A neonatal nurse in a British hospital has been found guilty of killing 7 babies
LONDON — A neonatal nurse in a British hospital was found guilty Friday of murdering seven babies and trying to kill six others during a yearlong campaign of deception that saw her prey on the vulnerabilities of premature and sick newborns as well as their anxious parents.
A jury at Manchester Crown Court convicted 33-year-old Lucy Letby of killing the babies in the neonatal unit at the Countess of Chester Hospital in northwest England between 2015 and 2016.
“Parents were exposed to her morbid curiosity and her fake compassion,” said the lead prosecutor, Pascale Jones. “Too many of them returned home to empty baby rooms. Many surviving children live with permanent consequences of her assaults upon their lives.”
Her attacks, Jones said, were “a complete betrayal of the trust placed in her.”
Letby was accused of deliberately harming the newborn infants in various ways, including by injecting air into their bloodstreams and administering air or milk into their stomachs via nasogastric tubes. She was also accused of poisoning infants by adding insulin to intravenous feeds and interfering with breathing tubes.
Families of the victims said they would “forever be grateful” to jurors who had to sit through 145 days of “grueling” evidence.
Nurses at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center and UCSF Medical Center at Parnassus say patients are doubled up in rooms or lie in gurneys in hallways.
In a joint statement read outside court, they also expressed their gratitude to medical experts, consultants, doctors and nursing staff who came to give evidence during the trial, which they described as “extremely harrowing and distressing” at times to listen to.
“The search for the truth has remained at the forefront of everyone’s minds, and we will forever be grateful for this,” they said. “We would now ask for time in peace to process what has happened as we come to terms with today’s verdict.”
A sentencing hearing was set for Monday.
The jury of seven women and four men deliberated for 22 days before reaching the verdict. One juror was excused well into deliberations for personal reasons, and the judge later gave the remaining 11 jurors the option of reaching a verdict with 10 people in agreement instead of a unanimous decision.
Nicole Linton had her foot on the gas of her Mercedes-Benz for at least five seconds and ‘was conscious and deliberate,’ L.A. County prosecutors say.
Letby denied all the charges. She was found guilty of the seven murders and of seven charges of attempted murder relating to six children. She was cleared of one charge of attempted murder, and the jury could not reach a verdict on several others.
Some of the verdicts were announced in court earlier in the month, but the judge imposed a ban on reporting them until deliberations were complete. Letby fought back tears Aug. 8 as the jury found her guilty of two counts of attempted murder and burst out crying as she left the courtroom. She had more recently declined to be in the courtroom as additional verdicts were announced.
During the lengthy trial, which began in October, prosecutors said the hospital in 2015 experienced a significant rise in the number of babies who were dying or suffering from sudden deterioration in their health for no apparent reason. Some suffered “serious catastrophic collapses” but survived after help from medical staff.
They alleged that Letby was on duty in all the cases and described her as a “constant malevolent presence” in the neonatal unit when the children collapsed or died. They said that the nurse harmed the babies in ways that did not leave much of a trace and that she convinced her colleagues that the collapses and deaths were natural.
Heather Greenman has been charged with murder after a toddler she was babysitting suffered a fatal head injury. She has pleaded not guilty.
The first baby allegedly targeted by Letby was a boy born prematurely who died when he was a day old, in June 2015. Prosecutors alleged that the nurse injected air into his bloodstream.
Police launched an investigation into the baby deaths at the hospital in May 2017. Letby was arrested three times in connection with the deaths before she was charged in November 2020.
Her lawyer argued that she was a “hard-working, dedicated and caring” nurse who loved her job and that there was not enough evidence of her carrying out harmful acts.
The case of the death of newborn Boaz Yoder plunged detectives into the murky world of USC’s ex-medical school dean, Carmen Puliafito.
The lawyer said the infants’ sudden collapses and deaths could have been due to natural causes, or in combination with other factors such as staffing shortages at the hospital or failure by others to provide appropriate care.
He also claimed that four senior doctors pinned the blame on Letby to cover up failings in the neonatal unit.
Letby testified for 14 days, denying all accusations that she intentionally harmed any babies.
“I only ever did my best to care for them,” she testified. “I am there to care, not to harm.”
Start your day right
Sign up for Essential California for the L.A. Times biggest news, features and recommendations in your inbox six days a week.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.
She sobbed at times and defended the collection of medical records she kept at home on some of the babies in her care.
But prosecutors said a note found at Letby’s home after she was arrested in 2018 was “literally a confession.”
“I don’t deserve to live,” she wrote on a green Post-It note shown in court. “I killed them on purpose because I’m not good enough to care for them.”
Her lawyer defended the notes as the anguished writings of a woman who blamed herself for what had happened in the ward.
“One note says, ‘Not good enough,’” defense lawyer Ben Myers said. “Who did she write that for? She didn’t write that for us, the police or these proceedings. That is a note to herself — writing for herself.”
She wrote in the note: “I am a horrible evil person. I AM EVIL, I DID THIS.”
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.