
Lucy Letby: Silenced Doctors and a Hospital That Chose Itself
The consultant pediatricians at the Countess of Chester Hospital identified the connection between Lucy Letby and the neonatal deaths as early as late 2015. They didn't sit on it. They raised it through formal channels. They compiled data. They met with hospital management and said the words nobody wanted to hear: one nurse is linked to every death.
The hospital's response was internal reviews. No police contact. No suspension. And at one point, the lead consultant was reportedly told to write Letby a letter of apology. The person suspected of harming babies received an apology from the doctor trying to stop her.
Between June 2015 and June 2016, the neonatal unit experienced an unprecedented cluster of infant deaths and collapses. Prosecutors alleged Letby harmed babies by injecting air into bloodstreams, administering insulin they didn't need, and overfeeding them through nasogastric tubes until they couldn't breathe. Every method allegedly mimicked natural complications. The staffing chart showed Letby was the only nurse present for every single incident. One mother reportedly walked into the unit during what prosecutors alleged was an attack in progress. One surviving baby was left with permanent quadriplegic cerebral palsy. Two triplet brothers died days apart.
Letby was convicted and sentenced to fifteen whole-life orders. But the system that was supposed to catch the threat chose to protect itself. The Thirlwall Inquiry laid out five institutional failures. No investigation into whether the deaths were connected. No police contact until May 2017. No recognition that a nearly identical case had just been prosecuted at another NHS facility. No communication with grieving families. And when Letby was finally removed from the unit, she was placed in the hospital's patient safety office. Three senior hospital figures were arrested in 2025 on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter.
Now, a panel of fourteen international medical experts says they found no evidence of deliberate harm in any of the cases. The Criminal Cases Review Commission is reviewing the conviction. Robin Dreeke and Tony Brueski examine the evidence, the institutional failures, and the doubt that won't go away.
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