I completely trusted nurse Letby, mother of twins told court
Letby murdered Child E, with an injection of air into his bloodstream, and tried to kill his twin brother, Child F, by insulin poisoning.

Like the parents of hundreds of babies that Lucy Letby cared for, one mother of newborn twins ācompletelyā trusted the nurse.
Letby, 33, murdered the womanās son, Child E, with a fatal injection of air into his bloodstream and the following day attempted to kill his twin brother, Child F, by insulin poisoning.
The boysā mother was under the impression that both incidents were natural occurrences, with no post-mortem examination carried out on Child E.
Three months later she and her husband even took in a hamper and a āThank youā card for staff on the neonatal unit at the Countess of Chester Hospital.
Before his death Letby was also said to have earlier attacked Child E on the same night shift, causing bleeding.
Giving evidence in the trial at Manchester Crown Court, the woman said she heard cries as she walked along the main corridor to the intensive care nursery.
āIt was a sound that should not come from a tiny baby,ā she said. āI canāt explain what the sound was. It was horrendous. More of a scream than a cry.ā
She said she tried in vain to comfort her son and then noticed blood around his bottom lip and the top of his chin.
Letby told her a feeding tube had irritated the back of his throat and caused bleeding, she said.
The mother said Letby then told her to go back to the post-natal ward.
Prosecutor Nick Johnson KC asked her: āDid you do what you were told?ā
Child Eās mother replied: āYes, because she was an authority and she knew better than me and I trusted her. Completely.
āShe said the registrar was on the way and if it was a problem someone would ring up to the post-natal ward.
āThe rules were go back upstairs and if there was a problem I would call you, and that was Lucy Letby on the neo-natal unit. I followed those rules.ā
I knew. I knew there was something wrong and I had known from leaving him but I left
The witness later cried as she told jurors: āI knew. I knew there was something wrong and I had known from leaving him but I left.ā
Following Child Eās death she was asked if she wanted to bathe the baby as part of the standard bereavement service offered to parents.
She said: āAt that time I didnāt feel like I was able to. I was just broken and I couldnāt so Lucy Letby bathed him in front of me.ā
She broke down in tears as she added: āAfter he was bathed he was placed in a white gown. I just remember being thankful because we had no clothes for him because he was so little.ā
Letby later presented her with a photograph of Child F holding his twin brotherās teddy, she said.
āShe said āI got this picture. He rolled over and hugged his bear. I thought it was so amazing I took a picture for youā,ā she told the court.
Another mother of one of Letbyās victims, a baby girl also murdered by administration of air, also recalled the nurseās involvement in bathing.
She said Letby was present when she was first allowed to bathe her daughter, Child I, when she was in the unit.
She said: āI was so pleased to be able to bathe her. (Child I) was obviously enjoying it because she was smiling.
āLucy helped prepare the bath ⦠she even offered to take some photos using my mobile, which I agreed to.ā
Letby took a bath in to the parentsā room after Child I died, she said.
āShe said if she could come in and take some photos, which we could keepā¦
āShe was smiling and kept going on about how she was present at the first bath and how (Child I) had loved it. I wished she would just stop talking.
āEventually she realised and stopped. It was not something we wanted to hear.ā
Letby later sent a condolence card to Child Iās parents, which she photographed on her phone.
Another mother said she did not want her baby daughter āout of my sightā after the death of the infantās twin brother, Child A, the night before.
She said she and her partner were eventually persuaded by nursing staff to get some rest, the court heard.
She said: āWe returned to the ward and attempted to watch a film, and the next thing I know we were getting woke up by a nurse.
āāYou need to come nowā. My heart sank. Not my baby. Not again.ā
They dashed into the neo-natal unit where a nurse told them their daughter, Child B, had stabilised following a āvery similar situationā to Child A with a rapid fall in heart rate and oxygen levels.
The twinsā mother said she was āfrantic and terrifiedā and stayed with Child B throughout the night. The baby was ārestless ⦠as if she was trying to tell me something was wrong.ā
Following her own discharge from the Countess of Chester, she said she would arrive daily at 9am to see Child B, the court heard.
She and her partner would then set alarms on their phones at two-hour intervals overnight so they could call the hospital for updates on Child B.
āI was, and still am, extremely protective of her,ā she said.