Wednesday, September 11, 2024 - A UK-based African nurse who left her ten-week-old baby to die while she went to work at a hospital has been jailed for three years.
Mother, Ruth Auta, 28, abandoned Joshua Akerele in her
nurse's accommodation for eight hours so she could work her shift on December
20, 2022, Mail Online reports.
When she returned from work, she found her son lifeless in
his cot and dialled 999, telling operators her son was not breathing.
The infant was pronounced dead an hour later with tests
showing he may have 'overheated' due to the layers of clothing and bedding he
was wrapped in.
Auta initially told the police that she had collected Joshua
from a childminder after she finished work, took him back home, fed him, placed
him on her bed, and then fell asleep next to him.
She claimed that when she woke up, she found him
unresponsive.
Later in her police interview, Auta gave no comment to
questions asked and was freed on bail pending further investigation.
Auta was charged after police found CCTV of her leaving and
entering her accommodation without Joshua on the day of the tragedy.
Officers also discovered incriminating texts in which she
urged her childminder to say she was looking after Joshua that day.
The childminder told officers she had not seen the infant
for a number of days.
Auta was charged with cruelty to a child and pleaded guilty
at Manchester Magistrates' court on May 24, 2024, with her case adjourned by a
month for sentence.
On June 6, the nurse who worked at Royal Bolton Hospital
tried to flee the country. But was detained at Gatwick while attempting to
board the flight to her home in Nigeria, having purchased a one-way ticket.
Auta was sentenced to three years in jail when she appeared
at Bolton Crown Court on 10 September.
Sara Davie, District Crown Prosecutor for CPS North West
said: 'Whilst she went to work to provide care for other people, Ruth Auta left
the very person who needed her care the most home alone.
'As a nurse, she should have known the dangers of leaving
her baby unattended. As she begins her sentence, she must now live with the
consequences of the terrible decision she made that day.
'Auta has failed to show remorse throughout the case. She
misled police about her childcare arrangements and then tried to evade justice
by attempting to flee the country.
'Our thoughts and sympathies are with all those who been
affected by Joshua's death.'
Prosecutors said she left her nurse's accommodation shortly
after 6.30am to carry out her shift leaving behind her Joshua.
At 3.24 pm Auta called for an ambulance reporting that her
son was not breathing.
Despite attempts to resuscitate him, Joshua could not be
saved and was pronounced dead at 4.40pm.
An inquest into Joshua's death was opened and adjourned in
Bolton in January this year.
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