The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Police widen inquiry into death of babies to second hospital

- KIM PILLING

A second hospital is co-operating with a police inquiry into the deaths of 17 babies at the Countess of Chester Hospital’s neonatal unit.

Lucy Letby, 28, continues to be questioned in custody on suspicion of the murder of eight babies and the attempted murder of six other infants.

Officers arrived at the nurse’s home in Chester on Tuesday and several hours later police announced a female healthcare profession­al had been arrested as part of the “highly complex and very sensitive investigat­ion”.

Police are said to have arrived at Ms Letby’s home at around 6am, while officers were also seen at her parents’ property in Hereford later on Tuesday.

It is understood that Ms Letby worked at the Countess of Chester after she graduated as a children’s nurse from the University of Chester in 2011 and went on to complete a work placement at Liverpool Women’s Hospital as part of extra training.

Yesterday, Liverpool Women’s NHS Foundation Trust said in a statement: “A healthcare worker currently involved in a police investigat­ion undertook placements at Liverpool Women’s during their training.

“We are co-operating with police as part of their investigat­ion which includes a routine review of patients cared for on our neonatal unit during the time of these placements. There is currently no suggestion that any patients at Liverpool Women’s came to any harm in relation to this investigat­ion.”

A blue tent erected by police remained outside the front of Ms Letby’s semi-detached property in Westbourne Road, Blacon, with a uniformed officer stationed nearby.

Detectives launched an investigat­ion into infant deaths at the hospital in May last year, initially looking at the deaths of 15 babies between June 2015 and June 2016.

On Tuesday police said the probe had widened to include 17 deaths and 15 non-fatal collapses of babies between March 2015 and July 2016.

Detective Inspector Paul Hughes said the arrest was a “significan­t step forward” in a “highly complex and very sensitive investigat­ion”.

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