Just a little update on the demo for Lucy Letby outside the Thirwall Inquiry at the town hall in Liverpool yesterday. There was a good turnout, and it was great to meet some of the lovely people I have only interacted with online before.
For some reason the actual demo started at 9.30am but was ended by about 10.45am. I do not know why they packed up so early and with hindsight I wish I had stayed outside the town hall and continued to protest alone and wait for any latecomers. There were bound to be people turn up later in the morning, since people had come from all over the country and abroad.
After the demo was officially closed, people were directed to Wetherspoons. It was St. Patricks day too, so probably not the best day to be in a pub, a lot of pissed people about. Wetherspoons was busy.
Some footage of demo I took here Lucy demo
There were undercover agents both at the protest and at Wetherspoons. The NHS are one of the bodies that has the powers to use CHIS to infiltrate protest organisations. I felt like we had been entrapped in the pub. It kicked off at one point, there was trouble over the signs and placards we had. Some guy threatened one of our group, Mark and a while after that, the same guy kicked my placard into me from behind, swearing and shouting.
I decided to get out of the pub some of the Wetherspoons staff were being rude and very intolerant towards me , despite the fact I had been kicked from behind in a totally unprovoked manner by an angry male.
As I walked out the door, a woman dressed from head to foot in green kept saying to me ‘You should be ashamed of yourself ..’ . When I asked her why she just kept repeating the mantra ‘you should be ashamed of yourself’. Pretty weird. I left the pub with Mark and another guy who did not want to stay there either and we walked around town. We again got some abuse from another male who saw my placard which was upside down. I was not displaying it at all.
As I say it would have been better if I had stayed at the town hall, I know how these things get engineered but I suppose I get fed up with always doing stuff alone , so I decided to go with the others to socialise a bit.
I got the impression there is a lot of anger in Liverpool about this case from people who want Lucy to remain in prison and hate the fact we are calling it a miscarriage of justice. I now understand better why the nurses are having such a difficult time and how much bullying and threatening must be going on of them behind the scenes to stop them speaking out. There are brave nurses though who are standing up and doing their bit , so hats off to them. Having the guts to get out and show their faces, they’re putting themselves in danger.
I did also put a video out here video on gross negligence manslaughter on my take on the police announcement that they are going to be looking into gross negligence manslaughter instead of just corporate manslaughter. Personally I think this could be a red herring but this would then be investigating individuals instead of just the hospital Trust itself. I would also add to my comments that I think this is also about avoiding huge payouts in negligence claims and huge fines if corporate manslaughter is ruled. If individuals are found guilty of the common law offence of gross negligence manslaughter then it might get the NHS as a corporation off the hook regarding fines and payouts. However as long as these deaths are officially ruled as murders, it is going to be extremely difficult to prove the chain of causation so that the baby deaths can also be described as manslaughter . It doesn’t really make sense to have a death described as both murder and manslaughter. Mind you the cult spend their time calling black white, so no doubt they can get away with saying that a death or deaths have been caused unintentionally, but by gross negligence whilst at the same time that death was actually murder which is intentional. The chain of causation would have to be that the gross negligence of an individual, say a manager, led to murders not being stopped . But a murderer or murders not being stopped , does not equal manslaughter. For that to be manslaughter, presumably the gross negligent act would have had to caused Lucy’s state of mind which led to her supposedly committing murder. Because manslaughter involves ‘ … conduct which did kill ….’. Just leaving Lucy on the ward is not an act of killing in itself. If Lucy won an appeal or was found not guilty in a retrial , the situation would of course be different.
We will have to wait and see on that one. There are several negligence claims against COCH , so if they can twist it to avoid payouts they will. And if they can avoid a corporate fine by getting individuals sent to prison for gross negligence manslaughter, then they will. It is possibly misdirection by the police, but they are only told what to do by the CPS and their freemasonic masters.
All in all I am glad I went to Liverpool for the protest and that a union took the trouble to organise it, so credit goes to them because it is important to keep the momentum up and keep Lucy’s name in the public eye so that the establishment can’t just shove her to the back of a dusty drawer and hope everyone will not notice and then forget about it. That must not happen. Lucy’s lawyer, Mark Macdonald has done a good job in keeping MSM interest which is important.
One more thing I have just thought of is that the nurse Colin Norris has his appeal coming up in May. He has served 17 years out of a thirty year sentence and his convictions could well have been unsafe. If he wins his appeal this will be really important for Lucy’s prospects, since the two cases are similar in many ways. Fingers crossed then for Colin. I can’t imagine what he must have gone through if he is not guilty.
Well done Cally, those physical ttacks on you and on Mark Mayes were appalling and it is clear indeed that there were infiltrators present mingling with the demonstators. I'm so glad that you survived and can now write about your horrible experience. During the demo, some woman rushed passed me saying "Hello Dickie" and vanished, I suspect it was the infamous Deb Roberts who was certainly at the Inquiry that day. The G's like to call me Dicky because they know I don't like it. But I've decided to adopt the nickname. Why not. My Grandfather was called Dick by his nearest and dearest, obviously I'm named after him. So: I will sign off here now, with love from Tricky Dicky! We'll all keep up the fight just as long as is necessary.
Far from being ashamed you are to be applauded for your demonstrable courage and persistence. I am sorry to hear that you and others faced abuse. I absolutely agree that efforts to support Lucy L., must be maintained and I shall do my best. Thank you Cally.