New Yorker magazine alert thread

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lol

mookieproof, Monday, 29 April 2024 02:56 (three weeks ago) link

two weeks pass...

Will dive in later. There was a lot of scepticism on twitter that this wasn't quite right.

Wrongful convictions are not a novel phenomenon, but the way Lucy Letby was strung-up seems particularly tied to the state of 2010s Britain: austerity-wracked, paranoid and incompetent https://t.co/9auf64Def1

— noah kulwin (@nkulw) May 13, 2024

xyzzzz__, Monday, 13 May 2024 20:14 (one week ago) link

I don’t really even know where to start with that article man. what a remarkable and tragic story.

say what you might about the US system of justice, but that trial (at least as portrayed in that story) was a farce. the standard of guilt is insane. I’m american so maybe I just don’t get it!

having not witnessed anything or read the autopsy reports myself, I can speak with at least a bit of authority that the medical evidence marshaled against letby (again, at least as reported in that piece — I hadn’t heard of the case before this) went beyond weak, it was completely preposterous. that it was allowed to stand and not seriously cross-examined by the defense is farcical.

you could spend a single day even in an elite hospital (which is, from what I gather, most certainly not descriptive of this facility) and instantly grasp the level of dysfunction, or the stark understaffing relative to what any patient or family member would desire, that could plausibly lead to tragedies like these. (also: she may very well have been an awful nurse, which is not a crime!) this is not even to mention the most likely explanation that the deaths were completely random, even accounting for the above.

the gag order, again speaking as an american, is also plainly grotesque! you can’t even read skeptical stories about this, this article included, in england. that’s insane to me. and the dearth of skeptical examinations of the case in the press is no doubt not coincidental.

she should be freed

brony james (k3vin k.), Wednesday, 15 May 2024 00:13 (six days ago) link

she would probably be lynched if she was. all the uk media (as far as i saw) portrayed her as the devil incarnate. she must be in the top 5 most publicly hated individuals in the UK.

stirmonster, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 00:22 (six days ago) link

Wow and you’ve got the whole royal family there

A So-Called Pulitzer price winner (President Keyes), Wednesday, 15 May 2024 02:32 (six days ago) link

is there something to the framing that the NHS is seen with such esteem? I’ve read previous articles on the case and, regardless of whether she was a good nurse, she seems like someone who took a difficult job with a huge emotional burden. and it was at an understaffed, under-resourced, hospital that was routinely having to take premature newborns that they were not classified to take.
the fact that they correlated her record with deaths but didn’t bother to check that stat for other nurses is insane.

it’s pure “burn the witch” behavior. maybe she is guilty of something, but nothing I’ve read indicates they proved that. just that they found their scapegoat

ɥɯ ︵ (°□°) (mh), Wednesday, 15 May 2024 03:00 (six days ago) link

just looking at some of the UK reactions to this story, a lot of people seem very stuck on the idea that someone *had* to have killed those babies

Roz, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 03:24 (six days ago) link

my main takeaway (even prior to this piece) has been that her defence was so wildly incompetent it beggars belief.

the gag order is not completely unreasonable - there is a retrial on one of the charges that the jury couldn't reach a verdict, but there are a lot of issues with how those reporting restrictions play out in practice in the uk.

ufo, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 03:36 (six days ago) link

again, very american perspective on freedom of the press here, but that the article is blocked in england is something that is so indefensible that how things play out in practice should be an indictment of whatever principle supposedly undergirds it

brony james (k3vin k.), Wednesday, 15 May 2024 03:40 (six days ago) link

restrictions to avoid prejudicing a jury are reasonable, but there are certainly issues with how this plays out in practice in the uk. i do not think the answer is to give the deranged uk press freer reign though

ufo, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 04:09 (six days ago) link

curious about how many brits want to read this but cannot get around the geofencing

mookieproof, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 04:17 (six days ago) link

i get a 404 error on the article. But just read it on the wayback machine. fucking hell.

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 15 May 2024 07:55 (six days ago) link

Archive ph should have it

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 08:11 (six days ago) link

i do not think the answer is to give the deranged uk press freer reign though

otm forever

devvvine, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 08:48 (six days ago) link

I read it through my local library via Libby app.

Shocking case, defence were negligible in not challenging more robustly the statistics used to convict her.

Dan Worsley, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 11:17 (six days ago) link

it's just completely baffling how her defence had an expert witness lined up who was aware of a lot of the issues with the prosecution's case and planning to challenge them, but didn't actually call him to testify? that's a level of negligence/incompetence that's very hard to understand

ufo, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 11:55 (six days ago) link

also just having letby testify seems like an obviously poor choice that i struggle to understand

ufo, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 12:06 (six days ago) link

Weird that this NY-er article is blocked but a BBC documentary and a Daily Mail podcast on the case are apparently fine?

Roz, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 12:53 (six days ago) link

yes, that is strange…I wonder why that could be…

brony james (k3vin k.), Wednesday, 15 May 2024 13:02 (six days ago) link

lol

Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Wednesday, 15 May 2024 15:56 (six days ago) link

Need to find a way to read this later. I can't believe it's blocked. Wtf.

Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Wednesday, 15 May 2024 16:00 (six days ago) link

https://archive.ph/TgC1X

fpsa, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 16:24 (six days ago) link

the adversarial judicial system was a mistake

, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 21:36 (six days ago) link

just read that, wouldn’t have without it being posted here. seems completely insane that she was convicted.

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Wednesday, 15 May 2024 22:49 (six days ago) link

Weird that this NY-er article is blocked but a BBC documentary and a Daily Mail podcast on the case are apparently fine?

the documentary was released the day of her conviction, which wasn't an issue as the retrial hadn't been announced yet, and the podcast was documenting the trial as it happens, as they're allowed to report on the case as it happens as long as they do so neutrally which usually means just directly quoting the transcript but the uk press of course does not usually do this in a way i'd consider responsible. it is a bit of a hole that the documentary is still accessible given the upcoming trial though, it's all a mess

ufo, Wednesday, 15 May 2024 23:15 (six days ago) link

I’m truly trying to understand your perspective here. what do you think the purpose of a free press is beyond court stenography? I really don’t mean to be rude

brony james (k3vin k.), Wednesday, 15 May 2024 23:46 (six days ago) link

i think ufo is just trying to describe how media outlets in the UK are trying to comply with a contempt of court law, which was mentioned in the article: https://www.gov.uk/contempt-of-court

i wouldn't read into it more than that

, Thursday, 16 May 2024 00:01 (five days ago) link

more than one poster itt has essentially defended the practice as a net good, so that’s what I’m trying to understand

brony james (k3vin k.), Thursday, 16 May 2024 00:21 (five days ago) link

and we seem to have found ourselves in a situation where documentaries produced by the local police and broadcast by the BBC are freely available, along with a comically credulous body of reporting by other british press outlets, with the british public seemingly devouring this as they do royal gossip, while actual indenpendent reporting is blocked — and instead of shrugging our shoulders I’m wondering if that might be examined a little bit

brony james (k3vin k.), Thursday, 16 May 2024 00:27 (five days ago) link

yeah, agreed

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Thursday, 16 May 2024 00:43 (five days ago) link

U.S. freedom of the press is not perfect, but it is in some basic respects more free than even in many other democratic countries.

(speaking only in terms of constitutional protections — on other fronts, like ownership pressures and working conditions, it's not a great place to be a reporter)

The First Amendment, it turns out, is pretty great after SCOTUS started expanding it 100 years ago -- before contracting it.

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 16 May 2024 00:59 (five days ago) link

It's quite amazing reading this piece having previously only read stuff about the case in the British press, including a long, detailed article in The Guardian that didn't express a scintilla of doubt about Letby's guilt. I'm astonished that the key expert witness was a retired paediatrician who had randomly read an article about the case in the press and then decided to volunteer his services... you'd think there would be some due process about identifying the right person to review the evidence!

Zelda Zonk, Thursday, 16 May 2024 01:46 (five days ago) link

the author wrote a very sensitive book about mental illness a couple of years back. recommended.

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Thursday, 16 May 2024 01:53 (five days ago) link

i think ufo is just trying to describe how media outlets in the UK are trying to comply with a contempt of court law, which was mentioned in the article: https://www.gov.uk/contempt-of-court

i think the basic principle that the media should avoid prejudicing a prominent criminal trial is worthwhile (similar laws apply in australia where i am but i can't think of any case that's been as messy as this one) but there's absolutely some inconsistency in how that seems to play out in practice, and the situation with the reporting restrictions around this case (that being that a retrial on one charge was announced a few months after the trial, which reintroduces the reporting restrictions just a few months after the verdict for the other charges was announced and the press had free rein with it for a bit) are quite unusual and i can't think of a similar situation here (though i can think of one where a prominent verdict was suppressed due to the defendant facing similar charges at another upcoming trial, and a lot of outlets were fined for breaching the order). at the very least the reporting restrictions for the retrial really should include the previously published material like the bbc documentary etc. being temporarily removed, or it would be reasonable to just give up on the idea in this case given how widely publicised the other verdicts were. the retrial being announced a few months later seems to be a weird edge case for the reporting restriction laws that produces particularly bad & messy results

ufo, Thursday, 16 May 2024 04:46 (five days ago) link

re messy Australian cases might include rapey Bruce and his multiple other rapes being kept quiet

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Thursday, 16 May 2024 05:24 (five days ago) link

that was a somewhat different reporting restriction (it was about protecting the identity and reputation of the defendant in a sexual assault case before they were committed to stand trial) and was unambiguously bad and that particular law has since been repealed

ufo, Thursday, 16 May 2024 06:28 (five days ago) link

Do people really think, even from a distance to the UK, that if contempt of court didn't exist, the UK papers would have managed to create a case against the prosecution of someone accused of murdering infants? Or that this would be a net good thing?

Even under the current law, the opposite is true. Many people accused of a serious crime are treated as guilty in the media. Given the numerous times an innocent person has been treated as guilty after being arrested, it seems the law could go further.

I'm no expert but the complication here seems to be that someone already had a trial at which they were found guilty and now another separate one is upcoming. So it seems the entire law sort of breaks in that system, as usually all the reporting happens freely once a trial is over.

One thing I will say is that a long time ago I worked in local news reporting for BBC News Online, and there was a murder trial. And after a verdict is handed down in the UK, every paper or website will write a sort of broader story of what happened, with the freedom allowed by the fact the trial is over. Especially if the person is found guilty. I had to write one of these after weeks of strictly assuming innocence until proven guilty, and reporting accordingly. In the particular case, there was no real doubt about the guilt of the person involved. But I still found it weird how we as a news organisation automatically switched our brains to 'here is the exact truth and detail of what happened, since it has now been proven by a court'. Like obv as an Irish person in the UK I find that weird. I remember talking about it here.

I still can see why it exists though, because the press would dig up everything and anything against innocent people otherwise.

In this case, I think if you read a wide range of sources about the trial, the New Yorker article omits almost any evidence that might make you think Letby could be guilty. For example the doctor who compares the trauma suffered by one of the victims to a road traffic accident. I'm not keen to dredge through all the evidence but you can find if you so wish.

I do think it seems a pretty weak case against her but I don't know what to believe about what actually happened.

LocalGarda, Thursday, 16 May 2024 06:48 (five days ago) link

yeah I broadly agree with that and after reading up a bit more, there did seem to be some cherry picking in terms of which evidence was cited in the story.

but I think it's besides the point whether she did it or not - what the story highlights is that there were serious issues with the methodology and evidence used to determine her guilt, as well as the surrounding circumstances of the unit, which were largely ignored and suggests an unsafe conviction.

Roz, Thursday, 16 May 2024 07:32 (five days ago) link

The only witnesses Myers called were the hospital’s plumber, who spoke about unsanitary conditions, and Letby, who testified for fourteen days.

This seems insane.

ledge, Thursday, 16 May 2024 07:55 (five days ago) link

Agree, Roz.

LocalGarda, Thursday, 16 May 2024 08:05 (five days ago) link

I had vaguely heard of the Letby case before reading this article, but yeah it raises a whole lot of questions. Unless she's excluding really damning testimony, it just doesn't sound like there was any evidence other than her presence. In a lot of the cases it sounds like other people were there so it's a little hard to see how she would have just slipped in, inserted an air embolism or insulin without anyone noticing anything strange at all. And also the way they added the insulin charges in, mostly on the basis of some scattered results that they only started looking for once they already decided something suspicious was going on.

I've spent a lot of time in neonatal ICUs. Both of my sons were born prematurely, one of them at 27 weeks and spent 3 months in the NICU before coming home. Of course, my experience was in the U.S. at a seemingly well-funded hospital, but even there I saw how hectic things could be in the unit when there were multiple high-needs babies all at once. Also, babies died there regularly, there were at least three in the three months we were there every day. And we did experience some arguable negligence too, with a gram negative bacterial outbreak that made several babies sick and was almost certainly spread by nurses taking insufficient care. BUT — the work they were doing was extremely difficult, and premature infants are just about the most vulnerable and fragile class of patients you can imagine.

I don't know, it all just feels so circumstantial and "statistical" (except probably not really very statistical) to be trying to charge somebody in such a complex environment. One thing I thought was, who's going to want to work in a NICU after all this?

Do people really think, even from a distance to the UK, that if contempt of court didn't exist, the UK papers would have managed to create a case against the prosecution of someone accused of murdering infants? Or that this would be a net good thing?

what’s the explanation for why an american magazine was able to craft such a case then? skill issue? something about the american temperament?

flopson, Thursday, 16 May 2024 18:02 (five days ago) link

it’s literally unpublishable in the uk

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 16 May 2024 18:04 (five days ago) link

i though that’s what “if contempt of court didn’t exist” was conditioning out

flopson, Thursday, 16 May 2024 18:06 (five days ago) link

But most readers in Britain trying to read it online have been met with an error message: “Oops. Our apologies. This is, almost certainly, not the page you were looking for.”

The New Yorker said it had “geo-blocked” the article for audiences in Britain to avoid clashing with a court order restricting media coverage of the case.

The court order stems from Britain’s 1981 contempt-of-court law, which bans the publication of any reporting and commentary that could prejudice legal proceedings.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/style/media/2024/05/16/lucy-letby-new-yorker-story-blocked/

i interpreted LG as saying even if Britain didn’t have contempt of court, they wouldn’t have written a case against the prosecution like the nyer piece. so i’m wondering what other factors beyond legal restrictions would stop them from writing such a piece

flopson, Thursday, 16 May 2024 18:22 (five days ago) link

what’s the explanation for why an american magazine was able to craft such a case then? skill issue? something about the american temperament?

― flopson, Thursday, May 16, 2024 2:02 PM (twenty-four minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink

there is not a good one IMO. the UK doesn't do long form investigate printed journalism like the New Yorker, but it does do 60 minutes style TV investigations. there's no good reason an American writer (who is not an investigative journalist and usually writes features/essays about psychiatry!) could pull this off, but panorama couldn't, other than the law.

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Thursday, 16 May 2024 18:31 (five days ago) link

(and a culture that is unusually viscous and red misty about certain kinds of criminal acts, even at the "high" end)

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Thursday, 16 May 2024 18:32 (five days ago) link

(who is not an investigative journalist and usually writes features/essays about psychiatry!)

don't mean to imply this is not aviv's "beat" and/or she his not a good writer. it is/she is. more that there are literal teams of investigative journalists much more familiar with this case in the UK would could just as easily have written a similar story if it weren't for the law.

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Thursday, 16 May 2024 18:36 (five days ago) link


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