Feature

Nurse accused of murdering babies in her neonatal unit


 

Post-it note: Admission or anguish?

At the end of the prosecution’s presentation, Mr. Johnson mentioned a Post-it on which Ms. Letby had written, “I AM EVIL I DID THIS.” In the defense’s opening statements, Ben Myers KC, said the note was an “anguished outpouring of a young woman in fear and despair when she realises the enormity of what’s being said about her, in a moment to herself.”

He added that the nurse was dealing with employment issues at the time it was written, including a grievance procedure with the NHS Trust where she worked. Another note was shown on screens to the jury, which read: “Not good enough. I’m an awful person. I will never have children or marry. Despair.” and “I haven’t done anything wrong.”

Mr. Myers said that Ms. Letby was the type of person who often scribbles things down and the note was “nothing more extraordinary than that.”

In presenting the defense case, Mr. Myers argued that there was no evidence of Letby hurting the children, and that the prosecution’s case was “driven by the assumption that someone was doing deliberate harm” and that this was combined with “coincidence on certain occasions of Miss Letby’s presence.”

“What it isn’t driven by is evidence of Miss Letby actually doing what is alleged against her,” he added.

“There is a real danger that people will simply accept the prosecution theory of guilt, and that’s all we have so far,” Mr. Myers said. “A theory of guilt based firmly on coincidence – if anything can be based firmly on coincidence.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape UK.

Pages

Recommended Reading

AAP updates hyperbilirubinemia guideline
MDedge Family Medicine
Managing maternal and infant mental health
MDedge Family Medicine
Large study amplifies evidence of COVID vaccine safety in pregnancy
MDedge Family Medicine
Children born very prematurely at higher risk to struggle in secondary school
MDedge Family Medicine
Higher rates of group B strep disease found in Black and Asian newborns
MDedge Family Medicine
Dolutegravir in pregnant patients with HIV showed more viral suppression at delivery vs. other treatments
MDedge Family Medicine
WIC review finds broad benefits, knowledge gaps
MDedge Family Medicine
Congenital cytomegalovirus declined in wake of COVID-19
MDedge Family Medicine
Congenital syphilis: It’s still a significant public health problem
MDedge Family Medicine
With sleuth work, pediatricians can identify genetic disorders
MDedge Family Medicine