I have never previously heard that the line had snapped either.
Sounds like I am in the minority on whether I would convict or not if I was on the jury.
Jmo
It was the other baby, I misunderstood!
I have never previously heard that the line had snapped either.
Sounds like I am in the minority on whether I would convict or not if I was on the jury.
Jmo
I genuinely am so surprised that people find the evidence weak for Baby K. I've always seen it as one of the strongest
I genuinely am so surprised that people find the evidence weak for Baby K. I've always seen it as one of the strongest:
Doesn't the jury know she has been convicted of previous murders though?I think looking at the case on its own, which the jury have to do (without the knowledge of previous “similar” patterns, events surrounding babies collapsing as soon as someone leaves etc)
I don’t believe there’s enough evidence to convict.
If I was on the jury in her previous trial though I would have found her guilty of this because how realistic is it to assume this is just an innocent coincidence?
It’s not likely when taken in context to everything else we knew from her original trial.
The jury doesn’t know everything else and only know about baby k.
Im not sure I could honestly, hand on my heart say, if I was on the jury here i would be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt.
True, it would only take seconds. But I think that it is important to show that she was there, for a ten minute period, alone with the child. And that ten minute period is right before the medical incident happened to Baby K.I'm not seeing how a few extra minutes is sufficient reason to retry something like this, though. I mean dislodging a tube must take mere seconds so it's surely basically irrelevant how long she had to do it?
That is true that 'each' of those things can have an innocent explanation. But when you stack them all together, how unlucky would a nurse be to have ALL of those incriminating circumstances, in ALL of those cases, and they are all just innocent coincidences?I personally feel she may well be culpable. But believing it is not the same as having compelling evidence. All those things can have an innocent explanation.
I so agree with you. But the jury won't have the benefit of knowing some of these points. They haven't (yet) been told that Letby specifically targeted unusual babies (twins, triplets, babies on their 100 day birthdays). They also haven't been told that most of the other cases occurred after the dedicated nurse left the ward. It would have been really useful to have independent doctors as witnesses to testify as to how unusual it is for a 25 weeker to dislodge their own tube. It seems pretty unlikely to me. It really comes down to who you believe. In the last trial LL was totally discredited as she was shown to lie so many times. Johnson had her over the handover notes and confession notes and she had no credible answer to his questions. But that hasn't happened yet in this cross examination. The jury know she has been convicted of murder, but they won't know the extensive evidence that was based upon.I genuinely am so surprised that people find the evidence weak for Baby K. I've always seen it as one of the strongest:
1) Another 'unusual' kill for the collection (a VIP 25weeker which they don't usually see and the ward staff are intrigued and messaging about her)
2) Dr Jaryam walking in on her doing nothing
3) Alarm not sounding and likely turned off
4) Baby that weak highly unlikely to be able to dislodge own tube, yet it does dislodge 3x, whilst baby is sedated
5) Facebook searching for the family 2yrs later, despite not caring for that baby and only being on the ward hours
6) As per usual, the dedicated nurse has just left the ward, and noone else in the room except Lucy
7) in the middle of a 12mth killing spree
That's more than enough for a guilty from me. Was surprised they struggled last time too, tbh.
Very good points, hadn't thought of that. Oof. Baby Ks parents deserve justice too, and I really hope they get itI so agree with you. But the jury won't have the benefit of knowing some of these points. They haven't (yet) been told that Letby specifically targeted unusual babies (twins, triplets, babies on their 100 day birthdays). They also haven't been told that most of the other cases occurred after the dedicated nurse left the ward. It would have been really useful to have independent doctors as witnesses to testify as to how unusual it is for a 25 weeker to dislodge their own tube. It seems pretty unlikely to me. It really comes down to who you believe. In the last trial LL was totally discredited as she was shown to lie so many times. Johnson had her over the handover notes and confession notes and she had no credible answer to his questions. But that hasn't happened yet in this cross examination. The jury know she has been convicted of murder, but they won't know the extensive evidence that was based upon.
I don't know anyone else's thoughts on it but I think a parent may find some relief in an acknowledgement that their child had passed through natural causes rather than malevolent action. I know I would. It would go from "I have Been wronged in a most heinous and evil way" to "my poor baby didn't get to a good start and was too much for them".as much as I stand by the original verdicts, the evidence in this trial is simply not enough to convict her.
I have no idea why they thought retrying this case on its own was a good idea. I get the parents might have wanted it, but how are they going to feel now if a not guilty verdict comes in. It will inevitably give rise to the miscarriage of justice conspiracy theorists that are already going wild. A not guilty verdict here will make them go through the roof.
Bad decision all round I’m sorry.
I have to say that I really hope that this whole things ends after this retrial, regardless of the outcome.
Yes, it's important that justice is done, and is done properly, but I think that further legal proceedings are just going to turn into some sort of farce - and an expensive one at that. I cannot see what benefit to anyone there could be in pursuing any of this further and I think that would apply even to any other suspected crimes she may have committed. She's never getting out so what's the point?
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