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Nurse Lucy Letby ‘smiled at mum of baby she murdered and sent a sympathy card’, court hears

Lucy Letby, 32, allegedly murdered seven babies and attempted to kill ten others while working on a neo-natal ward.

Nurse Lucy Letby ‘smiled at mum of baby she murdered and sent a sympathy card’

A “cold-blooded” nurse smiled at the mum of a baby she murdered on the fourth attempt and sent a sympathy card, a court heard today.

Lucy Letby, 32, allegedly murdered seven babies and attempted to kill ten others while working on the neo-natal ward at the Countess of Chester Hospital in the north west of England.

The “poisoner at work” is accused of injecting two babies with insulin during a year-long killing spree.

Letby also allegedly murdered or harmed others by injecting air or milk into their bloodstream or via a tube in their stomachs.

The collapses and deaths of all 17 children in the case were not “naturally-occurring tragedies”, it was said.

Manchester Crown Court heard today how Letby tried four times to kill a premature baby girl - Child I - weighing just 2lbs 2oz (0.96kg), The Sun reported.

After her death, the baby’s mum told how Letby was “smiling and kept and kept going on about how she was present at Child I’s first bath and how much Child I had loved it”, it was said.

The court was also told she sent a sympathy card to the grieving parents, which was “not normal”.

Lucy Letby. Picture: South West News Service
Lucy Letby. Picture: South West News Service

Child I was said to be “in good condition” despite her size and was described as “resilient”.

Prosecutor Nick Johnson KC told jurors Letby succeeded on the fourth attempt to murder the baby.

He added: “It was persistent, it was calculated and it was cold-blooded.”

On October 12 to 13, 2015, the baby was doing well so the designated nurse left her “temporarily” and asked either Letby or another staff member on duty to keep an eye on her, it was said.

When she returned, Letby was allegedly stood in the doorway of the “darkened” room where she told the nurse the tot “looked pale”.

The designated nurse discovered Child I “appeared to be at the point of death and was not breathing”, jurors heard.

She was found to have gas swelling in her bowel - the same issue Child I had two weeks previously when Letby allegedly attempted to kill her.

Less than an hour later, the child’s monitor alarm sounded again.

A colleague found Letby standing by the child’s incubator and wanted to intervene as Child I was “distressed”, it was said.

Letby told the worker “they would be able to sort it”, it was said.

Jurors were told Child I then collapsed and died after attempts to revive her, led by a registrar, were unsuccessful.

Mr Johnson said the alleged murder of the baby I was an “extreme example even by the standards of this overall case”.

He added: “This is a case where we allege Lucy Letby tried four times to kill her. (Child I) was resilient but ultimately at the fourth attempt Lucy Letby succeeded and killed her.”

Lucy Letby, 32, is alleged to have gone on a killing spree on a neo-natal ward
Lucy Letby, 32, is alleged to have gone on a killing spree on a neo-natal ward

‘Sphere of Letby’

The court was also told today that Letby twice targeted a baby girl - Child H - when she was five and six days old.

Jurors heard the tot’s case is complicated by the “suboptimal treatment Child H received at the start of her life”.

But Mr Johnson said there were still “two occasions when Lucy Letby tried to kill Child H” on September 26, 2015, and the following night.

As the baby was being given treatment in the ICU section of the ward, Letby “would have had the cover of legitimacy for accessing her intravenous lines just before she collapsed”, it was said.

Soon after, the court was told she suffered a collapse and needed a full resuscitation - although the cause was “unclear”.

The following night, Letby was not Child H’s designated nurse but was seen by a registrar activating a special resuscitator for babies called a neopuff to help her breathe when her oxygen levels dropped, jurors heard.

She was transferred to a different hospital on September 27 where it was said there was a “dramatic improvement”.

Mr Johnson said: “As soon as children were removed from the Countess of Chester Hospital, and the sphere of Lucy Letby, they often suddenly and remarkably recovered.”

‘Trust me, I’m a nurse’

The court was told around a week after Child H’s second collapse, Letby searched for her mum on social media.

She also allegedly looked up the dad of twin children E and F and the mother of Child I on her day off.

Jurors heard yesterday how Child E was allegedly murdered by an injection of air into the bloodstream.

The court was told the baby’s mum had visited him on August 3, 2015, in the neo-natal unit where she found him “distressed” and bleeding from the mouth.

Lucy Letby
Lucy Letby

Prosecutor Nick Johnson KC said: “We say that she interrupted Lucy Letby who was attacking (Child E), although she did not realise it at the time.”

The mum told how Letby attempted to reassure her by saying a registrar would review the youngster’s condition and she should leave the unit.

She told her “Trust me, I’m a nurse” - but Mr Johnson told the court this was the mum being “fobbed off” by Letby.

‘Malevolent presence’

Jurors were told the next day, Letby allegedly used insulin for the first time to attempt to kill his twin brother, Child F.

The court heard previously how Letby, who had special training in caring for ICU babies, was a “constant malevolent presence”.

She is accused of murdering five boys and two girls, and the attempted murder of another five boys and five girls.

Some of the newborns were repeatedly targeted by the nurse - including one baby Letby is alleged to have killed after three previous failed attempts.

Consultants at the hospital grew suspicious of the “significant rise” in the number of babies dying or suffering “catastrophic” collapses.

Jurors were told they found Letby was the “one common denominator” among the deaths and collapses.

She denies all 22 charges, which are said to have taken place between June 2015 and June 2016.

A court order prohibits identifying the surviving and deceased children and prohibits identifying parents or witnesses connected with the babies.

The trial continues.

This story was originally published by The Sun and was reproduced with permission

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/real-life/news-life/nurse-lucy-letby-smiled-at-mum-of-baby-she-murdered-and-sent-a-sympathy-card-court-hears/news-story/6b20cfbafc013eb37b4d498f879d3d0c