11:30
Letby 'sabotaged' Child H just after baby's father left neonatal unit
The prosecution claims Letby has falsified the medical notes for Child H after the fact, making it appear as if she was deteriorating before she collapsed in the early hours.
"You were falsely creating the impression to the registrar, your friend, that Child H was a child who had been presenting problems over the proceeding hours," Nick Johnson, the prosecution barrister, says.
Child H's father left around midnight, so the prosecution claim he would have noticed if what was happening in Letby's nursing notes was the reality of the situation.
Letby refutes this.
Child H had chest drains inserted and Letby has previously said their insertion, and how they were secured, may have contributed to the infant's problems, and collapse later that shift.
"Why were you not checking the drains?" Mr Johnson asks.
"I was checking the drains," Letby says.
"Because you removed the drain," Mr Johnson says.
"No," says Letby.
"And that is the reason why Child H desaturated just before midnight just after her father left," Mr Johnson says.
"No," says Letby.
"Because you were sabotaging Child H that night, weren't you?" Mr Johnson says.
"No," says Letby.
11:32
Letby: 'People makes mistakes'
Letby is now asked what happened at 3am on 26 September 2015.
"I don't recall," she says, before clarifying: "I don't recall the exact timings of everything that has happened."
"The child for which you were responsible had a cardiac arrest," Nick Johnson, the prosecution barrister, says.
"Okay," she replies, quietly.
She is asked again about another piece of medical paperwork where the time has been entered wrong.
"We are human and people make mistakes," she says.
"I agree the time is wrong," she continues, before adding that the timings were correct on her other notes.
Child H's collapse was "so serious" she needed CPR and there were fears she had sustained brain damage.
The infant made a "miraculous" recovery - Mr Johnson asks Letby if she was pleased by this.
"Of course I was pleased," she replies.
"Or were you frustrated by the fact your attempt to kill her had failed?" Mr Johnson asks.
"No," says Letby.
Lucy Letby, a former neonatal nurse, has been back in court for another day of cross-examination by the prosecution on Friday. She is accused of the murder of seven babies and the attempted murder of 10 others, and denies all the charges.
news.sky.com