
Three bosses at Lucy Letby hospital arrested on suspicion of manslaughter
Unnamed three from Countess of Chester hospital held on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter, police say
There is so much going on here, people seem to want an end to the case and put all the blame on Letby.![]()
Three bosses at Lucy Letby hospital arrested on suspicion of manslaughter
Unnamed three from Countess of Chester hospital held on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter, police saywww.theguardian.com
Who are you referring to?There is so much going on here, people seem to want an end to the case and put all the blame on Letby.
I think my point was clear. The case need going through again as imo it was not conducting properly as is becoming clear now as senior management are now being arrested. It may be that she was guilty but the case has not been transparent.Who are you referring to?
I think that most people simply want anyone who is criminally responsible, regardless as to what extent and level of culpability, to be made to answer for their actions or inactions.
Any investigation into management (or anyone else) is totally separate to Letby's offences. The police have been quite clear in that.I think my point was clear. The case need going through again as imo it was not conducting properly as is becoming clear now as senior management are now being arrested. It may be that she was guilty but the case has not been transparent.
I'm wondering if you are maybe confused about the manslaughter investigation alongside the murder convictions? Are you wondering if the police are showing doubt about the murders and whether this was negligent manslaughter/substandard care of the babies that caused the deaths?I think my point was clear. The case need going through again as imo it was not conducting properly as is becoming clear now as senior management are now being arrested. It may be that she was guilty but the case has not been transparent.
seconded, whether or not babies were harmed maliciously or via substandard care, there are really very clear policies on safeguarding, whistleblowing, and responsibility for alarming death rates, which were not followed - had they been done so earlier, fewer families may have been bereaved. That’s huge.I'm wondering if you are maybe confused about the manslaughter investigation alongside the murder convictions? Are you wondering if the police are showing doubt about the murders and whether this was negligent manslaughter/substandard care of the babies that caused the deaths?
I might be off-base with this, but if not, the gross negligent manslaughter investigation is not to do with the medical management of the babies, but senior executives not taking action to report to the police when the consultants first raised their concerns that these were not expected deaths and needed to be forensically investigated. The allegation would be that some murders, and attempted murders which caused life-changing injuries, might have been prevented had they acted appropriately on the consultants' concerns.
MOO
The rules are that you cannot publish anything which may may endanger a future trial, essentially. Speculating as to a particular person's guilt, or not, is potentially one of those things. Suggesting that someone already convicted may have been improperly convicted, or not, is most likely another.z as
seconded, whether or not babies were harmed maliciously or via substandard care, there are really very clear policies on safeguarding, whistleblowing, and responsibility for alarming death rates, which were not followed - had they been done so earlier, fewer families may have been bereaved. That’s huge.
And does meet the bar for corporate manslaughter IMO.
Am not 100% sure what sub justice rules mean for further discussing this so may absent self!
There has to be more substance to it than just that, as the doctors and consultants also had a process to go directly to the police themselves at any point and also chose not to. Just apologising for not following the policy, shouldn’t make them less culpable than another set of staff members being accused of not contacting the police. Being paid more or less than another member of staff, also shouldn’t make a difference as to whether you are responsible for safeguarding at work.I'm wondering if you are maybe confused about the manslaughter investigation alongside the murder convictions? Are you wondering if the police are showing doubt about the murders and whether this was negligent manslaughter/substandard care of the babies that caused the deaths?
I might be off-base with this, but if not, the gross negligent manslaughter investigation is not to do with the medical management of the babies, but senior executives not taking action to report to the police when the consultants first raised their concerns that these were not expected deaths and needed to be forensically investigated. The allegation would be that some murders, and attempted murders which caused life-changing injuries, might have been prevented had they acted appropriately on the consultants' concerns.
MOO
What a complete fool this man is. How on earth is he a barrister?Mark McDonald, the barrister now representing Letby, handed two large dossiers of new expert reviews to the CCRC earlier this year.
But on Tuesday Cheshire constabulary said its criminal investigation into the former nurse, hospital bosses and the hospital itself would continue.
Hughes said: “Both the corporate manslaughter and gross negligence manslaughter elements of the investigation are continuing and there are no set timescales for these.
“Our investigation into the deaths and non-fatal collapses of babies at the neo-natal units of both the Countess of Chester hospital and the Liverpool women’s hospital between the period of 2012 to 2016 is also ongoing.”
McDonald, barrister at Furnival Chambers, said: “Yet another press release from the police at a very sensitive time when the CCRC are looking at the case of Lucy Letby. Despite this the concerns many have raised will not go away, and we will continue to publicly discuss them.
“The reality is that 26 internationally renowned experts have looked at this case and the lead expert has concluded that no crime was committed, no babies were murdered. What is needed is a proper and full public inquiry into the failings of the neonatal and paediatric medical care unit at the Countess of Chester hospital.”
No credibility whatsoever. When actual forensic pathologists with actual access to cadavers (and forensic detail post mortem techniques) , notes, history, etc often say that cannot be absolutely certain about causes of death/abuse in highly suspicious cases (please read Richard Shepherd’s Unnatural causes or Seven Ages) it should be deemed highly concerning that pairs of clinicians should be so certain from notes review.What a complete fool this man is. How on earth is he a barrister?
How can he say that anything about this press release is in any way improper? He seems to be implying that the police are doing this to make things "go away"!
He could be sailing very close to the wind her with statements such as ...we will continue to publicly discuss them. along with the one about his people concluding that...no crime was committed, and that...no babies were murdered. These may be foolhardy words given the close association between those recently arrested and LL's convictions. As a barrister, he should know that better than 99% of people.
(8) The route by which the paediatricians raised their concernsThere has to be more substance to it than just that, as the doctors and consultants also had a process to go directly to the police themselves at any point and also chose not to. Just apologising for not following the policy, shouldn’t make them less culpable than another set of staff members being accused of not contacting the police. Being paid more or less than another member of staff, also shouldn’t make a difference as to whether you are responsible for safeguarding at work.
As an aside, I have also taken a moment to reflect on the parents, who still 10 years later are waiting, which seems unimaginable. 10 years for an inquiry to fully investigate what happened must seem a lifetime for the parents. Then we have charges of gross negligence manslaughter, with still outstanding possible corporate manslaughter and the threat of more warning letters from the Thirlwall Inquiry in September (that may or may not have been addressed through these arrests).
It may have been the “quickest and clearest way”, but it wasn’t the only way(8) The route by which the paediatricians raised their concerns
255 CoCH submits that in the extraordinary circumstances of 2015/16, it was appropriate for the paediatricians to escalate their concerns direct to those at the highest levels of the Trust outside of the established governance systems.
256 The concerns they were raising from February 2016 onwards were of the upmost seriousness. Far from being inappropriate, it was if anything entirely appropriate that they were escalated directly to those at the top of the organisation. Doing so was the clearest and quickest way to highlight the concern.
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