Thanks. So is it possible the small bottles could have been contaminated with insulin?
I can only tell you that the bottles we used had a ringtop metal cap over the rubber top, so could only be needled once this was removed.
Thanks. So is it possible the small bottles could have been contaminated with insulin?
LL and Mary Griffith were in room 1, which is away from the other rooms and has some blind spots if anyone was approaching the room from the corridor. Not sure which cot Baby L was in but if guilty, I assume LL would just wait till Mary was on a break or maybe on the computer if that meant Mary didn't have a clean line of vision to Baby L.You're correct, but you'd never do either independently. So if a nurse were alone at an incubator doing this it would look very suspicious.
But she was asked why you wouldn’t put insulin in one of these bags ; not why you wouldn’t put insulin in the bag in the case of the baby in question.Quotes from today in bold..
NJKC: "Why would you NOT put insulin into one of these bags?"
LL: "Because it’s against all practice"
NJKC: "It’s highly dangerous isn’t it?"
LL: "Yes"
NJKC: "Life threatening to a child of this age?"
LL: "Yes"
IMO it is telling that her first reason for why not to put insulin in a TPN bag is because ‘it’s against practice’ and not that ‘it could kill a child’ or even that it is dangerous and could harm. NJ has to suggest the dangers first.
Then this statement….
Nick Johnson KC: "It was a targeted attack wasn’t it. What do you say?"
Lucy Letby: "Not by me it wasn’t"
NJKC: "Poisoning a child in the same way baby F was poisoned"
LL: "Yes"
NJKC: "With the same substance"
LL: "Yes"
And this…
Mr Johnson says the reason for the hypoglycaemia was that someone had poisoned Child L through 'at least two' bags of insulin.
LL: "Yes."
NJ: "And that was you, wasn't it?"
LL: "No."
Both conflict IMO with this….
NJKC: "So do you accept that baby F was poisoned deliberately?"
LL: "I can’t answer that because I don’t know how insulin got into the bag, or who put it there or why"
She accepts that baby L was poisoned with insulin yet csnt say whether it was a deliberate poisoning? To me the word ‘poisoning’ in this context, implies intent IMO.
How can you say someone put insulin in the bag and the child was poisoned, but also say you don’t know how the insulin got there - someone put it there.
And can’t say if it was deliberate - why else would someone put insulin in the bag when it cannot be done accidentally? And not just a one bag but multiple bags? How can that not be deliberate?
It’s such a blatant contradiction that makes absolutely zero sense IMO…
She answered ‘because it’s against all standard of practice’ so I’m guessing that if insulin needed to be administered then it should never be added to a TPN bag.But she was asked why you wouldn’t put insulin in one of these bags ; not why you wouldn’t put insulin in the bag in the case of the baby in question.
Putting insulin in one of the bags isn’t going to kill or harm a baby if the baby actually requires insulin as far as I’m aware. It’s not practice to do it but doesn’t become more potent or dangerous when administered through a tpn bag as opposed to another method ?
If that is correct, then I don’t see anything suspicious about her answer.
It's up there with her answer to if she had done anything to deliberately harm any babies -IMO it is telling that her first reason for why not to put insulin in a TPN bag is because ‘it’s against practice’ and not that ‘it could kill a child’ or even that it is dangerous and could harm. NJ has to suggest the dangers first.
She answered ‘because it’s against all standard of practice’ so I’m guessing that if insulin needed to be administered then it should never be added to a TPN bag.
So LL is acknowledging there is no good reason for it to be in there by saying it’s against standard of practice, yet doesn’t actually answer the question of why? Why is it against standard of practice? - because it could be dangerous.
Even if a baby needed insulin, I gather from Lucy’s answer that it should not ever be in a TPN bag and to put insulin in there could cause all sorts of problems and pose a risk to the baby. Even if there’s only a low possibility of it harming a baby, if it’s against practice it’s for a reason. It shouldn’t be in there and if it was there it was put there deliberately IMO.
MOO
How many hours do you think ? Is there a possibility that the insulin could have been already in the bag when it went up at 12pm and didn’t reach the baby / cause the collapse until 9am the next day?
That would make more sense to me. As someone else pointed out, I can see someone furtively injecting a bag which was sitting on a table or a desk, but I find it more difficult to envisage someone going up to a bag that is already hanging up and injecting it with insulin.
Obviously it would only take a matter of seconds to inject a bag, but considering an already hung bag would be there on display in the nursery in view of anyone, the chances and implications of getting caught with a syringe in your hand and injecting the bag whilst it is hanging up seem far huge .
my thinking was if people actually witnessed the swelling would mean it’s not injected air that’s causing it.I don't know if that is true, that someone seeing some more swelling happening negates the timeline. I don't think it is exactly like a balloon, and there is instant swelling that never goes up or down. The air bubble could have moved from one place to another, eventually settling in the stomach, which began to swell visibly minutes later.
The comment LL made about having to think about the baby's "poor heels" was in relation to not testing Baby F's blood sugar because of how sore repeated test could make the heels. If guilty, and if LL's aim was for Baby F's blood sugar to go so low he died, then telling a nurse not to test him for a while because of his poor heels would suit her agenda. So would be more a case of using somebody else's empathy to achieve her own aims. We don't know for sure that she did tell the other nurse that, but the mention of his poor heels and the other nurse nto questioning it,indicated that they may have already discussed this as a reason for not testing.
We don't know the full exchange that happened at the time but if guilty, and if was something like this then I don't think it demonstrates any empathy on LL's part at all. I think it shows manipulation IMO
Baby F's blood sugar is testing low for hours
LL records a reading at 5am that seems to indicate that it's now improving and says that they shouldn't test for a while because of his sore heels
The other nurse doesn't test for a couple of hours
When Baby F's blood sugar is finally tested at handover, it has fallen to a dangerously low level.
(LL then messages the other nurse to tell her how low the blood sugar had fallen at handover, the nurse feels awful for not testing, LL says they had to think of his poor heels, before telling her "hope you sleep well")
I'm not sure. I know nothing about Air Emboli but the way some of these babies were reacting to resus was noted to be very strange. Rapid deteriorations and rapid recoveries and even babies 'coming back to life' after their heart beat stopped. Not what you'd expect even on a singular occasion, stranger still that there were so many incidents and all in one unit?my thinking was if people actually witnessed the swelling would mean it’s not injected air that’s causing it.
All very true. I would like to hear how it is theorised that all the odd events are possibly due to air embolism Though, even just a theory on how it could happen. I thought the pattern between baby i and baby O might indicate some other medical problem that could be at play. <modsnip>I'm not sure. I know nothing about Air Emboli but the way some of these babies were reacting to resus was noted to be very strange. Rapid deteriorations and rapid recoveries and even babies 'coming back to life' after their heart beat stopped. Not what you'd expect even on a singular occasion, stranger still that there were so many incidents and all in one unit?
Sadly it seems that whenever he gets close to rattling her, the judge calls for a break or there’s a break where she can recover.Mr Johnson has been reviewing this horrid evidence for years. He has interviewed grieving, devastated family members, offered them Kleenex tissues to dry their eyes, listened to their stories, and watched the defendant calling them 'confused or misleading' as they talk about their painful memories.
He has spoken to many co-workers and colleagues and many medical experts, who have led him to believe the allegations he is now putting forth. He sees the sweet, nice defendant as an adversary.
Mr Johnson has to stand next to the woman who he believes caused tremendous pain and torture to innocent babies and families, and try to get her to reveal herself, in the next few weeks. I am not surprised that he is trying to 'belittle' her in his attempts to rattle her cage. He is under tremendous pressure himself, if he believes his allegations and he feels it is up to him to get her to reveal her true self.
My father was a defense attorney and I know how urgent it was, in his mind, to get things done during a trial.
Do you have the original quotes where there are mentions of people "witnessing" the swelling. Are they not just referring to seeing that there was swelling or a swelling present, rather than witnessing the actual process of it swelling (ie getting bigger) in front of their eyes?my thinking was if people actually witnessed the swelling would mean it’s not injected air that’s causing it.
A few points IMO :ive seen enough to know she does empathise with older people but in terms of her attitude towards babies I’m really not sure. Certainly nothing to suggest a negative but little in the way of positive either. I know they are babies but how does one empathise with something that can’t communicate feelings?
in her texts she often apologises for being rude and more importantly without prompting which assuming it’s genuine is bonafide empathy. Ie responding appropriately to people’s emotions without being told about them Or putting oneself in others shoes.
I’ve posted them already upthread. One was in the podcast for baby O. Was the father who said it. He said it was definitely swelling which I would think is him Saying he saw it.Do you have the original quotes where there are mentions of people "witnessing" the swelling. Are they not just referring to seeing that there was swelling or a swelling present, rather than witnessing the actual process of it swelling (ie getting bigger) in front of their eyes?
A few points IMO :
- A baby is a "someone" not a "something"
- You don't need to be able to communicate how you feel in order to feel.
- You don't need to hear somebody communicate how they feel in order to empathise.
- You don't need empathy to apologise.
I think the most plausible explanation is that LL searched for the name after she had been tipped off that was one of the babies being investigated by police. It’s the only thing that makes sense.Thanks for all updates
What a day!
Re Baby K.
AFAI can remember this Baby was in the unit for about 10 hours and the name was not even on the handover sheet, right?
And suddenly, after many months LL checks parents' FB?
I admire Prosecutor's patience!
And meticulous work the whole team put into this terrible case.
As for the Juror's sudden emergency surgery - it doesn't bode well for the trial.
Let's hope this person gets well soon.
JMO
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