The Thirlwall Inquiry heard how Lucy Letby told a colleague she 'couldn't wait to get her first death out of the way'(Image: PA)

Lucy Letby said 'I can't wait to get my first death out of the way' on first day at work

The Thirlwall Inquiry into how Lucy Letby was able to commit her horrific crimes at the Countess of Chester Hospital heard how she told colleagues she "couldn't wait" for her first death

by · The Mirror

On her first day at the hospital where she went on to murder babies, Lucy Letby chillingly told a colleague she "couldn't wait for my first death", an inquiry heard.

The Thirlwall Inquiry, a public hearing over her crimes and how she was able to commit them, heard that the comment was made in January 2012 - more than three years before her year-long attack spree took place in which she murdered seven babies and attempted to murder seven more at the neonatal unit where she worked.

A nurse referred to as Nurse ZC during the inquiry, as she cannot be identified for legal reasons, said she was "taken aback". She also said she was similarly surprised when, later in early 2012, Lebty became "quite animated" when describing how she was involved in resuscitation attempts of a baby who had unexpectedly deteriorated overnight.

Letby was found guilty of murdering seven infants and attempting to murder seven others( Image: Countess of Chester Hospital)
Letby is serving 15 whole-life orders( Image: Cheshire Constabulary/AFP via Ge)

"She made a comment along the lines of 'I can't wait for my first death to get it out of the way'," the nurse told the inquiry. "It took me aback because for me the thought of having to experience that was not something you actively want to happen."

Nurse ZC recalled she thought at the time that Letby was trying to make conversation on her first day of work at the Countess of Chester Hospital, and did not believe the comments were said with "sinister intent". She spoke of another exchange from early 2012, regarding a baby who was being prepared for discharge from the unit.

"I came in the next day and not long after I had been there Lucy sort of presented as quite animated and told me everything that had happened to the baby and that she was involved in resuscitation attempts," she said. "It was something that took me by surprise because obviously the baby had been so well."

Nurse ZC described Letby as "kind of excited", but added she thought at the time that it may have been the "adrenaline" of the experience and that she needed to offload. She said: "It was not as if she seemed upset or that it had traumatised her in any way."

Lucy Letby was found guilty after a trial at Manchester Crown Court( Image: PA)

Nurse ZC said she also noticed Letby's "overfamiliarity" with the family of a baby that she cared for during a work placement at Liverpool Women's Hospital as she went into detailed discussions about them on her return to the Countess of Chester. On reflection, Nurse ZC said the discussions "didn't sit right."

Earlier, Nurse W, who also cannot be identified for legal reasons, told the inquiry that Letby "couldn't wait to tell me" about the overnight death of a baby boy when she arrived for a day shift in August 2015. She told the hearing: "When I had left only 12 hours previously the baby was clinically well.

"I should have been allowed to come into work and receive the handover with the rest of the support team but I was bombarded with that information within a minute of walking into the unit. I didn't think it was appropriate at all. It was unprofessional."

A review by Cheshire Constabulary of the care of some 4,000 babies admitted to the Countess of Chester while Letby was working as a neonatal nurse from January 2012 to the end of June 2015 remains ongoing. Police are also investigating Letby's work placements at Liverpool Women's Hospital between October and December 2012, and Janaury and February 2015.

Letby, 34, from Hereford, is serving 15 whole-life orders after she was convicted at Manchester Crown Court of murdering seven infants and attempting to murder seven others, with two attempts on one of her victims, between June 2015 and June 2016. The inquiry is expected to sit until early 2025, with findings published by late autumn of that year.