Killer nurse Lucy Letby has Court of Appeal bid rejected

She requested the challenge a conviction for the attempted murder of a baby girl

Author: Liam ArrowsmithPublished 24th Oct 2024
Last updated 24th Oct 2024

Child serial killer Lucy Letby has had a bid to challenge a conviction for the attempted murder of a baby girl dismissed by the Court of Appeal.

Letby's lawyers asked senior judges for approval to appeal against her most recent conviction after being found guilty following a retrial in July of attempting to kill a newborn known as Child K.

She watched on from her prison cell at HMP Bronzefield, where she is serving 15 whole-life orders.

On Thursday, lawyers for the former nurse told the Court of Appeal that the attempted murder charge should have been "stayed" as an "abuse of process" due to "overwhelming and irremediable prejudice" caused by media coverage of her first trial, and that the retrial should not have gone ahead.

But three senior judges dismissed Letby's bid following the hearing in London.

Lord Justice William Davis, sitting with Lord Justice Jeremy Baker and Mrs Justice McGowan, said at the start of their ruling that they would "refuse permission" for Letby to challenge the conviction.

Letby, 34, was previously sentenced to 14 whole life orders for the murders of seven babies and the attempted murders of six others, with two attempts on one child, and was sentenced to a 15th whole life term for the attack on Child K.

Thursday's ruling marks Letby's second appeal bid to be thrown out, after the Court of Appeal dismissed a challenge against her first set of convictions in May.