Peter Connelly died with more than 50 injuries Two independent reports into the death of the north London baby, Peter Connelly, are being published in full later on Tuesday.
Known as serious case reviews, the reports may provide more detail about the failure of Haringey Social Services to protect the toddler.
Baby Peter died after months of abuse in August 2007.
His mother, her boyfriend and a lodger at the family home are serving prison terms for failing to protect the boy.
The 17-month-old boy had suffered more than 50 injuries, and had been visited 60 times by the authorities over the previous eight months.
Serious case reviews are carried out when a child dies of suspected abuse and are supposed to reveal what went wrong.
Their publication “in full” follows on from a Conservative Party pledge to do so. The aim is to make officials involved in child protection more accountable to the public.
The first review was an internal investigation completed by Haringey Social Services. Snippets of this report have been released, but it was later found to be “inadequate” by government inspectors – so a second one was undertaken.
Parts of that report, the executive summary and conclusion, has been published and it revealed there were six opportunities to save the toddler’s life.
It is thought the full disclosure of both reviews will provide more detail about the failure of social workers to protect him.
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