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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To wonder what would happen if LL were ever released?

355 replies

Pleasehelp12345 · 06/02/2025 19:27

I'm not intending to state whether I think she is innocent or guilty but I am just curious as to how her life would look if she were released.
Even if her conviction was overturned, it's highly unlikely she'd be able to go back to a regular life, or would she? Would she walk away with no convictions?

OP posts:
Catpuss66 · 08/02/2025 00:00

Firefly1987 · 07/02/2025 23:30

@Catpuss66 well no of course that isn't the same thing, they're not in a position of power over you! Surely you understand that.

Course they are in power over us, if someone makes a complaint there have been numerous threads about people complaining one recently to a midwives manager because she said about there was a lot of mom, even though she acknowledged she was obese.
or the health visitor that called as the parent missed a clinic appointment they were going to report her for turning up unannounced. Patients say jump & staff have to say how high, why do you think staff are leaving they are not supported & abused by patients.that feels like power to me.

Catpuss66 · 08/02/2025 00:46

Totallymessed · 07/02/2025 23:43

Are you seriously basing your opinions on things you've read on a Reddit forum? Come on, that's ridiculous, surely you know that?

They had transcripts of the court proceedings.

Toddlerhelpplease123 · 08/02/2025 00:48

Totallymessed · 07/02/2025 23:43

Are you seriously basing your opinions on things you've read on a Reddit forum? Come on, that's ridiculous, surely you know that?

Unless you have the court transcripts everyone here is basing their opinions on second hand info. Whether from the media or podcasts or news or anywhere.

I very much believe in Cunningham's Law,

"the best way to get the right answer on the internet is not to ask a question; it's to post the wrong answer."

thiswilloutme · 08/02/2025 11:16

FanofLeaves · 06/02/2025 23:07

This still won’t prove anything. It’s not literally about the babies dying. It’s also about her behaviour in the aftermath, lack of care (standing by when babies flatlined) lack of empathy towards bereaved parents, stalking them on social media, taking about 500 pages of notes home with her, none of it proves guilt but put together it’s not as clean cut as saying oh maybe the babies would have just died anyway. It was enough to build a case for the prosecution and have her sent down by a jury. She had pretty much no defence. She’s also been refused an appeal twice.

Edited

OF COURSE it is LITERALLY about the babies dying FFS.

If they were not murdered then it doesn't matter how weird she was, what she did, etc. She did not murder them IF THEY WERE NOT MURDERED so cannot be convicted of murder.

Bloody hell.

FanofLeaves · 08/02/2025 11:57

thiswilloutme · 08/02/2025 11:16

OF COURSE it is LITERALLY about the babies dying FFS.

If they were not murdered then it doesn't matter how weird she was, what she did, etc. She did not murder them IF THEY WERE NOT MURDERED so cannot be convicted of murder.

Bloody hell.

You are being deliberately obtuse. The prosecution didn’t simply bring forward evidence about babies dying, she was accused of murdering them so her patterns of behaviour around the time were all called into question. It wasn’t simply her ‘being a bit weird’. There are a massive amount of red flags. WHICH HELPED THE JURY DECIDE TO CONVICT HER AS A MURDERER and the judge handing her 15 whole life sentences.

A sentence which still absolutely stands at this point, some posters would do well to remember that.

Hope that helps.

thiswilloutme · 08/02/2025 12:25

FanofLeaves · 08/02/2025 11:57

You are being deliberately obtuse. The prosecution didn’t simply bring forward evidence about babies dying, she was accused of murdering them so her patterns of behaviour around the time were all called into question. It wasn’t simply her ‘being a bit weird’. There are a massive amount of red flags. WHICH HELPED THE JURY DECIDE TO CONVICT HER AS A MURDERER and the judge handing her 15 whole life sentences.

A sentence which still absolutely stands at this point, some posters would do well to remember that.

Hope that helps.

Edited

If the babies were not murdered then she is not a murderer.

Nothing obtuse about that.

The cause of death is foundational to the case. If the cause of death is natural causes or poor care then none of them were murdered and her conviction must be overturned. It's really not complicated.

Catpuss66 · 08/02/2025 13:37

FanofLeaves · 08/02/2025 11:57

You are being deliberately obtuse. The prosecution didn’t simply bring forward evidence about babies dying, she was accused of murdering them so her patterns of behaviour around the time were all called into question. It wasn’t simply her ‘being a bit weird’. There are a massive amount of red flags. WHICH HELPED THE JURY DECIDE TO CONVICT HER AS A MURDERER and the judge handing her 15 whole life sentences.

A sentence which still absolutely stands at this point, some posters would do well to remember that.

Hope that helps.

Edited

This might help to view a different approach to evidence.

- YouTube

Enjoy the videos and music that you love, upload original content and share it all with friends, family and the world on YouTube.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k8jkl255PWI

thiswilloutme · 08/02/2025 20:07

Catpuss66 · 08/02/2025 13:37

This might help to view a different approach to evidence.

Thank you for that - I had read some of the criticisms that statisticians had with the data used - but this is a very thorough take down.

TLDR precis

The consultants initially identified 61 "suspicious incidents" including one where a baby was "suffocated". They narrowed it down to the 25 on the famous chart based SOLELY on whether or not LL was there. So the "suffocated baby" was reclassified as not suspicious because LL had not been on duty. Confirmation bias.

If you apply strict and rigorous statistical analysis to the probability of LL being on duty during one of the "suspicious incidents" then you have to take into account not only the number of nurses but also the number of shifts. LL did a lot more shifts than some of the others so of course was present for more of the "incidents". Other nurses who did the same number of shifts as LL were equally likely to be there for a larger number of "incidents". They could have made similar charts for every one of those other nurses, picking out just the "suspicious incidents" that they were present for. The more time spent on the ward = the more likely to be there when a baby crashed or died.

Pippyls67 · 08/02/2025 23:51

Dora26 · 06/02/2025 19:32

Who is L L - am not in UK

Lucy Letby

ErinBell01 · 09/02/2025 02:01

Viviennemary · 07/02/2025 23:37

It's an opinion.other experts will have a different opinion. Many other factors pointed to her guilt, or else she would have been found not guilty.

The statistical 'evidence' which says that LL was there for every murder has been totally discredited. One barrister said it's like spraying a wall with bullets and then drawing a circle around most of the holes and declaring that that's the bull's eye.

As you will know there was NO forensic evidence, nobody saw her doing anything, either stealing insulin or administering it, or air. it was all circumstancial evidence. It's quite concerning listening to Dr Ravi Jayaram referring to 'healthy babies' when they were actually tiny pre term babies being kept on the neonatal unit.

sashh · 09/02/2025 03:56

Not2identifying · 06/02/2025 19:41

I don't think she'd get compensation even if later found not guilty. Unless maybe the NHS was subsequently found guilty of something like corporate manslaughter.

And she would be handed a bill for her 'board and lodging'.

There are still people who believe the Birmingham 6 are guilty.

prh47bridge · 09/02/2025 10:13

sashh · 09/02/2025 03:56

And she would be handed a bill for her 'board and lodging'.

There are still people who believe the Birmingham 6 are guilty.

She wouldn't be charged for board and lodging - that stopped about 18 months ago -, but the bar for getting compensation is too high in my view. Compensation is only paid if it is proven beyond reasonable doubt that she is innocent.

And yes, there are people who will never accept that she is not guilty even if it is proven beyond any possible doubt that she is innocent.

Efacsen · 09/02/2025 10:33

prh47bridge · 09/02/2025 10:13

She wouldn't be charged for board and lodging - that stopped about 18 months ago -, but the bar for getting compensation is too high in my view. Compensation is only paid if it is proven beyond reasonable doubt that she is innocent.

And yes, there are people who will never accept that she is not guilty even if it is proven beyond any possible doubt that she is innocent.

Pleased to hear that the charges for board and lodging have been dropped

Always seemed so unjust and ;spiteful'

DoubleMM · 10/02/2025 12:18

I think she could become a champion for people who have been wrongly convicted as Paddy Hill of the Birmingham Six was. She would be entitled to compensation but the Home Office actually deducts the cost of board and lodging in prison from any compensation!

MyrtleLion · 10/02/2025 13:17

DoubleMM · 10/02/2025 12:18

I think she could become a champion for people who have been wrongly convicted as Paddy Hill of the Birmingham Six was. She would be entitled to compensation but the Home Office actually deducts the cost of board and lodging in prison from any compensation!

It stopped doing that 18 months ago.

Dramatic · 10/02/2025 13:22

I never understood the hatred and vitriol for Maxine Carr, yes she shouldn't have given him an alibi but she wasn't there when he did it, he was a controlling and abusive man and she was probably terrified of him. There are plenty of evil and disgusting people out there that have done things a million times worse than Carr yet don't get anywhere near the amount of hate.

butterdish93 · 10/02/2025 13:24

I think she'd be incredibly mentally Ill and traumatised if shes innocent. Not something that your average oerson could just snap back from. So if she were to be released I'm not sure she'd be capable of independent living. Probably not going to be leading any charities or support organisations for wrongly convicted people. I don't think she'd have the capacity or strength.

BoldBlueZebra · 10/02/2025 17:24

Dramatic · 10/02/2025 13:22

I never understood the hatred and vitriol for Maxine Carr, yes she shouldn't have given him an alibi but she wasn't there when he did it, he was a controlling and abusive man and she was probably terrified of him. There are plenty of evil and disgusting people out there that have done things a million times worse than Carr yet don't get anywhere near the amount of hate.

I think it’s the length of time she lied for. At any point she could have said oh I’m popping to the shop and spoken to a police man who would have protected her. But she didn’t she stayed in the house and gave interviews on tv and cleaned and washed and polished away all while knowing she wasn’t there that night and he could have done it. Although I do believe he told her some story about how it happened and how it wasn’t his fault.

Mumsgirls · 10/02/2025 21:51

Being pension age, I have seen so many of these cases and juries definitely can get in wrong and they do. As well as Birmingham six, Guildford 4, there have been many individuals. Sally Clarke, Stefan Kriskow and many others. The guy in prison in the ‘Bambi case’ seems to be moving towards having his convictions overturned yet it takes years for the state to act.
Many people seem unable to accept that a jury and the state can be wrong.LL May be an odd character, making it easier to pick on he.I think she was very ill served by her defence team. Only she really knows the truth, but the case against her stinks.
my heart goes out to the families who may also have been badly let down.

Firefly1987 · 10/02/2025 22:14

Wonder why no one ever thought Harold Shipman was a miscarriage of justice, after all no one saw him do anything?

SnakesAndArrows · 10/02/2025 22:37

Firefly1987 · 10/02/2025 22:14

Wonder why no one ever thought Harold Shipman was a miscarriage of justice, after all no one saw him do anything?

Shipman forged a will and falsified records to attempt to cover up an overdose of diamorphine. The evidence against him was incredibly strong.

Firefly1987 · 10/02/2025 22:54

@SnakesAndArrows that's not proof of murder though just proof he forged a will. LL also falsified records to make her look like she was elsewhere when a baby collapsed. Come to think of it plenty of people at the time came out to support Shipman and couldn't believe he killed anyone. I expect we'll all come to view LL the same way as Shipman in the fullness of time.

ErinBell01 · 11/02/2025 00:22

Firefly1987 · 10/02/2025 22:54

@SnakesAndArrows that's not proof of murder though just proof he forged a will. LL also falsified records to make her look like she was elsewhere when a baby collapsed. Come to think of it plenty of people at the time came out to support Shipman and couldn't believe he killed anyone. I expect we'll all come to view LL the same way as Shipman in the fullness of time.

The police claimed that LL murdered a baby because a record showed that she was on duty, so 'she must have done it.' Then they realised that the record was wrong by an hour and LL wasn't there. So did they look for someone else who must have murdered this baby? No, they just took the baby off the list. What does that say about the lack of evidence of babies being murdered?

Potsofpetals · 11/02/2025 00:24

FanofLeaves · 06/02/2025 19:54

Yes she definitely was, although not of murder.

LL might well be guilty- she has been found so by a jury after an incredibly long trial. The conviction being overturned (I doubt this would happen) will not be proof of innocence.

And this is the answer to why she’d need a new identity.

MyrtleLion · 11/02/2025 00:35

Firefly1987 · 10/02/2025 22:54

@SnakesAndArrows that's not proof of murder though just proof he forged a will. LL also falsified records to make her look like she was elsewhere when a baby collapsed. Come to think of it plenty of people at the time came out to support Shipman and couldn't believe he killed anyone. I expect we'll all come to view LL the same way as Shipman in the fullness of time.

Local GPs and the coroner were already concerned by the high rate of deaths under his care. A lot of his victims were very healthy. It is absolutely the case that he was a prolific murderer and in this case the statistics prove it. Bodies were exhumed and tested positive for the presence of the drug he used. Overwhelming direct evidence was found.

There is so much reasonable doubt in Letby"s car and now two reports from medical experts have been published saying there was no murder. A second report had confirmed that the alleged insulin poisonings didn't happen.

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