killers have she had parents and friends that love her . Of course the profiles do not fit so the physiatrists got around this by saying she was born evil . They just make it up as they go along

    • @OrcaT-j1y
      @OrcaT-j1y 5 месяцев назад +1

      Is that why she falsified her timesheets to make it seem like she wasn't there when the babies condition declined?

  • @MrStevecrasher
    @MrStevecrasher 5 месяцев назад +110

    The whole case has left me feeling uneasy about her conviction or even trial.

    • @fessali5726
      @fessali5726 5 месяцев назад +5

      You want her released?

    • @MargaretOHare-p8h
      @MargaretOHare-p8h 5 месяцев назад +3

      And me and my husband

    • @MargaretOHare-p8h
      @MargaretOHare-p8h 5 месяцев назад +2

      No another trial

    • @fessali5726
      @fessali5726 5 месяцев назад +8

      @@MargaretOHare-p8h why? She’s killed babies. Not one or two. She killed 7 babies. And possibly many more. Are you mad? Maybe you need to see a doctor. Do you know how she got caught? Eventually it came to a point where she was the only one involved with all the murdered babies. You need help. Protecting a child killer is very stange.

    • @MrStevecrasher
      @MrStevecrasher 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@fessali5726 A lot of people feel uneasy about what they heard in the media and as Pete Hitchens says she should be allowed to appeal, every convicted person should have that right.

  • @janewise2547
    @janewise2547 4 месяца назад +4

    No way she did it. I don’t even think the babies were even murdered

  • @mvl6827
    @mvl6827 5 месяцев назад +30

    If this turns out to be the case that she is innocent, everyone who contributed to her imprisonment should be locked up themselves...

    • @jillr9057
      @jillr9057 5 месяцев назад +3

      Agree

    • @PatrickMcAsey
      @PatrickMcAsey 4 месяца назад +1

      Including the juries who found her guilty? You, of course, are so brilliant that you would never have found her guilty, had you been on one of the juries, would you? This is called 'being wise after the event'.

    • @mvl6827
      @mvl6827 4 месяца назад

      @@PatrickMcAsey juries are a waste of time and energy .

    • @PatrickMcAsey
      @PatrickMcAsey 4 месяца назад +1

      @@mvl6827 This sort of comment is lazy, cynical and ignorant. You can't even be bothered to explain why you think this. But I, unlike you, am going to explain my view.. Jury trial is the basis of common law, and indeed, common law would have little meaning without it. Jury trial is thousands of years old. This, of itself, doesn't necessarily mean it's correct, but it's a poweful arguement for it, because it simply works. I think that bench trial is inferior to jury trial.
      There is nothing which makes the operation of the law more democratic than the jury system, where you are judged by your peers. It isn't perfect, and juries have made mistakes, but it most usually works extremely well. Sometimes juries are misled, but the judge is there to stop this. Sometimes jurors flout the rules under which they are supposed to operate. Sometimes lawyers are incompetent, but that's not the fault of the jury. In the case of Lucy Letby, two juries in two separate cases found her guilty, quickly and unanimously. You would too, had you been on the jury. The judge in the fiirst, main trial, thanked the jury, and he was right to.

    • @mvl6827
      @mvl6827 4 месяца назад

      @@PatrickMcAsey thousand years old... that means out of date mate . Most European countries don't do juries whatsoever. For obvious healthy reasons. Juries are remnants of the now obsolete British Empire... gone into history...

  • @dcbush
    @dcbush 5 месяцев назад +15

    I disagree with Hitchens on many things but he is such an erudite, articulate and brilliant man with a spectacular mind. I definitely agree with him on this.

  • @mrstamp5121
    @mrstamp5121 5 месяцев назад +11

    I Was never happy about her conviction it never smelt right at all!

  • @Her.Serene.Feline.Cuteness.
    @Her.Serene.Feline.Cuteness. 5 месяцев назад +6

    If she is innocent, I pray that she is found to be so on appeal whilst both of her parents are still alive, for her sake and theirs. My God if she has not done the things of which she was convicted this will be the greatest miscarriage of justice and she will deserve compensation running into the hundreds of millions.

    • @lucypalmer5228
      @lucypalmer5228 4 месяца назад

      Her appeal has already been rejected.

    • @Her.Serene.Feline.Cuteness.
      @Her.Serene.Feline.Cuteness. 4 месяца назад +2

      @@lucypalmer5228 We all know that. That does mean it is the end of it.

    • @lucypalmer5228
      @lucypalmer5228 4 месяца назад

      @@Her.Serene.Feline.Cuteness. It is the end. Once an appeal has been rejected there are no other appeal avenues.

    • @Her.Serene.Feline.Cuteness.
      @Her.Serene.Feline.Cuteness. 4 месяца назад +2

      @@lucypalmer5228 Nope, this is NOT the end of it. This is an ongoing process. I don't have the time or inclination to explain it to you. Try to enjoy your day (best wishes from a lawyer and the daughter of a Crown Prosecutor).
      I will not be getting into any debate with you on this. The internet is packed full of people who don't know, are convinced they do and have too much time on their hands. Goodbye.

    • @Her.Serene.Feline.Cuteness.
      @Her.Serene.Feline.Cuteness. 4 месяца назад

      For the benefit of anyone who does not have a completely closed mind on the question of whether or not Letby is guilty, the CCRC (Criminal Cases Review Commission) may be an option for an appeal of her conviction.

  • @stevengarside
    @stevengarside 3 месяца назад +2

    No-one can know if she is guilty - but that there is a 'reasonable doubt' about her guilt should have been evident to anyone who followed the original trial with a sceptical mind. I said it to friends at the time, if I was on the jury I could not have found her guilty on the basis of the evidence presented. She was convicted entirely on the basis of inference and speculative theories, which is simply staggering. We have had sufficient miscarriages of justice in England to know juries [and expert witnesses] get it wrong - especially when our febrile tabloid press are bent on creating a sensational narrative.

  • @denisberarie1912
    @denisberarie1912 5 месяцев назад +92

    As a former nurse myself. I seriously question Lucy Letby’s guiltiness. I strongly believe she was set up by rogue Doctors. Especially if she had challenged their practice in the past. There would have been non concordance approaches by CPS and an element of corruption.

    • @Cepheidvariable
      @Cepheidvariable 5 месяцев назад +11

      I've seen plenty of negligent doctors get away with all sorts

    • @StraightLetterz
      @StraightLetterz 5 месяцев назад +2

      Why do you think she wrote “I’m guilty I killed them. I am evil”

    • @annbumfrey6812
      @annbumfrey6812 5 месяцев назад +2

      The evidence was caught on cctv .

    • @annbumfrey6812
      @annbumfrey6812 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@StraightLetterz because she did ..she was obviously suffering from some mental health issues It took about a year to collect the evidence against her Babies have stopped dying now so how do you account for that ??

    • @annbumfrey6812
      @annbumfrey6812 5 месяцев назад +5

      The question is where are these rouge Dr's now and why have the babies stopped dying ???since Letbys imprisonment

  • @Zerpentsa6598
    @Zerpentsa6598 5 месяцев назад +30

    Miscarriage of justice, or typical of British justice? NHS needed a scapegoat for its failures? 😮

    • @any1younger
      @any1younger 5 месяцев назад

      @@Zerpentsa6598 And I suppose Allett is innocent too?! There aren’t half some morons posting here…….

  • @edeledeledel5490
    @edeledeledel5490 5 месяцев назад +22

    The Post Office got hundreds of people convicted with extremely dodgy evidence; why not Lucy Letby. The NHS has just as much interest in seeing her convicted as the PO and Fujitsu had with the subpostmasters, and probably even fewer principles, based on previous NMS scandals.

    • @rolandhawken6628
      @rolandhawken6628 5 месяцев назад

      The same week that LL was convicted a man was released from prison after serving 17 years for a crime he did not commit DNA evidence was suppressed by a judge 10 years earlier , The police are corrupt and the courts are corrupt we have just seen large over the top sentences given out by the courts for minor offences in resent troubles not for justice but to frighten the population into silence about religious fanatics that we are not allowed to speak of

    • @rolandhawken6628
      @rolandhawken6628 5 месяцев назад

      @@steveblundell7766 The answer to that is simple the 4 doctors concerned led the investigation simply because the police are thick and know nothing about medicine, they only reported her to police after she had humiliated them during an internal enquiry the management thought there was no problem with her .
      The major concern was the expert evidence /opinion on deaths lets not forget the case for the police was not going to court even though they had spent years investigating with no evidence of foul play . Then Evan volunteered his services for payment , according to him he knew how they died even though 5 babies had been previously recorded as natural deaths by other docs

    • @edeledeledel5490
      @edeledeledel5490 5 месяцев назад

      @@steveblundell7766 Of course they were - it gave then a big bonus all the money in fines went to them.

    • @rolandhawken6628
      @rolandhawken6628 5 месяцев назад

      @@steveblundell7766 That is your prerogative, forensics were not involved in this prosecution ,police surgeons were not involved in this prosecution , I don't think crime scene investigation were either, otherwise the ward would have been shut and all the people on the ward at time of deaths would have been questioned and investigated . In the first instance you have showed you have Zero understanding of this investigation and prosecution . As I said your average thicko policeman knows zero about medicine. FMEs are part time doctors that work for the police . How old are you 12 I suspect usual emotional response from a child .As for a doctor saw LL acting suspiciously around a baby is utter nonsense without being specific it is a ridiculous thing to say ,but it was the kind of drivel she was convicted on ,obviously the renaissance was wasted on you and the jury .I don't support LL I look at the facts not feelings and suspicions . I would like to see all convictions based on the fact that they are guilty beyond all reasonable doubt that is not the case in this trial ,I would even extend that human curtesy to you

    • @goatlps
      @goatlps 4 месяца назад

      Yeah, but the post office workers didn't confess like Letby, in her own writing.

  • @manoo422
    @manoo422 5 месяцев назад +95

    The longest trial in legal history, half a million medical reports, 2000 witness statements and still NO real EVIDENCE that any unnatural deaths occurred. The whole case was based on assumption, opinion and coincidence...

    • @JulietCrowson
      @JulietCrowson 5 месяцев назад +2

      Constructed by the regulator perhaps?
      Well that argument won't see the daylight...

    • @manoo422
      @manoo422 5 месяцев назад +10

      @@JulietCrowson Constructed by the prosecution who are NOT interested in the truth, only a conviction.

    • @ykrgfk
      @ykrgfk 5 месяцев назад +11

      Your claim that this was 'The longest trial in legal history' is completely untrue. It isn't even the longest in UK history. I think it's safe to assume that the rest of your claims are also lies plucked by you out of thin air.

    • @andimoraru5539
      @andimoraru5539 5 месяцев назад +1

      She was either going for the world record or for a niche of serial killers...

    • @manoo422
      @manoo422 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@andimoraru5539 ...Or, is completely innocent.

  • @Day_Chap
    @Day_Chap 5 месяцев назад +4

    Many of her defenders need to actually read about the case. She was the only one with the victims, other nurses and doctors are the witnesses who described her as "giddy with excitement" after babies were passing away under her care.

    • @noooowaydaddyo
      @noooowaydaddyo 5 месяцев назад +2

      Read the Private Eye reports

  • @davidDean-g5n
    @davidDean-g5n 5 месяцев назад +64

    You can't trust a conviction on a hunch which is basically what this was. Also a jury is never safe in these situations. I don't care what anyone says you can't take emotion out of a person. Their life experiences.

    • @WallyPyneoil
      @WallyPyneoil 5 месяцев назад +2

      I know. This is why we have 'Believe Women', isn't it? LOL!

    • @louisehogg8472
      @louisehogg8472 5 месяцев назад +5

      A jury CAN be safe, but only if THEY are given properly reliable, clear explanations of the situation. NOT partial or biased information. Were there GENUINELY independent experts explaining ALL possibilities of what might have happened?
      Remember the whole 'battered babies' scandal? Bad (risky) NHS advice to lie babies on their stomachs, yet juries believed 'expert advice' in good faith!

    • @laurahodgson6531
      @laurahodgson6531 5 месяцев назад +1

      As someone who has been on the jury for 3 trials, I agree.

    • @Who-z8k
      @Who-z8k 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@louisehogg8472 Nope the Human element is never safe. People aren't logical, the fact you think they can forced to be, shows how little you understand.
      Hence the fact witnesses are known not to be completely unreliable as shown time and time again. People literally make stuff up in their head they believe is real on a regular basis.

    • @laremabella
      @laremabella 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@davidDean-g5n on a hunch? Those babies x-rays showed the amount of air in their bodies that only a traffic collision could cause! Perhaps your emotions for real cases of injustice are wrongly inserted into a case full of evidence, or perhaps u find Lucy Letbys sad eyes pull on yr heart strings

  • @bannjaxx
    @bannjaxx 5 месяцев назад +134

    I don't know if she's innocent or guilty, but having followed the Private Eye investigation, it's astonishing that there's no ACTUAL evidence that those babies were even murdered let alone by her.

    • @victorvictoriousv5255
      @victorvictoriousv5255 5 месяцев назад +4

      Guilty!! Now you know. Facts proven, no doubts.

    • @BenjWarrant
      @BenjWarrant 5 месяцев назад

      Correctamundo. Even the evidence that 2 of the babies were killed because of by products of artificial insulin are challenged by world experts saying 'There's no definitive test for that'.

    • @sheilacotton7566
      @sheilacotton7566 5 месяцев назад

      @@victorvictoriousv5255shut up. You know nothing stop judging. One day will be you.

    • @OliveBooth-f5p
      @OliveBooth-f5p 5 месяцев назад +13

      @@bannjaxx I totally agree with you. A 2lb baby does not have a great survival rate without even knowing what other problems they have going on.

    • @michaelp998
      @michaelp998 5 месяцев назад +19

      According to the coroners office who was responsible for the autopsy of the majority of the babies who were supposed to have been harmed, no evidence was found of any misdemeanour.

  • @paulrussell7790
    @paulrussell7790 5 месяцев назад +11

    I am not sure of guilt or innocence. But after the recent Post Office scandal where it has transpires that it was computer error and not human error, plus much of the evidence against LL is based on data and circumstantial evidence then this does probably need reviewing.

  • @philview751
    @philview751 5 месяцев назад +7

    The jury were presented with hypothetical scenarios on cause of death. The original coroner and pathology reports didn't pick up anything unusual. A jury isn't qualified to decide if a hypothesis is correct or not. There is something wrong with this process. These cases should have been referred back to the coroners and allowed space for a range of forensic scientists to investigate.

  • @Trey-Beyen
    @Trey-Beyen 4 месяца назад +1

    Anyone who is interested in justice should be concerned by the original verdict in this case. Our media is an horrific and vile tool that fills the minds of jurors with their self serving discourse.

  • @donnaharris8097
    @donnaharris8097 5 месяцев назад +17

    And This is Why im against the death penalty, if shes innocent - that makes all of us Guilty ..of Imprisoning an innocent woman .

    • @TayWoode
      @TayWoode 5 месяцев назад

      Have you seen the “The life of David Gale”? That’s why I don’t agree with the death penalty either.
      Funny that in the UK people think you’re guilty and you get death the next week and it saves all the tax payers money.
      They don’t realise people in the US can be held for decades same as a life sentence

    • @mvl6827
      @mvl6827 4 месяца назад +1

      @@donnaharris8097 are you a judge? Or a member of the jury? Otherwise speak for yourself.

  • @lindastevens6861
    @lindastevens6861 5 месяцев назад +74

    People facing the courts are told “plead guilty”
    Even if you are innocent
    Or you will have a longer sentence if they decide you are guilty.

    • @ibrstellar1080
      @ibrstellar1080 5 месяцев назад

      We are seeing the tip of the iceberg as watch how vad it gets once a Digital ID and cashless tyranny is enforced.

    • @deliciouslyk3437
      @deliciouslyk3437 5 месяцев назад +2

      Absolutely correct. I've heard it said of an ex nhs nurse.

    • @TheLetterK81
      @TheLetterK81 5 месяцев назад

      And Yet nobody rioted over her but when a Asian or black does this the UK goes under fire

    • @Simon37423
      @Simon37423 5 месяцев назад +7

      @@TheLetterK81that’s just not true riots very rarely happen in the uk and we have had plenty of Islamist attacks over the years

    • @TheLetterK81
      @TheLetterK81 5 месяцев назад

      @@Simon37423 We had plenty of white man attacks women killing babies white pedos etc nobody rioted over white people

  • @LegallyBlondeCritic
    @LegallyBlondeCritic 4 месяца назад +3

    Don't know if she's guilty or not but I don't believe they proved it beyond the reasonable doubt.

    • @Steven-ze2zk
      @Steven-ze2zk 4 месяца назад +1

      Umm...a jury won't convict if there is reasonable doubt.
      Must try harder.

  • @gonadhulk3780
    @gonadhulk3780 5 месяцев назад +7

    To think that such a witch hunt can still take place in this day and age is depressing. The Police and CPS underestimated the power of social media nationally and internationally in seeing through this travesty of justice so quickly. Geoblocking articles such as in the New Yorker reeks of desperation. Thankfully the tide is moving fast in Lucy Letby's favour. The public outcry is gathering pace.

  • @helenporter7584
    @helenporter7584 4 месяца назад +1

    Never complain about a doctor!!!

  • @OperationMerlinFalcon
    @OperationMerlinFalcon 21 день назад +1

    Page 113 of the 2016 CQC report provides several clues as to what was going on at the CoCH, Neonatal Ward.
    Was Lucy Letby the original Whistleblower?

  • @bunclodyboy8968
    @bunclodyboy8968 5 месяцев назад +13

    I HAVE NEVER BELEIVED FOR ONE SECOND THAT THIS YOUNG WOMAN WAS GUILTY OF ANYTHING. THE N H S IS WELL SCHOOLED AT COVER UPS, something needs to be done for this person, before she spends 23yrs or more and then say, sorry about that

  • @colinjohnston9614
    @colinjohnston9614 4 месяца назад +3

    Is she innocent? Probably. There is more than reasonable doubt. The 'case' against her was not adequately defended. Het defence team needs looking at. Why didn't they call the expert witness who would refute the evidence given by a less-specialised neonatal 'expert'? Was the judge tired of it? Was he worried that the jury wrre becoming weary? He rushed the end of the trial! It's unsafe!

  • @laurieharper1526
    @laurieharper1526 5 месяцев назад +69

    This is a classic example of what happens in the case of the most horrific crimes. People lose all sense of reason and just want to punish the first person who is brought in front of them. Birmingham Six, anyone?

    • @mol588
      @mol588 5 месяцев назад +4

      Guilford 4
      MacGuire family
      Just being Irish, in the U.K., back in the 1970/80's was precarious ....

    • @dooshkin8552
      @dooshkin8552 5 месяцев назад +4

      Did you read any of the notes in her diary? the Birmingham six probably were guilty, and got away with it on a technicality

    • @gyorkshire257
      @gyorkshire257 5 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@dooshkin8552 You are saying the Birmingham 6 were guilty! They confessed under torture, and apart from those confessions, the only evidence was the testimony of a forensic scientist which was contradicted at the trial by Dr Hugh Kenneth Black of the Royal Institute of Chemistry, the former HM Chief Inspector of Explosives. Your statements on this detract credibility from your argument on Letby.

    • @laurieharper1526
      @laurieharper1526 5 месяцев назад

      @@dooshkin8552 Are you really that ignorant?

    • @WallyPyneoil
      @WallyPyneoil 5 месяцев назад

      Not if it's a woman, of course.

  • @NOT_SURE..
    @NOT_SURE.. 5 месяцев назад +10

    i was watching something the other day about a hospital in the US , and at the same time lucy was supposedly doing her things , the hospital in america noticed a 300% increase in random babies deaths , where they had 1 a month they now had 30 a month , and they could not work out why!
    I am sure they wanted a scapegoat for their malpractice (we all know what was doing it) and the perfect target is someone who not only challehged them but was proved right and got an aopolgy off her seniors , they would have hated that...

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe 5 месяцев назад

      I am willing to wager they tried very hard to find a Black american to pass the blame to and couldn't find because this is what they usually do. if i had been the accused i would have sued the apricot ... Apologies are not cutting it especially when crafted with the legal system in mind.

    • @OrcaT-j1y
      @OrcaT-j1y 5 месяцев назад

      If that was the case they wouldn't have waited so long before contacting the police.

  • @DomMack-qs5qq
    @DomMack-qs5qq 4 месяца назад +1

    Major misscacage of justice

  • @jamesbomd3503
    @jamesbomd3503 5 месяцев назад +4

    I said that at the time that she was sentenced and everybody said I was a shameful person

  • @ep1929
    @ep1929 5 месяцев назад +9

    There are a lot of variables that lean towards Letby being guilty - the facebook searches of the bereaved parents, scores of hospital records taken home, her diary records, writing cards for bereaved parents, saying she isn't able to remember when awkward questions were being asked by the prosecution, notes to self saying "I did this, I am evil".
    I have listened to the trial podcasts twice & I found the evidence damning - this trial was nothing like the Andrew Malkinson trial.

    • @romulanwang
      @romulanwang 4 месяца назад +3

      That's not the point, if some of the evidence was presented in an unsafe way, her conviction is unsafe. If there were enough other evidence, and any other possibility had been completely excluded, then she would be convicted any way.

    • @ep1929
      @ep1929 4 месяца назад +2

      @@romulanwang for her defence she called on a plumber to give evidence.
      That's the best her team could do.

    • @PatrickMcAsey
      @PatrickMcAsey 4 месяца назад +1

      Well stated! I've just listened to a discussion about the points of the trial that many of us probably know only too well, and I am more convinced than ever that Letby is guilty. The juries in two separate trials were unanimous, and it took them a short while to reach their verdicts. Her appeal to the Court of Appeal was not allowed.
      It should be emphasised that, in this video, Peter Hitchens does not cast doubt on the conviction, merely on one aspect of the evidence. He says that he is not making any claim as to Letby's guilt or otherwise.

    • @hannahviolinbusker
      @hannahviolinbusker 4 месяца назад +3

      I was a children’s nurse, I wrote cards to bereaved parents and searched for them on Facebook, because I cared about them and wanted to know how they were coping. Ok perhaps I didn’t take records home or some of the other things, but many of the things that “point to her guilt”, look very different when the conviction begins to be questioned.
      If there is a question over whether she received a fair trial, she should be allowed to appeal her conviction.

    • @hannahviolinbusker
      @hannahviolinbusker 4 месяца назад +2

      I was a children’s nurse, I wrote cards to bereaved parents and searched for them on Facebook, because I cared about them and wanted to know how they were coping. Ok perhaps I didn’t take records home or some of the other things, but many of the things that “point to her guilt”, look very different when the conviction begins to be questioned. Perhaps she was attempting her own investigation into the deaths? Is it clear to what she was referring when she wrote the diary entries? I’m sure we’ve all written things which could or have been taken out of context.
      If there is a question over whether she received a fair trial, she should be allowed to appeal her conviction. Could she still vibe guilty? Absolutely, but let the conviction be on a more secure premise.

  • @kathpengilley3925
    @kathpengilley3925 5 месяцев назад +17

    even when innocent, people are advised by their barristers to plead guilty in order to get a less severe sentence, in my opinion, this results in a system where you are guilty until proven innocent which is almost impossible to do from a jail cell

  • @JulieLevinge
    @JulieLevinge 4 месяца назад +1

    The conviction absolutely shocked me!
    I have no idea if Letby is guilty or not, but their was certainly no evidence that she murdered a single baby!

  • @janepearson5802
    @janepearson5802 5 месяцев назад +25

    She is a scapegoat

  • @carlg-67
    @carlg-67 5 месяцев назад +6

    If there is one shred of doubt there has to be an investigation or even a re trial asap..scapegoat for management of the ward ?

  • @trevorloughlin1492
    @trevorloughlin1492 5 месяцев назад +4

    I have no idea of her guilt or innocence but after the number of miscarriages of justice over cot deaths, the post office scandal and numerous other cases, it is not surprising that people question such verdicts. There seems "defensive practice" in both social services (forced adoption on the slightest excuse) and the same in the justice system. It is basically about covering their own backs.

  • @afairdealfortaxidrivers4359
    @afairdealfortaxidrivers4359 5 месяцев назад +53

    I always thought there was something not quite right about this girls trial!.
    It seems the media had her convicted long before the actual verdict!.

    • @davidshaw3374
      @davidshaw3374 5 месяцев назад +4

      You were there were you...

    • @johndickson2138
      @johndickson2138 5 месяцев назад

      This “girl” … this child murderer , just take a long look at the evidence, you’re a f*cking sick joke

    • @PatrickMcAsey
      @PatrickMcAsey 5 месяцев назад +3

      The media did not convict her 'long before the actual verdict'. The media confined itself only to reporting what was said each day in court, without comment of any kind. The reporting was wholly fair.

    • @EliteRock
      @EliteRock 5 месяцев назад

      _"It seems the media had her convicted long before the actual verdict!."_ Nothing unusual in that, unfortunately. If you read up about most serious miscarriages of justice you'll find the media usually do their best to help state prosecutors put their victims away.

    • @Letstalk295
      @Letstalk295 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@PatrickMcAseythank you. Let's not forget the amount of evidence Lucy had in her home. Even some of the babies clothes. That is called taking a Trophy serial killer use them to remind them of thier crime

  • @zoedaymond1191
    @zoedaymond1191 2 месяца назад +2

    How can the cps team use expert witnesses but the defence can’t sounds 🐠 y

    • @lesleyd9969
      @lesleyd9969 2 месяца назад +1

      The defence team could. They chose not to.

    • @zoedaymond1191
      @zoedaymond1191 2 месяца назад +1

      @ thankyou for reply ⭐️

  • @sambora123
    @sambora123 5 месяцев назад +1

    Find it strange how the death rate was skyrocketing when she was on the ward and now its back to what is considered normal after she was arrested. Lost count of all the serial killers that said I didn't do it yet after they were arrested all the murders ceased and bodies stopped appearing.

    • @John-p7i5g
      @John-p7i5g 5 месяцев назад +2

      Research further. CoCH was upgraded to level 2, then back to level 1 after she was taken off ward. Of course the death rates dropping coincided.

    • @sambora123
      @sambora123 5 месяцев назад

      @@John-p7i5g true but you could argue chicken or egg did it go down because it went from 2 to 1 or because she was no longer on the ward

  • @Lioness-Ma
    @Lioness-Ma 5 месяцев назад +4

    I don't know why but something about this has never sat well with me.
    Always knowing and now Having experience of how, practicioners in health and social care have a culture of blaming ', framing, and gaslighting other people including patients I wouldn't put it past all involved to have made someone the scapegoat of a mass failure.

  • @paulhodgins
    @paulhodgins 5 месяцев назад +3

    The legal system is failing the public! Was there any crime committed or just hospital management wanting a way of deflecting their poor performance.
    This case needs a full review now and not in 5 years time.
    What a biased system when the defendant can't get expert witnesses but the prosecution can!

  • @wert933
    @wert933 3 месяца назад +1

    It seems many people are misunderstanding the difference between circumstantial evidence and physical evidence. This case has no physical evidence and with circumstantial you need a strong link between the circumstance and hypothesis which goes beyond reasonable doubt. What bothers me with this case is that what is presented as links, example, diary notes, rosters, all seem flawed when you scratch the surface. The door swipe data was wrong, the roster displayed omits the days she wasn’t present when babies died, vital oxygen monitoring equipment was broken, bacteria was found in the water, staffing issues, the ward was not setup to deal with critical cases and a serial killer was on the loose. Really? As for her confession notes, a psychologist told her to write down random thoughts to deal with stress and suddenly notes written in a highly sensitive state are gospel, and where she states that she didn’t do anything wrong gets no media coverage. But of course why would it, this is a witch trial and speaks to an older, more primitive side of humanity that is shamed into questioning and ridiculed for critical thinking. The truth is, we don’t know if she is guilty or not that is why this case is controversial and took ten months.

  • @walterlatham8851
    @walterlatham8851 5 месяцев назад +8

    The hospitals reputation is more important than what happens to a nurse

  • @Holidayhome-spain
    @Holidayhome-spain 5 месяцев назад +6

    There is a hierarchy of blame and bullying in the NHS. Nurses take the blame for Drs mistakes and non clinical staff get blamed for nurses mistakes. As far as I know Letby was bullied, was it possible she was the whistleblower? Not saying release her at all hut consider if someone is still out there posing a risk to babies.
    RIP little ones.

    • @ilokivi
      @ilokivi 5 месяцев назад +1

      If there is any evidence that Letby blew the whistle regarding the actions of other medical staff, the argument may be valid. However evidence was presented that at least one doctor expressed concerns regarding her conduct at Chester hospital. Before considering whether a third party is involved, a review of evidence is essential.

  • @jay71512
    @jay71512 5 месяцев назад +50

    Not one shred of actual evidence, everything they had is circumstantial.

    • @mitchhills4747
      @mitchhills4747 5 месяцев назад +12

      But she actually admitted the crimes in her own diary....

    • @Crazydiamond1992
      @Crazydiamond1992 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@mitchhills4747she wrote "I did it because I'm not good enough" amongst other non sensible ramblings. She didn't exactly write a detailed confession

    • @AleaIactaEst2009
      @AleaIactaEst2009 5 месяцев назад

      Circumstantial evidence is evidence. It's just not direct evidence. That does not make it not evidence. The observed motion of the planets in the sky is circumstantial evidence that the Earth is not the centre of the solar system, the Sun is. That doesn't make it "not evidence". We all want a "smoking gun" I guess and then we can know for sure any conviction is sound. But there is evidence here to say she is guilty, like the notes, the behaviour, the fact she was always on shift. We just have to trust that jurors weigh the evidence, even if it is circumstantial.

    • @kurt479
      @kurt479 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@mitchhills4747That was after she'd been arrested. Not before. If someone was guilty why on earth would they write it after they'd been arrested?

    • @laremabella
      @laremabella 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@kurt479 she collected souvenirs from the dead babies before she'd been arrested, whilst she was in hospital killing. Shes NEVER going to admit to it bc the way on which she killed is cowardly. The amount of air found in those babies had been administered, bc none of those babies were in hospital from a traffic collision.

  • @hharrison-parker1606
    @hharrison-parker1606 5 месяцев назад +1

    If the trust had been found to be negligent, imagine what they would have had to have paid for every child that died. L.L in my mind is a scapegoat.

  • @any1younger
    @any1younger 5 месяцев назад +3

    Everyone conveniently forgetting BEVERLY ALLIT ?!

  • @dogred431
    @dogred431 5 месяцев назад +4

    "conspiracy theory" is now being used so widely and loosely that it's another phrase that is losing all meaning.

  • @jackking5567
    @jackking5567 5 месяцев назад +3

    I'll admit I was never very happy about the court case.

  • @melgrant7404
    @melgrant7404 5 месяцев назад +3

    Maybe her innocence is assumed because she is middle class.no one doubted Beverly Alitt.

  • @SarahjaneGriffin
    @SarahjaneGriffin 2 месяца назад +2

    Whos got more to lose a nurse band 5 or a doctor.

  • @Bevan69
    @Bevan69 5 месяцев назад +23

    I don't think she's guilty at all, the trial was speculation, no hard evidence

    • @any1younger
      @any1younger 5 месяцев назад +2

      And you heard all the evidence did you? You were in court were you? What do you base your expert opinion on?

    • @Bevan69
      @Bevan69 5 месяцев назад +2

      Yes I was in court, I heard everything so based on what I heard she is not what the tabloids make her out to be, so yes. Imo she is innocent.

    • @any1younger
      @any1younger 5 месяцев назад +2

      Well, thanks for your expert resolution - why did we even bother with a trial and expert evidence when we had you to give us the result immediately?!

    • @any1younger
      @any1younger 5 месяцев назад

      @@Bevan69 I don’t believe you, so, rather like you are calling out the prosecution evidence, I’m calling you out as a liar……….

    • @ruthbashford3176
      @ruthbashford3176 5 месяцев назад

      @@any1younger You didn't have to be in court to know that the jury heard flawed evidence

  • @halemcdan1
    @halemcdan1 5 месяцев назад +10

    I never believed her guilt. Her friends have stood by her.

    • @moosky7344
      @moosky7344 5 месяцев назад

      She too middle class, white, blue eyed i guess 😂

  • @jonrussell2695
    @jonrussell2695 5 месяцев назад +175

    Sounds like they just wanted a conviction

    • @GBPaddling
      @GBPaddling 5 месяцев назад +18

      They ALWAYS do, and they NEVER want to admit they're wrong when they get it so badly, and obviously wrong.

    • @helpyousleep7386
      @helpyousleep7386 5 месяцев назад +11

      and the person convicted must tick the right boxes, so as not to offend some of the uk's communities

    • @RickBerman-iv2il
      @RickBerman-iv2il 5 месяцев назад

      @@GBPaddlingwho are ‘they’? If there was some massive conspiracy involving the highest levels of the CPS and NHS wouldn’t Ms Letby have been found dead next to a detailed confession? There’s this incredibly powerful group that chooses to trust 12 random jurors? Were the jurors in on it too?! Who wasn’t involved?

    • @Steven-h1e
      @Steven-h1e 5 месяцев назад +24

      The ward was understaffed , overcrowded and unable to provide adequate care

    • @BoominGame
      @BoominGame 5 месяцев назад +1

      For once they catch a real baddy they want to show doing something about it.

  • @andrewharrispiano
    @andrewharrispiano 5 месяцев назад +3

    This presenter seems to come across as more concerned about people's perception of the judiciary being outstanding than it actually being outstanding. It's quite sinister to be ok throwing away the key regardless of guilt as long as people's confidence remains.

  • @julianchamberlain5399
    @julianchamberlain5399 5 месяцев назад +2

    She was clearly guilty. Listen to the trial like the JURY did..

  • @simonB143
    @simonB143 5 месяцев назад +5

    Convicted on what amounts to quite shaky statistical analysis of shift patterns ect, and it would appear not the most dynamic of defence lawyers. It seems quite unfair Lucy is not allowed an appeal

  • @angelawilliamson6765
    @angelawilliamson6765 5 месяцев назад +7

    She's been used as a scapegoat, it is clear there is a cover up because they need someone to blame. The system is far from perfect.

  • @Tymonie
    @Tymonie 5 месяцев назад +3

    Celebrating the justice system this week for the swift action it has taken? Sure! If you want to live in a version of North Korea with worse weather.

  • @Democracyguardd
    @Democracyguardd 5 месяцев назад +2

    Remember the judge who done this

  • @steponfrog7265
    @steponfrog7265 5 месяцев назад +20

    I did think when Letb6 was first arrested that it sounded more like another hospital management patients deaths scandal that was being blamed on a single scapegoat.

    • @dannylad1600
      @dannylad1600 5 месяцев назад +1

      And you turned out to be wrong.

    • @anjou6497
      @anjou6497 5 месяцев назад

      @@steponfrog7265 It's extremely unlikely a neonatal nurse would ever be scapegoated for such horrific and distressing murders. If there had been a dodgy doctor involved, there would surely be plenty of clues...?

    • @iallyl3877
      @iallyl3877 5 месяцев назад +1

      oh how wrong you where.. all the babys who died where in HER care at the time..

    • @oldcrow4301
      @oldcrow4301 5 месяцев назад

      @steponfrog7265• 👍🏿

    • @manoo422
      @manoo422 5 месяцев назад +4

      @@iallyl3877 100% wrong, she was only on shift for 7 out of 13 deaths, she wasnt even looking after all 7. When you look at all emergence incidents on the unit that didnt result in death there is no correlation with Letby at all. Even though she put in far more hrs than any other nurse on the unit...

  • @rhysnichols8608
    @rhysnichols8608 5 месяцев назад +9

    They quite literally convicted her on the basis of a probability chart, no direct evidence like DNA or cctv etc.

    • @JulietCrowson
      @JulietCrowson 5 месяцев назад +3

      Wow!
      Hope the truth is revealed soon

    • @Day_Chap
      @Day_Chap 5 месяцев назад +2

      She was the only person in the room with the victims when somebody injected oxygen into their blood. That is a 100% probability unless the babies did it themselves.

    • @MashLimit
      @MashLimit 5 месяцев назад

      ...in discussions of the supposed air embolisms, witnesses tried to pinpoint the precise shade of skin discoloration of some of the babies. In Myers’s cross-examinations, he noted that witnesses’ memories of the rashes had changed, becoming more specific and florid in the years since the deaths. But this debate seemed to distract from a more relevant objection: the concern with skin discoloration arose from the 1989 paper. An author of the paper, Shoo Lee, one of the most prominent neonatologists in Canada, has since reviewed summaries of each pattern of skin discoloration in the Letby case and said that none of the rashes were characteristic of air embolism. He also said that air embolism should never be a diagnosis that a doctor lands on just because other causes of sudden collapse have been ruled out: “That would be very wrong-that’s a fundamental mistake of medicine.”

  • @hatersburnlovercarryon4541
    @hatersburnlovercarryon4541 5 месяцев назад +3

    No protest here to save our children

    • @moosky7344
      @moosky7344 5 месяцев назад

      Was same colour obviously

    • @moosky7344
      @moosky7344 5 месяцев назад

      Now if she'd targeted just blac babies that's a different story

  • @jdrichardson6865
    @jdrichardson6865 5 месяцев назад +1

    Few can understand the duality of psychopaths. We expect the bad guys to look the part, black hats, twirling moustaches, but psychopaths are more dangerous than that, and the further confusing factor is that their 'good side' (think of Gollum arguing with his dark side) can be, and usually is, very convincing of an innocent. They're convincing con artists, whose brains, time after time, are wired to enjoy a secretive sense of power & enjoyment in causing pain. In this case, wallowing in watching on and apparently offering support to the grieving parents, stealing the limelight as if she also was the victim. Jealousy is often a factor lurking - parents had something she, with a psychopath's sense of isolation, would never attain with their loving relationship. It is not necessarily the killing they exult in, it's the ongoing destruction they can enjoy long after. People who did not see the complex evidence, see her reactions should not be offering silly opinions. One thing I can advise - if you look in a killer's eyes, you know what you're seeing - you feel the chill. Psychopaths are always secretive, sneaky destroyers of others' lives, they will always believe they are the injured party & most people are incapable of seeing them as they are. They are arch manipulators and in my experience are able to skilfully exploit doubt and dubious sense of morality, as well as others' inability of recall - pathological liars to the end they do make mistakes but can charm others to forget their instincts. The evidence of the post-its is intriguing, but lying as much as they do is exhausting, they will always reveal themselves, but equally know how to skilfully 'explain' away those revelations. I've met a few, and in the end you truly know what they are.

  • @alanhull-ii5ip
    @alanhull-ii5ip 4 месяца назад +1

    Thank you mr hitchins

  • @turanasan5368
    @turanasan5368 5 месяцев назад +5

    He clearly didn't read the medical expert reports and has no clue about air embolism induced death in babies, she is guilty beyond reasonable doubt

    • @noooowaydaddyo
      @noooowaydaddyo 5 месяцев назад +5

      The supposed medical expert was a 15 years retired general paediatrician - not a neonatologist with any knowledge of current practices. He speculated on possible methods babies may have been murdered. The author of the article he quoted about air emboli disagrees with the flawed application in this case. There is more than enough grounds for revisiting this trial if you listen to actual experts

    • @turanasan5368
      @turanasan5368 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@noooowaydaddyoHe is an experienced doctor, his report was supported by 5 different doctors from with narrow subspecialty such as such as neonatal neuroradiologist, he isn't the only expert involved Dr Bohin who is a practicing neonatologist also was an expert witness, the defence didn't have any expert witnesses to offer an alternative to view. I am not against an appeal I just don't think there will be an alternative outcome

    • @noooowaydaddyo
      @noooowaydaddyo 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@turanasan5368 being an experienced doctor doesn't automatically qualify you as an expert in another field of medicine. The defence did have an expert witness, but for reasons many can't fathom he wasn't called to the stand to give a reasoned argument. Possibly because the defence incorrectly assumed the garbage being presented by the prosecution wouldn't hold up, but we can only speculate on that. I think the outcome will be quite different if a retrial is permitted. Read the Private Eye special reports if you haven't already

  • @jancuk8881
    @jancuk8881 5 месяцев назад +6

    For some reason I doubted this case right from the start, something is very wrong here.

  • @RobertMustoe
    @RobertMustoe 5 месяцев назад +3

    The criminal justice system is not fit for purpose 😮

  • @The-Wirral-Viking-Festival
    @The-Wirral-Viking-Festival 4 месяца назад +2

    Motive? - none
    Criminal history - none
    Previous harm to others - none.
    Convicted on:
    * statistics that we're completely worthless.
    * lies by colleagues who were obviously jealous of her ability (both men)
    * and the insecure ramblings of a woman's personal diary!
    This should terrify every woman everywhere!

    • @joseparcenary4706
      @joseparcenary4706 4 месяца назад

      I was in agreement with your list until you had to turn it into a "men vs women" thing. Like a man was never framed for anything? Were the Birmingham Six in jail for 16 years because they were women?
      If you actually believe the doctors/men motive to frame LL was because they were "jealous" and "because she was a woman", then you should get help.

  • @paulis8107
    @paulis8107 5 месяцев назад +2

    Hitchens is a waste of space.

  • @Longshanks1956
    @Longshanks1956 5 месяцев назад +8

    I've never been comfortable with this conviction.

    • @MA-qf5gq
      @MA-qf5gq 5 месяцев назад +1

      it must have been an immigrant right?

  • @simonlaw9234
    @simonlaw9234 5 месяцев назад +5

    Any faith or trust that ordinary people had in the judicial system must surely have disappeared by now anyway.

  • @dawnatkinson7704
    @dawnatkinson7704 5 месяцев назад +44

    Thank goodness! I didn't know how any jury could honestly find her guilty given the way the 'evidence' was presented. I suspect hospital failings and picking a scapegoat.

    • @iallyl3877
      @iallyl3877 5 месяцев назад

      @@dawnatkinson7704 how can injecting insulin into baby’s be a “hospital failing” you people are insane

    • @scootaymildo1070
      @scootaymildo1070 5 месяцев назад +5

      Hospital failings that completely coincided with her presence on the wards, that weren't there before she was employed, and ceased to be after she was arrested? OK

    • @iallyl3877
      @iallyl3877 5 месяцев назад +7

      @@scootaymildo1070 this.. funny how babys stopped dieing once she was arrested

    • @anxietyexpertwahida
      @anxietyexpertwahida 5 месяцев назад +2

      And she had a diary in her home full of disturbing things about killing people

    • @manoo422
      @manoo422 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@anxietyexpertwahida She had nothing of the sort.

  • @64HomeMade
    @64HomeMade 5 месяцев назад +2

    Does seem strange that she would write in her diary that she killed them!!! And all that paperwork she took home concerning the babies that died. When questioned about the paperwork she suggested that it ended up at her home under her bed by accident?? Looking for the parents of the dead babies on Facebook. Hanging around parents who were spending time with their dying babies. If she's not guilty she's weird.

    • @noooowaydaddyo
      @noooowaydaddyo 5 месяцев назад +1

      Weird does not equate to guilt

    • @64HomeMade
      @64HomeMade 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@noooowaydaddyo I'm well aware of that, only making a comment.

  • @cp4512
    @cp4512 5 месяцев назад +3

    This is what happens when people in authority think they are untouchable and their opinion (or the outcome they want) trumps hard evidence and a fair hearing. It’s shocking. We saw it in the Post Office, and we’re seeing it in the recent ‘online social media thought police’ charges.

  • @cullen3624
    @cullen3624 5 месяцев назад +8

    I always thought it was a bit weird using circumstantial evidence based on statistics for something this serious.

  • @tinaturner134
    @tinaturner134 5 месяцев назад +3

    We need a better Justice System in this country they something wrong with it

  • @ian_b
    @ian_b 5 месяцев назад +1

    I began to feel concerned when I saw the "evidence" presented from her rambling notes as a "confession" when it clearly was not one. She may well be guilty but I think it was a very worrying trial that looks possibly unsafe to me.

  • @thekarmafarmer608
    @thekarmafarmer608 5 месяцев назад +1

    Strange that when it comes to these kind of cases, or the recent post office, Windrush and other injustices of the last 20 years, many people have strong opinions about convictions which lack safe or solid evidence. And yet, when it comes to more than 10,000 convictions for historical abuse between 2000 and 2020 that were made with `0` evidence or even corroboration, everybody is quite satisfied that they must be guilty. Just on the accuser's say-so a person is convicted of these SOs. Tears and a strong story on social media takes the place of absolutely any evidence. No burden of proof laid on the prosecution. No innocent until proven guilty for these cases. Perhaps one of the biggest injustices in British history is whitewashed by both the public and the government as a mass offering to re-establish faith in a system that covered institutional abuse from the church and the rich to politicians and the BBC. Unsavoury, sordid content from these supposed cases are pored over in every dark detail in the papers and yet the idea of having the courage to question its truth could make one look as though one is defending the actions of the supposed and presumed guilty party. There is no true justice in Britain, only politics. Those that know, know. It really is an unfair system we have in the UK.