Before reading Rachel Aviv’s most recent piece for The New Yorker, I might have described the Lucy Letby case as well-covered.
In August 2023, the former neonatal nurse became only the fourth woman in U.K. history to receive a whole-life prison sentence, after being convicted of killing seven babies and attempting to kill another six. The gut-wrenching case has generated hundreds and hundreds of news stories, including excruciating testimony from parents whose babies died. Little of the coverage, however, questioned the sturdiness of the case against Letby as Aviv’s piece does.
Letby’s trial, which experienced journalists described as “harrowing,” “extremely difficult,” and “incredibly complex” to cover, lasted 10 months. It included press restrictions “rarely seen” outside cases involving national security in the country.
Some of the court-ordered restrictions involved an unusual amount of anonymity granted to victims and witnesses. (A group of news organizations — including the BBC, The Guardian, Sky News, and the Daily Mail publisher Associated Newspapers — jointly contested a subset of the anonymity applications, arguing for more transparency and noting some requests were not well-supported. They were overruled by the trial judge.) But England also has strict contempt-of-court laws that prevent publication of material the court determines could affect the legal proceedings.
For her 13,000-plus-word story “A British Nurse Was Found Guilty of Killing Seven Babies. Did She Do It?”, New Yorker staff writer Aviv drew on text messages, police interviews, internal hospital records, and interviews with Letby’s hospital colleagues and experts.
The New Yorker blocked people in the U.K. from reading the article on its website, due to a court order restricting coverage. (A New Yorker spokesperson declined to answer additional questions about the order and the magazine’s response, citing legal reasons.) The article remains available in print, in The New Yorker’s app, and via some third-party services such as the library app Libby.
tfw you don’t know whether it’s contempt of court to publish a picture of the new yorker cover in a london newsagent so you have to scribble over it on your phone https://t.co/DX4gHdyAjt pic.twitter.com/7VWzb72DLz
— Bron Maher (@Bron_Maher) May 15, 2024
In her piece, Aviv concludes “there has been almost no room for critical reflection” about the case in England. A leading medical journal removed a comment from a doctor who warned against a “fixed view of certainty that justice has been done” in the Letby case “for legal reasons” while leaving “at least six” other editorials and comments “which did not question Letby’s guilt” on the site, Aviv reported. Other people have received notes from police threatening consequences including imprisonment over online posts and links shared on Twitter.
Because another trial involving Letby starts up in June, these press restrictions have continued after the verdicts.
What does that look like in practice? Well, good luck finding a U.K. publication covering Aviv’s blockbuster piece. News coverage about Letby’s appeal over “wrongly refused applications” can read strangely thin as well. For example, The Guardian wrote about the request but reports “the media is not permitted to publish the details of these arguments at this stage because Letby faces a retrial in June on one count of attempted murder.”
The restrictions on the case have baffled some Americans. Why can the Daily Mail publish a column stating Letby “has thrown open the door to Hell and the stench of evil overwhelms us all” or The Guardian call the former nurse “one of the most notorious female murderers of the last century,” as Aviv points out, but the doctor’s comment about a “fixed view of certainty” is taken down? Over on Reddit, the r/lucyletby community is roiling as moderators in the U.K. chastise Americans for posting links to Aviv’s article. (Rule No. 3 of the Lucy Letby subreddit bans “conspiracy theories” and states “verdicts in Lucy Letby’s trial are fact and are law unless and until an appeal is granted.”) The rowdy comment section of The New Yorker’s Instagram has drawn comparisons to the War of 1812.
I emailed with Aviv about her reporting. Our conversation, below, has been lightly edited.
The case made me curious about the way that our statistical intuitions play out in criminal investigations and trials — specifically, the kinds of unexamined beliefs we have about the nature of chance, and our tendency to attribute causality to random events. I was struck by the parallels between the Letby case and the case of Lucia de Berk, a nurse in the Netherlands who was wrongly convicted of murder in 2004, largely because of an association between her shift patterns and the deaths on her ward. Her case is now seen as one of the worst miscarriages of justice in Dutch history.
But it was a very different situation here: the way I ended up getting all those transcripts was by spending a lot of money. In the U.K., it is extraordinarily expensive to obtain transcripts — a transcription of one day in court costs roughly $100, and it requires the judge’s approval. It took about half a year to get the judge’s approval. I was told that even appeals lawyers tend not to request their clients’ full transcripts, because of the cost.
The organizational process for this particular story was more complicated, because for each baby I had a different document. Then, when it came time to write a paragraph about any particular baby, I, theoretically, had access to the relevant details and timeline without searching through all 300,000 words.
When I read through her texts, they read to me as very human and ordinary and nondescript, and I found it eerie to see how the certain lines, when placed under a particular headline, were presented as proof of the machinations of a twisted mind.
There are so many ways in which the fact-checkers, Nina Mesfin and Daniel Ajootian, improved the piece, but even on a social level it is very nice, after being immersed in a subject alone for many months, to be assigned companions who become equally invested in the same minutiae.
Read Rachel Aviv’s piece here or in the May 20, 2024 print issue of The New Yorker.