Wow, end of July? 2 and half months more? Does that indicate a long drawn out cross exam by the prosecution?
It may partly reflect booked holidays, both for jurors & barristers.
Wow, end of July? 2 and half months more? Does that indicate a long drawn out cross exam by the prosecution?
Yeah I had the same thought.
Would the trial stop though to accommodate holidays? I would have thought not.
I wonder if the date was for the estimated end of trial though, rather than end of evidence. If they factoring in deliberations and sentencing that would be a really short time for hearing further evidence.Sounds to me like the defence has some experts.
he might as well have said “hey presto, memento”.10:39am
Mr Johnson asks if Lucy Letby wishes to change any of her answers from yesterday. Letby: "No."
Mr Johnson asks if handover sheets were handed out to student nurses.
Letby said she would have handover sheets as a student nurse at some placements, but in the neonatal unit she cannot recall specifically. She tells the court it was not standard practice at the neonatal unit to hand out handover sheets to student nurses "for the time we are talking about".
Mr Johnson says one of the handover sheets, dated June 1, 2010, was in a keep-sake box with roses on the box, when Letby was a student nurse [Letby having started full-time employment at the hospital on January 2, 2012]. Letby says she cannot recall it.
Mr Johnson asks what is "unusual" about the handover sheet, and how it differs from the others.
Letby is unsure what Mr Johnson means.
Mr Johnson: "It is in pristine condition."
Letby: "It's the original?"
Mr Johnson: "Yes."
Letby: "Ok."
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Recap: Lucy Letby trial, May 18 - prosecution cross-examines Letby
The trial of Lucy Letby, who denies murdering seven babies at the Countess of Chester Hospital neonatal unit and attempting to murder 10 more,…www.chesterstandard.co.uk
I don’t think the judge could predict how long the jury will deliberate though?I wonder if the date was for the estimated end of trial though, rather than end of evidence. If they factoring in deliberations and sentencing that would be a really short time for hearing further evidence.
If 3 or 4 senior nurses or consultants saw the rashes----and she is the only one who says there was no rash, than I am having a hard time believing she is being totally truthful. She has been misleading in other areas already so I don't see her as being credible.Rather than what she’d be better off saying, maybe she’s just saying what she actually remembers.
If she’s not guilty, and truly believes she’s been scapegoated, then why would she say she saw something she didn’t?
Rather than what she’d be better off saying, maybe she’s just saying what she actually remembers.
If she’s not guilty, and truly believes she’s been scapegoated, then why would she say she saw something she didn’t?
Yes, I think so.Sounds to me like the defence has some experts.
Likely to be an estimate. I don't think we will hear ten more weeks of defence evidence though.I don’t think the judge could predict how long the jury will deliberate though?
It's actually very clever from the prosecution. Their expert has given the blood results and says it can only be from introduced insulin. LL can't come to any other conclusion, her medical knowledge isn't at the level that she can disagree than it was introduced deliberately. What else can she say?So ..she is agreeing with the medical experts rational so far ..but she didn't do it ...and just because she was on duty for all of them does not mean she did it
She also thinks she is a scapegoat for hospital failings..yet is confirming the insulin wasn't an error ?
"Dr Harkness said he could not remember the exact pattern of the skin at the time as he was "busy trying to save [Child A's] life" at the time, but "it was unusual enough for me to make notes and document it."Oh, maybe. In my head it was someone who had since become a senior consultant, but was junior at the time.
I'm guessing that the Judge's summing up may take the best part of a week on its own!I was wondering the same thing. Do you think there will be more witnesses, or old witnesses brought back for re-examination, or maybe veeery long concluding speeches by both sides. The mind boggles...
Depends on the box itself. its probably designed to hold large items so someone could put a hand in and retrieve anything in there.Is that even possible? Are confidential waste boxes not locked so you can't do that?
I think she's already said stuff to that effect ages ago. The initial reports suggested she didn't know what an AE was. That was clarified much later to meaning that she didn't know what the specific symptoms might be.I
Just think, without her choosing to take the stand the prosecution would never have got that admission from her, and it's a big one!
The outright admission that she knew it that it could lead to/that the biggest risk was death, is the most important part. Not just saying WTTE of oh I knew it was something to avoid etcI think she's already said stuff to that effect ages ago. The initial reports suggested she didn't know what an AE was. That was clarified much later to meaning that she didn't know what the specific symptoms might be.
This isn't a new admission by her, I don't think.
I'd say the answers we're hearing are LL's strategy not her defence teams. While she's on the stand, she's on her own!What's the play here from the defence? I'm struggling to understand. In my view they can either go for:
- Experts are wrong and bad luck/probability is a factor
- LL is a scapegoat for hospital failings
- There is just no way LL could have done these crimes, i.e. other plausible explanations
LL's answers don't appear to have a consistent strategy to point towards any of the above. Unless they are going for 'everyone at the hospital is in on a grand conspiracy and jointly secretly agreed to scapegoat LL'. Which doesn't seem likely.
It begs the question of what conversation did Myers and LL have prior to the decision to let her take the stand? Did she insist? Is she communicating properly with her lawyer? Did the defence decide to put her up based on an agreed version of events which she is now unexpectedly deviating from?
Any way I look at this it smells funny. In truth the prosecution's questions aren't especially challenging, but LL is putting a stick in her own wheels...
MOO
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