Published Monday, 08 October 2012
We’re sorry. This video is unavailable from your location.
Are you in Northern Ireland?
1. Why is my postcode required?
We are asking you to insert your postcode before watching some videos to confirm
you can access the video content via u.tv.
This is because some videos on u.tv
are only available in Northern Ireland.
Don't worry, we won't store or use this information for any other purpose.
If you are not in Northern Ireland, the content may be available to watch at itv.com or stv.tv.
2. Why am I directed to itv.com
or stv.tv when I try to view certain
clips?
The videos, which are not available on u.tv
to users outside Northern Ireland, will be available to those users on itv.com (for users in England and Wales) or stv.tv (for most users in Scotland).
We need to know where you are in order to make sure you are getting the right content.
If you think we've got your location wrong, then please
click here.
Need more help? Contact us
On Monday at Dungannon Crown Court both defendants burst into tears on different occasions as further evidence surrounding the 15-month-old infant's death in December 2009 unfolded.
Millie's grandmother, Margaret Graham, and others in the public gallery were also driven to tears at some aspects of the evidence, while for others it appeared all too much, and they fled the court.
Millie's 27-year-old mother Rachael Martin, from Main Street, Kesh, Co Fermanagh denies failing to protect her daughter from the unlawful act that caused her death and with wilfully neglecting her in a manner likely to cause unnecessary suffering.
She first wept as a consultant paediatrician told of how the toddler, described as being "a dancer" at home just the day before, had turned into the limp floppy child she had found at the Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children.
Rachael Martin openly wept again, as did her mother Margaret, sitting just feet behind her in the public gallery, as Dr Mairead McGinn told how both mother and daughter became distressed on being told baby Mille was brain dead and would never be revived.
Dr Maginn said at this point Rachael turned to her mum asking: "How am I going to live without her?"
Earlier her former partner 32-year-old Barry Michael McCarney from Woodview Crescent, Trillick, who denies her murder, buried his head in his hands and wept as the court was shown CCTV clips.
One of the clips showed him running into the Erne Hospital's A&E department with the infant wrapped in a blanket in his arms.
The trial continues.