Luke Walker innocent hostage

Luke Walker innocent hostage
ACCUSED WITH NO EVIDENCE

Sunday, 28 December 2008

The footage of Clare Fisher's Home - Suzanne Holdsworth




The two faces of Clare Fisher - the one for trial and the real one, repeated all over her blog - Clare Fisher out on the town.

When all was quiet on the Western Front and the children and grandchildren were either ensconced in their beds or watching the latest Batman movie, I put the DVD of Clare Fisher's disgustingly filthy home shot by Cleveland Police.

Disregarding the squalor in which she lived, I concentrated on the expert reports, the last few weeks of Kyle's life and the medicines that were up on the side, zooming in and out to identify which ones they were and who manufactured them so that I could research the content, adverse events and contra-indications.

These medicines cause drowsiness, these medicines cause side effects, side effects Kyle was exhibiting in the last two weeks of his life when his mother was leaving him alone - I tried to ignore the fact that the rubbish from the bin was strewn across the filthy kitchen as if a dog had raided it, putting out of my mind that it looked as if Kyle had been scavaging for food and the mountain of clothing that had been spread out on the middle of the kitchen floor, as if a child had made a makeshift bed, the empty food cupboards; all things I have seen before on footage shot relating to extreme neglect of children who had been left on their own and got down to the facts instead - Kyle was said to have exhibited the following by various witnesses "poor gait control - accident prone and oblivious to pain" - well when dosed up on high alcohol content cough medicines it all starts to fit in doesn't it!

Of more concern was the expectorant Guaifenesin. A compound contra-indicated with seizures and prior brain injury - a compound that alters blood platelets and when overdosed causes sickness, diarrhoea and headaches - ALL symptoms Kyle had in the two weeks leading up to his death, leading to Clare giving him the Diarolyte that was everywhere. Now if the body was attempting to get rid of the toxins that were building up and you then give him something to stop that, what do you think will happen?

Anyone who believes that this case shouldn't be re-investigated needs to read the above and understand that Kyle died of a seizure, what caused that seizure however is unclear.

Did Kyle fall down the stairs strewn with filthy clothes and
washing when left alone as a direct result of being woozy from the drugs he was being administered is that why the premeditate act of blocking the door with the broom handle and belt was needed?


Did the drugs themselves bring on the seizures?

Did the drugs cause the bleed to the brain?

Did Kyle head bang to get rid of the headaches caused by either the drugs or the dehydration from being sick all the time?

Why has Clare Fisher never been arrested and charged with neglect?

Given the disparity in the evidence of Clare Fisher in police witness statements, the first trial and then the retrial, why hasn't Clare Fisher been arrested and charged with perjury and perverting the course of justice?

Why have two experts, under whose care Kyle was, who
had raised child protection concerns about the eye socket injury, in relation to Clare Fisher, never been interviewed by the police?


Where is the letter raising child protection concerns in relation
to the eye socket injury written by one of those experts to Kyle's GP gone?


I will keep ploughing on because Suzanne didn't lay a finger on
Kyle, all she ever did was care for him - my name isn't John Sweeney, "A fit killed Kyle". I don't have to abide by BBC rules and Regs, neither do I have lawyers breathing down my neck telling me what can or can't go into print. I will raise the spectre of the unpalatable, what if mother is guilty? - I believe Kyle could have been saved and I also believe that Clare Fisher should be held accountable as well as Cleveland Police who decided, for whatever reason, to look at the least likely suspect.


As the days pass I shall begin to place the evidence in this case
up on the Internet, that includes the Police tape of Clare Fisher's "home".


Saturday, 27 December 2008

Suzanne Holdsworth - the Follow through

http://www.peterleemail.co.uk/news/Cot-death-mum-in-Kyle.4825204.jp


Cot death mum in Kyle case plea


Suzanne Holdsworth


27 December 2008

By Paul Watson

A COT death mum who was wrongly convicted of killing two of her children is backing calls for a Government probe into the death of two-year-old Kyle Fisher.
Angela Cannings, 45, spent 18 months in jail before being freed by the Court of Appeal during the infamous Professor Roy Meadow scandal in which the medic was discredited and struck off.

Mrs Cannings, now seen as a national figurehead against injustice, has vowed to support Hartlepool babysitter Suzanne Holdsworth, who spent three years behind bars after being wrongly convicted of murdering Kyle.

She was jailed for life in April 2005. But after new medical evidence was unearthed the Court of Appeal quashed her conviction and ordered a re-trial.

After damning new medical evidence was produced, the 38-year-old, who maintained Kyle suffered a fit before unexpectedly collapsing, was unanimously cleared of his murder at her home in Millpool Close, Hartlepool, in July 2004.

The jury was told she battered the youngster's head against a wooden banister, which caused him to collapse with swelling of the brain.

But medical evidence showed the tragic child suffered from a number of pre-exisiting brain conditions which pre-disposed him to epilepsy and the possibility of an unexpected fit.

At the forefront of calls for a Government probe is Mrs Cannings, who lost her first-born, Gemma, to cot death, and who was then wrongly convicted of smothering two of her other children, 18-week-old Matthew and seven-week-old Jason.

She and fellow campaigner Penny Mellor, of the Angela Cannings Foundation, have demanded action from the Attorney General, Baroness Scotland, Children's Minister Ed Balls, Solicitor General Vera Baird and Cleveland Police Chief Constable Sean Price.



Mrs Cannings told the Mail: "There are chilling similarities between our cases.

"When I was arrested police kept telling me I had done it and to admit it and the same thing has happened with Suzanne.

"They just kept going for me from the start and what kept going through my mind with this case was the fact that they just went for Suzanne.

"When I was freed there were promises that investigations would be thorough and reviews carried out. But here we are five years on with the case of Suzanne Holdsworth.

"Cases of this nature are still not being investigated thoroughly and innocent people are being sent to prison.

"Suzanne's case is the latest injustice and a full inquiry needs to be carried out at the highest national level."

After 18 months in prison, Mrs Cannings won her freedom in December 2003 after taking her case to the Court of Appeal.

She was the third woman in a year to have her conviction quashed after the evidence of paediatrician Professor Roy Meadow was discredited.

Among the others was Sally Clark, who died aged 42 of natural causes in March this year.

Mrs Cannings added: "I have been through all of this myself and will be there for Suzanne Holdsworth.

"Her life has been ruined and now she has to build it back up.

"Thankfully she has a strong family to help with that.

"The case mirrors everything I went through and I will be there to help her get through this."

The full article contains 546 words and appears in n/a newspaper.Page 1 of 1

Suzanne Holdsworth Daily Mail

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1102004/Justice-delayed-Kyles-babysitter-spent-years-prison-crime-did-commit.html



Justice delayed: Kyle's babysitter spent three years in prison for a crime she did not commit

Three years ago Suzanne was jailed for a little boy's murder. But a damning investigation by the Mail found police had missed key evidence. Days after being released, she tells her haunting story to the man who helped clear her

By John Sweeney

Last updated at 2:50 AM on 27th December 2008


For Suzanne Holdsworth, the long, dark December nights were always the worst. But then, every minute she spent incarcerated in Low Newton prison, County Durham, was a living nightmare.

As the monotonous weeks and months stretched on, she would often sit and wonder how her partner and two daughters were coping without her.

But it was at night, in her sparse, cramped cell, that the 38-year-old mother would lie awake, weeping silent lonely tears and wondering if she would ever spend another Christmas and New Year with her family again.

'Everybody who's got children and who's in prison knows that every day is hell, but birthdays, Christmas Day and New Year's Eve are the worst days of your life,' she says. 'Everyone else is having a happy time with their families, but you are locked inside.

'You can't have visits on Christmas Day: you have phone calls, but only at certain times of the day. All that me and the other girls wanted to do was talk to our children all day.
'But there's nothing you can do but close the door behind you and cry and cry and cry.'

Were Suzanne a cold-blooded killer, or even a part-time petty criminal, it might be hard to feel any sympathy.

But the fact is she was serving a life sentence for a crime she did not commit.

In 2005, she was convicted of the murder of two-year-old Kyle Fisher, the son of a 19-year-old single mother who had left him in her charge. Suzanne has always denied harming the little boy in her care.

She was jailed for life for Kyle's murder. In May this year, however, the Court of Appeal ruled that her conviction was unsafe after new medical evidence emerged suggesting the baby may have died from an epileptic seizure. A retrial was ordered, and at the new trial a jury unanimously found Suzanne not guilty.

Just eight days ago, on December 18, Suzanne was freed. She stood, hand-in-hand with her partner Lee Spencer, on the steps of Teesside Crown Court, enjoying her first taste of freedom in more than 1,000 days.

She is now home, spending Christmas and New Year with Lee and daughters Lesley, 20, and Jamie-Leigh, 14, as well as her new grandson, Matthew.

She falters as she speaks: 'Did I ever think this day would come? No. I thought I would be in prison forever.'

At the time of Kyle's death, police investigating accused Suzanne, from Seacroft, Leeds, of repeatedly smashing his head against a banister in a fit of rage.

'I never harmed him, I loved him,' she said, and certainly it left family and friends bewildered that the woman they called a modern-day Mary Poppins could have any connection to such horror.

But Cleveland police were adamant: Suzanne Holdsworth, a former supermarket shelf-stacker, was a brazen liar and a baby killer.


Only something didn't quite add up. If there was a smashing of Kyle's
head into a wooden banister, why was there no sign of impact? No blood, no hair,
no traces of Kyle's skin anywhere in Suzanne's house. Why had no DNA test -
which could have cleared Suzanne in the first instance - ever been carried out?

'It was horrendous'


Kyle also suffered from myriad problems. First, heterotopia - brain
matter in the wrong place, which can cause fits; second, megalencephaly - an abnormally big brain, which can cause fits; third, hydrocephaly - water on the brain, which can also cause fits; fourth, subdural haemorrhage, which can also cause fits.


Fifth, Kyle had been accidentally stabbed in the brain, in someone
else's care, a year before he died - a terrible injury that caused his eye to
droop as his damaged brain squeezed down 'like toothpaste through the tube'. It was pressing down through a hole in his eye socket onto the back of his eye.

Stabbing, squeezing and scarring of the brain can cause fits, too. And fits can kill.

These five brain disorders, any one of which could trigger an epileptic fit, eluded Cleveland Police's 'relentless investigation'.

So when Suzanne told the first trial jury in 2005 that Kyle had suffered from a fit, no one believed her.

'I remember the verdict coming,' says Suzanne, who even now is traumatised when talking about her ordeal. 'I remember seeing my partner Lee. Next minute, I was in a prison cell with just a bed and a CCTV camera looking at me. It was horrendous. Having no freedom, having people tell you what to do all the time.

Clare Fisher, Kyle's mum, had gone out clubbing and left her son in Suzanne's care
'Missing my two children was the most terrible thing, and to begin with some of the other prisoners called me names: nonce, child killer. It didn't matter that I knew I'd done nothing wrong, no one can ever understand what that feeling is like - to be locked away in such a dreadful place and for murder no less, when you have done nothing wrong.'

Today, as they prepare to welcome in 2009, she and Lee, a lorry driver, want to put the past behind them. But they are angry and bitter at how such a grotesque miscarriage of justice could tear their family apart for over four years.

I first reported on the possibility that Suzanne was in jail thanks to a grotesque miscarriage of justice a year ago for BBC2's Newsnight.

Since 2001, I have helped free or clear the names of eight people who have been wrongly accused of child murder and manslaughter, starting with cot death mothers Sally Clark, who died of grief last year, Angela Cannings and Donna Anthony.

All eight stories are double tragedies: the death of a child compounded by the false conviction of an innocent parent or carer. In seven of the eight cases, police and the courts were misled by rogue experts such as Professor Sir Roy Meadow or disputed scientific theories such as 'shaken baby syndrome'.


I was approached about Suzanne's case by her lawyer, whom I had worked with on previous occasions and court cases. The minute he showed me all the evidence - NOT taken into account by police officers working on the original murder inquiry - it seemed obvious that this was one of the worst miscarriages of justice I had ever encountered.

And it was also deeply troubling because it raises questions about the thoroughness of the original inquiry carried out by Cleveland Police.


It was led by Detective Superintendent Tony Hutchinson, who has since retired.
Hutchinson was Cleveland's bullet-headed super-cop, leading dozens of murder inquiries, who shot to international fame when he nailed missing 'canoe man' John Darwin.

Hutchinson maintained after Suzanne's first trial that she 'must have known very quickly that she had inflicted serious, if not fatal, injuries, and while she called for medical assistance' - the 999 call - 'she also began to manipulate the situation. She very calmly applied her mind as to how she would explain the injury to the authorities.'

Could she really be such a calculating killer, though? Naturally, Suzanne's own version of events - and the 999 call itself, which was broadcast last week for the first time - does not appear to suggest it.

It was late evening on July 21, 2004, when Suzanne was babysitting Kyle because his mother Clare Fisher had gone out clubbing. Suzanne's daughters were with Lee, who was working abroad.


Jon Taylor, Kyle's father, has said he never believed Suzanne was
responsible for his son's murder

Suzanne explains the events of that terrible night: 'Clare came over with Kyle, then went out to a nightclub with a friend. Kyle had his yoghurt and juice and we sat together, watching the reality show Big Brother on TV.

'We were having a lovely evening and then I must have yawned, because Kyle said: "Suzie tired". Then, as he shuffled to get off the sofa, his head went down, in a sort of flopping motion. I moved the coffee table out of the way and his head fell to the floor. I put him down on the sofa and threw water on him, the shock of it should have woken him because he hated water. Nothing. I dialled 999.'

A miscarriage of justice

The emergency call was played in court at Suzanne's trial. In it, clearly panicking, Suzanne describes Kyle as going 'all floppy, he's not breathing, his eyes are rolling and everything' - a classic description of an epileptic fit.

Suzanne is screaming and sobbing so much the operator cannot understand what she is saying, hard to reconcile with Hutchinson's concept of a calm, manipulative mind at work.

Then there is the so-called murder weapon. Andrew Robertson QC, prosecuting, alleged at trial and retrial that Suzanne had smashed Kyle's head against a banister at her house. But nothing was visible on the banister - no dent, no blood, nothing.


At the first trial, Judge Grigson said that the evidence presented by
the Crown's forensic expert was of 'breathtaking banality'.

At the second trial, the jury pointedly asked whether Kyle's DNA was on
the banister. The answer? No tests had been carried out.

Lee, Suzanne's partner, shakes his head in disbelief, still unable to fathom why the police didn't carry out tests on the banister.

'They didn't do a DNA test on the alleged weapon. I'm no Sherlock Holmes, but what kind of investigation was that?' he says. 'DNA profiling can distinguish between snot, tears, saliva, hair follicles, scalp. Technology can distinguish between all of them, but no DNA test was done.'

Then there is the question of Kyle's general well-being. Cleveland Police said that Kyle was an essentially healthy boy whom Suzanne had murdered.

'They told me again and again, "You did it, you did it",' says Suzanne. 'They were so wrong. Look at his drooping eye.'

On March, 15, 2003 - more than a year before he died - Kyle was taken to hospital with an injury to that eye.

On that very day, Lee had noticed Clare Fisher cradling her injured son outside her house in Troutpool Close, Hartlepool. She explained that he had fallen from his pram onto a spike from a fireguard. His eye socket was filling with blood.

It was patched up, but months later when Kyle's eye began to droop, he was taken back to the James Cook hospital in Hartlepool, and in February 2004 he was seen by face surgeon Professor Brian Avery and brain surgeon Sid Marks.



They carried out brain scans, found a hole in the eye socket through
which the brain was squeezing 'like toothpaste through the tube' and planned to operate on him. This should have been crucial evidence in the investigation. But Cleveland Police never took statements from the two surgeons.

Suzanne is livid about what appears to be a gross lapse of normal police procedure: 'The drooping eye should have been investigated properly by the police,' she says.
'Kyle died of a head injury. The droopy eye was a head injury.'

What angered Suzanne and Lee most, though, was that her own defence team didn't call a single defence expert at her first trial.

Finally, a free woman

After Suzanne was convicted, Lee - who never doubted her innocence - found a new defence solicitor, Campbell Malone. He helped free wrongly convicted Stefan Kiszko, who spent 16 years in prison for the murder of schoolgirl Lesley Molseed.

Malone contacted me and we set about gathering the evidence that would help clear Suzanne's name. Malone found three experts on human brain disorders.

Dr Waney Squier, a neuropathologist at Oxford University, was the first to identify that Kyle was in danger of suffering fits from his brain abnormalities and his injury, and the conviction against Suzanne could be a miscarriage of justice.

Last December, while Suzanne was still in prison, Dr Squier told BBC's Newsnight programme that Kyle had 'abnormalities in his brain that would predispose him to having seizures. And seizures can kill.'

In her view it was 'extremely unlikely' Suzanne had killed Kyle.


Kyle's eye was seriously injured in a freak accident a year before
his death After the second trial, expert for the defence Bill Dobyns, professor of neurology, paediatrics and genetics at Chicago University, told me: 'It's almost embarrassing the number of medical factors they (the police and prosecution) first completely missed, and when I and other defence witnesses pointed out, they then ignored.'



On top of this, there is also the ordinary evidence of Suzanne's character. Trusted by friends and family as a babysitter, Suzanne was said to be 'very good with children'.


Even Kyle's father - who had long since split with Kyle's mother -
believed her to be innocent.

But the same could not be said for the character of Kyle's own mother. One woman
juror at the second trial was seen holding her hand in front of her mouth in
horror as the court watched a video of Clare Fisher's house: clothes strewn
about, objects were lying around, and Kyle's bedroom looked like a junkyard,
with a broken cot on the floor. Judge Grigson at the first trial told the
jury that the house had been described as a 's***-pit'
.

Clare even admitted at the second trial that she had been a negligent, 'home-alone' mother.


Four nights before he died, she had locked Kyle in a bedroom by blocking the door with a broom handle and tying it with a belt, before going out clubbing.

A neighbour heard Kyle crying and called the police. Suzanne
only realised what had happened afterwards, but says Clare asked her to cover up and say she had been with Kyle that night to stop Clare getting into trouble. Suzanne agreed to help her friend and neighbour.

'I was wrong to cover up for Clare,' says Suzanne. 'I told a white lie - but the prosecution made it much darker. I ended up paying for it for three years inside.'

Another issue at both trials was unexplained bruising on Kyle's head. Both babysitter and mother deny causing the bruising.


Another expert, Professor Renzo Guerrini from the University of
Florence, gave evidence that it could have been caused by Kyle himself, banging
his own head in an unseen fit. And if the bruising had been caused by one of the
two women, then which one?

As Suzanne adjusts to life back with her family, Cleveland Police have announced they will not be apologising for what they describe as a 'thorough, diligent and professional investigation'.

Chief Constable Sean Price says: 'I can't criticise my officers for doing their job. The reason we have jury trials is so they can decide when they have heard all the facts.

'I don't really have any intention of speaking to Suzanne Holdsworth, and she probably just wants to be allowed to get on with things now.'

Suzanne and Lee are naturally disappointed, but not surprised, at the police's reaction.

'I spent three years in prison for a murder that didn't happen so the chief constable is wrong,' says Suzanne.

'I'll never forget Kyle. I loved him very much, but it is utterly wrong that I have had to suffer, too, for something I haven't done. Yes, I'm thankful to be free, but an apology is something I would like very much.'

Monday, 22 December 2008

Hannah Overton and her family


Can everyone also please think of Hannah and her family at this time of year whilst they await the appelate courts ruling on her conviction.


Anyone interested in the case must visit





I know that again Hannah would welcome any correspondence at this time of year.


Thanks


Penny

Sunday, 21 December 2008

Mark Rodda the forgotten prisoner

I would like everyone reading this blog to now support me in proving Mark's innocence, he is currently serving a minimum of 16 years and is into his 7th year of imprisonment, he has a young son who sees him intermittently and his other beloved son Benjamin who sadly died from "SIDS" - epilepsy is rife through the family so I believe that is what Benjamin died of. Mark was accused of SBS, suffocation, MSbP - a full house.

Mark isn't liked by the media, uneducated not a woman, he isn't middle class and worst still (from the medias point of view) Mark comes from a family that are gypsies and was a fairground worker.

Mark's accusers were Meadow, Green (Sally Clark) and Martin Samuels, (david Southall's sidekick) the legal team prosecuting were also the prosecution team for Clark.

Mark has now been moved from Liverpool to Cardiff Prison


Mark Rodda
HMP Cardiff
Knox Road
Cardiff
CF24 0UG

Angela and I get very little by way of cash donations so, in these bad times what we would really like is if people would write to Mark. Mark loves the outdoors so cards with outdoor scenes and flowers on would be fantastic, please enclose stamps for him too, if possible.

Mark is not well, life threatening in fact, I won't go into details, however he really would appreciate knowing that he isn't forgotten.

Angela and I are looking after his wife and child as best we can, so that's covered. I don't often beg, however if everyone could just do a little something to make life more bearable for Mark, it would be fantastic.

Those of you that know me will know that I do not support child abusers, so if I say this conviction is unsafe, you will know that I have done my research and do not say this lightly.

Thanks in advance.

Penny

Saturday, 20 December 2008

Suzanne Holdsworth Tyne Tees interview

http://www.itvlocal.com/tynetees/news/?player=TYN_News_15&void=271944

Heartbreaking viewing, however ....

Watch Clare Fisher with Kyle.

Cleveland Police respond to criticism Suzanne Holdsworth

What a load of bollocks this is. First off when the pathologist died they could have got another expert, they did and he was just as bad, a bought and paid for expert and why would that be, because as Professor Dobyns said "it was embarrassing" to the police and CPS that you only had to look at Kyle to KNOW something was wrong.

How misleading is that statement not from a public servant surely, they wouldn't mislead the public a la Stockwell shooting, or Colin Stagg would they????

Northern Echo



‘My officers were doing their job’

10:28am Saturday 20th December 2008

By Dani Webb »

THE Chief Constable of Cleveland Police last night defended his force for taking the Suzanne Holdsworth case to trial.

Sean Price spoke out after the BBC’s Newsnight programme on Thursday night criticised the people working on the case of the Hartlepool babysitter.

Miss Holdsworth was cleared of murdering twoyear- old Kyle Fisher at her home in 2004, by a jury at Teesside Crown Court.

It was the second time she had been tried for his murder after the Appeal Court overturned her first conviction when her legal team proved they had new medical evidence showing the toddler had brain abnormalities.

Mr Price said: “Cleveland Police were a little disappointed at the one-sided nature of the presentation in the programme. There were a number of issues we spoke to Newsnight about earlier in the week.

Nonetheless, they went ahead unchanged.

“In order to get to court, we have to go through the Crown Prosecution Service.

We gather the evidence, we don’t decide if it should go to court.

“Newsnight said we did not look at pre-existing conditions, that is completely untrue. The Home Office pathologist works out the cause of death and anything that may have caused it.

“Our inquiries go from there.

“The pathologist was very clear with the injuries and he had full knowledge of his medical records and pre-existing conditions. It was a very tragic death.”

Mother-of-two Miss Holdsworth was accused of repeatedly ramming Kyle’s head into the banister at her home in Mill Close, Hartlepool.

However, she always maintained that she did not harm him and said he appeared to have an epileptic fit before falling unconscious.

Cleveland Police say the pathologist died before the appeal hearing and the retrial, so for that reason they could not contradict the evidence given by experts by the defence.

Mr Price said: “Medical evidence was the key part of the first trial. We investigated this case like we would any other.

“I can’t criticise my officers for doing their job. The reason we have jury trials is so they can decide when they have heard all the facts.”

Mr Price said there were no plans by Cleveland Police to reopen the case at the present time.

He said he could understand if people had concerns, but that they would continue to investigate cases properly.

He said that Miss Holdsworth would not be getting an apology.

“I don’t really have any intention of speaking to Suzanne Holdsworth and she probably just wants to be allowed to get on with things now,” he said.

A spokeswoman for the BBC said: “We gave Cleveland Police the opportunity to be interviewed or give a statement and this was reflected in the piece.”

Friday, 19 December 2008

Kyle Fisher the questions that must now be answered

The prosecution stated that it would require the velocity of a 60 mile an hour car crash to cause the injuries sustained by Kyle and that velocity was supposed to have been created by Suzanne in so much as she is supposed to have repeatedly bashed his head against the banisters, this alleged event left virtually no impact injuries, no cuts, no lumps, no fractured skull nothing that you would see in a car crash.

Now ask yourselves this question, what sort of velocity would it have required for a child to have sustained the eye injury Kyle sustained whilst in the care of his mother, my world renowned experts in the car safety industry reliably inform me that it is not possible for a "fall out of a push chair onto a fire place" to have caused a round edged implement to enter the skull at its thickest point, there isn't enough velocity from a fall to cause that sort of damage. So what really happened?



What really happened to Kyle the day that alleged incident happened? And why did the police never investigate that "accident" and why aren't they prepared to look now? Surely the organisations that are there to protect children aren't trying to protect themselves again are they??

Neglected children head bang, fact, the night Clare Fisher left him locked in a room, did Kyle wake up and when he couldn't get out and start banging his head on the door? Is this when the slow bleed started? Was that the cause of the bruising on his head, which certainly wasn't "fresh"?
Did Kyle start head banging because of the pressure that was building up in his head? This is also a well documented action of young children who are experiencing head pain but aren't being tended to or aren't able to express what's going on.

Now maybe it is becoming clearer why the two maxillofacial surgeons who were going to operate on Kyle weren't interviewed by the police, because I bet they don't believe "the fall out of the pushchair" story either.

Suzanne Holdsworth

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/7792373.stm

Suzanne's Newsnight Interview and Court step statement

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/7791075.stm


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7790587.stm

The 999 tape says it all

Kyle: The 999 call


Suzanne Holdsworth

Date: 19 December 2008


THE opening part of the conversation on July 21, 2004, between Suzanne Holdsworth and the 999 operator.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: Can I have an ambulance straight away please? I'm babysitting for a two-year-old child and he's gone all floppy.

OPERATOR: Listen. Listen. Calm down.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: He's not breathing.

OPERATOR: Listen, give me the address.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: It's number three Millpool Close. His eyes are rolling and everything.

OPERATOR: Millpool Close.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: Yeah.

OPERATOR: Has he had a fit?

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: Yeah.

OPERATOR: Right, listen. All I need you to do first of all.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH:I tried to fling water on him. He just won't wake. Hurry.

OPERATOR: Listen. Listen. No. Listen. If you wanna help him you're gonna first of all have to calm down.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: Yeah.

OPERATOR: Right.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: He's just dead floppy.

OPERATOR: Listen. Calm down.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH:Right.

OPERATOR: What's your name?

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: It's Suzanne.

OPERATOR: Susan, first of all move your mouth away from the phone cos you're shouting that much you're distorting it. I can't hear you.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: Sorry.

OPERATOR: Tell me what he's doing now Susan.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH:He's just dead floppy. His head's dropped to one side.

OPERATOR: Right, who is he?

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: He's Kyle.

OPERATOR: Callum?

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: Kyle Fisher.

OPERATOR: Right, okay.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: He had a bang to the head yesterday. And he's just gone dead floppy.

OPERATOR: How old is he now? Is he two?

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH:Two yeah.

OPERATOR: Right. Okay love, and you are a relative did you say?

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: I'm his babysi... I'm just babysitting for him. His mum's gone out.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: He's breathing but his head's laid to one side and his eyes are just gone.

OPERATOR: Right okay. Has he been poorly at all today? Or has he had a bit of a temperature or anything?

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH:No, he banged his head yesterday and...

OPERATOR: He banged his head yesterday?

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: Yeah.

OPERATOR: Right, tell me why you think he was fitting. What was he doing?

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: I told her to take him to hospital.


OPERATOR: All right love, don't worry. We're gonna take him now. Is he diabetic at all?

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: No.

OPERATOR: No, okay. And he doesn't have any other medical history? Any heart problems or anything like that.

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: He's got a hole in his head. That... all right darling. Kyle wake up. Come on baby.

OPERATOR: He's got a hole in his head? How do you mean?

SUZANNE HOLDSWORTH: He's got a hole in his eye and they're gonna have to take his skin off to get to it. You know his face.

The conversation continued for another eight minutes before the ambulance arrived at the address.

Thursday, 18 December 2008

Suzanne Holdsworth the questions that need answering

Mistakes that convicted innocent babysitter

By John Sweeney
BBC News



The child was two years old at the time of his death
Look at Kyle Fisher's right eye. Behind his drooping eye was a damaged brain.

Look at his head. It was abnormally big.

Babysitter Suzanne Holdsworth - free today after a retrial - spent three years in prison after she was convicted in 2005 of murdering Kyle because of this simple logic: Kyle was essentially healthy, then he was killed.

The simple logic was wrong - Kyle's brain had five separate disorders - and that mistake led to a terrible miscarriage of justice.

That miscarriage only became clear when Newsnight reported on it a year ago when Ms Holdsworth was still in prison, and was only righted when a jury at Teesside Crown Court found her not guilty.

After Ms Holdsworth, 38, was convicted in 2005, Cleveland Police boasted of "a relentless investigation" led by Det Supt Tony Hutchinson, the now retired "super cop" who nailed "canoe man" John Darwin.

Far from being relentless, too many things that should have been investigated properly were not investigated.

Ms Holdsworth was alleged to have smashed Kyle's head against the banister at her home.

But there was no visible blood, no hair, no skin on the banister, and no DNA test was carried out.

The accused's partner, Lee Spencer, who has stuck by her throughout, told me: "They didn't do a DNA test on the alleged murder weapon.

"I'm no Sherlock Holmes, I drive a cement mixer, but what kind of investigation was that?"

Earlier injury

The babysitter said in her frantic 999 call that Kyle was suffering from a fit - and never changed her story.

Home Office pathologist James Sunter, now dead, reported after the toddler's death in July 2004 that Kyle's brain was essentially normal - one of eight findings he got wrong.

New defence experts like neuro-pathologist Dr Waney Squier and Professor Bill Dobyns from Chicago University say that Kyle suffered five separate brain disorders.

They were: scarring caused by the brain pressing down through the hole in his eye socket onto his eye; an abnormally big brain; brain matter in the wrong place; bleeding on the brain; water on the brain.


Suzanne Holdsworth always denied killing Kyle
Any one of the five can cause a fit or epileptic seizure and, as Dr Squier told Newsnight a year ago, "seizures can kill".

The eye injury that caused Kyle's brain to scar has never been properly investigated by Cleveland Police.

It happened in March 2003, when Kyle allegedly fell from his pram on to a fire prong, which punctured his eye socket and stabbed his brain.

It happened while he was in the care, not of Ms Holdsworth, but of his mother, Claire Fisher.

The retrial heard evidence that four nights before he died Ms Fisher left Kyle home alone, locked in a bedroom by tying a belt to a broom handle to block the door.

Ms Fisher admitted that she had been a negligent mother.

The court heard evidence that Ms Holdsworth was, in contrast, a caring mother to her two daughters, Leslie and Jamie-Leigh, who have never questioned her innocence.

Gross lapse

Both women deny causing bruising to Kyle's head on the night in question - but it could have been caused while Kyle suffered an unseen fit.

Early on, Cleveland Police decided that the eye and brain injury was irrelevant to the murder inquiry though the police say they relied on the opinion of the Home Office pathologist.

Kyle's medical notes showed that two surgeons had planned to operate on Kyle's injury.

Newsnight understands that in mid-August 2004, Det Con Paul Hook logged a phone call with James Cook University Hospital brain surgeon Sid Marks.

The two men were said to have discussed the brain injury and at the end of the call Cleveland Police continued to believe the eye injury was irrelevant.

But Mr Marks has no recollection of the call and said that he would never discuss the death of a patient with a stranger over the phone.

Cleveland Police say that the detective was only given the task of logging and reviewing the medical records so these could be assessed by the pathologist.

What is clear is that Cleveland Police did not take statements from the two surgeons in the context of a murder inquiry - a gross lapse in normal police procedure.

Chief Supt Mark Braithwaite told Newsnight: "I am satisfied that Cleveland Police carried out a thorough, diligent and professional investigation and that the prosecution of Suzanne Holdsworth was properly brought on the basis of the available evidence."

Suzanne Holdsworth is now free to spend her first Christmas at her home, with her family, after three Christmases inside for a crime she did not commit.

John Sweeney, who reported this story for BBC2's Newsnight, has helped free or clear the name of eight people falsely accused of murder or manslaughter.

A message from Suzanne

Suzanne would like to thank the Tees side jury for giving her back her life.


Anyone that watched the press conference, will have seen how devastating the last few years have been for her. Asking anyone to talk about time in prison when you've been wrongly convicted is not something any one of us are able to talk about, it remains between all of us, we discuss it and it stays there in our close knit community.

Whilst Suzanne had prepared herself for the worst, her biggest fear was going back "there", nobody will ever understand the impact prison has on mothers unless they have experienced it themselves.

So I have to thank you too, members of the jury, I have to thank you for allowing me to let this case go now, I can now just be Suzanne and Lee's friend with nothing else tying us together.

Sue, Lee and family love you all, see you soon XXXXX

Suzanne Holdsworth NOT GUITY

I drafted this on Monday the 15th of November knowing that Suzanne could not be found guilty because she did not harm Kyle in any way and I knew that a North East jury would see the truth.



Monday, 15 December 2008

Suzanne Holdsworth NOT GUILTY

The verdict has come in on Suzanne's case, NOT GUILTY no doubt there will be a media furore, some claiming to have "solved" the case, some reporting on "how could this happen again", the Clark and Cannings cases being cited as other examples along with the shaken baby appeals.



First of all without Suzanne and Lee continually protesting her innocence, there would have been no appeal or retrial and believe me, given the incentives to cop a plea, lesser sentences and early release dates, it's no mean feat to hold on to that truth and shout it from the rooftops, not to mention how much attention that attracts for the family bringing a whole new set of problems.



So before everyone takes title to this case, let me make it clear, Suzanne, Lee, Jamie-lee and Leslie are the true heroes.



Secondly, Suzanne has had the benefit of an outstanding legal team, a legal team who have a particular expertise in cases like this, their appointment of experts for the defence was a very carefully thought through and absolutely brilliant process in which they ensured that they instructed the very best experts in the world with regard to Kyle's brain conditions. I take my hat off to Campbell Malone, Peter Wilcock (from my favourite Chambers, Tooks who was also Ian Gay's barrister) and the absolutely outstanding silk Andrew Thomas, who inherited this case only weeks before the retrial started and has been able to absorb and present this very complex medical case in such a short space of time; fearless in the face of a very difficult job, genius in its presentation to the jury, these are the sort of lawyers that make our legal system the very best in the world.



Thirdly I want to thank the jury for their dilligence in a case that at times must have been very hard for them emotionally, these are the hardest cases to listen to. So thank you from the bottom of my heart.



Finally, I have to thank the media for highlighting this case, this, however is their job and without the cooperation of the above, they would not have this case, they also have more money to chuck around than the defence, who are on a very tight legally aided budget, so are able to cherry pick which bits of a case they investigate.



Sue, Lee and the children, live your lives for today from now on, it has been an absolute pleasure working with you all and this is yet another friendship that will only go onto grow.



May Kyle now rest in peace in your hearts, I know how much you all loved him and I hope that now you will have time to grieve for the little boy you cared for and nurtured, who became so much part of your wonderful family and whose short life was so much more enhanced because of you all. Never forget that and hold onto the knowledge that nothing you could have done would have saved his life, so remember the good times you had with him and live your lives with the happy memories, not those that have been created by the system.



Love you all XXX

The price of the anti-vivisectionists and alleged shaken baby

At the risk of getting my home firebombed or being attacked (what else is new!!) I am going to talk about how the anti-vivisection movement has impacted on child protection.

When I first started on this long and arduous journey way back in the late 90's, little did I know that I was entering a world where nothing is as it appears. My first case involved drug use in paediatrics, over a number of months I was able to definitively prove that the unlicensed drugs given to the child were the root cause of the problems the child was displaying, adverse events, to cut a long story short, I then began to seek out other cases in which this drug had been used and subsequently discovered that it had been widely used as the first drug of choice, eventually that drug, Cisapride, was banned. From there I moved into other drugs, drugs that were being used as anti-emetics but had neuroleptic properties, that cause seizures, ataxia, dystonia etc, drugs like Metaclopramide, Domperidone etc, they are also dopamine 2 antagonists and affect things like anti diuretic hormone, which in turn affects the chemical balance in the human body. Chemical imbalances such as sodium channels which affect the heart and cause arrhythmia's misdiagnosed as unknown ALTEs, chemical imbalances that caused malignant hyperthermia, NMS and free water loss creating hypernatraemia, not to mention restting the osmostat and artificially creating diabetes insipidus and SIADH.

At this point I contacted some of the world's leading neuro-psychiatrists and neuroendicrinologists, who informed me that the ONLY reason these drugs came into being was because way way back people discovered that the devastating anti psychotic Thorazine, given to mental health patients, also stopped them from being sick, so they took certain chemicals from that drug and turned them into anti-emetics, trouble was, this did not remove the neuroleptic properties, which in turn led to all sorts of problems for babies, whose blood brain barrier was not sufficiently formed to keep out those chemicals. ( I am getting to the point promise!)

In 1997 I worked on the Louise Woodward case, from there I have always kept on researching alleged shaken baby cases. Why were we seeing all these babies infants and toddlers manifesting the triad all of a sudden, I wanted to know, so again, I approached the world's leading experts in neuropathology, neurology and genetics, they could not provide me with any answers, because you can't research this and you can't research it because you can't start shaking and impacting babies to see what happens. Guess what though, because of the anti-vivisectionists, you can't trial any of this on animals either. So, at the moment, we have underlying disorders or abuse, undiagnosed, all guess work because the animal activists are so potent in their campaigning that we cannot undertake just the one desperately needed trial on baby apes to see what actually does happen when you shake or impact a baby.

So, as a direct result of this, babies continue to die, from what, we don't know. And in my book, if it's a toss up between the baby or the bunny, the bunny gets it. And because of the anti-vivisectionists, many drugs that are given unlicensed to babies and children are actually being "tested" on them - so who are the child abusers in this scenario?

Wednesday, 17 December 2008

Suzanne Holdsworth

Jury sent home for the night, at 12 PM today the jury came back and requested the 999 tape, the video footage of the inside of Clare Fisher's house and the banisters that Suzanne is alleged to have bashed Kyles head against repeatedly - there was NO DNA evidence at all found on those banister's, not so much as a skin cell.

A stark reminder of what imprisoning innocent mothers does to their children

I am still mending my broken children, as are so many of the others. It's heartbreaking and there's nothing you can do other than catch them when they fall.
WOMEN IN CHAINS


You wear a mask to hide your pain
Hearts ripped apart there is no gain
A solitary tear begins it's fall
A small child's cry, unanswered call

Suffer little children come unto me
Motherless homes, lives of misery
Innocence protested upon deaf ears
Guilty verdicts erode the years

Where is the sense or the reason
The state committing an act of treason
Guiltless children torn apart
A judicial system with no heart

They're all so blind they will not see
In ivory towers, hypocrisy
The scales of justice are no more
It's all about winning,
the highest score


Human traffic that's the game
Cases won, media acclaim
No one answers the small child's cry
"My mummy's gone please tell me why"


A family unit shattered in one
It's all too late, the damage is done
And who will mend the broken child
That the 'law' has now defiled?


Penny Mellor HMP Foston Hall May 2002

Suzanne Holdsworth

http://itn.co.uk/news/befdceeceb3b5e2c2fbb73526faf0e2f.html


Jury in babysitter case retires
Updated 10.57 Wed Dec 17 2008
Keywords: suzanne holdsworth, babysitter, kyle fisher
A jury has retired to mull verdicts in the case of a babysitter accused of murdering a toddler.

Former supermarket worker Suzanne Holdsworth, 38, of Boggart Hill Drive, Seacroft, Leeds, is on trial for the second time charged with killing two-year-old Kyle Fisher in her home in Hartlepool in July 2004.

The prosecution alleges the mother-of-two repeatedly banged the little boy's head against the bannisters after snapping in a "fit of temper".

Holdsworth, who denies murder, was jailed for life for murder in 2005 but the Court of Appeal overturned the conviction in May - ruling it "unsafe" - and ordered a re-trial.

The trial at Teesside Crown Court heard evidence from medical experts, appearing for the defence, who said an epileptic seizure was most likely to have led to Kyle's death.

The defence also told the jury of eight men and four women that they could not be sure that Holdsworth inflicted the fatal blows on Kyle, blaming his mother Clare Fisher, now 24.

The jury have just been sent out Suzanne Holdsworth

Further developments will be posted as they emerge.

Police accused of a selective investigation Suzanne Holdsworth

I bet there was a "selective" investigation - wouldn't have anything to do with the SCR and the hidden evidence relating to the prior involvement of Social Services in the Fisher Family would it???? Wouldn't be that the Safeguarding Children's Board safeguarded themselves first and foremost would it???????????

ARGHHHHHHHH!!


http://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/3983140.Police_accused_of_a____selective_investigation___/





Police accused of a ‘selective investigation’

8:30am Wednesday 17th December 2008


By Karen Westcott »

POLICE have been accused of carrying out a “selective and flawed investigation”

into the death of a two-year-old.

Andrew Thomas, defending murderaccused Suzanne Holdsworth, told the Teesside Crown Court jury yesterday that the Crown Prosecution Service had only ever been given his client as a possible suspect.

The 38-year-old mother-of-two denies murdering Kyle Fisher while babysitting him at her then home in Millpool Close, Hartlepool, in July, 2004. She maintains he suffered a seizure.

However, she is accused of repeatedly ramming his head into the banister in a rage while looking after him for just over an hour, causing fatal brain swelling.

The prosecution has argued that Kyle would have collapsed no more than 15 minutes after suffering the head trauma – meaning Miss Holdsworth was the only possible suspect.

Andrew Robertson, prosecuting, said the curved and linear bruising on the toddler’s head matched the banister.

But during his final speech to the jury yesterday, Mr Thomas said he believed the bruising to Kyle’s head was not caused on the night he collapsed, but possibly the day before.

He reminded the jury that Kyle’s mother, Clare Fisher, of nearby Troutpool, Hartlepool, had noticed bruising on her son’s head during the morning of the day he collapsed. He said that as a teenage, single mother, she was unable to cope, suffered depression and was known to “mistreat” Kyle. He said she was the one with motive, adding that older, unexplained bruises on Kyle’s body meant she was the only “credible candidate” for causing the fatal injuries.

He said: “It was a selective, flawed investigation, which caused the prosecution to fix on a selective view of the facts to maintain the case against Suzanne Holdsworth. Suzanne Holdsworth was innocent and did nothing more than get involved because she cared.”

The court has accepted the toddler suffered three serious brain abnormalities, two of which left him pre-disposed to suffer from epileptic fits.

The defence has argued that Kyle suffered a serious head injury, possibly the day before he collapsed, which may have caused a slow bleed on his brain.

That, Mr Thomas claimed, could have triggered a massive epileptic fit, leading to brain swelling. Or, he said, the toddler could have simply had a second minor bang that night, which could have triggered the brain swelling.

He said: “Tragically, the two problems that Kyle had came together.”

The prosecution accused the defence of grasping at straws.

The jury is expected to consider a verdict today.

Tuesday, 16 December 2008

Clare Fisher's blog - Suzanne Holdsworth

Only one photo of a photo of Kyle,

http://viewmorepics.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewAlbums&friendID=209664457

She also states: "there's not many nights when I'm not out".

Just in case it's taken down I have saved it all.


http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=209664457


HI ALL, WELL WHAT CAN BE SAID ABOUT ME.....FISHER !!!! IM LOVED BY ALL BUT PROBABLY ANNOYING TO MOST TO LOL ONLY JOKING. IM A BIG GIRL WITH A BIG MOUTH, WHICH PROBABLY DESCRIBES ME BEST. I HAVE LOADS OF FANTASTIC MATES I.E PETER AND AIMEE ARE THE BESSIES BUT THERE IS LOADS I LOVE TO BITS XXXX I ABSOLUTELY LOVE SINGING, ITS A BIG PASSION OF MINE AND MY FAVOURITE SOME TO SING HAS TO BE BED OF ROSES, ITS BLOODY BRILLIANT LOL XX I LOVE TO DANCE, I SHOW THEM SKINNY GIRLS ALOT HOW BIG GIRLS DO MOVE LMFAO BUT I LOVE TO GO OUT TO PARTY !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THERE ISNT MANY NIGHTS IM NOT OUT TO BE HONEST LOL WELL I THINK IVE MENTIONED EVERYTHING BUT IF THERE IS SOMETHING THAT YOUR JUST DYING TO KNOW ABOUT FISHER, JUST DROP ME A MESSAGE OR A COMMENT AND ILL BE SURE I REPLY XXX TA TA FOR NOW XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Jurors given a choice of killers Suzanne Holdsworth

http://www.sunderlandecho.com/news/Jurors-given-a-choice-of.4795918.jp



Jurors given a choice of killers



« Previous « PreviousNext » Next »View GalleryPublished Date: 16 December 2008
Jurors have been given the stark choice of deciding whether a babysitter or the boy's own mother caused the severe head injuries which led to the death of two-year-old Kyle Fisher.

Closing speeches have started in the trial of Suzanne Holdsworth, who is accused of the murder of the Houghton youngster, she was minding while his teenage mother Clare Fisher went out drinking.

The prosecution claims at Teesside Crown Court thaADVERTISEMENTt Holdsworth battered his head against a wooden banister in a fit of temper at her home in Millpool Close, Hartlepool, in July 2004.

Holdsworth, now 38, has denied murder, and maintains the youngster unexpectedly suffered a fit and collapsed as they sat watching TV. Her defence team claim Kyle suffered an epileptic fit brought on by head injuries inflicted by his then-19-year-old mother 24 hours before his fatal collapse.

The court has heard that the youngster suffered a number of abnormalities with his brain which would have left him pre-disposed to epilepsy.

Andrew Robertson, QC, prosecuting, said: "The defence appear to be saying there was only one assault and that was on the Tuesday night. They say that was by Clare Fisher.

"There are only two possible candidates, Suzanne Holdsworth or the child's mother Clare Fisher."

Jury to decide who inflicted fatal blows Suzanne Holdsworth

Fatal in this case does not mean that the blows themselves killed Kyle, a fit killed him, why oh why did the police, social services and every other agency not do their job properly from the outset?

http://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/3980047.Jury_to_decide_who_inflicted_fatal_blows/






Jury to decide who inflicted fatal blows

8:08am Tuesday 16th December 2008

By Karen Westcott »

THE jury in the trial of a murdered two-year-old boy was told last night to decide if it was his mother or babysitter who inflicted the fatal blows.

Andrew Robertson, prosecuting, told Teesside Crown Court that he believed babysitter Suzanne Holdsworth had repeatedly rammed Kyle Fisher’s head into the banister at her home in a fit of rage.

However, Andrew Thomas, defending, said there was nothing to suggest that Miss Holdsworth had done anything but love and look after the “mistreated” child. He told the jury to look to Kyle’s teenage, single mother, Clare Fisher, when considering how the toddler had received severe bruising to his head and other parts of his body.

Holdsworth, a 38-year-old mother-of-two who denies murder, had been looking after Kyle at her home in Millpool Close, Hartlepool, for just over an hour when he collapsed and fell unconscious on July 21, 2004.

He died two days later after suffering a bleed in his skull and brain swelling, caused, the prosecution said, by severe head trauma no more than 15 minutes earlier.

Bruises on his shoulders and under his chin were caused by a gripping motion, Mr Robertson claimed.

He said: “The reality, in our submission, can only be that Miss Holdsworth caused the injuries.”

The court has accepted that Kyle suffered from three preexisting brain abnormalities, two of which could have left him pre-disposed to suffer epileptic fits.

Mr Thomas argued that Kyle may have suffered a head injury in the hours and days before he collapsed, causing a slow bleed in his skull.

A secondary, very minor impact to his head while he was at Miss Holdworth’s house could then have triggered an epileptic fit and fatal swelling.

He said Miss Fisher was suffering from depression at the time and was unable to cope with the demands of a toddler.

Her house was untidy, neighbours complained of loud music at night, and days before Kyle died, she “mistreated”

him by leaving him home alone while out with friends. He also said there were older bruises on Kyle when he died, consistent with rough handling.

And he submitted that when her mother, Linda Fisher, went away on holiday, the pressure of looking after Kyle alone became too great.

He said: “It is Clare Fisher who is the credible candidate for attacking Kyle in this case.”

The jury is expected to consider a verdict today.

Monday, 15 December 2008

Suzanne Holdsworth NOT GUILTY

The verdict has come in on Suzanne's case, NOT GUILTY no doubt there will be a media furore, some claiming to have "solved" the case, some reporting on "how could this happen again", the Clark and Cannings cases being cited as other examples along with the shaken baby appeals.



First of all without Suzanne and Lee continually protesting her innocence, there would have been no appeal or retrial and believe me, given the incentives to cop a plea, lesser sentences and early release dates, it's no mean feat to hold on to that truth and shout it from the rooftops, not to mention how much attention that attracts for the family bringing a whole new set of problems.



So before everyone takes title to this case, let me make it clear, Suzanne, Lee, Jamie-lee and Leslie are the true heroes.



Secondly, Suzanne has had the benefit of an outstanding legal team, a legal team who have a particular expertise in cases like this, their appointment of experts for the defence was a very carefully thought through and absolutely brilliant process in which they ensured that they instructed the very best experts in the world with regard to Kyle's brain conditions. I take my hat off to Campbell Malone, Peter Wilcock (from my favourite Chambers, Tooks who was also Ian Gay's barrister) and the absolutely outstanding silk Andrew Thomas, who inherited this case only weeks before the retrial started and has been able to absorb and present this very complex medical case in such a short space of time; fearless in the face of a very difficult job, genius in its presentation to the jury, these are the sort of lawyers that make our legal system the very best in the world.



Thirdly I want to thank the jury for their diligence in a case that at times must have been very hard for them emotionally, these are the hardest cases to listen to. So thank you from the bottom of my heart.



Finally, I have to thank the media for highlighting this case, this, however is their job and without the cooperation of the above, they would not have this case, they also have more money to chuck around than the defence, who are on a very tight legally aided budget, so are able to cherry pick which bits of a case they investigate.



Sue, Lee and the children, live your lives for today from now on, it has been an absolute pleasure working with you all and this is yet another friendship that will only go onto grow.



May Kyle now rest in peace in your hearts, I know how much you all loved him and I hope that now you will have time to grieve for the little boy you cared for and nurtured, who became so much part of your wonderful family and whose short life was so much more enhanced because of you all. Never forget that and hold onto the knowledge that nothing you could have done would have saved his life, so remember the good times you had with him and live your lives with the happy memories, not those that have been created by the system.



Love you all XXX

"Brain Flaws killed Kyle" Suzanne Holdsworth

The eminently qualified Professor Dobyns, who I might add, along with Professor Renzo Guerrini and Waney Squier have more years of experience and qualifications than the entire prosecution team put together, state that Kyles brain was, in laymen's terms, a ticking bomb.

It's sad that our NHS does not have the sort of expertise that the USA has, I don't know of any doctor here in the UK that has four sub specialities on top of their consultancy in paediatrics, you're lucky if they have one!

http://www.hartlepoolmail.co.uk/news/39Brain-flaws-killed-Kyle39.4789780.jp


'Brain flaws killed Kyle'


Kyle Fisher

12 December 2008

By Paul Watson


AN acclaimed American professor has told how he has never come across such a combination of brain abnormalities as those suffered by tragic two-year-old Kyle Fisher.


Professor William Dobyns flew in from Chicago to give evidence at the trial of babysitter Suzanne Hosldsworth, who is accused of the youngster's murder.

He added his weight to claims by other leading experts that the youngster was not murdered by Holdsworth, but died from an epileptic fit brought on by his abnormal brain.

Yesterday, Professor Dobyns, of the University of Chicago, said a fit would have caused the severe brain swelling which led to Kyle's death.

Professor Dobyns said that as he read medical reports and post mortem results in the wake of Kyle's death he became aware of the complexity of the youngster's existing brain problems.

He told the court: "With every page I read I found one abnormality after another, after another, after another.

"In my studies of 4,000 children with developmental problems I have never seen this combination before."

A jury has heard that Holdsworth, 38, allegedly murdered the youngster by banging his head against a wooden banister in a fit of rage while she minded him at her home in Millpool Close, Hartlepool, in July 2004.

The jury of eight men and four women at Teesside Crown Court have been told that Kyle suffered from a number of abnormalities to his brain, any of which could have caused him to have an unexpected seizure

World-leading epilepsy experts have already told the court that such a seizure was the likely cause of his collapse at Holdsworth's home while the two sat on the sofa watching television.


The court was told that Professor Dobyns has penned more than 180 publications and works in the fields of human genetics, neurology and paediatrics.

He told the court: "At the time of the epileptic fit Kyle had a brain that was vulnerable and was simply unable to cope.

"His brain was so vulnerable because of so-many pre-disposing features that he had."


Teesside Crown Court has heard that Holdsworth, now of Boggart Hill Drive, Secaroft, Leeds, was convicted of Kyle's murder in 2005 and the current hearing is a re-trial ordered by the Court of Appeal earlier this year.

The defence case is nearing its end and the trial, which got underway on Decemebr 1, is expected to end around the middle of next week.


The full article contains 411 words and appears in n/a newspaper.

Saturday, 13 December 2008

Professor William Dobyns Seizure Killed Kyle - Suzanne Holdsworh

http://www.gazettelive.co.uk/news/teesside-news/2008/12/13/professor-tells-court-seizure-could-have-killed-kyle-fisher-84229-22468500/


Professor tells court, seizure could have killed Kyle Fisher


Dec 13 2008 by Gareth Lightfoot, Evening Gazette







A CHICAGO professor has rejected the assertion that toddler Kyle Fisher can only have died by blows to the head the night he collapsed.


Professor William Dobyns, University of Chicago professor in human genetics, neurology and paediatrics, gave evidence at Teesside Crown Court yesterday.


He is the latest international expert called by the defence for Suzanne Holdsworth, 38.

She is accused of killing the two-year-old Kyle by banging his head against her banisters on July 21, 2004.

The Crown say the boy must have suffered his fatal injuries while alone with the mum-of-two who was babysitting him at her home on Millpool Close, Hartlepool.

The case was put to the professor that the only possible explanation of Kyle’s fatal collapse from brain swelling was a further trauma to the head.

Defence barrister Andrew Thomas QC asked Prof Dobyns: “Do you accept that?” He replied: “No, not at all.


“The idea that he had a severe trauma to his head and brain on that day just doesn’t fit with the information.



“I believe that a direct blow to the brain causing the brain swelling and death is simply not an appropriate conclusion at all.”



In contrast, he said, the swelling was “perfectly consistent” with pressure from water on the brain combined with an epileptic seizure.


He told jurors there was nothing pointing away from that explanation.


He said Kyle had five brain conditions pre-disposing him to epilepsy - nerve cells in the wrong place, bleeding, scarring, a large coin-sized hole in his skull and a large brain.

“I have not seen this exact combination before. It is very, very rare,” he added.

“I found one abnormality after another after another. I’ve listed seven or eight abnormalities this boy had. Each one is totally separate.”

He said the “striking” factors combined made Kyle’s brain “very, very vulnerable to the problems of pressure and (it) simply wasn’t able to cope”.

“I think that explains why the boy went so quickly. His brain was so vulnerable because of so many pre-disposing factors that he had.”

He added: “The pathological findings are incontrovertible.”



A prolonged fit, which he said would have lasted for a minimum of 11 minutes, could have caused fatal brain swelling, said the professor.

“There is no question that it could,” he added.

He said Kyle’s brain injuries did not follow the typical pattern for traumatic damage.


Holdsworth, 38, now of Boggart Hill Drive, Seacroft, Leeds, denies murder.

Proceeding.

Friday, 12 December 2008

Suzanne Holdsworth



Funny the "expert" for the prosecution was Dr Christopher Rittey (previously infamously written up in The Pillow, MAMA's play) whose qualifications are below:


So why hasn't he got his MRCP, why isn't he on the specialist reg, nor on the RCPCH A list for CPD?



Details Help

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Results of search on: 12 Dec 2008 at 13:46:02. The details shown are valid at the date and time of the search only.


GMC Reference Number 2623942
Given Names Christopher Donald Clement
Surname Rittey
Gender Man

Registration Status Registered








More Details

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Primary Medical Qualification
MB ChB 1982 University of Edinburgh


Provisional Registration Date 26 Jul 1982
Full Registration Date 01 Aug 1983



Specialist Register entry date This doctor is not in the Specialist Register

GP Register entry date This doctor is not in the GP Register

Information for Employers Details






'It was fit that killed Kyle'


Kyle Fisher

December 2008

By Paul Watson


MEDICAL experts believe an epileptic seizure most likely led to the death of two-year-old Kyle Fisher who was allegedly murdered by his babysitter.
The court has heard how the tragic youngster suffered a fit and died a few days later from severe brain swelling having never regained consciousness.

Suzanne Holdsworth, now 38, has denied murdering him at her home in Millpool Close, Hartlepool, on the Central estate, in July 2004.

The court has been told that she repeatedly banged his head against a wooden banister in a "fit of temper" while minding him when his teenage single mother Clare Fisher went out drinking.

Holdsworth has maintained that Kyle suddenly "went floppy" and collapsed as they sat on her sofa watching television.

Professor Wainey Squier, who is currently at the University of Oxford, was brought in by Holdsworth's defence team because of her expertise.

It was put to her in court yesterday that the prosecution case is that the youngster had to have died from injuries caused by the banister
Professor Squier, who the court was told had an "illustrious career" said: "I can't exclude that, but I think it would fly in the face of a large amount of clinical evidence to say that it is the only possibility.

"In my opinion, an epileptic seizure would be far more likely."
The court has heard that Kyle suffered from a number of pre-exisiting brain abnormalities, some of which even on their own, would have left him pre-disposed to epilepsy.

The jury of eight men and four women were told that 80 per cent of children with any one of the abnormalities would develop epilepsy.
Professor Squier added: "I have never seen a brain where all of these features have come together.

"It is quite unique.

"This case is incredibly complicated, there are so many factors involved."

Professor Renzo Guerrini, a paediatric neurologist at the University of Florence Children's Hospital, flew in from Italy to give evidence yesterday.

The court heard he has helped write guidelines on paediatric epilepsy for the World Health Organisation, has held numerous posts including Professor at Kings College, London, Professor at Great Ormond Street and currently sits on numerous international committees.


Professor Guerrini said of the youngster's brain abnormalities: "I am not aware of such a patient reported in any medical literature.

"There's a really high chance for a child having this combination of features to have epileptic seizures."

He said that Holdsworth's description of Kyle's symptoms when she rang 999 saying he was floppy, hitting himself and drifting in and out of consciousness matched such a fit.

When asked by defence barrister Andrew Thomas: "Is it conceivable that a member of the public could invent a description like that?" he replied "No".

The court has heard that the youngster had bruising and marks to his head. But her defence has claimed that they were inflicted the previous day and coupled with his brain abnormalities led to the unexpected fit on Wednesday July 21.

Professor Guerrini was asked by Mr Thomas: "What is the scenario that caused Kyle to collapse that evening?"

He told the court: "In my opinion there is compelling evidence he had some head injury before this night which might have been trivial but sufficient enough to produce bleeding on the brain which triggered the epileptic seizure which because of Kyle's brain condition was possibly prolonged."

Teesside Crown Court heard that Holdsworth, now of Boggart Hill Drive, in Seacroft, Leeds, was convicted of Kyle's murder in 2005 and the current hearing is a re-trial following a ruling by the Court of Appeal earlier this year.

Kyle Fisher brain "unique"

Holdsworth Trial: Kyle's death unique say experts


Dec 12 2008 by Gareth Lightfoot, Evening Gazette

THE death of a Teesside toddler is a unique case which may be beyond the current knowledge of medical science, a murder trial jury heard.


Teesside Crown Court has heard from experts called by the defence of babysitter Suzanne Holdsworth.

She denies murdering two-year-old Kyle Fisher by hitting his head against banisters at her home on Millpool Close, Hartlepool in July 2004.

Consultant neuro-pathologist Dr Wainey Squier, a clinical lecturer at the University of Oxford, said she had never seen a child with the same combination of problems.

She could find no medical journals with cases comparable to Kyle’s.

"I think this case is incredibly complicated. There are so many factors it’s very difficult to tease out which individual pathway to follow.

"It’s a very abnormal brain and a number of factors operating in the last period of Kyle’s life.

"I’ve never seen a brain where all of these factors have come together. So it is quite unique."


She said Kyle had at least four reasons to be susceptible to epilepsy and two to be more vulnerable to brain swelling.

She said a prolonged epileptic seizure could have caused fatal brain swelling in Kyle, and she saw nothing in the case to prove otherwise.


The prosecution have said that the only conceivable explanation for Kyle’s brain swelling is that he suffered a trauma the night he collapsed in Holdsworth’s sole care.

Dr Squier said: "One certainly can’t exclude that as a possibility but I think it would fly in the face of a huge amount of clinical evidence to say that that is the only possibility.

"In my opinion an epileptic seizure would be far more likely."

She said it was likely Kyle suffered bleeding over the brain the night before he collapsed, which, along with his other brain difficulties, caused a fit the next day, leading to fatal brain swelling.


Professor Derrick Pounder, forensic pathologist and professor of forensic medicine at the University of Dundee, said Kyle’s head bruises were the result of blunt force trauma requiring moderate force.

But he said he was "highly sceptical" that the banisters at Holdsworth’s home were the cause of the marks.

"That’s not the only explanation and I’m highly sceptical that it’s the correct explanation," he told the court.

He added there was no evidence proving Kyle’s injuries were caused in the time window alleged by the Crown.

He could not give an age for the bruises, some of which, the court heard, would have needed up to 11 impacts, or say whether they were inflicted on one or more occasions.

He said original pathologist Dr James Sunter’s theory of Kyle having his head rammed into banisters was an initially logical thought.

"But in exploring that thought, there should have been a more critical appraisal of whether it was truly possible."

He said no definite cause could be given for Kyle’s bruises.

He attributed some bruises to Kyle’s body to "rough handling" taking place about a week before death, and could not rule out resuscitation as a possible cause for jawline marks.


Professor Renzo Guerrini, a professor of paediatric neurology and international specialist in epilepsy in children, said he had never treated or seen in medical literature a patient with the same combination of findings.

He said an epileptic fit was the most likely possibility given Holdsworth’s description of Kyle’s collapse in a 999 call, and was consistent with a prolonged seizure.

He said Kyle went in a comatose state and never recovered, "but the dynamics which have produced that are impossible to disentangle in a very clear manner".

He suggested Kyle had a head injury, which might have been trivial but produced bleeding over the brain, which later triggered a seizure leading to brain swelling.

The professor indicated that Kyle’s precise situation was not currently in the knowledge of medical science.


Holdsworth, 38, now of Boggart Hill Drive, Seacroft, Leeds, denies murder.

Lucid intervals, small bangs on the head and epilepsy death

Here was a child that fell, banged his head, was checked by medics and given the all clear and went on to die from a fit hours later. Yet in Holdsworth several experts for the prosecution claim that for Kyle to have the fit and die, the alleged head injuries would have occurred just prior to the fit. Shows you how the prosecution will make square pegs fit round holes doesn't it!


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1028001/Parents-held-murder-young-son-paramedics-failed-spot-playground-injury-killed-him.html


Parents held for murder of their son after paramedics 'failed to spot playground injury that killed him'


By Liz Hull
Last updated at 11:19 PM on 20th June 2008



Lewis Urmston-Brown died hours after banging his head in a playground accident


When two-year-old Lewis Urmson-Brown died just hours after falling in a playground, his parents were left devastated.

But Michelle Urmson and Chris Brown suffered a double agony when, a short time later, police wrongly accused them of killing their son.

They were arrested and led from their home in handcuffs before being locked in a cell.

The couple were released only after around 45 hours of questioning when officers determined their son's death had been a tragic accident.

Yesterday, the couple criticised paramedics who gave Lewis the all-clear without taking him to hospital. He died eight hours later after suffering a suspected fit in his sleep.


Mr Brown, 41, a security guard, said: 'Not only did our son die, but we were then accused of killing him and all because ambulance staff failed to do their job.

'If they had given him a decent examination, they would have realised he needed hospital treatment and he would still be alive.

'They did not examine him properly. It was a two-minute job and they were off. It was like it was all too much trouble and they could not wait to get away. It's an absolute outrage.

'Lewis should still be alive today, but instead he has gone and our lives are shattered.'

The accident happened at 7.30pm last Sunday as Lewis was playing in a small park close to his home, in Runcorn, Cheshire. After seeing him tumble off railings and bang his head, 39-year-old Miss Urmson dialled 999.

Paramedics examined Lewis but gave him the all-clear after deciding he did not need to go to hospital.

The couple, who also have a four-month-old son, put their children to bed as normal, but woke up in the early hours to find Lewis unconscious and frothing at the mouth.

He was taken to Warrington General Hospital, where he died a short time later. Police arrived at their home at 6.30am next day to arrest them.

Although Miss Urmson was released on police bail shortly before 8pm, Mr Brown was forced to spend a night in the cells and was finally let out without charge at around 2pm last Tuesday.

Miss Urmson's bail has since been cancelled.

Fighting back tears, Miss Urmson, who has two older sons from previous relationships, said: 'I'd only just learned I had lost my son, and the next minute I was being arrested on suspicion of killing him.

'I can't explain the horror of it. It was a living nightmare. My body went numb and I collapsed. To think I could hurt my precious boy makes me feel physically sick.'

Mr Brown said the couple are planning to sue the ambulance service for alleged negligence.

'Lewis was such a loveable boy who always had a cheeky smile on his face,' he added.

'He never had any health problems, this came completely out of the blue. We were certain he was hurt in the accident.

'The paramedics could have done tests at the hospital and his internal injuries would have shown up and he could have got treatment to save his life.

'We have such terrible mixed emotions of sorrow and anger, firstly at the way Lewis was left to die and then because we were accused of killing our beautiful son. It is criminal what they did.'

A spokesman for North West Ambulance Service said an investigation has been launched into this incident.

A Cheshire Police spokesman confirmed that no action is being taken against Miss Urmson or Mr Brown, and that a file has been passed to the coroner.

Suzanne Holdsworth

Kyle wasn't Suzanne's child, it defies logic that she would agree to babysit if she didn't want to do it, she was under no obligation to care for Kyle and the jury are being asked to believe that not only did she lose her temper to the extent that she harmed Kyle with no previous history of any violence towards anyone let alone a child, they are also being asked to believe that on the night in question she was so fed up with him, she attacked him having agreed to look after him?


http://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/3970668.Brain_specialist_gives_evidence_to_toddler_murder_trial/





Brain specialist gives evidence to toddler murder trial


9:00pm Thursday 11th December 2008

By Neil Hunter »

A BRAIN specialist has told a murder trial jury that the head injury which killed a toddler might not have been caused by him being assaulted by his babysitter or anyone else.

Dr Wainey Squier said the prosecution's case that Kyle Fisher was repeatedly banged against a banister "would fly in the face of a large amount of clinical evidence".


Babysitter Suzanne Holdsworth is facing a retrial at Teesside Crown Court, accused of the murder of the two-year-old at her home in Hartlepool in the summer of 2004.

On the eighth day of the case today, Dr Squier, a consultant neuro-pathologist, was called by the defence to give evidence based on her 24 years' experience.

She said that she could not agree with the assertion that Kyle's injuries could only have been caused by him having his head smashed against the wooden stair-rail.

Dr Squier, now based at the University of Oxford, told the jury of eight men and four women that her opinion was that an epileptic seizure was "far more likely".


Kyle collapsed at Ms Holdsworth's home on the Central Estate while his mother, Clare, had a night out with friends, and died in hospital two days later.

The prosecution alleges that the former shelf-stacker lost her temper with the toddler as she babysat him, but her defence team suggests his injuries were caused by a fit.

The jury is tomorrow expected to hear from an expert who is flying in from the US to give evidence to support mother-of-two Ms Holdsworth's version of events.

The case continues.

Thursday, 11 December 2008

Wayne Squier Neuropathologist Suzanne Holdsworth

http://www.bbc.co.uk/mediaselector/check/player/nol/newsid_7130000/newsid_7130000?redirect=7130078.stm&news=1&nbram=1&nbwm=1&bbwm=1&bbram=1

Clare Fisher neighbour "offered to adopt Kyle"

http://www.gazettelive.co.uk/news/teesside-news/2008/12/11/holdsworth-trial-babysitter-denies-losing-temper-84229-22454613/



Just how bad was it that a neighbour would think to make that offer?

Holdsworth trial: Babysitter denies losing temper

Dec 11 2008 by Gareth Lightfoot, Evening Gazette

A MURDER trial jury heard a babysitter deny losing her temper and assaulting the toddler she was looking after.


Two-year-old Kyle Fisher collapsed while under the care of babysitter Suzanne Holdsworth at her home on Millpool Close, Hartlepool.

She is accused of causing his fatal injuries by attacking him on July 21, 2004. He died in hospital two days later.

At Teesside Crown Court yesterday prosecutor Andrew Robertson QC asked her: “The reason for him having that fit was that you have banged his head so hard in a short space of time that his brain started to swell, causing him to collapse to the ground. That’s what happened, isn’t it?”

“No,” Holdsworth replied.

Mr Robertson alleged that the mum-of-two also lost her temper with the boy while babysitting him the previous night.

“Sadly, Mrs Holdsworth, you lost your temper with Kyle on two occasions and that’s the sad truth of this case,” added the barrister. Holdsworth denied this.

She also denied allegations that she despised, bullied, dominated and manipulated the child’s single mother, then 19-year-old Clare Fisher.

Holdsworth said she didn’t like the way Miss Fisher lived, and once threatened to punch her in the mouth if she did not clean up her home across the road, but told jurors: “I never took advantage of her.”

She agreed that the mother loved Kyle “with all her heart”, and denied trying to “pass the blame to Miss Fisher.

Mum-of-four Kathy Cassenelli, Clare Fisher’s next door neighbour at the time, said Holdsworth was “straight-forward” in general and “strict but fair” with her own children.

She said Clare Fisher loved Kyle but she struggled as a single mum and “couldn’t be bothered” with some motherhood roles.

She said she offered to adopt Kyle and that she and Holdsworth could help if Miss Fisher was not coping.

Holdsworth, now of Boggart Hill Drive, Seacroft, Leeds, denies murder.

Proceeding

Epilepsy Kyle Fisher


What are the symptoms?

People with epilepsy have recurrent seizures. There are about 40 different types and common ones include:

Generalised tonic-clonic (previously called grand mal) - loss of consciousness; person falls down; body stiffens; starts to jerk uncontrollably


Generalised absence (previously called petit mal) - brief loss of consciousness; doesn't fall down; usually no abnormal movements; person appears as if they're daydreaming

Simple partial - person fully aware; abnormal twitching movement of part of the body, for example, head, eyes, hand or arm, or tingling sensation; person may sense odd smells, sounds or tastes

Complex partial - person experiences odd tastes or smells or déjà-vu; dream-like state follows; during an attack, lip smacking, grimacing or fidgeting may occur; can be followed by generalised seizure


What causes it?

For six out of ten people with epilepsy, the underlying cause isn't clear. Epilepsy isn't a disease or a mental illness.

Epilepsy may develop after damage or injury to the brain caused by infection, a stroke, a brain tumour or scarring from a head injury. Predisposition to seizures can run in families.




LONDON (Reuters) - A babysitter jailed for life three years ago for murdering her neighbour's two-year-old son by battering his head against a banister will be retried, three judges ruled on Thursday.

The conviction of Suzanne Holdsworth, 37, was quashed by the Court of Appeal in the light of new medical evidence.

Holdsworth had denied murdering Kyle Fisher at her home in Hartlepool in July 2004.

On Thursday, the appeal judges, led by Lord Justice Roger Toulson, accepted defence arguments that prosecution medical evidence had been potentially misleading.


Her legal team told the court the boy's death was possibly caused by an epileptic seizure triggered by a previous eye injury.


The judges said that in the interests of justice, the fresh medical evidence had to be considered before a new jury.

"We do not consider that we can safely dismiss the medical scenario advanced on (Holdsworth's) behalf as definitely incredible," they said.