Aveline
Over 50 experts have protested her innocence. Most of these are senior and more experienced than those listed above.
‘Professor’ and ‘Consultant’ are the top rungs of an academic/medical career. It doesn’t get more senior than that.
The prosecution experts look pretty experienced to me:
- Dr Andreas Marnerides, Consultant Pathologist. 10 years’ experience as a consultant in 2023 (the year that Lucy Letby’s first trial ended).
- Dr Owen Arthurs, Professor of Radiology. 10 years’ experience as a consultant in 2023.
- Dr Sally Kinsey, Professor of Haematology, specialising in paediatric haematology. Retired in 2023 so had had plenty of experience.
- Dr Peter Hindmarsh, Professor of Paediatric Endocrinology. 19 years’ experience as a professor.
- Dr Stavros Stivaros, Professor of Radiology. Can’t quickly find how long he has been a professor. Had been publishing research papers for 21 years in 2023.
- Dr Simon Kenny, Consultant Paediatrician. 20 years’ experience as a consultant in 2023.
- Dr Dewi Evans, Consultant Paediatrician. Was retired in 2023. Had had 29 years’ experience as a consultant.
- Dr Sandie Bohin, Consultant Paediatrician. 14 years’ experience as a consultant in 2023.
A few articles about press conferences held by Lucy Letby’s current barrister really don’t give the full picture. If you have a look at the book and Reddit forum I linked to above you might feel less certain. There is also a very good podcast called The Trial of Lucy Letby which gave an account of the trial as it progressed.
The experts you mentioned have only addressed the medical evidence, not the rest of the evidence. For example,
- the fact that LL falsified medical records
- the fact she was shown in court to have lied several times
- the fact that she hoarded handover sheets about her patients in her house
- the fact that she frequently searched Facebook for the babies’ parents (even on Christmas Day)
- the fact that deaths followed her from night shifts to day shifts and stopped when she went on holiday
- the fact that she was seen to be strangely excited after babies died
And that’s just some of it. She failed a placement during her degree due to lack of empathy. She came across very unconvincingly in court.
The views of the experts you mention are not necessarily correct. For example, one suggested that a baby could have inherited its mother’s genetic disorder, I think a blood clotting disorder. But this had already been looked into in court and it had been shown that the baby had not inherited the disorder. The experts did not read the court evidence, only the medical notes.
Another example:
//Among the debated claims, Letby's new defence team, headed by human rights barrister Mark McDonald, says Baby I, who died in October 2015, had a bacterial infection causing thick secretions which blocked an endotracheal tube.
But the families said testing indicated the child never developed the infection and the tube was not in place when they died.//
www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14529241/Evidence-killer-nurse-Lucy-Letbys-defence-errors-families.html
Mark McDonald, the barrister, is good at generating hype, but less good at getting results. He makes a practice of advocating for convicted murderers, but so far none of them have been released.