This, by the way, is one case where the defence will likely dispute that she was where she needed to be to do what she is said to have done, if they haven't already.
opening speech, which isn't evidence but is unlikely to be untruthful or the defence would have objected, said she admitted she was the only nurse in there when C collapsed. We didn't get to hear about the police interviews in full from our lovely court reporters.
11:19am
The court has heard Child C was being looked after by a nurse less qualified than Lucy Letby and had been given the responsibility as Child C was stable.
That nurse had left to go to the nurses station in the hospital. While there, she heard Child C's monitor sound an alarm.
Upon her return, Letby was already in the room, standing next to Child C's cot.
It was the third baby to have suffered a serious deterioration in the matter of a few days, the court heard.
11:20am
Letby was the only nurse who had been on duty for all three collapse incidents for Child A, B and C.
11:22am
In police interview, Letby denied she had anything to do with Child C, other than with the resuscitation.
She could not remember why she had ended up in nursery 1.
In a second interview, asked about texts which had been found on her phone placing her in that room, Letby said that she might have been sending them from the nurses’ station and then gone into room 1 “to do something else”.
She then agreed that she had been the only person in the room when Child C had collapsed.
11:24am
After finishing her shift, Letby searched on Facebook for Child C's parents.
The prosecution say this would've been one of the first things she would have done after that night shift ended.
Mr Johnson, for the prosecution, added Letby would have been the only adult in the room when Child C collapsed, as was the case with Child A, and was one of only two in the room when Child B collapsed.
Recap: Prosecution opens trial of Lucy Letby accused of Countess of Chester Hospital baby murders