Agreed. The right to appeal- the right to request appeal - and the rexamination of contentious trials are fundamentally essential to justice. For everyone.
This isn't simply about Letby and whether she had been wrongly imprisoned, it is shaping up to be a case which will have far-reaching effects on the pursuit and execution of justice in this country and beyond.
Justice has to be fairly & equally applied even to the guilty. Especially to the guilty, because doing so ensures that the rest of us receive justice too.
The babies in this case, and those who weren't included but also died, and their parents are forefront of my mind right now. I cannot begin to imagine what their parents are going through, or how they find strength when they thought the conclusion of the trial would bring them some closure. It must be torturous for them and I hope their suffering & the tragically short lives of their children are not forgotten during this.
They deserve justice, its cruel that such a weighty question mark hangs over Letby's sentencing...but,if she is the victim of a miscarriage of justice then so are they.
The questions being asked now, the judiciary / evidential processes bring challenged are precisely about what was heard in court and how it was presented. About strong bias of evidence that could mean no other conclusion could have been reached. If that is found to be true, then it isn't just Letby who has been poorly served by the courts, but the victims too.
It is worth pointing out that what we're seeing isn't merely a social media campaign like Free Britney, but that serious concerns have been raised by eminent experts in the related fields of neonatalism and statistics, which are crucial corners of the case for both the prosecution and defence.
In spite of all of this, I keep thinking...what must it be like to lose your tiny, fragile child, to be told he or she was murdered and then when the killer is caught and jailed, to hear it was all a big mistake?
I believe the means of justice in this need to be rigorously retested, but my heart goes out not to Lucy Letby, but to the parents who lost their children in such awful circumstances.