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Brother Lee: Anguilla Mourns a Gentle Giant Who Shaped Public Health and Culture

A beloved inspector, broadcaster and community pillar whose fairness and humility touched every corner of the island. Share Anguilla is mourning a man whose presence was so steady, so familiar, and so quietly influential that his passing feels like a break in the island’s rhythm. Leroy “Brother Lee” Richardson was more than a public health pioneer, more than a cultural contributor, more than a voice on Kool FM — he was one of those rare Anguillians who managed to touch every corner of community life with a spirit that was pleasant, professional, fair, and unfailingly reasonable. His loss has swept across the island like a firestorm because he was woven into the everyday fabric of Anguilla in ways people often didn’t realise until now. “An older photograph of Brother Lee captures the quiet strength he carried throughout his life — a man whose pleasant nature, professionalism and unwavering fairness shaped Anguilla far beyond the roles he held.” For...

Lucy Letby: Could New Evidence Reopen the UK's Most Chilling Baby Murder Case?


Lucy Letby, a former neonatal nurse, is serving multiple whole-life sentences for murdering seven babies and attempting to kill several more at the Countess of Chester Hospital between 2015 and 2016. Prosecutors said she injected air, insulin, or fluids to harm newborns in her care.

Now, fresh medical opinions claim some babies may have died from natural causes or mistakes in care—not deliberate harm. In one case, Baby O, an expert says a needle used in resuscitation may have accidentally pierced the liver. This detail was never aired in court.


For the bereaved families, the pain is unending. They have already endured the loss of their children, and now must face renewed public debate over the verdicts. Their grief—and their right to justice—remain at the heart of this case.

Letby’s lawyers have taken these new findings to the Criminal Cases Review Commission. If accepted, the case could go back to the Court of Appeal, possibly leading to a retrial. Or it may be rejected, leaving her convictions untouched.

Either way, the outcome will be watched closely, because for the families, only the truth—however painful—will ever be enough.

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