Yes exactly...how many "oddities" can be excused
I think each individual 'oddity' can be excused and explained away. The problem is when you stack them all up, it doesn't make sense they are all just one/off random coincidences. The post-it notes are hard for me to totally explain away.
Another example, LL goes on vacation for 8 days, and no unexplained collapses or deaths in the NICU. She returns to work, and there is an unexplained death, 2 nights in a row. And an unexplained collapse on the 3rd night. [Babies O,P and Q]
These were the last 3 victims and she was removed from the floor after child Q collapsed.
Hereford nurse denies murdering seven babies and trying to kill another 10
www.gloucestershirelive.co.uk
Referring back to the last two babies allegedly harmed by Ms Letby, the
prosecutor alleged Child P was murdered the day after his brother, Child O, died by Ms Letby in late June 2016.
Child P had an ‘acute desaturation’, was intubated and improved, and efforts were made to relocate him to a different hospital. But during that, he desaturated again and was given treatment which saw his circulation be restored, but he continued to deteriorate, it was said.
Fifteen minutes before he was due to be taken to the other hospital, his blood gases were taken and appeared satisfactory.
“The doctor who was supervising his treatment was ‘optimistic’ for his prospects when all of a sudden Ms Letby said something like ‘he’s not leaving here alive is he’, which surprised him,” Mr Johnson said.
Prosecutors alleged she knew what she had done. Child P sadly collapsed again and all resuscitation attempts were unsuccessful. His cause of death was recorded as Sudden Unexpected Postnatal Collapse, jurors heard.
An independent medical expert reviewing the case concluded Child P had been injected with air through a nasogastric tube, describing it as the ‘only plausible explanation’.
The court heard that after he died, Ms Letby spent time with his parents and at one point took a photograph of both Child O and Child P together in a cot.
The next day, Ms Letby was the designated nurse for a baby boy, Child Q. It is alleged that Ms Letby injected him with air and a clear fluid in an ‘attempt to kill’ him.
Medical notes later showed that lots of clear fluid had been removed from his abdomen, it was said.
That night Ms Letby was ‘worried’ that people were becoming suspicious, the prosecutor said, as she sent a text message to a doctor asking:
“Do I need to be worrying about what [the doctor] was asking?”.