I don't know if it is considered a gross mistake by management, but I do think they wouldn't like it. Those handover sheets are called that for a reason---they are meant to be handed over at end of shift and discarded . So why wasn't she doing so?
These kinds of reports are full of very personal medical info. They should never leave the unit. I can see how it might happen once or twice maybe. But shouldn't someone who is 'highly attached to her job' mend the situation by returning the paperwork or at least destroying it. Shredding or burning it would be very easy.
Why was it saved and moved around and kept under the bed?
I don't think your explanation is the only explanation for why she might have kept them.
Again , I don't really agree with the assumption that she was oblivious to the seriousness of the situation. She was forced off the unit, told she could not work with the babies anymore because there was an investigation into the many collapses that happened when she was on duty. So she was aware.
Even though she knew all that, she kept all of the paperwork that was supposed to be handed in when she left work.
To me that suggests they were significant and did have some importance---even though they were not organised because I think they may have felt it was less suspicious if they were just thrown in a bag with a bunch of other random things and under the bed, it would be easier to say what you are saying---' she wasn't really aware they were there, it was not a big deal, just accidentally brought him, never thought twice about it....etc etc'
May have been a strategy on her part to make their importance, imo
Maybe because she wanted to keep them?
Is it normal? If I took some paperwork home from work that was not supposed to be taken, and it had highly personal medical information on it, is it normal to keep it around as opposed to returning it or destroying it?
Is it a lack of fear or something else? Maybe defiance, secret excitement, pride?
I don't think she was ignorant to the facts that she had something to fear. She even asked her doctor friends early on, "Should I be worried about what the doctor is asking about me? "
Once she was forced out of the unit and told she could no longer work with patients, because of an investigation into the deaths of her prior patients, how could she not think she had something to worry about?
im not sure your following my logic. Let me explain.
”why wasn’t she doing so”. I’m not defending it nor trying to say it’s irrelevant, only what in my mind is suggested by the presence of “a large amount of documents“. it’s not just handover sheets either I am actually expecting a large range of documents. Makes it worse if anything. I am trying to consider what is likely to be the reason for it without the lens of “right and wrong“, my suggestion is that it is what someone considered to be a workaholic would do. Really someone who lives and breathes their job and
doesn’t leave work at work. this if true isnt Necessarily a positive especially contextually. It’s not the only reason I agree but looking at other aspects of the case I think it’s the only likely one.
“shredding or burning it” well that’s exactly what I think a person who is guilty and remembered keeping them would do, if she is guilty and remembers them it suggests high significance in her mind but no just left about the house Willy nilly. fire and forget kind of thing suggesting insignificance in her mind imo. I’m not given any reason to think that she is that cognitively impaired that if guilty she would knowingly keep them around for the inevitable and highly predictable house search by police, two years after events quite clearly indicating that a police investigation is inevitable if guilty. I think she would be fearful of keeping those records if she was guilty and knew about them, the fear would be the only motivation for disposing of any of them. Imo you can’t say they are significant simply by them Being found as its against the rules of self preservation without which you will most likely be put in an institution with or without your consent. To me it’s almost entirely contradictory to say they are significant to her yet were found by police when there is two years of opportunity to do as a guilty person would and dispose of evidence.
no her obliviousness imo is a continuous theme for her. No fear at all about the things she would be fearful of if she knew she was guilty. I’m not just talking about the suspension from clinical duties. Obviously she would be aware of impending doom if guilty after that meeting and presumably would do as a guilty person often does and dispose of the evidence. I think they probably held importance to her hence lots of them but not significance. Otherwise you would see a certain level of care involved like organisation of them or placement not strewn around the place. Imo you can’t marry that they were significant if guilty and found. Bit more like “nothing to fear officer, search my property at your leisure“. not “dispose of the evidence Before they get here”.
1. do you have anything that suggests the way they were found was a strategy?
2. I don’t believe there is anything to suggest these large amount of documents would hold such value to a guilty person that they would keep them “at all costs” including the ability to keep them if significant for longer as it’s against the rules of self preservation
3. I said “normal for her” not “it’s the done thing generally“.
it’s still the lots of them that makes me think it. Not normal for everyone but normal for her. In other words highly irregular but not unexpected.
4. the reason I think it’s a lack of fear is because if she was guilty she would know what the police finding them could potentially do instead more “nothing to fear officer, carry on”
anything that suggests it’s something other than a lack of fear?
5. What is it about that sentence that you think is in line with someone who knows they are guilty of the most heinous crimes? If she was worried and showing it it would be “I am worried about dr asking” etc
“how could she not worry“ because in her mind she hasn’t done anything wrong. As far as I know a guilty person and innocent person in police interviews act very differently from each other, the innocent act more confident and without fear whereas the guilty will act in a way that is noticeably different. You can use your imagination to figure out how. Bit like “it’s a bit of a worry if it’s going that far” which is an universe sized understatement if she’s guilty. Seemingly no fear about the internal investigation but a bit worried about it being external suggesting she didn’t think there would be anything to find.
im not saying anything about certain points in time I’m drawing this from looking at her across the entire year and after.
im sure this is getting ahead, I don’t think we have heard the police interview when they asked her about the notes. I won’t be surprised if it’s more nothing to fear again.
i will say at this point I’m not going to be surprised if allot of stuff comes out after the trial and then all will be made clear.