Welcome to True Crime Storytime, and thank you for joining us.
In this special debate episode, we take a careful and measured look at one of the most controversial criminal cases in modern British history, focusing on the ongoing debate rather than retelling the verdict alone.
Lucy Letby was a neonatal nurse at the Countess of Chester Hospital in England. Between 2015 and 2016, a series of unexplained collapses and deaths involving newborn babies occurred on the neonatal unit where she worked.
Following internal reviews and a lengthy police investigation, Letby was arrested in 2018 and later charged with multiple counts of murder and attempted murder.
In 2023, Lucy Letby was convicted of several of those charges and received a whole life order, meaning she will never be released from prison. She has consistently maintained her innocence.
Since the trial concluded, the case has continued to attract intense scrutiny, including legal appeals and growing public debate about the evidence used to secure the convictions.
This episode is structured as a debate rather than a definitive account. We examine the prosecution case as presented at trial, including medical testimony, patterns identified by investigators and the circumstantial evidence relied upon by the jury.
We also explore the arguments raised by critics of the verdict, including concerns about expert evidence, statistical interpretation, hospital staffing and whether alternative medical explanations were adequately considered.
As part of this discussion, we reference a detailed investigation published by The New Yorker, which examines the case in depth and includes coverage of an independent expert panel review that questioned aspects of the medical evidence and investigative approach. The article can be read here:
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/05/20/lucy-letby-was-found-guilty-of-killing-seven-babies-did-she-do-it
The Lucy Letby case raises difficult questions about how complex medical evidence is presented in court, how guilt is established in highly technical cases and how public confidence is shaped after a verdict has been reached.
This episode does not seek to overturn conclusions or assign blame. Instead, it invites listeners to engage critically with the facts, the uncertainties and the wider implications of a case that continues to divide opinion.
Thank you for joining us on True Crime Storytime.