
Man charged with murder of Sarah Montgomery in Co Down
Police said the man had also been charged with child destruction.
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The man is due to appear before Newtownards Magistrates' Court on Wednesday.
Ms Montgomery, 27, died at her home in Donaghadee in Co Down on Saturday.
Floral tributes have been left outside Ms Montgomery's home in the Elmfield Walk area.
Earlier on Tuesday, a 47-year-old woman who was arrested as part of the investigation was released unconditionally.
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BBC News
43 minutes ago
- BBC News
Who is Lucy Letby and why is her case back in the news?
It is now approaching two years since Lucy Letby was told she would die in prison after being given 15 whole-life sentences. The 35-year-old murdered of seven babies and the attempted murder seven others, making two attempts on the life of one of them, making her the most prolific child serial killer in British legal history. Since her conviction, a highly-vocal campaign has protested her innocence, but investigations continue into whether she may have committed other crimes against children before she was caught. Earlier the police confirmed a "full file of evidence" has been passed to prosecutors who will consider fresh charges relating to the non-fatal collapse and deaths of babies in Chester and Liverpool. Who is Lucy Letby? Her trial at Manchester Crown Court revealed Letby to have lived an unremarkable life before her arrest in July 2018, with detectives who worked on the case describing her as "the human form of beige". Born in Hereford in January 1990, she attended a local school and sixth form and, she told jurors, "always wanted to work with children". She was the first person in her family to go to university and studied nursing for three years at the University of Chester. During her studies and training she had placements at the Countess of Chester Hospital and Liverpool Women's Hospital. Letby qualified as a band five nurse in 2011, and was considered competent and capable by the majority of her colleagues. But the public inquiry set up to examine how she was able to murder children under the noses of her colleagues heard she initially failed her final year student placement because her assessor felt she was "cold" and "lacked empathy" with patients and their families. Letby appealed that decision, however, and passed with a new assessor. At the time of her arrest she was living in a modest semi-detached property in Westbourne Road, Chester, with two cats, Tigger and Smudge, and appeared to have an active social life. What did Lucy Letby do? Over the course of a nine month criminal trial, a jury heard that Letby was present at a series of "unexplained" deaths and sudden collapses of vulnerable babies on the neonatal unit where she worked. The indictment - the list of charges she faced - focused on the period between June 2015 and June 2016, when Letby was removed from frontline duties. Prosecutors said she attacked babies by injecting air into their bodies, by force feeding them, by poisoning them with insulin, and in some cases causing traumatic injuries by inflicting physical blows. Why Letby case is under more scrutiny than ever One piece of evidence presented in court was a staffing rota which showed only Letby was present at every single incident considered suspicious by the prosecution. On 8 August 2023, the jury returned the first set of verdicts, before returning the second set on 11 August. Letby was convicted of seven murders and six attempted murders, with not guilty verdicts on two counts of attempted murder and the jury deadlocked on another six counts. After a retrial in July 2024, she was convicted of a further count of attempted murder. What happened next? Letby almost immediately applied for leave to appeal her original convictions, which was refused on 4 July 2024 by the Court of Appeal. However one significant detail did emerge in that process. An academic paper by Dr Shoo Lee, a retired Canadian neonatologist, had been used by the prosecution at trial to highlight signs of vascular air embolism - the introduction of air bubbles into their veins - in newborns. Dr Lee, who was unaware of his work being involved in the case during the trial, had since been contacted by Letby's legal team and stated his belief that his paper had been misinterpreted by prosecution experts. Letby was also separately refused leave to appeal against her conviction from the re-trial. In September 2024, the Thirlwall Inquiry into the circumstances of Letby's offending began in Liverpool, and heard evidence over seven months. The chairwoman of the inquiry, Lady Justice Thirlwall, had confirmed she would not hear evidence on whether Letby's convictions were safe, stating it was not the appropriate forum. It is due to publish its findings early next year. Innocence campaign In the weeks and months after Letby was convicted, a steady drumbeat of questions about the safety of her convictions grew louder. While some of that discourse veered into online conspiracy chatter, serious academics including medical experts and statisticians also questioned the case. Conservative peer Sir David Davis announced he believed a miscarriage of justice had taken place and has since supported the campaign. Last month, his Conservative Party colleague and former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said the case should be "urgently re-examined". In February this year Letby's post-trial barrister, Mark McDonald, called a press conference featuring a panel of 14 international experts in neonatology and paediatric care and chaired by Dr Lee. Dr Lee said the panel had independently reviewed the evidence heard at trial and concluded no murders or attempted murders had taken place. Dr Lee said the panel believed the babies in question had died due to natural causes or poor medical care. The report, along with other evidence, has been submitted in an application to the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC), the statuatory body set up to examine potential miscarriages of justice. The CCRC is reviewing the application and said it could take some time to reach a decision as to whether to refer the case back to the Court of Appeal for a full families of Letby's victims, through lawyers, have described the panel's report as a "rehash" and "full of analytical holes". Criminal investigation continues While Letby's legal team have been working to secure a new appeal, detectives on Cheshire Police's Operation Hummingbird, which was set up to investigate the events at the Countess of Chester, have been continuing their enquiries. Shortly after Letby was convicted in 2023, the force announced it was still investigating non-fatal collapses and deaths of babies that were not included on the indictment - both in the Countess of Chester Hospital and Liverpool Women's Hospital. In October that year, it also launched an unrelated but parallel investigation called Operation Duet, looking at potential offences of corporate or gross negligence manslaughter relating to the response of hospital leaders to rising death rates. This week there were significant updates in both investigations. On Tuesday the force announced three former senior managers at the Countess of Chester had been arrested on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter and had been bailed pending further enquiries. On Wednesday, news broke that a "full file of evidence" had been handed by the Operation Hummingbird team to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) for a decision on whether to bring fresh charges against response, her barrister Mr McDonald said the evidence of her innocence was "overwhelming". "We will cross every bridge when we get to it but if Lucy is charged I know we have a whole army of internationally renowned medical experts who will totally undermine the prosecution's unfounded allegations," he added. Listen to the best of BBC Radio Merseyside on BBC Sounds and follow BBC Merseyside on Facebook, X, and Instagram, and watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Magician 'punches four-year-old boy in the face' after child disrupted his show at a kindergarten
A magician is under investigation after he allegedly punched a four-year-old boy at a kindergarten party. The preschool in Munich, Germany had hired the performer for the afternoon when the act is said to have gone awry. While a group of children went on stage at the end of the magician's set, a boy kicked his equipment. Enraged, the clown is said to have punched him in the face with the flat of his hand. The boy reportedly suffered minor injuries in the alleged assault. Police were called to the school around 6:20pm, where they were met by around 40 children and their parents. After police questioned the magician, he was released. When asked for comment by German publication Bild, he said: 'I can't say anything about that. 'It's all in the police report. It's crazy how this is evolving.' Meanwhile, the boy's distraught mother also told Bild: 'My son said the magician had big hands.' However, she refused to comment further on the incident. When asked, St. Stephan Kindergarten refused to talk about the what happened. If he is convicted, it has been reported that the magician, whose website promises 'Amazement, laughter, and excitement... unforgettable moments for your guests', could face up to five years in prison or a fine.


BreakingNews.ie
an hour ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Grandmother denies assaulting toddler who died after head injury
A grandmother accused of the murder of a two-year-old has denied assaulting the child. Kerry Ives, 46, and her husband Michael Ives, 47, are alleged to have been in the living room of their home in Flintshire, North Wales, with grandson Ethan Ives-Griffiths on August 14th, 2021 when he suffered a 'catastrophic' head injury, leading to his death two days later. Advertisement Giving evidence at Mold Crown Court on Wednesday, she was asked by Owen Edwards KC, defending: 'Did you assault Ethan on August 14th?' She replied: 'No.' Ives also denied seeing, helping with or encouraging an assault on that date. The grandmother, who wiped her eyes with a tissue at points during her evidence, described Ethan as a 'bubbly little child' and said he came to stay at their home in Garden City from about June 24th, 2021 for a few weeks, before going back to his mother – her daughter, Shannon Ives. Advertisement Shannon and Ethan then both came to stay at the house from July 16th until his death, the court heard. Asked how her daughter behaved towards Ethan, she said: 'She used to smack him, up the head.' After Mr Edwards asked in what circumstances that would happen, Ives said: 'He'd probably pissed her off, just by laughing at her if she told him off.' She said on August 14th she noticed a red mark on Ethan's face after he had been in the bedroom with his mother. Advertisement Ives said she did not see Shannon hit Ethan that day, but was later reminded of her defence statement in which she said she saw Shannon strike her son to his head as they walked to the living room. She told the court she was in the living room with her husband that evening, while Shannon was upstairs, when she turned and saw Michael Ives catching Ethan. Ives said: 'Michael picked him back up and then he did it again so Michael lay him on the carpet.' Asked how it looked, she said: 'It was horrible.' Advertisement She said she shouted for Shannon, who came down from upstairs and later called her other daughter, Nicole, over Facetime, the court heard. The accused said: 'Nicole had gone through something similar with her son. I just needed some advice for what to do.' She then rang an ambulance, but the court heard the time between Kerry Ives shouting for her daughter to come downstairs and phoning emergency services was 18 minutes. Ives said: 'I was panicking. I didn't know what was going on.' Advertisement Kerry Ives, originally from Wolverhampton, accepted the way her husband carried Ethan, by his arm, in CCTV footage from August 4th, 2021, was 'cruel'. She said: 'It wasn't nice.' Ives said at the time she did not see her husband holding Ethan in that way and denied the footage showed her watching as Ethan was carried from a trampoline in the back garden. She said: 'I was just staring, that's what I usually do, just stare and glaze.' Asked what she would have done if she had seen her husband carrying the toddler like that, she said: 'I'd have told him to pack it in.' She accepted she did see him lift Ethan over a railing by his arm in later footage which was shown to the court. Gordon Cole KC, defending Shannon Ives, said: 'Do you regret how Michael treated Ethan?' She said: 'Yes.' When Mr Cole asked why she had not initially told the jury she had seen her husband carry Ethan like that, she said: 'I can't answer.' She added: 'I'm not protecting him.' Michael and Kerry Ives, of Kingsley Road, Garden City, deny murder, an alternative count of causing or allowing the death of a child, and cruelty to a person under 16. Shannon Ives, of Nant Garmon, Mold, denies causing or allowing the death of a child and cruelty to a person under 16.