There must be because people on here are saying that precise thing. Many posters here have followed this case intently, far more intently than me and about a million times more intently than most of the muppets on Facebook and lots are coming to the conclusion that - if guilty - she did it for drama, the attention, the glorification and the adoration that came from saving the babies. If they are correct in that then, logicaly, she could not have had the intention to cause death because there would have been none of those "rewards".
She either had the intention to bask in the glory of being the savior or she had the intention to kill. It is logically impossible for her to have had both; she may have had the intention to be utterly indifferent to whether or not death would result but that is not an intention to kill.
Yes, you are correct as regards the quote from the precedent case.The words "virtual certainly" were not highlighted in previous usages of it, though, which is why I said it was being cherry-picked. Those are important words; from the evidence presented this far, death is clearly not a "virtual certainty" as she has failed more times than she succeeded. Indeed, she failed to kill baby G entirely!
Two highly experienced expert witnesses have been specifically questioned by the defence as to the likelihood of an air embolus causing death and they have given very specific answers as to it depending upon the volume of air and the time taken for its administration. So, in short, their evidence has demonstrated quite clearly and unequivocally that air emboli are not virtually certain to cause death. I think that that is the precise reason as to why the defence asked those questions.
You say there must be evidence because lots of people here believe that if she's guilty she did it for the attention and adoration etc she got from saving the babies.
Even if there were a hundred people here saying it (there aren't) that is not evidence of it. It's a theory of a possible motive some people have jumped to, but it's not in the evidence. She sent a couple of texts saying she was bored with feeding babies or it was too quiet, or she wanted to be in the ITU, but that's not evidence of wanting babies to live, or die.
The theory just doesn't fit with the evidence presented.
The evidence is that following three deaths and one near-fatality, a fourth baby died also with an alleged air embolus AND an alleged injury in which he lost most of his blood. The following night baby F was poisoned with insulin, injected with glucose to raise his blood sugars, and then LL went home while he was still receiving a potentially lethal amount of insulin through his TPN. A second bag of TPN had also (agreed by the defence and the prosecuion) been poisoned to the same degree which he was hooked up to, which looks like a concerted plan to cover for the eventuality of doctors removing the first bag, while LL was not present. Baby F could have died at any point while LL was not there to rescue him. None of this fits with an intention to rescue babies.
Following the four deaths, babies started to collapse with a myriad of other presentations, after people started talking about the similarities of the collapses. Baby I was allegedly given air through his ngt four times until on the fifth occasion he died with the alleged addition of air through his IV line, the same alleged method that had already killed four babies.
The evidence of the experts is that air injected killed these babies. The defence asked about the babies who survived some alleged injections to make the point that it is usually fatal, not to make the point that it isn't:
"Mr Myers said it is a 'key aspect' that the inability to successfully resuscitate Child A had led to an air embolus. He adds that child B recovered, and that is "inconsistent" and "contradicts the air embolus theory".
Dr Evans: "No it does not."
"Mr Myers says Child D recovered twice, which, in principle, is inconsistent with an air embolus.
Dr Bohin disagrees, saying it depends on the speed and volume of the air administered."
Recap: Lucy Letby trial, Friday, November 11