‘Killer’ nurse Lucy Letby said ‘he’s going’ when she was unexpectedly found by baby’s cot after ‘injecting him with air’
A NURSE said "he's going, he's going" when she was found by a murdered baby's cot after she injected him with air, a court heard today.
Lucy Letby, 32, allegedly murdered seven babies and attempted to kill ten others while working on the neo-natal ward at the Countess of Chester Hospital.
The "poisoner at work" is accused of injecting two babies with insulin during a year-long killing spree.
Letby also allegedly murdered or harmed others by injecting air or milk into their bloodstream or via a tube in their stomachs.
The collapses and deaths of all 17 children in the case were not "naturally-occurring tragedies", it was said.
Manchester Crown Court heard today how the nurse injected air into "significantly premature" Child C on June 14, 2015.
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Jurors were told how that night, Letby had been assigned to look after another baby, while a less-qualified nurse was sent to Child C as he was more stable.
But when the assigned professional left the room to visit the nursing station, she heard an alarm going off in the baby's room, it was said.
The court was told she returned to find Letby standing next to Child C's cot as his oxygen levels and heart rate dropped after he "suffered a serious deterioration".
The colleague claims Letby told her: "He's going, he's going".
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Child C was declared dead just before 6am with medics discovering excessive air in the gut at the time of his collapse that could only be caused by the deliberate introduction of air via the nasal gastric tube.
Prosecutor Nick Johnson KC said: "If you are trying to murder a child in a neonatal unit it's a fairly effective way of doing it - it doesn't really leave much of a trace."
Letby later searched on Facebook for the baby's parents shortly after waking up from her night shift, the court heard.
Jurors were told just six days earlier, she allegedly murdered Child A, who was 24 hours old, 90 minutes after taking over his care.
She also allegedly attacked his twin sister, Child B, 28 hours later but she survived.
Child A's collapse was "consistent" with a "deliberate injection" of air a minute or two beforehand when just Letby was present, it is alleged.
Mr Johnson said Child C's death was a "variation - or refinement - of a theme Lucy Letby had started with Children A and B".
He added: "Again, taking a step back, you can now see there was a pattern emerging.
"Lucy Letby was the only person working on the night shift when child C died who had also been working on either of the shifts when child A died and his twin sister child B collapsed.
"What we are going to see, as we progress, is that Lucy Letby's method of attacking the babies in the neo-natal unit was beginning to develop.
"She had injected air into the bloodstream of the first twins, child A and B, and varied this approach by injecting air into child C's stomach via the nasogastric tube."
'ONE COMMON DENOMINATOR'
The court was told yesterday how Letby, who had special training in caring for ICU babies, was a "constant malevolent presence".
She is accused of murdering five boys and two girls, and the attempted murder of another five boys and five girls.
Some of the newborns were repeatedly targeted by the nurse - including one baby Letby is alleged to have killed after three previous failed attempts.
Consultants at the hospital grew suspicious of the "significant rise" in the number of babies dying or suffering "catastrophic" collapses.
Jurors were told they found Letby was the "one common denominator" among the deaths and collapses.
She denies all 22 charges, which are said to have taken place between June 2015 and June 2016.
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A court order prohibits identifying the surviving and deceased children and prohibits identifying parents or witnesses connected with the babies.
The trial continues.