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Lucy Letby: The expert group offers alternative death causes in several cases UK News

Lucy Letby: The expert group offers alternative death causes in several cases UK News

A group of international medical experts has given alternative death in several cases against Lucy Letby.

Pensioned neonatologist Dr. Shoo Lee, who was an academic work on the air (bubbles) work in 1989, which promoted in the process, presided over a group of 14 experts to compile a “impartial report. on evidence. “

Dr. Lee said he thought that his discoveries on the skin were misinterpreted by criminal prosecution. He said in a new work that he published in December 2024 that there are no cases of skin discoloration when air was injected into the veins.

At his 2023 trial, prosecutors indicated the discoloration of the skin in several victims as proof that Air was injected into the Letby veins.

“The notion that these cases are air embolism because they collapsed and because there were no rashes have no basis in evidence. Let’s be clear in this regard,” said Dr. Lee.

Lucy Letby Last: Experts reveal “new medical evidence” that questions the guilt of the nurse

Professor Neena Modi, Barrister Mark McDonald, David Davis and Dr. Shoo Lee. Pic: pa
Image:
Professor Neena Modi, Letby Mark McDonald’s barrister, David Davis and Dr. Shoo Lee. Pic: pa

The panel has put alternative death causes in many cases, including natural causes and precarious medical care at Counter of Chester Hospital.

“I found no crimes,” said Dr. Lee. “In all cases, death or injury have been due to natural causes or only bad medical care.”

Asked about Contesa de Chester Hospital, Dr. Lee, a retired doctor from Canada, said: “I would say that if it were a hospital in Canada, it will be closed. It will not happen.”

Sky News was close to Contesa Chester Hospital for comments.

A few minutes before the conference, the Commission for reviewing the criminal cases, investigating the potential abortions of justice, announced that it will examine Letby’s case after receiving a request from his lawyers on Monday.

Opening the press conference, MP Sir David Davis He described Letby’s convictions as “one of the major injustices of modern times.”

Findings will be shaking for the land for the parents of the babies

This must have been one of the most frightening mornings for the grieving parents of the babies who died in the Chester.

A 10-month trial concluded that their newborns were killed by Lucy Letby.

Now they have presented a body of evidence gathered by some of the most important neonatal experts in the world, who could and will probably put a certain doubt against his conviction.

The death of each child was analyzed criminally: the accusations presented in court with the circumstances of each death against what the commission claims are the clinical facts.

Dr. Shoo Lee, the president of the panel, was close to Letby’s lawyers following his 2023 sentence. He was convinced his 1989 work on neonatal deaths used in the case against Letby was misinterpreted.

The team he brought together to examine each death is a world leader in his own field.

For parents who learn today, these experts believe that some of the baby’s deaths have been prevenable and not the result of a series murder in series will come as nothing less than the sinking of the earth.

This review of the expert group of each case, if true, could still indicate a systemic failure of NHS maternity care.

Now, now, the Commission for the revision of criminal cases will decide whether Letby’s case is investigated as a potential abortion in justice.

Letby, 35, the most prolific killer child of modern times, is Serving fifteen terms of life in prison after She was convicted At Manchester Crown Court of killing seven infants and trying to kill seven others between June 2015 and June 2016.

Various methods have been used to attack babies while the defendant worked as a medical assistant at the neonatal unit at the COUNTE Chester Hospital.

One method was injecting the air into the bloodstream that caused an air embolism, blocking the bloody supply and which led to sudden and unexpected collapses.

Last year, Letby lost two offers to challenge his convictions to the Court of Appeal – in May, for seven crimes and seven attempts of crimes, and in October for attempted murder of a little girl, who was condemned by another jury at a re -examination.

In December, the lawyer of the former medical assistant, Mark McDonald, said he would request the permission of the Court of Appeal to reopen his case for reasons Dr. Dewi Evans, the main medical expert, was not “reliable”.

Dr. Evans, a pediatrician consultant, said that concerns about his evidence were not “unsolved, unfinished, inaccurate.”

In September, a public investigation on how Letby was able to commit the crimes began to hear evidence. The closing of the legal deposits are expected in March, and the results are expected to be published this fall.

Detectives at Cheshire Constabulary also continue to review the care of about 4,000 babies admitted to the Chester Countess Hospital from January 2012 until the end of June 2016, while Letby worked as a neonatal assistant there. It also includes two work destinations at the Liverpool Women’s Hospital in 2012 and 2015.

Letby was interviewed under caution at HMP Bronzefield in Ashford, Surrey, in connection with the ongoing investigation of children and non-facal collapses.

She maintains her innocence.