
Jabe
@JabesAllowed
Not only did Cheshire police get the door swipe data wrong but analysis indicates that in the case of Baby E they got telephone call log times wrong too. When the events are examined in detail the only possible explanation for discrepancies in the evidence is that calls made to Baby E's father were actually an hour later than the Police and Prosecution stated. Could it be that the calls were logged in GMT and never adjusted for British Summer Time? You wouldn't think that this oversight would be possible but it seems to be the only explanation. (Please note I am in no way critical of Baby E's parents because what they went through is unimaginable) This was crucial evidence because Baby E's mother says she saw blood around her baby's face at around 9pm. She was understandably panicked and after going back to the ward she called her husband who was at home an hour away - the call log showed her call placed at 9.11pm, which was used supporting evidence. But Letby's notes recorded this event as happening at around 10pm and Dr Harkness's notes were recorded at 10.10pm having arrived a little before. The testimony given by Baby E's mother must have had a powerful effect on the Jury as she described horrendous crying (like screaming) from the corridor before entering the room and seeing blood around her baby's mouth. The Prosecution made the extraordinary allegation that Letby had attacked the baby before 9pm causing this bleeding and then sat on the situation for an hour whilst he suffered. In hindsight, the mother thought she had interrupted Letby in the process of murdering her baby, which is too awful to contemplate. It seemed the Jury believed this. After Baby E's condition worsened there was a later call from the midwife to the father logged at 10.52pm telling him "Don't panic, but get over here now." He testified that this call was split between the midwife and his wife, though his wife didn't remember it. From trial reporting of the mother's testimony: She was later told by the midwife and to ring her husband. The midwife called the husband at 10.52pm, telling him to come to the hospital, after the neo-natal rang the maternity ward. But clinical notes recorded that Baby E's condition didn't worsen until after 11pm and it was at 11.30pm that the midwife received the call from the neonatal unit at the time they were preparing to intubate. The midwife's statement from 2019 was read out in court. From trial reporting: "At 11.30pm on August 3 she had a call from the neonatal unit to ask Child E's mother to go down in 30 minutes as Child E had a bleed and required intubating - 'very poorly'. " "At midnight, the midwife stayed with Child E's mother for 10 minutes in the corridor outside the neonatal nursery room." The midwife was called by the neonatal unit at 11.30pm and was with the mother at midnight. The only way to reconcile the call log times with medical & midwife records is to shift the call log times 1 hour forward meaning that the mother's call to her husband was at 10.11pm rather than an hour earlier. Lucy Letby did not wait and do nothing while Baby E suffered but did everything correctly as she was supposed to and told the truth about it. Source of the above information was from the http://tattle.life website and also cross-checked with other trial reporting. https://tattle.life/wiki/lucy-... #LucyLetby
From the Thirlwall Inquiry we find out that Baby E's mother contacted her phone company in 2017 to get the call log times. Mobile phone companies usually report call logs in UTC (= GMT). Did Cheshire Police ever verify these call times? https://x.com/mucha_carlos/sta...
This information was taken from the Daily Mail podcast from a few days ago as the relevant Inquiry transcripts haven't yet been published: https://youtu.be/dzJBFBMUTjY?s... "In the end, she got the medical records for her children from her solicitor and started reading up on medical terminology and blood readings herself. She told the inquiry she soon realized Lucy Letby had falsified entries in baby E's notes on the night he died. Lucy Letby had written that it was 10 PM when she'd come down to the unit with the breast milk and found her son in distress. But she was sure it was an hour earlier because of the call she'd made to her husband immediately afterwards. So baby E's mom called her phone company herself to double check. She told the Inquiry, 'I needed the proof and I got the proof.'"