The owners of the former hospital suspended the thirralwall investigation

BBC News, Liverpool
BBC North West Tonite

The lawyer for the former hospital owners where the killer nurse Lucy Latbi was murdered, infants have asked for a public investigation to suspend their crimes.
Inquiries chair Lady Justice Thirlwall said that he had received a request from the lawyer for the management team after a panel of international medical experts. Drawed deaths on poor medical care and natural causes.
She said that she was earlier a similar plea with the legal team of latebi and conservative MP David Davis who has called for a retric.
Later submissions will be heard in Liverpool Town Hall with closing statements.
Latbi, 35, originally serve the orders of the entire life to the hearford, killing seven infants and trying to kill seven others.
Lady Justice Thirlwall said the lawyer for former hospital officials – Chief Executive Tony Chambers, Medical Director Ian Harvey, Director of Nursing Ellison Kelly and HR Director Su Hodkinson – also wrote to the State Secretary for health suspension for investigation.
Last month, the findings of a panel of 14 international experts in nenetology and pediatrics were revealed by the legal team of latebi.
Chairman of the panel, Dr. Shoo Lee said that experts had put on testing tape and medical records and “found no murder”.
The findings have been passed to the Review Commission of Criminal Affairs, which investigates the potential abortion of justice.
Latbi’s legal team hopes that the Commission will send its case back to the court of appeal.
A crowd of about 50 people gathered outside the Liverpool Town Hall before the questioning started again, claiming that it claimed that it was innocent.

Thirralwall inquiries are listening to the concluding submission from the chief participants after the evidence of the hearing in January.
In his closing speech, Neil Sheldon Casey, who represents the Department of Health and Social Care, stated that earlier cases where health professionals had damaged, infants were not learned.
In 1991, a nurse, Beverly Allit, killed four children at a hospital in Lincolnshire and in 2015, another nurse, Victorino Chua, was jailed to kill two patients at Stepping Hill Hospital in Stockport.
Mr. Sheldon said, “Long -inquiry and investigation lessons have been failed for a long time to learn and implement those lessons.
“Recommended has been recommended but inadequate action has been taken.
“The tragic incidents in the Countse of Chester Hospital should not have been allowed to be in the first place.”
Lady Justice Thirlwall is due to publishing its final report on this autumn.