A senior doctor says he'll ask police to consider investigating hospital bosses for corporate manslaughter
In England, lawyers representing families of some of the babies attacked by Lucy Letby say an inquiry needs to look at why hospital bosses prioritised reputation above child safety.
The 33-year-old nurse was convicted of the murder of seven babies and the attempted murder of six more during her shifts on the neonatal unit between 2015 and 2016.
They're accused of not listening to the concerns of staff at the Countess of Chester Hospital, where the nurse worked.
Letby's being sentenced on Monday for multiple murders and former Old Bailey judge Wendy Joseph thinks she might never be freed.
She claims, "The actual sentence will be life imprisonment so even that if there is the opportunity for her to apply for parole after she has serve any minimal term. Whether the parole board would ever her give her parole is another matter entirely."
Also, a senior doctor who helped prosecute serial killer nurse Lucy Letby says he'll ask police to consider investigating hospital bosses for corporate manslaughter.
Consultant paediatrician Dewi Evans thinks there was negligence in the way concerns were ignored.