Lucy Letby's dad wanted two consultants sacked for raising concerns over killer nurse
The father of Lucy Letby told hospital bosses that two consultants should be "instantly dismissed" after raising concerns that she was deliberately harming babies, a public inquiry heard
by Tim Hanlon · The MirrorLucy Letby’s dad wanted the “instant dismissal” of two consultants who raised concerns she was deliberately harming babies on a hospital neonatal unit, a public inquiry heard.
John Letby was also said to have “exerted pressure” via phone calls to members of staff at the Countess of Chester Hospital.
One of the people he spoke to was the hospital’s then HR director who told the Thirlwall Inquiry into the events surrounding Letby’s crimes that it was the only time she had spoken to a relative of a staff member about an employment issue.
His calls to Sue Hodkinson came weeks after a meeting in December 2016 when Mr Letby and his wife, Sue, stated to hospital executives their daughter “had been to hell and back” after she was moved from the unit five months earlier following the concerns expressed by the consultant body.
Letby was said to have felt Dr Stephen Brearey and Dr Ravi Jayaram had “orchestrated a campaign” to have her removed amid claims some doctors on the unit referred to her publicly as “angel of death” and “murderer on the unit”.
On Tuesday, the inquiry heard Mr Letby also told hospital bosses: “The behaviour of those two people, they should be instantly dismissed.” He wanted to know what “severity of actions” would take place against the two doctors after medical director Ian Harvey was noted to say it was “inappropriate behaviour”.
Mr Letby also made numerous phone calls to occupational health nurse Kathryn de Beger, who had been assigned to support Letby following her redeployment. Giving evidence, Ms Hodkinson said: “She described to me how Mr Letby was getting agitated on the phone with her, that it was becoming increasingly difficult to manage and she felt very uncomfortable.
“I felt I needed to support her through this situation. In fact I don’t think I had ever spoken to a member of a family in relation to an employment issue. That was the only time. And then having the conversation with Mr Letby it was very clear it was a very difficult set of conversations.
“In my view he wanted to express his anger towards the ongoing situation with Letby. John was placing Kathryn under significant pressure to have the calls escalated to a more senior level. In normal circumstances I would not have dealt with a call of this nature or spoken to a staff member’s parent.
“These were however exceptional circumstances and I felt I needed to step in and support other members of staff who were struggling with the amount of pressure being exerted.”
Chief executive Tony Chambers went on to ask the consultants to apologise to Letby for the alleged derogatory remarks and days later the nurse emailed her colleagues to say she would be returning to the unit after she had been “fully exonerated” of allegations made against her.
But Letby never returned to the unit as the hospital finally called in the police in May, 2017, after previously opting to commission a series of reviews into the increased numbers of deaths in 2015 and 2016. Ms Hodkinson said a “real turning point” happened on March 15, 2017, when Dr Jayaram told her about an incident in February 2016 when he had seen Letby at a baby’s cot side and that a valve had moved to a different setting.
Ms Hodkinson said it made her feel “really, really uncomfortable” and she was “stunned”. She said: “I didn’t think we had really looked into some of the aspects enough clinically and I have to take his concerns seriously. I remember going home at night and I was in tears about it.” She told the inquiry she believed what Dr Jayaram had told her and informed fellow executives the next day.
Letby, 34, from Hereford, is serving 15 whole-life orders after she was convicted at Manchester Crown Court of murdering seven infants and attempting to murder seven others, with two attempts on one of her victims, between June 2015 and June 2016. The inquiry, sitting at Liverpool Town Hall before Lady Justice Thirlwall, is expected to sit until early 2025, with findings published by late autumn of that year.