I have a few observations to make about the account he gave in court on Friday, of what happened on the night of Ellie's head injuries as a 6 week old baby.
BB said JG was an hour late arriving because she had fed Ellie and then had to change a dirty nappy. When JG dropped her off she dropped off milk bottles as well and said she had been told Ellie was having a growth spurt, so he should feed her. She arrived in her car seat, asleep, which was when they both agreed she looked as white as a sheet. After taking her up to his room, he took her out of her car seat and tried to feed her but she wasn't interested so he put her back in her car seat and put her on the floor next to him while he played on his computer. He said she usually slept with her fists together like a boxer in front of her chest but when he looked her arms were laying floppy by her sides and he knew something wasn't right. That was when he put her on the bed and called his friend from the next room to see and asked him to call an ambulance.
1. Why feed Ellie if she had just had a feed before leaving JG's home nearby and wasn't showing signs of needing a feed / being hungry / crying?
2. Why feed a sleeping baby?
3. Why would Ellie still be asleep (with her fists up) after he disturbed her and tried to feed her?
4. Why would a baby keep control of her hands/arms while asleep?
5. How would he know her usual arm position and if it was what she always did - a) he hadn't seen much of her and this was only the 2nd time she had slept at his place and had only just got there, b) babies don't usually sleep all night in car seats, this wasn't a laid out baby in a cot or in a normal sleeping position, c) babies in my experience don't have one general arm position, they may prefer to sleep on their sides or fronts/backs but a baby in a car seat is not likely to have much option for positioning their arms
6. Why would he think arms by her sides was not just a fully relaxed sleep?
I really don't believe he would have been that observant of her, while playing on a computer, to notice her arms had moved or to think that was immediately a sign that there was something drastically wrong.
Sorry BB, I don't believe one word of your account.
I've only just realised fully why the judge stopped him from saying the cyst in Ellie's throat caused her collapse. The court has obviously agreed that the way to present this evidence to the jury was to say that following the quashing of the conviction, it has never been established in court what caused her collapse.