Emily

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Emily

Emily

@Emilyjbronte

'I don't know why you're getting so angry, I wasn't trying to help you' (Bion)

Katılım Şubat 2022
198 Takip Edilen172 Takipçiler
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Emily
Emily@Emilyjbronte·
@SelfSpidey It is striking that the consultants never seemed to consider their absence as a factor but only Letby's presence
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Damn Halen
Damn Halen@Damn_Halen·
@adiosmuchachos4 @SelfSpidey @TomEvans80 @mervynpervyn Roy Meadow testified that the mathematical probability of Sally Clark's innocence was 63 million to one against. Her first retrial failed too. The statistical evidence in the Letby case is a complete joke and just as farcical as Sally Clark in its presentation.
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Thameside
Thameside@Sunnanbyrg·
Absolutely shocking He should never have had any involvement in reviewing the Letby referral to the CCRC He may well have derailed it These organisations are insufferable So unaware of their intellectual limitations - combined with an establishment type complacency and arrogance (This happens because there is no oversight)
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Axel
Axel@axel1974·
@markjurgenmayes I must say. Deb Roberts and her attack dogs are doing a fabulous job of publicising these newspaper articles. The more they comment on them the further they spread.
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A spider
A spider@SelfSpidey·
@adiosmuchachos4 @TomEvans80 @mervynpervyn Just think it through. The consultants should have been doing two ward rounds per day. They were doing just two per week. (This was later fixed; the death rates dropped). Conditions got missed, treatments got delayed, babies deteriorated unnoticed, till it was too late.
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Mary
Mary@marydsmyth·
@gilham_stuart Nobody told the jury about the death of baby Noah Robinson. The doctor who killed him was present as a witness, not as a suspect AND was offered anonymity! Contrast this with the treatment of Lucy Letby. Make it make sense to me?
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Registered Hitman
Registered Hitman@RegisterdHitman·
@NeoDoc11 I have zero medical expertise, but I have read up on the Letby case and even by my layman's level of understanding, I sense a wrong-doing. It does seem there is an entrenched reluctance to re-examine the case and I fear Letby will become a future travesty of justice case.
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Henry Tudor Stan Account
Henry Tudor Stan Account@HenryTudorStan·
@ContrarianJolly @james1071 Against a baseline prior probability of a nurse serial killer being like 1 in 1,000,000 at most, the evidence presented that I'm aware of doesn't even come close to reducing that to 1 in 100 never mind to being sure/beyond reasonable doubt.
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Thameside
Thameside@Sunnanbyrg·
I think that what is obvious is that there needs to be a retrial Dozens of experts pulling apart the prosecution medical evidence is the thing that is not supposed to happen in a credible court system There are 30 odd experts working for the defence - probably two dozen more supporting Letby publicly Medical evidence used in court must be respected by peers for a trial to be fair
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Neil Wilby
Neil Wilby@Neil_Wilby·
@ACLMoss @VeraBaird Vera's position is now untenable. She knows it, too. More crucially, the CCRC review of #LucyLetby's application is now seriously tainted. Every member of the team around Shaun Edwards, whose position is also now, very clearly, untenable, has to be replaced.
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Andrew Wheeler
Andrew Wheeler@AndrewWheeler_1·
If #lucyletby is given a retrial, and if I happened to be on jury duty and was assigned to the case (impossible in fact, but for illustration), I'd have to ask to be excused because I've publicly expressed my opinion on it multiple times. Apparently the same logic doesn't 1/2
The Trials of Lucy Letby@LucyLetbyTrials

🚨 UPDATE: Shaun Edwards, the CCRC's current Head of Investigations, *was* involved in the handling of Lucy Letby's appeal application up until now. A spokesperson told me he "will play no further part in it."

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Emily
Emily@Emilyjbronte·
@RachelMaddiso15 @mellycatslave @ContrarianJolly @DebbieKennett Same, I listened to those 2 podcasts and then came on here desperately looking for coherent, convincing arguments that she was guilty. In the end it has been the weakness of the arguments of those who think she's guilty that has convinced me this is a miscarriage of justice.
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The Jالی Contrarian
The Jالی Contrarian@ContrarianJolly·
The Letby debate has become so tribal and politicised in that neither side seems able to recognise any flaws or shortcomings in its own positions, however preposterous, and is reduced to rebarbative Sir Humphrey Applebyisms, only with swearing.
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The Machine Stops🦇🦇🦇
The Machine Stops🦇🦇🦇@appears_mental·
Lucy Letby is innocent, an NHS scapegoat to cover up the fact substandard care killed children. It's the main reason I oppose the death penalty. Lucy's life has been ruined but there's still a chance she could be exonerated.
Dr Svilena Dimitrova@NeoDoc11

When I first heard about Lucy Letby's case, I had no reason to doubt the allegations against her. I began following the case because, as a neonatologist with a further interest in risk management and patient safety, I felt I needed to understand how it could possibly happen that someone could murder or attempt to murder any babies on my unit without anyone seemingly noticing or doing anything about it. I worried - could this have happened to me and my colleagues? And I hoped if it had, we would have noticed and acted on it properly much sooner. As I followed the case via the media, I became increasingly confused by the medical evidence being presented. At first, I assumed the journalists simply didn’t understand the expert testimony and were not reporting correctly - surely no one could genuinely believe claims as medically absurd as babies being murdered by injecting air into a nasogastric (NG) tube? I had this conversation with many colleagues - Neonatal consultants, doctors in training and neonatal nurses. We were all really shocked by what was being reported. But I decided to wait until after the trial concluded before forming any real opinion as it was only then that enough information would become available that would make it clear as to what was actually said. After the convictions, like many of my colleagues, I sat down to watch the interview with aspiring TV star doctor Ravi Jayaram. My jaw dropped as I heard his appallingly misleading statements about extubation made on national television. I have still kept the messages I exchanged with Neonatal colleagues that evening. All of us who watched were saying - surely he didn't just say that the only possibility for a 25 weeker to have extubated was for it to have been done deliberately? I cannot even begin to explain how absolutely ridiculous that statement is. The sensational manner in which it was also delivered immediately made me ask myself - did I make a cognitive error in assuming no actual real doctors could have said the medical nonsense reported by the journalists? Is it possible that the experts and medical witness doctors involved really have said things that were so ridiculous in court and got the judge and jury to believe this nonsense? I then started looking through the information publicly available post-trial and I discovered that yes, this kind of flawed medical reasoning had indeed been accepted as fact. I was really shocked and decided to speak up, which I did as soon as the media gag was lifted. Thank you to Felicity Lawrence @guardiannews for making me feel safe to speak up. At the stage when I first spoke up, I still didn’t know whether Lucy Letby was innocent. What I did know, however, was that the medical basis of her conviction was deeply flawed. I also knew - but this is due to my law degree rather than me being a Neonatologist - that there were multiple legal reasons for why this conviction was unsafe as well. However, I wasn't as interested in this as I wouldn't want for someone's sentence to be quashed on legal grounds if they were genuinely guilty. It remained possible, as far as I could see, that Letby had harmed the babies. What was certain, however, was that if she did, she certainly didn't do it in the way that was claimed. However, it stands to reason that a serial killer could more easily operate in a unit where substandard care was the norm - when overall competence is low, people are far less likely to recognise when something is seriously wrong - something I know very well from personal experience of being a clinician dealing with risk, and having worked for the CQC and the Ockenden inquiry. After some time, I was instructed as an expert in the case. I took some annual leave and temporarily left the Ockenden review so I could give myself some time to properly look through everything. I then discovered many incidents of significantly substandard care with subsequent lack of insight by the clinicians involved and an almost complete absence of meaningful learning from mistakes. Unfortunately - neither of these are uncommon events in maternity and neonatal care these days. And neither is scapegoating someone. However - what was truly stunning in this case, and was definitely new to me at that point in time, was scapegoating via the criminally convicted serial killer route (usually people are just bullied out via employment tribunals, GMC/NMC and occasionally via the criminal courts for Gross Negligence Manslaughter route). For one year now, I have lived with the knowledge that a committed hard working competent nurse is in prison for crimes that never happened, whilst the doctors responsible for very poor care remain celebrated as “heroes” and continue practising without consequences. And the medical experts also continue to practise with no consequences. Putting this out here for the record. Not much else I can do. Thank you so much to @drphilhammond for continuing to expose this disgraceful MoJ. @drphilhammond @legalmarkmc @DavidDavisMP @DavidRoseUK @PeterElston1 @Michelehal7344 @reasonoverfear @DOckendenLtd @wesstreeting @PrivateEyeNews @Jeremy_Hunt @MartynPitman @Voice4theDead

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The Trials of Lucy Letby
The Trials of Lucy Letby@LucyLetbyTrials·
An urgent question that @ccrcupdate must answer "in the interests of transparency," as they put it to me just yesterday: What involvement did Head of Investigations Shaun Edwards have, to date, in the CCRC's review of Lucy Letby's application to appeal her convictions?
PeakIpsedixitism #IStandWithKeiraBell🗣💜💚@Jessica12uk

@LucyLetbyTrials This is INCREDIBLY serious. After all the failures of @ccrcupdate in recent years and now this. What involvement did Edwards have to date? How can anyone trust this outfit now? It looks more & more likely that this system persecution of Letby is a deliberate & premeditated act.

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TobeHonest
TobeHonest@TobeHon29809726·
CCRC quoted in The Telegraph gaslighting the public into thinking that a former police officer effusively praising Hughes for his work in the Hummingbird Operation in late 2024 was in no way conflicted when employed months later to investigate the case. archive.is/2026.03.25-070…
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Tom Evans
Tom Evans@TomEvans80·
@Neil_Wilby I went into Thirlwall prepared to have my mind changed about it looking dubious. Maybe there was stronger evidence I hadn't heard about. What has emerged has been eye-watering in the opposite direction.
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