https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12356241/murdere-timeline-Lucy-Letby.htmlThe making of a serial killer: From student nurse to ruthless murderer, a full timeline of the horrific crimes Lucy Letby committed in plain sight ending with her conviction as the most prolific child killer in modern day Britain
Timeline sets out chilling detail of nurse Lucy Letby's horrific crimes
By Nigel Bunyan
Published: 09:33, 19 August 2023 | Updated: 11:07, 19 August 2023
This is the full, shocking timeline of the year Lucy Letby spent killing babies on the neonatal unit of the Countess of Chester Hospital. Beginning with her enrolment as an 18-year-old student nurse at the city's university, it details the horrific crimes she committed in 'plain sight' of colleagues who trusted her as one of their own. Letby is seen to repeatedly betray both nurses and doctors alike, and to exploit the vulnerability and trust of the parents whose infants she was meant to be caring for. The narrative ends with her conviction and incarceration as a serial killer, together with the revelation that police are now investigating the possibility that she attacked other infants earlier in her career.
Here, NIGEL BUNYAN looks back at the full timeline following the end of the trial:
2008
September
Lucy Letby, a quiet, innocuous 18-year-old from Hereford, moves to Chester to begin a three-year nursing degree. It is the career she mapped out for himself while a student at Hereford Sixth Form College.
2008
September
Lucy Letby, a quiet, innocuous 18-year-old from Hereford, moves to Chester to begin a three-year nursing degree. It is the career she mapped out for himself while a student at Hereford Sixth Form College. She is three years behind another student at the college, the singer-songwriter Ellie Goulding. Years later, when she is nine months into her killing spree, Letby will attend one of Goulding's concerts at the Liverpool Arena. During her time at university she will go on work experience at the Countess of Chester Hospital.
2011
September
The future killer finishes her degree and qualifies as a Band 5 nurse.
2012
January
Letby starts work at the neonatal unit of the Countess of Chester Hospital. She's living in nurses' accommodation at Ash House, within the hospital site, and qualifies as a mentor to new students 'fairly early on'. Just over a decade later she will tell a jury that she 'really enjoyed that aspect'. It will emerge after her trial that this is one of the years police are now investigating as part of a new inquiry into her activities.
2014
March 15
She goes to live alone in a flat belonging to one of her colleagues. She will be there until June 1, 2015.
2015
This is the second of the two years Cheshire Police are now investigating in the aftermath of the trial.
March/April
In court she will tell her barrister, Ben Myers KC, that from this point on her time is spent 'predominantly' looking after the sickest babies on the neonatal unit at the Countess of Chester. At some point in the year Letby spends time at Liverpool Women's Hospital. Her time there is now being investigated as part of the new investigation.
May 31
Baby G, the most premature of the babies in the indictment, is born at Arrowe Park Hospital. She weighs 1lb 2oz and has a gestation of 23 weeks and 6 days. Letby will tell Mr Myers: 'She stood out as a baby who had complex needs and was a very premature baby.'
June 1
Letby moves back into Ash House. She'll remain there until moving into her semi-detached house in Westbourne Road, Chester, in April 2016. Her sadistic killing spree on the neonatal unit is about to begin.
June 5-7
Letby is in York on a hen party for her friend and nursery nurse on the unit Jennifer Jones-Key. A number of other Countess of Chester nurses are on the trip. They travel by train and end up drinking cocktails in Revolution Bar.
June 7
8.31pm: Baby A, a boy, is born a few moments ahead of his twin sister, Baby B. He is in good condition.
June 8
Letby has returned to work after the trip to York. Today she will claim the life of her first victim, Baby A.
5pm: Paediatric registrar David Harkness inserts a long line so Baby A can be fed the fluids he needs.
8pm: Baby A has been alive for almost a day. Up to now he has been looked after by Melanie Taylor. He is stable. Now Nurse Taylor hands over care to Lucy Letby and together they start the fluids via the long line.
8.26pm: Baby A collapses and Letby calls Dr Harkness over to his incubator. The infant is deteriorating rapidly. Resuscitation procedures are started and adrenaline is given to stimulate his heart. Harkness is joined by Ravi Jayaram and both notice an odd discolouration on the baby's skin, with flitting patches of pink over blue that seem to appear and disappear. Neither has previously seen such discolouration. The medics try desperately to save the baby's life, but none of the techniques that would normally help revive a baby are working.
8.58pm: Baby A is pronounced dead. He has died within 90 minutes of Letby coming on duty. Nick Johnson KC, prosecuting, said: 'That it is a hallmark of some of the cases in which Lucy Letby injected air into the circulations of some of these small babies'.
June 9
In the aftermath of Baby A's death Melanie Taylor sends a WhatsApp message to Letby: 'I hope you are OK, you were brilliant'.
Letby, though, is due to begin a night shift and is already thinking of killing the infant's twin, Baby B.
11.50pm: Letby's friend and colleague Nurse A is looking after Baby B. Shortly before midnight it's noted that her blood/oxygen levels have fallen to 75 per cent and the Cpap nasal prongs attached to her nostrils have become dislodged. Nurse Nurse A repositions the baby's head and the prongs and gives her additional oxygen.
June 10
12.16am: Letby takes Baby B's blood gases even though she's not her designated nurse.
12.30am: Baby B's alarm sounds and Letby calls Nurse A over to the incubator. The baby has stopped breathing and a crash call is put out. It is about 28 hours since Baby B's brother has died.
Letby's nursing colleague notices purple blotches and white patches all over the infant's body. Baby A is intubated and makes a quick recovery. The skin discolouration has reduced by the time the on-call consultant, Doctor B, arrives. She notes loops of gas in the baby's bowel. When Dewi Evans, the prosecution's main medical expert, comes to review the case three years later he concludes that Baby B has been sabotaged both before and after midnight. Her airways may have been blocked and she may have had air injected to her bloodstream. Professor Kinsey, a blood expert, says an injection of air into a vein can cause blood to cross from one side of the heart to the other without being oxygenated through the lungs. This would lead to the changes in skin colour seen by the medics. No blood disorder would account for Baby B's sudden deterioration. Baby B continues to recover and will be discharged on July 9 and is now aged eight. She lives abroad with her parents.
3.31pm: On the same day Baby B has collapsed Baby C is born. His mother is a GP.
June 11
5.46pm: Letby is pressing to return to the 'front line' of Nursery 1, where the most vulnerable of babies are generally cared for. She messages one of her bosses, Yvonne Griffiths, to say: 'I think from a confidence point of view I need to take an ITU baby soon x'
9.48pm: Letby to Jennifer Jones-Key: 'I just keep thinking about Mon. Feel like I need to be in 1 to overcome it but E (Eirion Powell, unit manager) said no x'
June 13
11pm: Nurse Sophie Ellis is in Nursery 1 giving Baby C his first feed of milk. She then goes briefly to the nurses' station where she hears Baby O's monitor go off. She returns to find Letby already in the room standing beside his cot. The killer says 'He's just dropped his HR and saturations: or something similar.'
11.09pm: Letby sends a message about the image of Baby A that she's had in her head from the week before, then says 'sleep well xx'.
11.15pm: Crash call. Senior house officer and the registrar, Katherine Davis, respond. Katherine tries three times to intubate him. She can't do because his vocal chords are swollen and blocking the route. They're 'stuck and swollen' before her first attempt. John Gibbs, one of the leading consultants, is called in and manages the intubation.
The attempts to save Baby C cross over into June 14.
June 14
5.58am: Despite a prolonged resuscitation they can't save him and C is pronounced dead.
8.48am: Letby to Jennifer Jones: 'I was struggling to accept what happened to Baby A. Now we've lost Baby C overnight & it's all a bit much. X'
8.57am: Letby again: 'Baby C is the little 800g baby, went off very suddenly, Sophie was looking after him. I know it happens but it's still so sad & cruel isn't it x'…
9.25am: Letby to her mum: 'We lost a little one overnight. Very unexpected and sad xxx'
9.41am: Letby to Jennifer Jones: 'I just keep seeing them both. No one should have to see & do the things we do. It's heartbreaking. But it's not about me. We learn to deal with it…'
9.45am: Letby to Jennifer Jones: 'It's not about me or anyone else, it's about those poor Parents who have to walk away without their baby. It's so unbelievably sad…'
Letby messages the news to Nurse A. Her friend urges her to try to sleep, then adds a sympathetic footnote: 'A really tough week for you'.
Mr Johnson will tell the jury that this time air has inserted into the baby's stomach via the NG tube, rather than into the baby's bloodstream. It is, he says, 'a variation or refinement of a theme Lucy Letby had started with the twins (A and B)'.
June 20
4.01am: Baby D is born by C section. She's a full-term baby born in good condition.
4.13am: At 12 minutes she goes floppy in her father's arms. Staff fail to give her antibiotics, then fail again to conduct an immediate review when she shows signs of respiratory distress. Eventually she is moved into Nursery 1. By now she has an infection.
June 21
Baby D is responding to treatment and not expected to deteriorate.
June 22
1.30am, 3am, 3.45am: Baby D suffers three collapses. In the second the infant is particularly distressed and crying. Staff are struck by the sight of mottling, poor perfusion and brown/black discolouration to her skin. Prosecutors say this was caused by Letby injecting air into her bloodstream while the baby's designated nurse, Caroline Oakley, was out of the room.
3.45am: As she collapses again Baby D is given CPR.
4.21am: Baby D can't be saved and treatment is withdrawn. She is pronounced dead four minutes later.
Medical expert Dr Sandie Bohin will tell Letby's trial Baby D was injected with air on one or more occasions. Between 3 and 5 mg/kg is enough to kill. The paediatrician highlights D's heightened distress during her second collapse and says that in published cases of air embolus the patient suffers 'extreme distress and terror prior to collapse signs demonstrated by D'.
June 30
9.49pm: Nurse A messages Letby: 'There's something odd about that night and the other 3 that went so suddenly'.
Letby responds: 'What do you mean?'
Nurse A: 'Odd that we lost 3 and in different circumstances ignore me, I'm speculating'.
In the days after Baby D's death senior staff identify the first tenuous connection between Letby's presence and inexplicable collapses on the neonatal unit. Lead consultant Stephen Brearey has been so concerned by the three deaths and one near-fatal collapse that he's asked Eirian Powell, the nursing manager, to carry out a review in the hope of identifying possible issues. She analyses which staff have been on duty at the relevant times, while also looking at such factors as incubator space and micro-biology. Dr Brearey will tell Mr Myers: 'We were learning from every case we reviewed. (But) they were just pointers. They didn't always explain why these babies collapsed'.