Alright, I guess she will start with Babies A and B. Below are excerpts from her interviews about babies A and B:
Child A was given 1ml of milk via a nasogastric tube at 4pm and 6pm.
A nurse had looked after Child A that day. She handed over care to Letby at 8pm before she had been able to administer intravaneous fluids. The fluids were started at the time of the handover - the nurse assisting Letby.
Child A was stable at the time of the handover.
The connection of the fluids, Mr Johnson said, would have been after 8.10pm, and it was recorded on the infusion prescription chart at 8.05pm.
At 8.20pm, Child A was reported to have white feet and hands, and Letby called a doctor to the incubator at 8.26pm, as child A was deteriorating.
Resuscitation procedures began, with adrenaline administered to stimulate the heart.
Doctors observed "an odd discolouration on Child A's abdominal skin - flitting patches of pink over blue skin that seemed to appear and disappear".
Mr Johnson said: "This proved to be the first of a series of similar presentations on the skin of babies suddenly and catastrophically collapsing at the CoCH NNU over the succeeding months.
"It is a hallmark of some of the cases in which Lucy Letby injected air into the blood streams of some of these small babies."
"All resuscitation techniques which would be expected to bring a baby back to life failed."
Child A was pronounced dead at 8.58pm. He had died, Mr Johnson said, within 90 minutes of Lucy Letby coming on duty.
She was recorded as being the only witness associated with Child A's collapse.
The doctor noted, at 8.26pm, that Lety was showing an oxygen mask to Child A's face.
The monitors showed Child A had a normal heart rate and good oxygen saturations, and a normal ECG, but was not breathing.
The doctor noted: "an unusual blotchy pattern of well perfused pink skin over the whole of [Child A]'s body coupled with patches of white and blue skin … all over his body."
Medical expert Dr Dewi Evans suggested Child A's collapse was "consistent with a deliberate injection of air or something else into [Child A]'s circulation a minute or two prior to deterioration," Mr Johnson told the court. Only Letby was present.
Another medical expert said the cause was "not some natural disease process, but a dose of air "deliberately administered".
An independent pathologist described the cause of death was 'unascertained', in that there was nothing in the autopsy that pointed to why Child A had died, but the cause was most likely 'exogenous air administration through the longline or UVC'.
Said explanations are also backed up, the prosecution say, by an independent radiologist.
When interviewed by police regarding the circumstances over Child A's death, Letby said she had given fluids to Child A at the time of the change of shifts.
She said within "maybe" five minutes, Child A developed 'almost a rash appearance, like a blotchy red marks on the skin'.
She said she had wondered whether the bag of fluid "was not what we thought it was".
In an interview in June 2019, Letby said she had asked for all fluids to be kept from the bag at the end to be checked, but the prosecution said there was was no record of her having made such a request.
It was suggested by police that Letby had administered an air emolus. She replied it would have been very hard to push air through the line.
In a November 2020 police interview, police put to her that Letby had tracked the family of Child A on Facebook. She said she had no memory of doing so but accepted it if there was evidence on her computer doing so.
The prosecution said there was evidence.
Recap: Prosecution opens trial of Lucy Letby accused of Countess of Chester Hospital baby murders