The child, who can only be named as Baby E for legal reasons, was 'acutely distressed' and found bleeding from the mouth in his cot at Countess of Chester Hospital on August 3, 2015.
www.dailymail.co.uk
Good grief, daily mail headlines are just horrific. They never actually accurately reflect the contents of the article. People don't even click to read, they go by what the headline says. None of this has been definitively proven (yet).
In the case of Rebecca Leighton, when she had been charged (later found innocent and the real culprit found), the dailymail were uploading pictures of her out drinking, posing with a toy gun etc. Comments about her saying she wasn't looking forward to work etc.
I can only imagine the stories journalists would make up about me if they saw my internet history, pictures and comments about my job! I'm not saying this is the case for LL, but as someone mentioned here about possible autism or OCD, I have OCD and when not doing well, I will search the same things over and over again in a sort of obsessive routine that I can't beat. I won't even be reading what I'm searching or taking in any information on the webpage (so if you asked me when I searched it, what I read on that day, I wouldn't remember) but it's just part of a ritual that I cannot break.
When I worked in care, it wasn't professional I know but sometimes we'd text each other a heads up like "K is in a bad mood", "K has had bad news today", just so we could prepare the staff on next shift. We had a really fast paced job, and whilst we had notes to write up, you often got in and the client would be waiting for you so they could go to the toilet etc and you didn't always get a chance to read the notes before starting. At least if you knew the client was in a bad mood, you knew to be quieter when you got on shift, and that would avoid upsetting the client and having a hard shift.