A Bombshell on child killer Lucy Latbi would offer a new interpretation behind several scripted notes written by the new documentary nurse, which was used as evidence to convict him.
Britain’s most vast child serial killer is currently serving 15 sentences of all life For seven murders and seven attempted killings of infants while working Countse of chester hospital,
“I am evil, I did it”, such as notes were scattered on a scary notepad found in his house, which also read: “I killed him with the purpose because I am not enough to take care of him and I am a terrible wicked person.”
The “hate” was also written in the block capital with heavy ink and circled, while the note has been led: “Not quite good.” But the notes also included other phrases such as: “I have done nothing wrong” and “We tried our best and it was not enough”
The NHS newborn nurses are currently serving the entire life sentence for seven murders and seven have attempted the killings of infants while working in the counts of Chester Hospital.
As Many timesA new ITV documentary will give a new explanation for notes, which was presented by the prosecution to an conflict – despite some notes appeared to deny his crime.
Don is a childhood friend of Latbi, with whom he studied his A-Level at Ilestone School in Hearford. The 35-year-old, who did not want his last name to be published, said the pair was taught in school to write their most dark ideas during the “Peer-Sports Training Session”.
talking to Lucy Latbi: Beyond proper doubt? The documentary, he said: “In all the training sessions, it was recommended for us that, you know, if you are feeling overwhelmed, you write everything that is going through your brain, what you know, bother you.

“So, all dark thoughts, all the internal voices that you cannot silence. You write it on a piece of paper to remove it from your mind.”
Latbi has lost two attempts to challenge their culprits in the appeal court, but many experts are increasing questions about the safety of the convicts of Latbi after doubting some evidences used in the test in August 2023.
The Criminal Case Review Commission (CCRC) is reviewing an application by the legal team of Latbi, which includes a 300-page report of Chemical Engineer Helen Shannan and Professor Geoff Chase, refuting the claims made by the prosecution that latebi “undoubtedly” raised his feeding bags with insulin to two children.
Ms. Shannon and Prof. Chase, which were accessible to infants’ medical notes, say they could be born with specific types of antibodies in their blood that could cause high reading of insulin.

Talking to the documentary, Ms. Shannon said Many times: “What was presented in court because it is a proof of smoking-doubt poison that actually looks very special for a pre-term newborn.
“And we can not see any justification for the prosecution statement that it can only be poisoning.”
Don also told the documentary that Latbi was found guilty: “I think I was at work when I heard that they were, were returning the verdict, and were tuned and I think I was just sitting with gum for a while, in fact I didn’t really know what I was listening, what I was listening,” she said.
“I did not think it was real. I immediately switched to think: ‘Okay, what is next, you know what is next? It may not happen. It can not be done. She can not just spend the rest of her life in jail.”