“You’re Saying She ISN'T Guilty” Dr David Bull Challenges Barrister on Lucy Letby

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  • Опубликовано: 18 авг 2023
  • Neonatal nurse Lucy Letby was arrested in July 2018 and questioned about the unexplained rise in deaths and near fatal collapses of premature babies in the Countess of Chester Hospital's neonatal unit.
    Criminal barrister Mark McDonalds joins Dr David Bull and Dr Renee Hoenderkamp to discuss the trial before the nurses sentencing on Monday.
    #lucyletby #crime #police #talktv #talkradio

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @paddingtonthomson8561
    @paddingtonthomson8561 9 месяцев назад +2055

    As a senior NHS nurse, I will wholeheartedly say the management within the NHS is corrupt. They should be removed and replaced by clinicians.

    • @krugerfuchs
      @krugerfuchs 9 месяцев назад +2

      All of you should be replaced

    • @lola70k
      @lola70k 9 месяцев назад +240

      As a NHS consultant, I totally agree with you. They don’t have any idea of anything about health care and they have all the power in their hands.

    • @shonabeggs4640
      @shonabeggs4640 9 месяцев назад +140

      As a lay person, I agree wholeheartedly with you both. Remove the pen pushers!

    • @johnbobson1557
      @johnbobson1557 9 месяцев назад +209

      As a retired consultant, I chucked the towel in early as did most of my cohort. The NHS really is useless and we need a return to clinically guided health care. Having a business manager is just ludicrous.

    • @isking1715
      @isking1715 9 месяцев назад +91

      So many people agree with you but will the gov listen. Nope.

  • @zoefree3950
    @zoefree3950 9 месяцев назад +708

    Whistleblowers will not be tolerated in the nhs….ask anyone who has worked for them and tried to make a complaint about anything 🤷‍♀️

    • @dizzykat9524
      @dizzykat9524 9 месяцев назад +33

      Absolutely true!

    • @markcordwell2035
      @markcordwell2035 9 месяцев назад

      Your right it's been on the radio last few days,useless NHS closing ranks,and this idiot NHS barrister just backs it up

    • @amirahabdi
      @amirahabdi 9 месяцев назад +17

      Well that’s becus we are meant to feel scared if we do report, we will be questioned a 100 of questions make us feel nervous….

    • @scartwright9350
      @scartwright9350 9 месяцев назад +4

      What r u on. She didnt expose anything. She killed babies. Thats it

    • @carlaorchard6794
      @carlaorchard6794 9 месяцев назад

      I agree. Although I was told when I started in the nhs you're as bad as what you walk past. But if you open your mouth be prepared for the backlash you will face. Managers in the nhs are the biggest problem. Too many managers on a lot of money doing not a lot of work

  • @fredneecher1746
    @fredneecher1746 9 месяцев назад +113

    Imagine being convicted of murdering seven babies with no evidence presented of killing any one of them, no motive and no confession. Why are people so keen to bay for blood, as this presenter is doing? It's as if people want a hate figure and when they have one they will not allow reasoned doubt to get in the way.

    • @heddaszczepanski9210
      @heddaszczepanski9210 9 месяцев назад +11

      She was found guilty by a Jury and a Judge, who were not swayed by her looks!

    • @holycannoli64
      @holycannoli64 9 месяцев назад +10

      Colin Stagg was found guilty by judge and jury too.

    • @kayleyrobinson6591
      @kayleyrobinson6591 8 месяцев назад

      No, why are people baby killer sympathisers? Callous. There was a confession and yes a motive- just because you don't know it, doesn't mean there wasn't. Onviously was.

    • @ruthbashford3176
      @ruthbashford3176 8 месяцев назад

      @@heddaszczepanski9210 Lucy was found guilty on flawed evidence. Read SCIENCE ON TRIAL rexvlucyletby

    • @rubyredall2145
      @rubyredall2145 8 месяцев назад +9

      Yes Presenters should really be neutral in my opinion but he wasn t having any of it.

  • @matthewmcbride28
    @matthewmcbride28 8 месяцев назад +23

    I'm afraid this conversation is going to age badly for the presenters.

  • @michellemcgarr1709
    @michellemcgarr1709 9 месяцев назад +820

    Cctv is needed over all hospital cots and beds of vulnerable people especially babies and children.

    • @nicholasporter1417
      @nicholasporter1417 9 месяцев назад +7

      1000% agreed. Tbh i thought they did. Whole case is troubling

    • @yell50
      @yell50 9 месяцев назад +23

      I thought CCTV is standard equipment in maternity wards and throughout hospitals in general

    • @Felicity2121
      @Felicity2121 9 месяцев назад +31

      Everyone in hospital is vulnerable.

    • @melgrant7404
      @melgrant7404 9 месяцев назад +12

      Especially when they knew something was going on .

    • @citizenphaid1880
      @citizenphaid1880 9 месяцев назад +3

      Never going to happen….the unions would have a field day with that one.

  • @steves1592
    @steves1592 9 месяцев назад +363

    A end of life nurse tried starving and dehydrating an old lady my mother was helping, my mother gave her some water after she was begging for a drink! This was 6 years ago and this old lady is still going strong!
    I find it hard to trust anyone these days 😢

    • @tonkabeancat1117
      @tonkabeancat1117 9 месяцев назад +32

      Your mum IS A TOTAL HERO.
      I tried doing that for my dad (3 days before he died) - and was barred from the hospital, along with having false accusations made about “interference” in the protocol.

    • @dorbie
      @dorbie 9 месяцев назад +33

      I hope you reported her. That's neglect, abuse, and murder.

    • @ukwhitewitch
      @ukwhitewitch 9 месяцев назад +73

      I am medically retired, but wanted a simple part-time job, so became a hospital cleaner for a few years. I have also helped patients who were begging for drinks. Several times I've shouted at the nurses who are usually sitting chatting at the nurse's station, completely ignoring their patients and they all just stare at me blankly as though they're surprised a cleaner can actually hold an intelligent conversation! I got to see what was really going on, because I was invisible and they didn't care....honestly, you'd be horrified.

    • @carolilseanne2175
      @carolilseanne2175 9 месяцев назад +32

      Bring back proper old fashioned Matrons!

    • @carolilseanne2175
      @carolilseanne2175 9 месяцев назад +12

      ​@@tonkabeancat1117you were doing what the staff should have been doing

  • @elizabethryan2217
    @elizabethryan2217 9 месяцев назад +153

    To be fair, I feel this barrister is being misrepresented. He didn't say - as the texts coming in suggested he did - that she wasn't guilty. He said the evidence on which she was convicted and the way in which she was investigated was very concerning and didn't *convince* him that she was guilty. He never said she was definitely innocent.

    • @sunway1374
      @sunway1374 9 месяцев назад +35

      You are right. I think there is reasonable doubt.

    • @nutrition182
      @nutrition182 9 месяцев назад +8

      and that other parties were not making mistakes, so she may not have been liable for all of the babies. Having said that, the culling of one baby is very bad if deliberately done.

    • @elizabethryan2217
      @elizabethryan2217 9 месяцев назад +14

      @@sunway1374 I actually don't know enough about the case to comment - I just felt the barrister made a point that was then misrepresented.

    • @elizabethryan2217
      @elizabethryan2217 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@nutrition182 no question. 💔

    • @johannahoneyman697
      @johannahoneyman697 9 месяцев назад +14

      You’re absolutely right!! Most people don’t listen properly.

  • @darkoz1692
    @darkoz1692 8 месяцев назад +21

    So in the eyes of the presenter, a miscarriage of justice never happens nor has ever happened.

    • @lesley9989
      @lesley9989 5 месяцев назад +2

      No one is saying there never are, but it doesn't mean every case is

  • @parker-ii7fg
    @parker-ii7fg 9 месяцев назад +938

    Let's not forget the role of the senior hospital management. They were fully aware of the accusations and not only failed to investigate, but actively tried to quash those who were attempting to speak out.
    They should also be in the dock for gross criminal negligence.

    • @truckerfromreno
      @truckerfromreno 9 месяцев назад +52

      Arrest them today.

    • @uniquevideosUk
      @uniquevideosUk 9 месяцев назад +38

      Exactly! Saying now you had significant concerns isn't saving anyone of them innocent babies!
      I feel NHS as become way to open, they don't question the obvious, they just kept ignoring it with nonsense! What we see in many cases today within many of our services.

    • @harold6863
      @harold6863 9 месяцев назад +36

      Too keen to cover up, all too, I’m afraid.

    • @rogerwood4846
      @rogerwood4846 9 месяцев назад

      no manager in the nhs every gets sacked or prosecuted......meanwhile they attack women at every turn and break the equality acts laws...they dont care because if it gets worse they get a golden hand shake and then move to another job in the nhs

    • @bonglandgreg
      @bonglandgreg 9 месяцев назад

      We have guilty by association laws, accomplices laws, aiding and abetting laws, conspiracy laws. These managers are by definition as guilty for the crimes as letby is.
      What the fuck has happened to our country? Really, what has happened and how did we allow it?

  • @darylheasman1
    @darylheasman1 9 месяцев назад +559

    I hope all the managers that tried to cover up this scandal face manslaughter charges for all the babies that died because of their negligence.

    • @testudohorsfieldii7052
      @testudohorsfieldii7052 9 месяцев назад +3

      No offence but you obviously don't know what manslaughter is

    • @darylheasman1
      @darylheasman1 9 месяцев назад +19

      @testudohorsfieldii7052 your clever,I'm not a legal expert in anyway, but their actions are responsible for the deaths of them poor babies due to their woeful neglect in pursuit of the Trusts reputation

    • @cbellasbusta4643
      @cbellasbusta4643 9 месяцев назад

      They're guilty of corporate manslaughter

    • @asmith5149
      @asmith5149 9 месяцев назад +21

      ​@@testudohorsfieldii7052nor do you. If your actions directly causes someons death it can be classed as manslaughter.

    • @jamiehav0k62
      @jamiehav0k62 9 месяцев назад +10

      Yeah it's literally called gross negligent manslaughter that they could be charged with due to gross failure of their position of care.

  • @britishbeef6178
    @britishbeef6178 9 месяцев назад +104

    I was in hospital once for a few days and one nurse took a disliking to me for no apparent reason, in the night when her shift changed, I could hear her slagging me off to the next nurse when she briefed her, seemingly forgetting that I could hear everything she was saying. There are some very bad apples lurking in the shadows.

    • @bigcityjunglecatenvisageth1422
      @bigcityjunglecatenvisageth1422 8 месяцев назад +14

      British: I've found the vast majority of nurses to be arrogant, nasty and hateful. And a good few doctors too.
      Welcome to the "caring profession" 🤒🤕😥🤧

    • @lifelongred7056
      @lifelongred7056 8 месяцев назад

      Since everyone has Internet access these long-established institutions the government,police, N.H.S, TV and sports. Now they can't hide things so easily. The police in my opinion are one of the most corrupt institutions there is. No freedom of speech,no common law rights,no justice . Everything is secretive,dark and sinister. The government,the police,solicitors,judges,bailiffs,debt collectors,councils are just organised gangs and totally untrustworthy.

    • @MrGranfield
      @MrGranfield 8 месяцев назад +7

      I am sure she had good reason to dislike you.

    • @bigcityjunglecatenvisageth1422
      @bigcityjunglecatenvisageth1422 8 месяцев назад +10

      @@MrGranfield
      Why are you being so spiteful? You might have to go into hospital one day!!!

    • @britishbeef6178
      @britishbeef6178 8 месяцев назад +6

      @@MrGranfield None. I minded my own business and never really spoke to her. At the time I was in an isolation room because I was positive for covid, but that wasn't why I was in hospital.

  • @miffy2760
    @miffy2760 7 месяцев назад +14

    Mark put up a good argument with those 2 clowns who refuse to look at it objectively.

  • @magenta6754
    @magenta6754 9 месяцев назад +418

    As soon as there was suspicious, she should not have been left alone with babies. At the very least they could have put up hidden cameras in the baby wards.

    • @oldskoolrools1353
      @oldskoolrools1353 9 месяцев назад +6

      now you're thinking about it....

    • @MikedeGarry
      @MikedeGarry 9 месяцев назад

      Yes, easy to do with today's technology. They probably feared some sort of 'invasion of privacy' infraction !!! NHS, Police, Education, Civil Service ... Knock them down and start again!

    • @normankennith7919
      @normankennith7919 9 месяцев назад

      it sounds like a cover up &someone above lucy is guilty of the deaths of the children!! i don't think anybody meant to kill the babies
      lucy has become the scapegoat!! she is as guilty of murder as much as kate & gerry mccann!!!!

    • @normankennith7919
      @normankennith7919 9 месяцев назад +19

      or the camera would have filmed the real 'murderer'!!!!!!!

    • @irenedavo3768
      @irenedavo3768 9 месяцев назад +5

      I have had Complaint with Liverpool Hospital! No one is interested!

  • @michellemcgarr1709
    @michellemcgarr1709 9 месяцев назад +390

    Those in management positions who overlooked the Doctors warnings should be charged with misconduct or aiding and abetting such crimes she was getting away with.

    • @Qkano
      @Qkano 9 месяцев назад

      Pashaw! Before you know it senior government and BBC staff that enabled Jimmy Savile to operate for decades despite it being an open secret ... should be charged?

    • @annegordon6725
      @annegordon6725 9 месяцев назад +12

      Corporate Manslaughter! They failed to act to avoid criticism of the hospital.

    • @lorrainepatterson8558
      @lorrainepatterson8558 9 месяцев назад +5

      They have all retired on massive pensions I'm sure

    • @viola1699
      @viola1699 9 месяцев назад +8

      They didn’t have any evidence that why they couldn’t remove Lucy. They still don’t have hard evidence till now.

    • @faodail3913
      @faodail3913 9 месяцев назад +2

      Manslaughter!

  • @dontbewoke
    @dontbewoke 8 месяцев назад +12

    The death rate rose to above the levels when Letby worked there as litte as 1-2 years later ; I'd have thought that on its own is evidence that the verdict was unsafe.

  • @bridiesmith5110
    @bridiesmith5110 9 месяцев назад +40

    No post mortems were done on all the elderly that died of covid. The shipman law was repealed for covid and has not been reinstated. This to protect Hancock and co from prosecution.

    • @aldorraman
      @aldorraman Месяц назад

      And what has this to do with Letby's mass murder convictions?

  • @Discombobulate453
    @Discombobulate453 9 месяцев назад +405

    My late mother tried to report bullying by her boss when she was a nurse, and the higher ups were not even remotely interested. And this was in 1995. NHS has been corrupt for decades. It's not getting any better.

    • @davesmith3526
      @davesmith3526 9 месяцев назад +21

      It not just the NHS, though. The level of corruptions in these services are just out of control.

    • @haza123b4
      @haza123b4 9 месяцев назад

      *Sorry for your loss. One possible factor in that treatment is that the PHSO (which handles NHS complaints) is corrupt - see Trust Pilot reviews.*

    • @joannarichards6245
      @joannarichards6245 9 месяцев назад +8

      That’s dreadful, your poor Mum! What on Earth are they up to? X❤️

    • @peterthomas5792
      @peterthomas5792 9 месяцев назад +12

      And it'll continue as long as there is no accountability for NHS managers.
      All they care about is the bottom line - the reputation of the trust. End of. Everything else is secondary, including patient lives and consultants' careers.

    • @donnae9566
      @donnae9566 9 месяцев назад +19

      I suffered the misfortune of working for the NHS around 1995, the ward managers (ex nurses themselves) bullied every nurse on that ward. I handed my notice in and told them in no uncertain terms that their management skills (or lack of) were disgusting and terrible for staff morale and that they desperately needed retraining. One of the bullies couldn't handle my direct approach and she bawled her eyes out. It makes me laugh to this day.

  • @63mckenzie
    @63mckenzie 9 месяцев назад +146

    The whole NHS system needs to change. I once made a complaint about a procedure I had done. The hospital manager said they would 'investigate'. This comprised of asking the person I complained about if anything had gone wrong. The said no, so that was the end of the matter!!! It's like criminals policing themselves.

    • @siljevege7283
      @siljevege7283 9 месяцев назад +6

      This tragically happens to most who complain about the nhs. This explains why the nhs is a breeding ground for serial killer.

    • @63mckenzie
      @63mckenzie 9 месяцев назад +9

      @@siljevege7283 The whole mentality has to change. It's become like some kind of religious organisation where you can never question them.

    • @user-vj4hs3li8d
      @user-vj4hs3li8d 9 месяцев назад +8

      @@63mckenzieoverpaid managers behaving like the mafia.

    • @haza123b4
      @haza123b4 9 месяцев назад +4

      *That's because the PHSO (which handles NHS complaints) is corrupt - see Trust Pilot reviews.*

    • @mkaz3997
      @mkaz3997 9 месяцев назад +1

      You should have 'lawyered up'. The NHS tends to fold when litigation is threatened.

  • @kham6006
    @kham6006 9 месяцев назад +62

    It’s amazing they never put cameras in after the first 2 deaths -they do it if they think a mother is harming a child m by proxy

    • @Ayat78
      @Ayat78 9 месяцев назад +7

      I hope they make it protocol to install cameras in all baby wards from now on.

    • @ryand141
      @ryand141 9 месяцев назад +1

      Well, it definitely should've happened after suspicion, because now, it's just fuelling speculation she's innocent. There's no real evidence.

    • @pjsmith2744
      @pjsmith2744 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@ryand141theirs no evidence.

    • @pjsmith2744
      @pjsmith2744 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@soloman6156totally agree mate.

    • @mauriceraphael5901
      @mauriceraphael5901 8 месяцев назад +4

      As an ex nurse I am amazed that Lucy Letby could have been left alone on a 12 hour shift this alone must have been illegal,

  • @cordeliav3055
    @cordeliav3055 9 месяцев назад +75

    Oh boy! I am thinking of Lindy Chamberlain here in Australia, sent to prison for a year for murdering her baby daughter. She was proved innocent, and that indeed a dingo had taken her baby. Her life was ruined, her marriage destroyed. A very sad case.

    • @SueRosalie
      @SueRosalie 9 месяцев назад +8

      cannot be compared at all. The Chamberlain case was police stuff up and prejudice against Chamberlain's personality and religion, and general ignorance of the capabilities of dingoes.

    • @darrenporter1850
      @darrenporter1850 9 месяцев назад +3

      1 child. Completely different

    • @cordeliav3055
      @cordeliav3055 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@darrenporter1850 not quite. Three other children: 2 small boys and a daughter born to her in prison, subsequently taken from her.

    • @mallikapatri8477
      @mallikapatri8477 9 месяцев назад +6

      @@darrenporter1850one child killed so it’s not as important?
      Wow

    • @darrenporter1850
      @darrenporter1850 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@cordeliav3055 All eaten by Dingo's?

  • @stephenclarke8864
    @stephenclarke8864 9 месяцев назад +99

    Nobody checking her work , left to her own devices , managers in the building on 6 figure sums

    • @donny121able
      @donny121able 9 месяцев назад +3

      You propose everybody that works needs to be under constant supervision?

    • @roymills9334
      @roymills9334 9 месяцев назад +8

      @@donny121able Most people in most jobs have supervisors. Not constantly, but they are there or should be.

    • @donny121able
      @donny121able 9 месяцев назад

      @@roymills9334 yes that right, Lucy had a supervisor too.

    • @stephenclarke8864
      @stephenclarke8864 9 месяцев назад +1

      @donny121able yes my work is as a carpenter for social housing

    • @donny121able
      @donny121able 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@stephenclarke8864 So you have helpers and you are constantly watching them work? At no time are they free to work on their own initiative?

  • @sean380
    @sean380 9 месяцев назад +41

    Hospital Trusts Management teams are more concerned about their reputations than Patient safety.

  • @eleveneleven572
    @eleveneleven572 9 месяцев назад +23

    I worked at a senior level in a sheltered housing division and later in a medical charity. I inherited NHS staff in the first and worked with the same in the latter.
    In both situations the NHS staff, all female, were lacking in empathy, care and professionalism. In my first job i got rid of them ..with very swift improvements for the residents. In the latter i had no direct influence but did my hest to raise concerns and after a long time staff changes and management structures were changed.
    Frankly i think the NHS is very deeply flawed. Most people have horror stories about their own experiences and of loved ones.

    • @dianeshannon7988
      @dianeshannon7988 9 месяцев назад

      Frankly???

    • @SoldUrSoul24982
      @SoldUrSoul24982 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@dianeshannon7988Yes frankly. What is your problem?

    • @heddaszczepanski9210
      @heddaszczepanski9210 9 месяцев назад

      And your point is🧐???

    • @SoldUrSoul24982
      @SoldUrSoul24982 9 месяцев назад

      @@heddaszczepanski9210 They stated their point. You stated Lucy is guilty elsewhere. What's your source, for your reason to state that!?🧐

    • @SoldUrSoul24982
      @SoldUrSoul24982 9 месяцев назад

      Good on you for getting rid of those ones lacking in empathy, care & professionalism. In the latter, when you raised concerns, I noticed that staff changes & management structures were changed. But, were your concerns acted upon in any way? Did you have the same management & same staffs, in the same place still, where you are? What was the change please?

  • @anthmegaton
    @anthmegaton 9 месяцев назад +30

    I think this kind of discourse is important. None of us knows the extent of the evidence but all major cases like this should be highly scrutinised, in the interest of the public.

    • @kayleyrobinson6591
      @kayleyrobinson6591 8 месяцев назад

      At what cost? Already cost the tax payer 3 million+

  • @a.urbanchuk513
    @a.urbanchuk513 9 месяцев назад +173

    The police should have been contacted from the start. Then if anything these children would be alive

    • @darthpepe2994
      @darthpepe2994 9 месяцев назад +9

      the police can't treat each and every hospital death as a crime, they'd never leave the hospitals and be able to focus elsewhere. The hospitals do have processes in place for this sort of thing, it's just in this case that procedure wasn't carried out by management to protect the reputation (and probably; jobs and budgets) of the hospital

    • @iguiste23
      @iguiste23 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@darthpepe2994 Yes they should, even if it is a tragic and natural death yes the police should 100% always attend the death of a new born child to rule fowl play out to begin with. The fact we don't do this is a huge part of the reason a lot of things like this happen. The deaths of the other six were easily preventable if the police had just been called for the first to rule it out as standard practice to in fact find out something was off. It only takes for the police to suspect one case of fowl play to prevent even more deaths.

    • @meredithisme3752
      @meredithisme3752 9 месяцев назад +9

      Management refused to involve police

    • @a.urbanchuk513
      @a.urbanchuk513 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@meredithisme3752 that is disgusting and this person ended up killing how many more before being charged? It's a sick way people know days.

    • @RowntreeRobin
      @RowntreeRobin 9 месяцев назад

      @@darthpepe2994 As if the hospitals have any good reputations at all! After covid, all hospitals are guilty of crimes against humanity.

  • @deeperlife5689
    @deeperlife5689 9 месяцев назад +44

    I didn’t like the way the media kept focusing on how ‘normal’ she was and from a middle class family and educated etc it’s disingenuous . I wonder if this barrister would be so quick to dismiss the months of evidence gathering and hours of deliberation the jury went through if Letby was from a single parent family living on a council estate.

    • @imprsk6729
      @imprsk6729 9 месяцев назад +6

      True... cannot count the number of smiling ..angelic looking photos of her in the press... portrayal of an English Rose...very normal... lovely nurse...😮

    • @olivegrove5215
      @olivegrove5215 9 месяцев назад +8

      She would be more likely to get off if she was from a broken home because remember we're all woke now. Throw evidence and meritocracy out the window in favour of the disadvantaged or perceived disadvantaged.

    • @deeperlife5689
      @deeperlife5689 9 месяцев назад

      @@olivegrove5215Did you listen to this Barrister he is an example of the criminal justice system, he clearly spouts misinformation about this case, he admits he didn’t sit through the trial he is making his conclusion based on what he thinks rather than the evidence presented. When you look at statistical data people who are more likely to be found guilty of a crime and serve custodial sentences are not the middle classes but the working classes. Just consider what the government have done in response to this case, decided not to have a public inquiry this protects those at the top of this hospital trust. We see the blatant cover up when a crime is committed by a politician or the head of some multinational corporation who often have political connections they are protected and this is what we have seen more recently with King Charles in the cash for honours inquiry that the Met have decided to drop. The people who are more likely to ‘get off’ are those with the most to lose

    • @kevphillips02
      @kevphillips02 9 месяцев назад +8

      Well the very same barristers fought for the Guildford 4 who were all very working class . The class argument is nonsense for those with a chip on their shoulder .

    • @charlynnegibson2893
      @charlynnegibson2893 9 месяцев назад +2

      Whether we like it or not, 'looking normal' and background do play a part in who we are. How many times do we say that the eyes are the windows of the soul. Having worked in schools from more affluent areas and then in poorer areas, I know firsthand that our surroundings and upbringing 'can' sadly have an effect on our development and ultimately our character. How many times do we see photos of caught criminals on our TVs showing faces that look evil. Their eyes are not sparkly, pure looking, but dead looking. In laymans terms, they look rough. It's sad but true.

  • @sarahparry1012
    @sarahparry1012 8 месяцев назад +37

    The interviewers argument is 'the jury said she's guilty so there' - by that logic you can never have a miscarriage of justice

  • @deanvm9158
    @deanvm9158 9 месяцев назад +114

    I can't believe there was no camera in any of those hospitals she worked in.

    • @ciaomuffet
      @ciaomuffet 9 месяцев назад +4

      Good point.

    • @ElementsMMA
      @ElementsMMA 9 месяцев назад +6

      Firstly it's not hospital policy, due to privacy laws. Secondly the expense of fitting cameras to every ward up and down the UK would be unfathomable.

    • @user-eg2wt1xj2t
      @user-eg2wt1xj2t 9 месяцев назад

      It it expansive for the system, but if a parent want to set up their own camera (having the the hospital provide WiFi and electricity), it it possible?

    • @ElementsMMA
      @ElementsMMA 9 месяцев назад

      Thats a difficult one, at present although there is nothing stopping people from filming in the wards, technically they would require the permission of any person that was captured on film, so shared wards would be a no, and if nurses or healthcare professionals did not grant permission then the filming would be extremely limited. Thats to the best of my knowledge in terms of current privacy laws. In public it is completely different and a person can film whatever they choose to, but a hospital ward is not a public space.@@user-eg2wt1xj2t

    • @KJ-lb4tj
      @KJ-lb4tj 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@ElementsMMAfair enough... But when there are suspicions and many deaths on an icu unit, there are incredibly cheap and small and undetectable cameras that can be placed in a room.

  • @DD-gt2cv
    @DD-gt2cv 9 месяцев назад +105

    I understood that insulin was found in at least 2 without C peptide, which is indictaive of deliberate addition. Also the fact that the death rate has reverted to the norm since her removal , is rather significant.

    • @uniquerebeljaney3639
      @uniquerebeljaney3639 9 месяцев назад +27

      Yes, that's correct, this barrister is talking bollocks.

    • @mrsthatcher9815
      @mrsthatcher9815 9 месяцев назад

      no he isnt - he is saying that there was no evidence other than circumstantial which is shaky - i agree she likely was guilty but you cant say 100% without DNA for example@@uniquerebeljaney3639

    • @pedazodetorpedo
      @pedazodetorpedo 9 месяцев назад

      He doesn't understand the medical evidence

    • @thinkislamcheckmychannel
      @thinkislamcheckmychannel 9 месяцев назад +3

      👍👍👍

    • @bradleyday5829
      @bradleyday5829 9 месяцев назад +37

      Since her removal, it is believed that the hospital stopped taking babies with highly complex needs!

  • @gherkamum
    @gherkamum 9 месяцев назад +18

    24 Hour Video Cameras would make it safer in all maternity Units….this must never happen again.

  • @samumoth
    @samumoth 9 месяцев назад +102

    I think the police should have carefully traced back through all the cases of dead babies in the hospitals prior to her time at the Countess of Cheshire. It’s not acceptable that all the evidence is circumstantial when someone is jailed for life without parole. Most of the psychologists being interviewed are labelling her as a psychopath - and yet the post notes scribbling were filled with declarations of panic, fear, despair and need. Isn’t part of being a psychopath the fact that one has no emotions or guilt? In fact it is not entirely clear that she was saying in her scribbling that she was guilty and evil because she murdered them or because she was a poor nurse who didn’t care for them properly. Her attitude in the Court was criticized as cold and indifferent…but, how is one expected to act in those circumstances - plus she was heavily medicated. I’ve also read…though I don’t know if this true…that after she left the unit, the hospital immediately stopped accepting very sick babies.
    I’m not saying she is not guilty because - she may well be. I am simply stating that I think this case needs further review in terms of hard evidence and background history.

    • @heddaszczepanski9210
      @heddaszczepanski9210 9 месяцев назад +8

      Of course they reviewed all the deaths and she was present in every single one! There were no more deaths when she was removed

    • @irishcountrygirl78
      @irishcountrygirl78 9 месяцев назад +9

      ​@heddaszczepanski9210 and it apparently started back up again when she returned from Ibiza.

    • @Ayat78
      @Ayat78 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@heddaszczepanski9210nope she wasn’t.

    • @KingBee24
      @KingBee24 9 месяцев назад

      There were 30 deaths over the time period and she was present at 8 of them@@heddaszczepanski9210

    • @WeiYinChan
      @WeiYinChan 9 месяцев назад

      Why is it not acceptable that all evidence is circumstantial? This is how shows like CSI is misleading people about how evidence work. Not every case need a DNA sample or finger print. Circumstantial evidence are still evidence. The babies were definitely murdered, they found artificial insulin and air bubbles in them that couldn’t have been there accidentally (there’s your physical evidence), she was the only one who could have done it given that she was there every single time, she was even witnessed by people of doing something to the babies seconds before they collapsed. That’s evidence enough. You also have a misunderstanding of what psychopath is… seriously people need to stop defending her

  • @teslaandhumanity7383
    @teslaandhumanity7383 9 месяцев назад +16

    Have to keep an open mind , moms we’re put in jail for cot deaths , and over baby deathS .

  • @hautedoctor2738
    @hautedoctor2738 9 месяцев назад +193

    Unless we were in court and had access to all of the evidence put forward by the prosecution and defence, we can't say the jury made the wrong decision.

    • @nrw34260
      @nrw34260 9 месяцев назад +12

      12 people agreed

    • @therighthonsirdoug
      @therighthonsirdoug 9 месяцев назад +19

      ​@nrw34260 They were majority decisions and not unanimous and the final jury was of 11.

    • @Hammybread
      @Hammybread 9 месяцев назад +1

      With the evidence presented, the notes, the text messages(sus as F to refer to them living and dying being "Fate") I'd say they made the right call, oh yeah lets not forget that babies actually SURVIVED WHILE SHE WAS ON HOLIDAY AND STARTED DYING AGAIN WHEN SHE CAME BACK.
      Its not rocket science, the signs and evidence are there. You all wouldn't be saying "we can't say if its actually true" if a man was being convicted right? but because its a woman oh she gets a free pass its ok.

    • @ashwayn
      @ashwayn 9 месяцев назад

      @@nrw34260 see film 12 just men

    • @nrw34260
      @nrw34260 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@therighthonsirdoug OK, 11 out of 12 then

  • @johnmercer3571
    @johnmercer3571 9 месяцев назад +84

    There have been unsafe murder convictions the courts have overturned before. The NHS is in disarray. It’s entirely possible she’d been used as a scapegoat and thrown under the bus to cover NHS negligence.

  • @nickrichardson9353
    @nickrichardson9353 9 месяцев назад +88

    The barrister at no time said she was innocent but that the evidence had all the makings of a miss trial.

    • @kevphillips02
      @kevphillips02 9 месяцев назад +5

      Barristers will never commit even if they are on your side . They discuss the evidence and its strengths . It is not unusual .

    • @billybonds4449
      @billybonds4449 9 месяцев назад +10

      Most of the poor circumstantial evidence was as bent as a nine bob note.

    • @heddaszczepanski9210
      @heddaszczepanski9210 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@billybonds4449 well actually it wasnt! If this wasnt a thorough investigation taking years, then I dont know what is. She was found guilty, end of.

    • @ABC-dw7pe
      @ABC-dw7pe 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@heddaszczepanski9210 exactly, complete load of conspiratorial cr4p people are coming up with here. “Lucy didn’t do anything- that’s why she hasn’t spoke up in her own defence, didn’t come to sentencing to make her mark etc etc “ all the holes in their arguments are laughable

    • @billybonds4449
      @billybonds4449 9 месяцев назад

      @@heddaszczepanski9210 Doesn't matter how long the investigation took Knob Head. 4 weeks or four years, the evidence was manufactured to suit the narrative of a scapegoat that had to be found to divert attention from the real evil tw*ts who contributed to those unfortunate deaths. END OF!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @LittleJoyJar
    @LittleJoyJar 9 месяцев назад +92

    Could those notes of been her writing down her bad beliefs about herself? Rather than a confession?

    • @heddaszczepanski9210
      @heddaszczepanski9210 9 месяцев назад +6

      Well, regardless, they were notes of a very disturbed person and she certainly didnt look disturbed but she was! I think she was 100% guilty. The management protected her until they couldnt any more!

    • @jeanettedevereux7664
      @jeanettedevereux7664 9 месяцев назад

      👏

    • @vetworker
      @vetworker 9 месяцев назад

      @@jeanettedevereux7664another sheep who always believes the media. Because you’ve been told she is guilty you automatically think she is and can’t/ won’t believe maybe she is innocent. 🐑 🐑🐑🐑🐑

    • @holycannoli64
      @holycannoli64 9 месяцев назад

      Sounds like a Freudian cathartic exercise. It's not proof of anything to anyone with a functional intellect.

    • @ryand141
      @ryand141 9 месяцев назад +12

      Yes, possibly. There's absolutely no evidence. Why weren't autopsies done?

  • @phoebecaulfield4062
    @phoebecaulfield4062 9 месяцев назад +175

    Mr McDonald is in error when he says Letby's case mirrors the others he cites - Letby had all manner of documentation at home with her relating to the deaths and documents where she wrote about her involvement in these deaths. A confession obtained under police questioning may be questionable as individuals are open to duress, but this writing was her own free reflections on her behaviour.

    • @darthpepe2994
      @darthpepe2994 9 месяцев назад +36

      everything is circumstantial though, and her "confession" was argued to have been written under stress, blaming herself etc. All the evidence does point to her, but what bothers me the most is that it is still all circumstantial. If this hadn't been such a public trial I doubt she'd have given a clear guilty verdict

    • @JFDA5458
      @JFDA5458 9 месяцев назад +36

      It's open to interpretation. Either she was confessing to murder in those notes, or she felt so much remorse and guilt over their deaths that she felt responsible for the fate of these babies. I just don't know.

    • @ProjectMoff
      @ProjectMoff 9 месяцев назад +4

      How convenient

    • @Ardwick-Crome
      @Ardwick-Crome 9 месяцев назад +40

      He's not simply in error, he's lying. He knows she's guilty. What he's doing is setting himself up as her barrister in the event of an appeal, which will guarantee him years of work and a grand paycheque. It doesn't matter whether he wins or loses, it's all about the money.

    • @mrsthatcher9815
      @mrsthatcher9815 9 месяцев назад +7

      no there was one letter actually

  • @therange4033
    @therange4033 9 месяцев назад +42

    He says nothing found in the system BUT they found insulin in a baby who was NOT prescribed it!

    • @jeanettecardinal790
      @jeanettecardinal790 9 месяцев назад +1

      Lots of Lucy Letby 's friends and family here.

    • @tinygold772
      @tinygold772 9 месяцев назад +14

      One of the babies mother had gestational diabetes and it’s shown that insulin can and does pass via the placenta to baby’s blood stream and for the other baby in question they were administered insulin 5 days prior to the blood tests - also the levels of insulin found were so high as to kill two grown men yet both of these babies recovered? How is that possible if it was in fact synthetic insulin? There are other medical explanations for these blood test results that exclude it being added via a glucose or feeding bag - they actually point more to it not being administered at all but being present in blood tests results for other reasons - ie transmitted via placenta for one and for the other being in the blood stream for a longer than the usual half life due to other processes when it was documented as being administered 5 days before the blood tests- there simply is not any evidence that synthetic insulin was maliciously added to feed or glucose drip or at all

    • @projectObject247
      @projectObject247 9 месяцев назад +1

      Differentiate between insulin and synthetic insulin. You can't.

    • @therange4033
      @therange4033 9 месяцев назад

      You can. @@projectObject247

    • @ChelleKT1
      @ChelleKT1 9 месяцев назад +4

      Doesn’t mean she administered it though.

  • @dmounsey1
    @dmounsey1 9 месяцев назад +94

    I’ve been watching everything about the trial that I can find and I can’t say that I find anything that proves guilt. I scratch my head and wonder if this was a witch hunt. I pray to god they got the right person for the sake of all the babies.

    • @kerrieannebaker8595
      @kerrieannebaker8595 9 месяцев назад +8

      agreed

    • @lf9341
      @lf9341 9 месяцев назад +9

      Are you insane? She has notes she wrote saying she is evil and did this.

    • @andrewg2618
      @andrewg2618 9 месяцев назад

      lol c'mon. Look at her face and look at her notes. She's a nutter in any case.

    • @vickisocks
      @vickisocks 9 месяцев назад +23

      The notes also say 'i did nothing wrong'.

    • @miacat1727
      @miacat1727 9 месяцев назад +1

      Apparently only the incriminating notes were presented, whereas the many, many other notes that could have provided a counter balance, were not disclosed. This is blatant, cherry picking, which is a crimes in itself. Same with the attendance mandate, deliberate manipulation of one staff member present on the ward but way of exclusion of the others. Norman Fenton interview with Dr Scott McLachan, gives an open, experience alternative to the verdict & what the MSM are forcing on us to believe.

  • @softcolly8753
    @softcolly8753 8 месяцев назад +32

    Having done Jury duty, it would terrify me standing trial while being innocent. Remember that half of the jury are likely to be below average intelligence.

    • @softcolly8753
      @softcolly8753 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@gpw203 indeed, the less smart people in the case I was involved in seemed to treat it as a TV drama where they were trying to guess the plot twist. Despite being instructed to base it on the evidence.

    • @justinneill5003
      @justinneill5003 8 месяцев назад +3

      Trial by jury seems such an antiquated system, it’s like a relic from a more primitive age. Think about it… evidence is painstakingly gathered and forensically analysed by experts, specialists are consulted, experienced lawyers trawl through every aspect of the case… but in the end, the defendant’s fate is decided by the butcher, the baker & the candlestick maker.

    • @andyryan3756
      @andyryan3756 6 месяцев назад

      100 % agree and I bet nearly all had no medical background or knowledge. I trial by your peers should be just that. In Lucy case doctors and nurses who know what the terminology means. How this woman was found guilty should scare everyone, it’s as plan as the nose on one’s face that the evidence was so weak. The case never should of come to court. A pure coverup has took place and the chosen sacrificial lamb was slaughtered to
      Appease the gullible masses. Ie Joe Public

  • @soulonice99
    @soulonice99 9 месяцев назад +71

    If a lifeguard sees someone drowning they CALL FOR HELP, then jump in to rescue. LL did not call for help while a child was in distress; the monitoring system held the time, date, the fact that the alarm did NOT SOUND, and a doctor witnessed her standing over the child watching after she had sabotage the tubing.

    • @Andrea-ld9cy
      @Andrea-ld9cy 9 месяцев назад +31

      Yet that same doctor did not report it or even make a note of it.
      For someone convinced of her guilt he said and did nothing. Which is very odd.

    • @beverlyw6881
      @beverlyw6881 9 месяцев назад +11

      @@Andrea-ld9cyThe administration was supportive of and I believe aggressively defending her to the point of threatening the medical staff who would not shut up. They should be fired and sued.

    • @iknowaletheia5560
      @iknowaletheia5560 9 месяцев назад +14

      A nurse witness in one of the baby cases spoke how her and Letby were in one of the rooms together, and one of the babies was desaturating, and you would wait to see if they would self-correct before managing further as it was so common. If that was standard practice, then Dr J (not being a ward nurse and not knowing this was how all the nurses monitored things) then took LL looking over one of the cots and not ‘reacting’ completely out of context. He potential ‘made a murderer’.

    • @Andrea-ld9cy
      @Andrea-ld9cy 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@iknowaletheia5560 well said

    • @paulroberts7544
      @paulroberts7544 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@beverlyw6881 there is no proof the babies were murdered. There is no proof letby did anything wrong. It's quite possible that they did the right thing and the police/courts got it wrong.

  • @StephASMR
    @StephASMR 9 месяцев назад +125

    My baby fell on delivery and landed on her face. The midwife was new and should not have been alone. The umbilical cord broke on delivery and I had to have it manually removed. When I complained a few months later they denied it all… they said that there had been two midwives there and my daughter had never fallen. This was in Australia… they cover their mistakes.

    • @rosebud1493
      @rosebud1493 9 месяцев назад +14

      That's terrible and traumatic for both you and your little baby. I hope your daughter was ok.

    • @druvadava9080
      @druvadava9080 9 месяцев назад +3

      Is the baby alright??

    • @sheilabutterworth5800
      @sheilabutterworth5800 9 месяцев назад

      @@druvadava9080 read it above again x

    • @Laura-fh3sc
      @Laura-fh3sc 9 месяцев назад +2

      Wow that's awful! So sorry. I hope your daughter had no lasting damage?

    • @natashajovic7080
      @natashajovic7080 9 месяцев назад +1

      May I ask how long ago this was? I will be having a baby is AUS soon.. very nervous

  • @MegBlyth
    @MegBlyth 9 месяцев назад +29

    The two babies who were poisoned with insulin did have evidence that they were deliberately poisoned and she herself agreed that a deliberate act was the only way that they could have had that much insulin in their system. So it’s not true that there is no toxicology screenings at all. He should have sat through the trial if he was going to comment on it.

    • @KK-jf4oo
      @KK-jf4oo 9 месяцев назад +3

      Well said !

    • @coleuk8817
      @coleuk8817 9 месяцев назад +8

      The insulin issue is certainly not cut-and-dried. Different experts offer up perfectly plausible other potential explanations for its presence that do not involve being them deliberately injected.

    • @davidowen2859
      @davidowen2859 9 месяцев назад +15

      I'm afraid that a deliberate act is not the only way the two babies could have died from insulin poisoning. Both infants who reportedly showed increased concentration of insulin were at significant risk for the production of autoantibodies to insulin. Child F was treated with insulin in the days prior, which is related to the production of autoantibodies, while Child L was born to a mother who was seriously unwell and had a diagnosis of gestational diabetes.
      Gestational diabetes is associated with hyperinsulinemia The production of maternal antibodies to insulin in response to maternal insulin treatment can result in insulin readily crossing the placenta.
      As for Lucy Letby agreeing with the prosecution that they were deliberately poisoned, if you are presented with so called irrefutable evidence that it was a deliberate act then any sensible person would be bound to agree.
      The point I'm making is that unless the defence has access to scientific experts the jury have only a blinkered view. This case is complex. Two of the babies were removed from mechanical ventilation with no apparent reasoning and later collapsed. One was removed three times!

    • @francishooper9548
      @francishooper9548 9 месяцев назад +11

      Even if the insulin was deliberately introduced into the babies ( and I agree this is not proven) how is not known and neither is who did it. There was a case here in Australia where a woman was convicted of murder after 3 of her 4 children died over a period of about 4 years. How they died was not known, there was no motive (she was described as a loving mother by people who knew her). She was convicted on the basis of her having opportunity. It was subsequently found that all her children had a rare genetic condition which could bring about sudden death. Only after a public outcry was she "pardoned" and release - the conviction remains.

    • @coleuk8817
      @coleuk8817 9 месяцев назад +9

      @@davidowen2859 Thank you for this. One of the huge flaws in the case is the fact such critical evidence was seemingly not submitted in court. Dr Scott McLachan is among those pointing fingers at her defence team, while also acknowledging her King's Counsel was restricted in what he was allowed to ask and submit in court.

  • @r1pperuk
    @r1pperuk 9 месяцев назад +11

    This case did smack of no real evidence.

    • @Friendofstfrank
      @Friendofstfrank 8 месяцев назад +1

      25000 pages of evidence is not 'no evidence'.

    • @poopoppy
      @poopoppy 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@Friendofstfrank That is not relevant how many pages. It's what evidence those pages contain. Not the amount of pages.

  • @johncolley7643
    @johncolley7643 9 месяцев назад +10

    If he’s so convinced let him do the defence on her appeal on a no win no fee basis, see how convinced he is then.

  • @captainplatinum
    @captainplatinum 9 месяцев назад +14

    I’ve smelt a rat from the start . None of this stacks up under scrutiny

  • @lynseywilliamson1911
    @lynseywilliamson1911 9 месяцев назад +57

    They found over 300 medical hand over reports of the babies she murdered in a Tescos bag under her bed . Why would you take them home . She searched 290 time 3 parents of the dead babies why . I listen to the court hearing word for word yesterday

    • @flumpaustin1994
      @flumpaustin1994 9 месяцев назад +12

      Were any handover notes found of babies that she didn't "kill"? That question has to be asked.

    • @cariza5
      @cariza5 9 месяцев назад +4

      Not Tescos, it's Tesco.

    • @Alan-ss3xp
      @Alan-ss3xp 9 месяцев назад +1

      Morrisons, Sainsbury’s but not Tesco’s I’m intrigued. Is it because it is not named after a person?

    • @cariza5
      @cariza5 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@Alan-ss3xp because there is no supermarket by the name of Tesco's.

    • @jack1d1XB
      @jack1d1XB 9 месяцев назад +1

      Can you re-write this it's bizarre how u writed thiss!!!!!

  • @BunyanaRed1958
    @BunyanaRed1958 9 месяцев назад +126

    Some people might be under the impression that this Barrister is auditioning his services for an appeal. Some people might think that.

    • @abacussin
      @abacussin 9 месяцев назад +30

      For a man that didn't sit through the presenting of evidence he seems quite sure that there are flaws, a real columbo.

    • @MarkJones-gt2qd
      @MarkJones-gt2qd 9 месяцев назад +16

      People are entitled to appeal, and often cleared on appeal to. are you saying that this woman should be denied that?

    • @yorkshirelass8786
      @yorkshirelass8786 9 месяцев назад +2

      That's exactly what I thought.

    • @yorkshirelass8786
      @yorkshirelass8786 9 месяцев назад +13

      ​@@MarkJones-gt2qdthe comment didn't say anything about taking her right to appeal away. It pointed out that it came across to some like he was auditioning his services... and it did.

    • @lindapayne1595
      @lindapayne1595 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@MarkJones-gt2qdpity that didn't work for Andy Malkinson.

  • @simonroberts5
    @simonroberts5 9 месяцев назад +131

    Mr McDonald is simply wrong when he claims there was no statistical analysis done in this case. The case came about because seven consultants could see a clear correlation between a rocketing mortality rate in the neonatal unit and Lucy Letby being on duty. The key statistic here is that once she was removed from the unit, the deaths stopped. That one fact is damming.

    • @thomasob1492
      @thomasob1492 9 месяцев назад +2

      No bother Taggart.

    • @nickwaughman5514
      @nickwaughman5514 9 месяцев назад +37

      That's not What Mr McDonald said. A hospital consultant is not capable of carrying out a statistical analysis. We live in a time when we are constantly bombarded with messages to trust science. If statistical analysis was not carried out by statisticians then a statistical analysis was not done. How can a jury convict beyond a reasonable doubt if they are told that unqualified consultants conducted a statistical analysis? Let me be clear. The loss of these babies is a tragedy and I know virtually nothing about this case because I don't consume news. But, if what Mr MCDonald is saying is in fact true then we must have juries that have clear evidence put before them, not a narrative.

    • @thecarpetman7687
      @thecarpetman7687 9 месяцев назад

      @@nickwaughman5514 oh look…another conspiracy theory nut job…this must be like Christmas for you

    • @lavrentievv
      @lavrentievv 9 месяцев назад +8

      No. That's not how statistical significance works. This kind of thinking is probably why jury found her guilty. Post hoc ergo propter hoc..

    • @lacossanostra
      @lacossanostra 9 месяцев назад +2

      clearly you know more than Dr David Bull and clearly you have seen all the evidence right!!?

  • @notbaltic280
    @notbaltic280 9 месяцев назад +29

    This is not true - they found high levels of synthetic insulin in the bodies of 2 babies.

    • @itwasntme8770
      @itwasntme8770 9 месяцев назад +10

      And ? Who put it there? And the evidence as to how it got there is ?

    • @samuellarcombe4209
      @samuellarcombe4209 9 месяцев назад

      Taking aside all the alternative explanations for that, not least that that only one test was taken/false positives etc etc, why would this mastermind murderer, supposedly so smart that she injects air into tubes so as to go undetected suddenly then change her method to injecting insulin, which she knows could be detected?

    • @helenagracie1465
      @helenagracie1465 9 месяцев назад +8

      I agree.. I see this case is driven by emotion and a determination to close the lid on it! This country is in a very bad place..

    • @ianransome855
      @ianransome855 9 месяцев назад +8

      At least one of those babies was prescribed insulin as part of an earlier treatment program. As an undisclosed doctor stated, accidental administration could not be ruled out.

    • @von-Adler
      @von-Adler 9 месяцев назад

      The body can produce Insulin without injection

  • @tommytitmouse
    @tommytitmouse 9 месяцев назад +10

    It appears Money paid to defence Barristers is paramount to anything else.
    The thing that has to be recognised is that since Lucy Letby has ceased nursing. No further babies have died in the numbers they did when she was on duty on the Maternity Ward.

    • @kevphillips02
      @kevphillips02 9 месяцев назад +2

      Who has said that no babies have died ?. You invented that comment .

    • @bobsmith5441
      @bobsmith5441 8 месяцев назад +2

      The care unit does not permit babies at such a premature age anymore either which would naturally increase survival rate.

    • @colinluckens9591
      @colinluckens9591 8 месяцев назад

      ....and when she went on holiday - these conspiracy theorists (as usual) have their head in the clouds....

  • @user-sj1nz8zb9m
    @user-sj1nz8zb9m 9 месяцев назад +9

    What about the babies who had excessive levels of insulin? They were looked at right after death. Is there another explanation for the excess insulin? Also the baby who’s stomach content was measured after projectile vomiting over the nursery and still had the normal amount of milk in his/her stomach and it is testified to by witness that Letby was the only one with the baby and fed him/her.

  • @Padraigp
    @Padraigp 9 месяцев назад +59

    Maybe those nurses who were exxonerated....werent actually innocent. And got away with it from lack of evidence.

    • @pedazodetorpedo
      @pedazodetorpedo 9 месяцев назад +1

      Exactly

    • @fusionfan6883
      @fusionfan6883 9 месяцев назад +9

      No they were exonerated after conviction.

    • @ZaydDepaor
      @ZaydDepaor 9 месяцев назад +5

      indeed he doesn't apply his own logic.

    • @Padraigp
      @Padraigp 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@ZaydDepaor yes he uses patterns of past crimes and then says all the proescution are doing is looking for patterns lol!

  • @abrin5508
    @abrin5508 9 месяцев назад +58

    The guy being interviewed is correct. Anyone with a scientific, statistical, medical or even common sense background knows that this conviction is extremely unsafe.

    • @eddieshredder5740
      @eddieshredder5740 9 месяцев назад +6

      Funny how it's only the men that think this "pretty" nurse is innocent

    • @kgbgb3663
      @kgbgb3663 9 месяцев назад +20

      @@eddieshredder5740 No, it's people who are numerate, understand science, and are sensitive to logical and statistical fallacies. And have a strong sense of justice. Those properties may or may not be correlated with being a man.

    • @leah1633
      @leah1633 9 месяцев назад +16

      @@eddieshredder5740 i'm a woman and believe she could well be innocent

    • @alenagonzales9489
      @alenagonzales9489 9 месяцев назад +12

      @@eddieshredder5740
      I’m a woman who works in a medical field and I’m not a 100%convinced. The evidence is shaky.

    • @8964TS
      @8964TS 9 месяцев назад

      You've seen the evidence? How did you get a seat in court?@@alenagonzales9489

  • @Dinadino994
    @Dinadino994 9 месяцев назад +39

    The trust in the NHS is failing more & more each day .
    I was actually told by a consultant that no one cares about patients in pain .
    I always hear staff openly talk about patients private details they were unaware I was there .
    This is not a one off and not just one hospital .

    • @DaleSteel
      @DaleSteel 9 месяцев назад +1

      Yes by events like this. There would be absolutely no reason to make up a case like this to deliberately damage the NHS is there? 😂

    • @Dinadino994
      @Dinadino994 9 месяцев назад

      @@DaleSteel not sure what you mean tbh

    • @DaleSteel
      @DaleSteel 9 месяцев назад

      @polly6819 no, that's the problem with 95% of the population. Either stupid, ignorant or cannot see the wood for the trees.

    • @kerrytibenham2668
      @kerrytibenham2668 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@Dinadino994 @DaleSteel is referring to yet another conspiracy theory where its all blamed on Big Brother as apparently were all sheep being hoodwinked from the ‘bigger picture’ ….yawn!

    • @chowfurnowmeow
      @chowfurnowmeow 9 месяцев назад +2

      I agree. It's horrible what you hear behind the scenes.

  • @Iain1962
    @Iain1962 9 месяцев назад +92

    Nonsense the statistical evidence is overwhelming, much higher death rate than could be expected and she was on duty for every case.

    • @DailyCorvid
      @DailyCorvid 9 месяцев назад

      Only a crooked lawyer would think that post-natal abortions for babies with asthma and hair lips could _ever_ be defended. These two deserve grenades in each orifice.

    • @phoebecaulfield4062
      @phoebecaulfield4062 9 месяцев назад +14

      Not only was she on duty for every case, the crises began the moment she was left alone on a shift.

    • @charlytaylor1748
      @charlytaylor1748 9 месяцев назад +15

      This is all true, but 100% of the evidence is circumstantial. It's a horrible trap.

    • @Iain1962
      @Iain1962 9 месяцев назад

      @@charlytaylor1748 It's the nature of the case. You could also say that 100% of the evidence against say Jimmy Savile is circumstantial and based on heresay and claims.

    • @phoebecaulfield4062
      @phoebecaulfield4062 9 месяцев назад +14

      @@charlytaylor1748 I don't know why people continue to refer to "it was all circumstantial evidence" as if that is not valid evidence. Thousands of guilty people are found guilty on the basis of circumstantial evidence every day of the week, and it is a very valid form of establishing guilt. If a person enters a room, and CCTV picks up a second person entering the same room. And when the person exists they are bruised and beaten, it is "circumstantial evidence" that tells us person number 2 is guilty. The circumstances being - the person was seen entering the building, following person 1, they were there at the time and place when the wounding occurred, nobody else was around. All of that is "circumstantial".

  • @carlahilton2872
    @carlahilton2872 8 месяцев назад +5

    Lucy went through hell being blamed for this. She began to think maybe i did! What if i dont know im a psycho. The notes lucy wrote was her seeing if she was going mad. If i write it, will i remember doing it! She was thinking if i did kill these babies, im evil! She was trying to spark a memory because she thought s going mad. She really could be innocent.. Was there other staff on the majority of these shifts. How many hours did lucy work compared to others. If she worked extra on top of full time, then she would be on the ward most days. She could be innocent 😢

  • @daniellatheczarina2u915
    @daniellatheczarina2u915 9 месяцев назад +37

    With the rate of infant mortality when she was around is of itself highly suspicious. She paid unusual interest in the families on FB. Consultants reported their concerns about her. Management wanted to brush those concerns aside to protect themselves and the reputation of the hospital.

    • @leldelat9621
      @leldelat9621 9 месяцев назад +5

      She looked up many more families on fb, not just those whose babies died

    • @flumpaustin1994
      @flumpaustin1994 9 месяцев назад +1

      Maybe she looked the families up because she blamed herself and became mentally unstable. She wrote "I'm not good enough".

    • @DARKOvibrations
      @DARKOvibrations 9 месяцев назад +3

      It’s definitely her. These videos are disrespectful to the poor babies and their parents

    • @AethelwulfOfNordHymbraLand2333
      @AethelwulfOfNordHymbraLand2333 9 месяцев назад +13

      Oddly, at the SAME time Lucy Letby was taken off duty(June 2016), the neonatal unit was also downgraded and stopped admitting severely ill babies, henceforth there were fewer deaths. But despite the departure of Lucy from the unit and the fact severely ill babies were no longer being admitted to the unit, the death rate was STILL regarded as 'high' two years AFTER LL left.
      People need to do their research before sharing their ill-founded, prejudiced opinions. There's NO evidence against Lucy Letby.

    • @daniellatheczarina2u915
      @daniellatheczarina2u915 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@AethelwulfOfNordHymbraLand2333 Doesn't make her more or even less guilty.

  • @poppy1779
    @poppy1779 9 месяцев назад +28

    Being a criminal barrister for twenty seven years doesn’t impress me one iota.

    • @ant292uk
      @ant292uk 9 месяцев назад +3

      Being emotional doesn't impress me...

    • @uttaradit2
      @uttaradit2 9 месяцев назад +1

      the guys a paid dissembler ..

    • @johnclegg4993
      @johnclegg4993 9 месяцев назад

      People at the top or near the top can be just as criminal as anybody, all human.

    • @Sctch_Egg
      @Sctch_Egg 9 месяцев назад +4

      So you are calling his professional credentials into question because his opinion doesnt align with yours?

    • @johnclegg4993
      @johnclegg4993 9 месяцев назад

      @@Sctch_Egg professional credentials, hmmm. I seen three different doctors a few years ago who all said I was suffering from migraines and not to worry for six weeks until it was discovered it was actually subdural brain blood clots, just a little true story regarding professional credentials . .

  • @Damage_Inc_
    @Damage_Inc_ 9 месяцев назад +22

    The notes seal the deal. She knows she's evil.

    • @user-xw1he5si7c
      @user-xw1he5si7c 9 месяцев назад +1

      Just what i thought..why write them

  • @elainejefferson.uk5656
    @elainejefferson.uk5656 9 месяцев назад +19

    I witnessed my sister being badly treated by a nurse ,she had a tracky in she had in every hour or so a nurse would come in and clean it when full of mucas when a certain nurse come in she had fear on her face I knew she didn't like this nurse, one day arrived early and had to wait outside the room the nurse removed the tracky to clean but delayed putting it back in so my sister was panicking I rush in and the nurse quickly put it back in I was so angry I complained but was told she was doing her job I asked the same nurse how my sister was she was but in a reduced coma but I noticed she had tears running down her face I asked is she in pain can she feel pain she just said I don't know you can't say because she can't speak she then said well because she alcoholic it will have a effect on her, my sister had been in hospital for 3 months she had breast cancer and it went to her lungs she died two days later, may be the nurse didn't like the fact she had a drink problem but she didn't know was my sister like was like or may be it was because women don't drink in her country .

    • @ryand141
      @ryand141 9 месяцев назад +4

      Should've reported it.

    • @voice.of.reason
      @voice.of.reason 9 месяцев назад +1

      There are some bad nurses out there I agree, but I think Lucy took the can for all of them

    • @colinluckens9591
      @colinluckens9591 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@voice.of.reason "Lucy took the can for all of them" I don't think a cold-blooded murderer of 7 babies is "Lucy taking the can" for all merely negligent nurses....

  • @pawewesierski5933
    @pawewesierski5933 8 месяцев назад +30

    As a nurse, I’m not convinced there was any direct evidence that Lucy let by did anything. She didn’t take baby note home either… it was handover notes and I don’t know one nurse who hasn’t done this, purely by accident.

    • @Kaioken20
      @Kaioken20 8 месяцев назад +4

      Purely be accident she had all the handover notes of babies affected and others yet to be affected?
      You don't have to believe it. You're right. It's a fact there was no direct evidence of her guilt. Just stacks and stacks and stacks and stacks of indirect evidence she had no retort for. But hey, if she's as innocent as you all are making out then I am certain one of the many innocence projects will come to her aid.

    • @Ida_Dunne_Moore
      @Ida_Dunne_Moore 8 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@Kaioken20
      Where did you hear the notes only regarded deceased babies? It's not true. She had a load, student nurses are told to take them home as part of study. They have to document a lot.
      This includes diaries.
      The same goes for the Facebook searches - she looked up many happy former patients, too.
      I'm sure, with a specialist paediatrician, statisticians, nurses and lawyers already kicking off about this a project will be incoming.
      The level of manipulation and cherry picking with grievous omissions should scare anyone

    • @heddaszczepanski9210
      @heddaszczepanski9210 8 месяцев назад +3

      It wasnt just the notes that convicted her. She was present at all the murders. I believe the case was thoroughly investigated.

    • @heddaszczepanski9210
      @heddaszczepanski9210 8 месяцев назад

      @@Kaioken20 its not just her notes. I believe she is guilty as charged

    • @timmytee734
      @timmytee734 8 месяцев назад +1

      Wtf are you all talking about, she had notes in her apartment that "i kill babies" "I'm evil" You are all out of your mind dumb females!

  • @Buckbury
    @Buckbury 9 месяцев назад +123

    This case further supports the unprofessional role of hospital management, a root and branch reorganisation plus the reappraisal of the level of managers over health professionals.

    • @citizenphaid1880
      @citizenphaid1880 9 месяцев назад +2

      Ooh you can’t say that…apparently if you listen to LBC there is no bullying in the NHS 😂

    • @nancytestani1470
      @nancytestani1470 9 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, absolutely, but circumstances need to be factual, gotta look at everything babe, look at the nurses on other shifts..everyThing!

    • @siljevege7283
      @siljevege7283 9 месяцев назад

      Spot on

  • @winstonsmith7801
    @winstonsmith7801 9 месяцев назад +27

    Did the deaths cease after she was taken off the ward ?

    • @phoebecaulfield4062
      @phoebecaulfield4062 9 месяцев назад +24

      yes they did.

    • @anddontcallmeshirley-
      @anddontcallmeshirley- 9 месяцев назад

      But my erection didn't.

    • @Moonstone115
      @Moonstone115 9 месяцев назад +26

      Yes they did, when she had 2 weeks off holiday then attacked 2 of a set of triplets when she came 'back with a bang' in her words. As soon as she was taken off the ward, there has only been 1 death in 7 years.

    • @rebeccalloyd3098
      @rebeccalloyd3098 9 месяцев назад +17

      That is not correct. The hospital was downgraded and no longer allowed that level of premature baby.

    • @winstonsmith7801
      @winstonsmith7801 9 месяцев назад +7

      @@rebeccalloyd3098 Stop embarrassing yourself.

  • @paulineweber9331
    @paulineweber9331 9 месяцев назад +20

    Keep in mind that they tried this case for a year and poured over that much evidence. The barrister may have a point about cases in general, but he was not involved in this case at all which is something he does admit at the start. So don't be too swayed by his alternate perspective.

    • @heddaszczepanski9210
      @heddaszczepanski9210 9 месяцев назад

      Exactly! Its just his opinion, based only on other cases

    • @holycannoli64
      @holycannoli64 9 месяцев назад +2

      Exactly! Tell it to the Birmingham 6. Or the Guildford 4.

    • @user-dh6sl1hz7m
      @user-dh6sl1hz7m 9 месяцев назад +1

      You’re acting like people don’t get off on appeal. They do.

    • @heddaszczepanski9210
      @heddaszczepanski9210 9 месяцев назад

      @@user-dh6sl1hz7m well, only time will tell. None of us armchair criminologists have any say in the matter!

  • @Stoic2000
    @Stoic2000 9 месяцев назад +76

    She was also seen standing over babies doing nothing when babies were struggling and did not call for help. More babies were killed by air embolism after she went on a course that would have instructed her on how to avoid causing this.

    • @barriewilliams4526
      @barriewilliams4526 9 месяцев назад +14

      Were you there......

    • @halomultiplayermoments3651
      @halomultiplayermoments3651 9 месяцев назад +6

      @@barriewilliams4526where you there? 100 percent the answer is no!

    • @JohnSmith-hf8zn
      @JohnSmith-hf8zn 9 месяцев назад

      @@halomultiplayermoments3651I highly doubt anyone in this comment section was there

    • @miacat1727
      @miacat1727 9 месяцев назад +26

      Based on Hearsay, alleged statements, circumstansial evidence, no post mortems & no proper defence.

    • @miacat1727
      @miacat1727 9 месяцев назад

      @@halomultiplayermoments3651Difference being, Barriewilliams was not making accusations because he was not there.

  • @Goldenlion148
    @Goldenlion148 9 месяцев назад +93

    There was a mountain of evidence gathered together over two years.. 2 things stand out for me the fact that when these catastrophic incidents happened Letby was the only one who was on duty in every case and that when she was not present for any length of time the incidence of these events dropped dramatically. And the fact that she had in her home medical notes for these babies which had been altered. It is a well known fact that insulin overdose and air pumped into the body are exceptionally difficult to detect post mortem. Overfeeding would also be difficult to determine. The fact that 2 previous babies under her care did have blood tests and produced the result of exceptional high insulin levels at the time but were ignored. They survived so were not part of the investigation. It is no good this barrister saying you cannot say there was a pattern so it does not prove her guilt. It happened too many times so does show a pattern. No one has that many coincidences. Murderers often kill in the same manner targeting the same kind of victim again and again as Letby has apparently done. 7 doctors had their suspicions about her so it is not just one doctor who didn't like her. It is very common for psychopaths to have 2 completely different personalities which they use to manipulate and hide their darker side. One appearing really nice, normal, quiet, appearing benevolent, kind and helpful whilst hiding a truly evil persona which has no feelings whatsoever. Which is why people cannot believe that this person is capable of such evil. But they are.

    • @explorer0213
      @explorer0213 9 месяцев назад +12

      Narrcissist too cluster b personalities over lap.

    • @Malayalikada
      @Malayalikada 9 месяцев назад +4

      Narcissistic Personality disorder

    • @gainsbourg66
      @gainsbourg66 9 месяцев назад +16

      Incredible that all the evidence is circumstancial. Odd that the mainstream media have not mentioned this fact. We're told that the accused was extremely skillful at covering up her tracks. Now where have I heard that before?

    • @deeperlife5689
      @deeperlife5689 9 месяцев назад +9

      ⁠​⁠@@gainsbourg66 Most criminal convictions are based on circumstantial evidence, although it must be adequate to meet established standards of proof. Just because evidence is circumstantial doesn’t mean it doesn’t meet standards of proof it’s why the judicial system has to be robust : you must piece it all together and then determine whether or not it leads to a reasonable conclusion about the fact which is to be proved. When people are falsely found guilty because of circumstantial evidence there are always other factors at play such as the actions of the Police. In Letby’s case I understand that 257 handover sheets were found at her home documents that should not have left the hospital. A note of medications given to a baby boy was among items found under Letby's bed after her arrest. The record of emergency drugs provided to the infant was written on a paper towel found in her home these are just a few pieces of circumstantial evidence. Letby can appeal if she claims a miscarriage of justice but what shouldn’t happen is that the deaths of the babies are just passed off as nothing. Is Letby saying she didn’t have the handover notes at home why did she have them why did she write that she did it?

    • @BobK5
      @BobK5 9 месяцев назад +21

      @@deeperlife5689did the police put the handover sheets into context by investigating how many other nurses had taken handover sheets home?, no they didn’t so we don’t know whether this is a common practice or not but just on its own it looks bad for the suspect, the police want it to look bad for the suspect. The barrister pointed out that the context in which the damming note had been written had not been emphasised, again making it look really bad. There doesn’t appear to have been any suggestion that the police investigated what had occurred in the way of suspicious incidents on Letby’s days off, focusing only on when she was there, it’s all a picture, a pattern portrayed by the police who found no direct evidence that anyone had actually been murdered only speculation and hypothesis. Maybe they ought to investigate the abnormally high morbidity rate in baby deaths at Staffordshire hospital and see if they can build a circumstantial case around anyone there or get Letby accused of committing those on her days off, there might be a pattern. Mr Malkinson has just been freed after spending 17 years in prison for a rape he did not commit, he maintained his innocence and was only freed because of a dna sample otherwise he’d still be locked up an innocent man, I’m sure there was also claimed overwhelming evidence against him at the time of his conviction, he was labelled as a monster. Mr McDonald is just saying that a sense of caution needs to applied as things aren’t always as they appear.

  • @CarJacka
    @CarJacka 9 месяцев назад +87

    My baby son was overdosed on morphine on a ward following his heart surgery and recovery in cicu at Great Ormond Street, he recovered a day or so later and I was called into an office to be told it was an accident, the nurse had been spoken to and I should be grateful for the treatment he'd already received and if I made a fuss about it I'd be the one removed from the hospital and not alllowed back in. I dont know enough to say Lucy is innocent but wouldnt be surprised at all if ever the situation was revealed to be a cover up for poor practice or an unfortunate period on the ward.

    • @topscran7954
      @topscran7954 9 месяцев назад +16

      I'm so sorry you had that awful experience 🤗

    • @rosie94204
      @rosie94204 9 месяцев назад +18

      I agree with this barrister. Extremely worrying conviction!!

    • @Kizzy902
      @Kizzy902 9 месяцев назад +1

      😳

    • @catherinethomas1276
      @catherinethomas1276 9 месяцев назад +1

      What was said to you is appalling wickedness. Tell EVERYONE

  • @neelamacwan7670
    @neelamacwan7670 9 месяцев назад +9

    What about the notes that Lucy left in her house

    • @hydrohasspoken6227
      @hydrohasspoken6227 8 месяцев назад

      people with mental disorders write such notes all the time.
      Train your mind to find evidence bruh, not to believe what is believable.

  • @laurareardon6674
    @laurareardon6674 8 месяцев назад +6

    patterns aren't evidence, they are only a reason for further investigation

  • @IdeologieUK
    @IdeologieUK 9 месяцев назад +76

    The jury deliberated for a hell of a long time, and they found her not guilty on some charges. Found guilty by a jury of her peers. Justice prevailed.

    • @james970027
      @james970027 9 месяцев назад +4

      Yep, I'm tired of people trying to defend bad people effectively with the lens of "but we didn't see them physically do it!!". If it were up to those people we would never see next to anyone in jail and in instances like this multiple babies/people would continue to die.
      Her colleagues themselves had called out this risk again, and again, and again - the people who worked with her and saw her effectively the most out of anyone else in her life and they themselves identified a pattern. I don't know how on earth people expect to protect other people when they hold the belief that multiple forms of evidence should be disregarded because they don't provide 100% proof - you're never going to get 100% proof unless you've got video or audio evidence and even then the same people would still argue that it's doctored. It's not cluedo - it's real life and we damn well know if it walks and quacks like a duck then 99.9% of the time it's probably a duck.
      I'm tired of stupid people putting other people's lives at risk through their astounding ability to deny evidence that isn't 100% conclusive while they themselves have no evidence to offer in defence. It's a stupid approach focusing on exception to rules and there are ALWAYS exceptions to rules - it doesn't mean we should never have any rules out of concern we may get it wrong on the 0.001% of occurrences. That percentage is justified if it results in thousands of lives (if not more) protected and is why we have levels of proof within the court system.

    • @mrsthatcher9815
      @mrsthatcher9815 9 месяцев назад +5

      so did the jury for louise woodward

    • @Sctch_Egg
      @Sctch_Egg 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@james970027so do you honestly believe that Andrew Malkinsons conviction was justifiable given the evidence was not a 100%? That man spent 17yrs behind bars for a rape he did not commit, would you accept a conviction of that length if you didn't do the crime but were convicted on evidence that was not 100% and just chalk it up to the 0000.1% of wrongful convictions.

    • @IdeologieUK
      @IdeologieUK 9 месяцев назад

      @@mrsthatcher9815 it’s the only system we have.

    • @SpeccyMan
      @SpeccyMan 9 месяцев назад +2

      Were they really her peers? Do you actually understand what peer means?

  • @dennism7813
    @dennism7813 9 месяцев назад +63

    The only thing I can be sure of is that the two presenters were nearly hysterical at the idea that this lawyer should see things differently. That worries me.

    • @oseasviewer7108
      @oseasviewer7108 9 месяцев назад +5

      It just means they are having a vigorous debate!

    • @AJ-kb9hf
      @AJ-kb9hf 9 месяцев назад +6

      I wouldn't worry too much. The criminal barrister is doing what lawyers do - debating/mooting is our thing.

    • @HissyMcHissyfit
      @HissyMcHissyfit 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@AJ-kb9hfMade a complete arse of himself while omitting crucial evidence. His little anecdotal tirade of 'Doctors in toilets with their arms full of Fentanyl' to name dropping Shipman also screams Walter Mitty chasing the limelight here. Cue his reaction when called out.
      FTFY

    • @yvonnehayton6753
      @yvonnehayton6753 9 месяцев назад +5

      HissyMcHissyfit. What reaction? You mean his slightly bewildered but good-natured denial?

    • @HissyMcHissyfit
      @HissyMcHissyfit 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@yvonnehayton6753 There was no denial whatsoever. He side stepped the claim while laughing out loud muttering something rather incoherently regarding money, then stroked his nose through nerves.
      To stand on a soap box regurgitating fantastical claims of innocence in defence of a convicted female serial killer of babies, yes babies, while claiming he hadn't heard all the evidence yet screams absolute chancer with zero morals.

  • @christopherlloyd98
    @christopherlloyd98 8 месяцев назад +3

    Mark Macdonald spoke very well.

  • @voice.of.reason
    @voice.of.reason 9 месяцев назад +55

    They might have found more than one note but it was only one note that was used as evidence, therefore the number of notes has no bearing on this case if the others are not being used to convict her. The barrister is right - it was only one note in this context. I also agree, that this looks like a miscarriage of justice

    • @jamesmurphy-walsh8966
      @jamesmurphy-walsh8966 9 месяцев назад +6

      I don’t think so !

    • @stella9624
      @stella9624 9 месяцев назад +8

      The number of notes notwithstanding, how do you explain the insulin level of a newborn which can only he artificial and the testimony of Dr Ravi who said he saw Letby stand by a 25 week old baby with a disconnected tube and dropping oxygen levels on the monitor?

    • @von-Adler
      @von-Adler 9 месяцев назад

      Absolutely correct. Miscarriage of Justice.

    • @von-Adler
      @von-Adler 9 месяцев назад

      @@stella9624 No. Look it up. Insulin can be produced in the body
      WITHOUT INJECTION.

    • @aprilgosa5779
      @aprilgosa5779 9 месяцев назад +8

      The only miscarriage of justice is that what she did to those innocent babies we can't do to her

  • @shellsbignumber2
    @shellsbignumber2 9 месяцев назад +51

    You dont suddenly go from 3 babies dying a year to 3 dying a month, just look at the numbers. At that rate your looking at 36 deaths over the year. She was either incredibly unlucky to always be there when the babies died or she was the main factor in their deaths.
    Also all these babies who died where not expected to die, all were doing well and all of a sudden they had catastrophic collapses without warning that did not make sense to any of the doctors on shift.

    • @shazanali692
      @shazanali692 9 месяцев назад +11

      But there is no direct evidence, what you just said is probability, it's like me saying you like number 2 with two men because your name is shellsbignumber2, I have no direct evidence if you like it, but because you wrote it down as your profile name., You cant say someone is Fred west incarnate just on probility

    • @jadeemmagibbons6668
      @jadeemmagibbons6668 9 месяцев назад +10

      That argument only holds weight for so long, with her being the common denominator for each and every unexplained case akin to Beverley Allit. Then the confessional notes, culminated with the average death rate returning back to normal rates with her gone. Funny that eh?

    • @hindenberg507
      @hindenberg507 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@shazanali692 this case is becoming more bizarre by the hour. i must admit i havent even really looked in to it. things are looking strange for sure with this case.

    • @BobK5
      @BobK5 9 месяцев назад

      Have a research on high morbidity rates in hospital and you’ll find evidence that other hospitals such as Staffordshire also had a run of abnormally high numbers of unexplained baby deaths similar to this one, strangely no one was accused of murder there, those unexplained deaths, exactly the same as the ones in question, were put down to staffing shortages, file closed. Is it possible that another serial killer was a work In Staffordshire or did Letby go up there on her days off?

    • @louwinters508
      @louwinters508 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@MillieBealHer. They just couldn't get a conviction on some of them. Or they just died naturally.

  • @orvillefindley8117
    @orvillefindley8117 9 месяцев назад +22

    So there was 22 deaths and she was found guilty of the murder of 7. Who killed the other 15 ? 🤔

    • @carrietaylor6658
      @carrietaylor6658 9 месяцев назад +3

      In a neo natal ward it is common that naturally premature babies could die because they are seriously unwell and have complications

    • @ApolloT-vp5dn
      @ApolloT-vp5dn 9 месяцев назад +3

      She did.. most likely.
      But they can't necessarily prove them all. Yet!

    • @artsy38
      @artsy38 9 месяцев назад +1

      Why would she have continued after suspicion was raised , unless she was was want to tarnish her name and her family reputation and ruin her parents life. She would need to be evil and stupid , if she was evil I don't believe she would have been thst stupid

    • @ApolloT-vp5dn
      @ApolloT-vp5dn 9 месяцев назад +2

      @artsy38 being stupid doesn't come into it.
      Serial killers are ultimately obsessed and get great pleasure or relief from killing.
      Simply getting away with it, time and again, probably made her feel untouchable.

    • @claudiameier666
      @claudiameier666 9 месяцев назад +6

      shipman kept killing people too even tho people started getting suspicious. i think people dont want to believe a young pretty woman could be so vile

  • @bellababy50505
    @bellababy50505 2 месяца назад +3

    i do not think she’s guilty and it’s eating away at me each day. I am horrified by this

    • @amasworld7126
      @amasworld7126 13 дней назад

      Same here. And nhs nurses killed my daughter and covered it up. I’m certain she’s being framed because they frame people all the time. She probably was part of the cover up and then tried to turn on the group and whistleblow

  • @AdamandEve639
    @AdamandEve639 9 месяцев назад +4

    I don’t get it. If he is working for justice for people who have been wrongly convicted, why is he not super thorough and careful not to imply someone might be innocent when he clearly has not seen nor heard all in this case? Seems counter productive to his mission…

    • @Ida_Dunne_Moore
      @Ida_Dunne_Moore 8 месяцев назад +1

      A miscarriage of justice isn't necessarily on the basis someone is innocent.
      You could have someone who's guiltyofa serious crime, but if they were lied about, their guilt exaggerated, things other people did covered up, they didn't get a fair chance to explain mitigating factors or these were deliberately obscured, or they were subject to collusion by authorities/agencies, they still did not have a fair trial

    • @AdamandEve639
      @AdamandEve639 8 месяцев назад

      @@Ida_Dunne_Moore true. Yet what i mean is it seems he has not looked into THIS case enough.

  • @rogerwood4846
    @rogerwood4846 9 месяцев назад +69

    why have this lawyer on if he didnt sit through the entire case?...

    • @thecarpetman7687
      @thecarpetman7687 9 месяцев назад

      Because talk tv is little more than GB news light and the guests they have are usually right wing conspiracy nut jobs

    • @MS-sb9ov
      @MS-sb9ov 9 месяцев назад +9

      Ah good question, so let me educate on how the media works. This is a commercial channel whose person is to make money first and foremost. Its product is purportedly news, insights and commentary. But that product needs content that appeals to its audience, which for this show is ‘contentious debate’. It doesn’t matter if the guest speaker is an idiot talking gibberish so long as it generate audience interest. Sponsors love audiences. The channel loves sponsors’ money.

    • @shazanali692
      @shazanali692 9 месяцев назад

      Because she could be innocent, the media have ears in the law inns of chancery lane, and they don't like it, there are lawyers out there who will go through all the notes and minutes of this case, and there was never a smoking gun that she did it, remember Barry George was said to have killed Jill dando. How did that turn out

    • @gainsbourg66
      @gainsbourg66 9 месяцев назад +1

      I think it goes against the code of conduct of barristers and judges to discuss details of a trial with the media after conviction or at any stage.

  • @leercat4934
    @leercat4934 9 месяцев назад +248

    If what that barrister is saying is true and there’s no physical evidence and she was convicted on opinions then this is terrifying

    • @commonlyheldsentiment819
      @commonlyheldsentiment819 9 месяцев назад +52

      It's true. There was not one piece of evidence that wasn't circumstantial or just someone's opinion.

    • @leercat4934
      @leercat4934 9 месяцев назад +14

      @@commonlyheldsentiment819 I heard that. I do think she’s guilty but that is bullshit that they could even convict on hearsay

    • @geezerp1982
      @geezerp1982 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@hismhs nothing new, men have been hanged on just hearsay evidence etc

    • @paulroberts7544
      @paulroberts7544 9 месяцев назад +41

      @@hismhs which is truly terrifying. How many innocent people are in prison? Probabaly a lot.

    • @patpending8134
      @patpending8134 9 месяцев назад

      B.S. @@paulroberts7544

  • @lashawndavarner6683
    @lashawndavarner6683 День назад +1

    Listening to what has come from FOIA requests from the hospital I’m sickened to think this poor young woman was a scapegoat for incompetence by the hospital being understaffed and taking on severe cases they weren’t staffed for. The baby deaths were higher the months after she was taken off the ward. No outside investigation by epidemiologist for a bacterial or viral infection outbreak due to broken sewage pipes in the unit over several weeks. And now she’s been denied an appeal. Justice is dead.

  • @user-hv1ld4ps4f
    @user-hv1ld4ps4f 9 месяцев назад +11

    Even a 27 year Barrister can get it wrong

    • @joangrennan886
      @joangrennan886 8 месяцев назад

      So true .Anyone remember Professor Meadows who convicted a mother of killing her 2 babies ,which were proven afterwards to be natural causes .The poor mother spent years in prison and never recovered .The prof was struck off .These medical cases are notoriosly difficult always

    • @passionfruitprincess
      @passionfruitprincess 8 месяцев назад

      Absolutely. To truly understand WHY she is guilty can easily be seen by those that have worked in healthcare. This is not to diminish the opinions of those who haven't. For instance, NO, it's not OK to take home handover sheets & patient notes. She knew this but did it anyway. Also the way she stayed past her shift, volunteered to do extra shifts, had a crush on the married doctor & appeared to be trying to impress him. Or at least have him come to the unit. It all makes.sense to me. She is guilty & where she deserves to be.

  • @Snoozzzzzze
    @Snoozzzzzze 9 месяцев назад +60

    The jury took a very long time to reach their verdicts. To me that indicates that after many months of hearing evidence it still wasn’t an easy or obvious decision on each charge. Either way the doctors and management of that hospital need to be looked at very closely.

    • @judithdesrosiers-qm9wt
      @judithdesrosiers-qm9wt 9 месяцев назад +3

      Speaking from experience,yes!!!!!!!

    • @AethelwulfOfNordHymbraLand2333
      @AethelwulfOfNordHymbraLand2333 9 месяцев назад +6

      It's a miscarriage of justice. The prosecution failed to prove beyond all reasonable doubt the defendant guilty.

    • @sarahwhyld5596
      @sarahwhyld5596 9 месяцев назад +3

      I think the jury felt such empathy with the parents that they wanted closure for them. I can’t believe how little evidence there is.

    • @garethlloyd4716
      @garethlloyd4716 9 месяцев назад

      Only reason they took so long beacuse it’s such a big case wasn’t just one baby they would of had to discuss and agree on every case.

    • @heddaszczepanski9210
      @heddaszczepanski9210 9 месяцев назад

      No, it was correct. Sh e was found guilty!

  • @andreahodson7031
    @andreahodson7031 9 месяцев назад +55

    Great to hear an alternative view on this rather than the dramatic outrage

  • @mrparlanejxtra
    @mrparlanejxtra 9 месяцев назад +5

    The post it notes in her writing are the deciding evidence. They are close to a confession.

    • @voice.of.reason
      @voice.of.reason 9 месяцев назад

      It's not at all, it even looks like the note was doctored with another person writing the it was me bit in another handwriting.

    • @993Redveg
      @993Redveg 9 месяцев назад

      As others have said, this could have been taken out of context. And why were so many of her other notes ignored?

    • @mrparlanejxtra
      @mrparlanejxtra 9 месяцев назад

      They were not ignored. A Jury of 12 ordinary people sat through months of evidence and gave it all fair consideration before a final decision was made. There will be many other cases where she was not caught up with and there were many where the crown did not prove her guilty. She had a fair trial.@@993Redveg

    • @mrparlanejxtra
      @mrparlanejxtra 9 месяцев назад

      She had the chance to raise those issues in the trial. The Jury were able to consider that. The idea that someone sneaked in and altered the note is madness. @@voice.of.reason

  • @jaimeedowell1383
    @jaimeedowell1383 9 месяцев назад +8

    Its a matter of all the connecting factors and the odd of it not being her vs being her. I belive she is guilty.

  • @defaultYTchannel
    @defaultYTchannel 9 месяцев назад +15

    This barrister knows what he’s talking about. She’ll be proven innocent

    • @janlittle2148
      @janlittle2148 9 месяцев назад +2

      Not a chance

    • @davesmith3526
      @davesmith3526 9 месяцев назад +8

      @@janlittle2148 She is absolutely innocent. There is no evidence. Rather than looking for anybody to blame, why don't you have your heart set on finding the real killer.

    • @melgrant7404
      @melgrant7404 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@davesmith3526 she has been convicted. End of.there is no one else.

    • @jvs1540
      @jvs1540 9 месяцев назад +1

      And yet he admitted to not following the trial or hearing all the evidence. He even accused one of this panel of exaggerating the evidence and saying she only wrote one note saying’I did this’. In fact one of the notes also said ‘I killed them on purpose because I am not good enough’.

  • @deedee7733
    @deedee7733 9 месяцев назад +108

    The evidence against Letby is so flimsy and circumstancial that she might as well have been strapped to a ducking stool to see if she floats or sinks. A national scapegoat for a health service that is broken and in terminal decline. Neonatal deaths at Chester hospital actually went UP in the two years after this nurse was removed, and in the note mentioned she also said she was innocent, the incoherent ramblings of someone who had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder because of all the finger pointing. She wrote elsewhere "I killed them. I don't know if I killed them. Maybe I did. Maybe this is down to me." This is someone in a state of shock and depression, not a confession of guilt.

    • @janebaker966
      @janebaker966 9 месяцев назад +22

      I suspect we are going back to the days of witch burning. Such jolly fun.

    • @Okthankyoubye
      @Okthankyoubye 9 месяцев назад +11

      You should have a bit more trust in all the doctors and co workers who worked with her and came to the conclusion after years of disbelief and fight with the management that yes she really is what she seems to be.

    • @Innocent_Villain
      @Innocent_Villain 9 месяцев назад +25

      Trust in a herd agreeing on a scapegoat is not a good thing. And this video was disingenuous too in the way they quickly closed it with that lady smugly saying that the nurse left lots of notes and that the lawyer said it was only one. No, the lawyer said there was one where she called herself evil, and not hundreds where she literally said she committed the crime as the lady said before. The lawyer didn't say there was only one note; that was squirmy nonsense. It doesn't prove her not guilty either, but if your evidence is as solid as some people have been insisting then you don't need to stretch it and distort criticisms of it like that.

    • @OngoGablogian185
      @OngoGablogian185 9 месяцев назад +13

      Defending an obvious baby-killer and undermining all the witness testimonies from people who worked with her. Absolutely disgusting. You've obviously got no clue about PTSD either, if you think it makes people ramble incoherently and confess to something that never happened.

    • @kerrygold6494
      @kerrygold6494 9 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@OngoGablogian185and those who claimed nurse beck was innocent were also accused of undermining witness testimony. It happens.

  • @andrewfletcher6476
    @andrewfletcher6476 9 месяцев назад +42

    So who injected the insulin into those two babies? Letby even said it had to be on purpose. Only her and one other nurse were present when both of events happened. Letby also was the only nurse present for all 7 murders and a further 10 attempted murders. The only one. There were also post mortems on some of the babies who were judged, by two independent experts, to have died from air embollis. These show up in xrays. There was also toxicology reports showing exogenous insulin that got missed. So there was evidence. She also had notes from the victims, facebooked the families of the victims, wrote she was ‘evil’ and ‘she did this’, she behaved strangely in front of the parents grieving with their dead baby; one parent is adamant she caught her in the act of killing her child. Two consultants became increasingly suspicious of her. Again, one caught her alone with a baby whilst it was crashing, alarms not bleeping, and said she was doing nothing. He went in there to check as he had a bad feeling about her when he learned one nurses asked letby to look after the child when she was on a break. He needs to look through the trial. There was toxicology and autopsy reports showing they were murdered.

    • @robertjones2053
      @robertjones2053 9 месяцев назад +15

      31 babies died and she was actually present for 8. They only tried 13 and she was found guilty of 7 but it seemed not unanimous...
      Fyi the deaths spike again after she was arrested. They were still very high. They only dropped for about 12 months after she left. The highest death rate was 2 years later.

    • @leah1633
      @leah1633 9 месяцев назад

      The insulin is the only piece of evidence that I would want answers to had I been a juror .
      Apart from that I believe she could be innocent ....
      All purely circumstantial ....
      There was errors in some of the babies care since day 1 ....
      Letby had medical notes in her room dating back to 2011.
      Nobody turns into an evil psychopath overnight

    • @fredneecher1746
      @fredneecher1746 9 месяцев назад

      Someone was there for the highest number of deaths and that person happened to be Letby. She was there for 13 of the 31 babies who died.

    • @robertjones2053
      @robertjones2053 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@fredneecher1746 erm that is not true... 7 out of the 13. She was innocent of 6. If you believe she is guilty and the jury is correct. It is only 7 deaths not 13. You cannot believe in a jury for only what you want.
      So that does leave 18 when she was not there and 6 that they found her innocent on.

    • @henryworthington8261
      @henryworthington8261 9 месяцев назад +2

      How can she be the only one when there were 18 babies in the unit and the ratio is at least 1 nurse to 2 babies?

  • @fionagregory9147
    @fionagregory9147 9 месяцев назад +10

    As soon as she stopped working there, the death rate dropped. Coincidence?

    • @voice.of.reason
      @voice.of.reason 9 месяцев назад +4

      No, by then the management could not afford to have any more baby deaths so they shook up the management and staff, or stopped very sick baby care in that hospital

    • @993Redveg
      @993Redveg 9 месяцев назад +6

      Maybe the death rate dropped because the hospital stopped caring for the sickest and most premature of babies.

    • @SueRosalie
      @SueRosalie 9 месяцев назад

      @@voice.of.reason nope

    • @SueRosalie
      @SueRosalie 9 месяцев назад

      @@993Redveg nope

    • @993Redveg
      @993Redveg 9 месяцев назад +3

      You are wrong. Others have stated that it was in fact the case that after Lucy Letby left the hospital a decision was made not to care for the sickest babies at the Countess Hospital and that they should be sent to facilities elsewhere.@@SueRosalie

  • @minnietoot9704
    @minnietoot9704 9 месяцев назад +33

    That woman will never get out of prison

    • @Victor-wp5jl
      @Victor-wp5jl 9 месяцев назад +7

      Why ? If she is found to be innocent. why write such a callous comment when many have doubts she's guilty.

    • @kjones1785
      @kjones1785 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@Victor-wp5jlshe hasn’t been found not guilty she’s been found guilty with no mitigation offered by her , she is not getting out of prison alive.

    • @bloochoob
      @bloochoob 9 месяцев назад +3

      14 life sentences. Too good for the scum.

    • @jodiebird1551
      @jodiebird1551 9 месяцев назад

      tried in MSM and directed by the judge@@kjones1785

    • @ApnaChoud
      @ApnaChoud 9 месяцев назад +4

      Terrible miscarriage of justice here Einstein!

  • @clarab1646
    @clarab1646 9 месяцев назад +13

    Police have a hypothesis and gather evidence to prove it.

    • @buckobuchanan
      @buckobuchanan 9 месяцев назад +1

      Yep

    • @kgbgb3663
      @kgbgb3663 9 месяцев назад +4

      The exact opposite of the Scientific Method.

    • @Friendofstfrank
      @Friendofstfrank 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@kgbgb3663What is the 'scientific' method pray tell for your one way science. Are you talking inductive vs deductive or perchance how you rule out other hypothesis or maybe you don't actually know science. See I happen to be one and all the 'there is only one science's people make me shake my head. My fields of specialty are social psychology, neuroscience, environmental science. Oh, and I have 4 decades of investigating suspicious deaths.

    • @kgbgb3663
      @kgbgb3663 8 месяцев назад

      @@Friendofstfrank Pity you haven't learnt in your four decades of (presumably professional?) investigations how to make a pertinent and coherent argument rather than depending on personal attacks and appeals to (claimed) authority.
      I won't list the ways I might claim to have authority, as you did. Instead, I'll just say that if you really think that the proper way to investigate a hypotheses is to look only for evidence that is _consistent_ with it rather than to _test_ it, I hope never to have to depend on the products of your "science". And I will have only limited sympathy with you when the police come up with the hypothesis that you are guilty of some heinous crime, and look only for confirmation.

    • @francesbale1409
      @francesbale1409 2 месяца назад

      @@Friendofstfrank the scientific method is to try and disprove the hypothesis not prove it.

  • @christopherlloyd98
    @christopherlloyd98 7 месяцев назад +3

    I agree with Mark Macdonald that Lucy may have been guilt - ridden over the deaths of Babies "on her watch".......nothing sinister in that i feel. Lucy trying to make sense of these deaths....taking home of notes to try to establish WHY they died.....wanting to get at the truth as to why they fell ill........does that make her a killer ???? Apparently so, according to many.

  • @davidweldon1402
    @davidweldon1402 9 месяцев назад +3

    I've got my doubts now too

  • @jennybaboolal4777
    @jennybaboolal4777 9 месяцев назад +29

    Back to the days when Ward Sisters were fearsome in demanding the best for their patients and Matron was in charge . It all went downhill when managers from outwith the NHS were brought in and given huge salaries.

    • @SagaciousFrank
      @SagaciousFrank 9 месяцев назад +5

      We can't be having that, a captain of a ship, actual leadership, someone taking charge and ultimate responsibility for failures, but pride in success, that'll never do in our culture of no responsibility and worship of mediocrity.

    • @adriftinaboat3452
      @adriftinaboat3452 9 месяцев назад

      Thatcher brought managers in.
      If you voted Tory -suck it up

  • @Fireglo
    @Fireglo 9 месяцев назад +8

    She literally bought a house opposite the baby section of a cemetery.

  • @orlamcmanus9019
    @orlamcmanus9019 8 месяцев назад +5

    When I first read about this story I wondered how she was convicted. Glad I'm not alone on that

  • @roselw2239
    @roselw2239 9 месяцев назад +3

    She's sick head & Psycho, management should take it serious removeing her from position in the beginning, but they didn't, this case is good alarm, because this still happens in health system.

  • @magrathean0
    @magrathean0 9 месяцев назад +32

    He didn't deal with the issue of her notes and writings, he stuck with the parts of this case in which he has some point. I can't see any legitimate reason a nurse would write "I am evil, I did this" with references to their patients. He also seems to talk rather overly lengthily, perhaps in the hope the presenter will forget the second thread..

    • @TheSeedpearl
      @TheSeedpearl 9 месяцев назад +8

      You know that's exactly what I was thinking. He phooh phooed the notes she had written blaming herself for the deaths and went on and on about the similarities between her and those found not guilty. It's like he was pleading her case.

    • @gailcusden3607
      @gailcusden3607 9 месяцев назад +4

      Those things are a bit strange but having worked In the NHS I think the barrister has a point in what he is saying. The part that is hard to explain is taking the notes home.

    • @jenjones90
      @jenjones90 9 месяцев назад +6

      Cause everyone was accusing her and she was having a breakdown.

    • @Feellikealady99
      @Feellikealady99 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@jenjones90do she confessed? How does that make sense?

    • @anthonyhall2483
      @anthonyhall2483 9 месяцев назад

      She also wrote she was innocent on the same note - what to make of that? @@Feellikealady99

  • @Blue_3rd
    @Blue_3rd 9 месяцев назад +31

    Thank you for letting the guest talk.