A senior social worker has told a hearing a colleague involved in the case of murdered Fife toddler Liam Fee was “disorganised and chaotic”.

Lesley Bate faces 13 charges over her role with Fife Council between 2011 and 2014.

Mrs Bate has chosen not to appear before the Scottish Social Services Council (SSSC) conduct sub-committee.

She was a member of the Glenrothes Child Protection Team who managed Liam Fee’s case.

Read more: Liam Fee murder: Child killers Nyomi and Rachel Fee jailed for 47 and a half years for the murder of toddler Liam

Two-year-old Liam was murdered by his mother and her partner at their home in Thornton, Fife, in March 2014.

It is alleged Mrs Bate failed to follow up referrals more than a year earlier about bruising to Liam’s face and a sore neck.

The charges against Mrs Bate relate to 16 different children.

The committee heard in the months following Liam’s death, Mrs Bate had been under a disciplinary investigation and had been off sick.

When she returned she was moved to the Children and Families Team based in Dunfermline.

Her manager James Ross told the hearing he tried to “help and support” her on her return, but her work was “poor”.

Mr Ross said she was given a case to handle in which the father of an unborn child had been charged with 21 offences of domestic and sexual violence against women.

However, Mrs Bate neglected to mention that in a report going before an Initial Child Protection Case Conference.

In a further case, Mrs Bate dropped a letter outside her office building containing “the most sensitive information possible” about children she was working with – a document later found in the street by a neighbour.

Mr Ross said: “There had been a lengthy investigation into her work before she came to my team.

“That had concluded she be given an opportunity to practise elsewhere in the service.

Read more: Liam Fee murder: Child killers Nyomi and Rachel Fee jailed for 47 and a half years for the murder of toddler Liam

“She was probably the most erratic person I have worked with.

“She was fine when there was no work to be undertaken – but the minute anything was required she failed to undertake it.”

He added: “She absolutely could not understand risk at that point and I had a real concern about her visiting families and drawing a conclusion about what the information was telling her.

“I constantly tidied up for her because I wanted the children to be safe.”

The hearing was told Mrs Bate has relinquished her registration as a social worker with the SSSC but does not admit any of the charges against her.

The hearing continues at the SSSC headquarters in Dundee.