Dear Dotta, may I compliment you upon your use of the English language? You say it isn't your first language, but you're very very good!

I was a good student at school haha
Dear Dotta, may I compliment you upon your use of the English language? You say it isn't your first language, but you're very very good!
The nurse went out of her way to speak up and confirm what happened. It remains to be seen how compelling a witness she was but she took a risk doing this. This may be the first thread that unravels the whole trial.She didn't say it was a fact. She said "as far as I'm aware I believe that was the case"
"She said the screen was still up when she entered and a “concerned” Letby was trying to revive the youngster who was not breathing.And she recalled a nearby monitor, which also measures heart rate, was not switched on.On Wednesday, she confirmed to Ben Myers KC, defending, that she spoke to detectives last month after reading the opening speeches online which suggested Letby had switched off the monitor
Mr Myers said: “From what happened you knew that was not the case?”
The nurse replied: “As far as I’m aware I believe that was not the case.”
She said two doctors, consultant Dr John Gibbs and registrar Dr David Harkness, approached her the same afternoon to apologise for leaving Child G behind the screen and for not turning the monitor back after completing the procedure.
Mr Myers said: “I suggest Ms Letby was cross that the doctors had left her behind the screen with the monitor off?”
The nurse said: “I don’t remember that.
“I remember her being concerned.”
Mr Myers said: “Do you recall she said this is something to make a formal complaint about?”
The witness replied: “I don’t remember but I went to my manager to report it myself without anyone suggesting it.”.
The scenario appears to be:
1. The doctors leave Baby G (and say they would not have left if the baby was not stable.)
2. LL either returns to Baby G or was there all along
3. LL shouts for help
4. The nurse arrives and baby G has deteriorated.
5. The nurse notices the monitor is off
5. LL says the doctors switching the monitors off could be a formal complaint(nurse does not remember this)
6. The nurse reports it to her manager (the manager does not remember this)
7. The Doctors come and apologise to the nurse (The doctors do not rememebr this and do not remember switching the monitor off, one says that would not be his normal practice, the other says at no point di dhe turn it off and he's not sure he woudl even know how to)
So the only person who actually knows whether the doctors left the monitors off is LL. The other nurse only arrived after LL did.
The nurse went out of her way to speak up and confirm what happened. It remains to be seen how compelling a witness she was but she took a risk doing this. This may be the first thread that unravels the whole trial.
A little bit like Dr Js statement; as soon as he approached the doorway, she was allegedly stood over the incubator, the machine had allegedly been paused (so the alarm didn’t go off) and baby happened to be “deteriorating” just at that very point as he approached her.Or perhaps she heard the footsteps of someone approaching, and then called for help.
I don't see how this kerfuffle over who turned off a monitor, would unravel the entire trial. The jurors have heard evidence in SEVEN baby attacks so far. That is a lot of damning information. Much of it was straightforward and not really disputed.The nurse went out of her way to speak up and confirm what happened. It remains to be seen how compelling a witness she was but she took a risk doing this. This may be the first thread that unravels the whole trial.
IMO memories won't be 100% perfect years later, but if witnesses are very specific and give detail then that stands out for me.He said he doesn't remember it and it's testimony for the jury's consideration whether they believe a consultant with a long career would have turned off a monitor, and not just him but two doctors. Two doctors pressing the off switch together, if she's correct about their apologies.
We're not actually getting transcripts or the benefit of seeing witness demeanour to supplement our understanding of the evidence.
What we've been told he agreed is conditional upon her memory of the apology being accurate, not his memory - 'if I apologised, presumably it happened, I don't remember' doesn't constitute fact.
It could have been a senior doctor acting graciously and apologising to a nurse for a distressing situation dealing with a collapsed baby and she's misinterpreted their apologies. It could have been as she said, but no notes and 7 years later I don't think it's factual evidence at all.
IMO
IMO memories won't be 100% perfect years later, but if witnesses are very specific and give detail then that stands out for me.
I do think what the nurse said about talking to the doctors is truthful though, it comes across as she's certain JMO. I'm imagining a scenario where the nurse sees the monitor off, assumes doctors switched it off in error and didn't turn it back on.
And then in my imagined scenario she then has conversation with doctors, then they apologise to her, both assuming the nurse's assertion is correct - that they must have done this (unintentionally).
Just my opinion.
I've been busy lately and haven't had time to post (I have my finals for Uni this week).
But I wanted to add something I thought of regarding the monitor being turned off.
The nurse said the doctors apologised to her for not turning it off, but I think it was in the context of hearing that Baby G had collapsed and the monitor had been off, so maybe they said something along the lines of "I'm not sure if it was us who left it off, but if it was we are sorry," that makes more sense than two of them apologising for not turning it off, IMO.
It's quite illuminating to see her response to the allegation originally, and how she responded to this testimony by purporting to remember strong feelings and conversation about formal complaints that she couldn't remember closer to the time and omitted from her texts that evening. It's evidence imo of a manipulative and exploitative nature.
JMO
I agree the nurse's evidence was truthful.IMO memories won't be 100% perfect years later, but if witnesses are very specific and give detail then that stands out for me.
I do think what the nurse said about talking to the doctors is truthful though, it comes across as she's certain JMO. I'm imagining a scenario where the nurse sees the monitor off, assumes doctors switched it off in error and didn't turn it back on.
And then in my imagined scenario she then has conversation with doctors, then they apologise to her, both assuming the nurse's assertion is correct - that they must have done this (unintentionally).
Just my opinion.
I think she would have talked about it in her texts, instead of going on about the nursery nurses as she did.I guess it's possible that the nurse's new statement jogged LL's memory of the incident in a way that being accused of attempted murder failed to. However, it does come across like she's taking full advantage of the nurse adding a bit of information about the doctors, and then running with it and adding even more of her own detail that paints her in a good light, IMO.
I think she would have talked about it in her texts, instead of going on about the nursery nurses as she did.
I don't think she wanted to draw attention to it because the more scrutiny given to it the more chance that this could escalate in an unpredictable way, with people talking about it.
JMO
There is a parallel here to LL not pointing out to doctors or nurses that baby G had been fed double the amount of milk she should have had in her stomach, the first time she projectile vomited.I'm waiting to hear more details of the remaining charges, as it looks like this was the only charge where the monitor was turned off completely. Then in at least one, or is is two charges after this one she is accused of pausing the alarm on the monitor to stop it going off, rather than turning it off completely. If guilty, this could be an example of her adapting her methods, after the other nurse had noted when the monitor had been switched off completely or maybe with the remaining charges there was no screen present, so a blank screen on a monitor was more likely to be noticed.
IMO
I almost used the word "opportunist" in my post about how it appeared that LL had taken the nurse's new information as an opportunity to add other detail to portray herself in a good light, regarding something she had failed to mention at all, at any point before, even in police interviews.If guilty
- The motive is elusive (although I think it is there in her "famous" note)
- The methods are varied (although repetitive)
- The ward seemed to be in chaos (how lucky for an alleged SK)
- And it seems to me that (alleged) taking advantage of every opportunity was her strength.
JMO
It's a shame we didn't get to hear more detail about the contexts of the text she sent to a colleague about their designated baby's feeding. The fact that it was mentioned hints that the baby may have been Baby G, but I don't think we've ever seen it confirmed.There is a parallel here to LL not pointing out to doctors or nurses that baby G had been fed double the amount of milk she should have had in her stomach, the first time she projectile vomited.
If these incidents were not caused by LL I think she would have been drawing attention to them.
JMO
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