Sunday, November 17, 2024

Clemency bid rejected for Texas man set to be first executed in U.S. for ‘shaken baby’ death

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A Texas board rejected recommending clemency Wednesday for a condemned man who would be the first in the country to be executed for a case of “shaken baby syndrome.”

Robert Roberson, 57, is scheduled to die by lethal injection Thursday after having lost a string of appeals, including one Tuesday when a district judge declined to vacate his execution warrant. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals also refused another request to halt his execution Wednesday, as it did last week.

Roberson’s fate would have been in the hands of Gov. Greg Abbott, who has the power to commute death sentences if the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles recommends doing so. Abbott can still grant a one-time 30-day reprieve to postpone the execution even though the board has denied a clemency bid. The U.S. Supreme Court can also block an execution at the final hour, which it rarely does.

Roberson’s lawyer, Gretchen Sween, said in a statement Wednesday that his legal team will ask Abbott to grant a reprieve so the courts can “hear the overwhelming new medical and scientific evidence” that Roberson’s daughter, Nikki, died of natural causes and not abuse in 2002, when she was 2 years old.

“We pray that Gov. Abbott does everything in his power to prevent the tragic, irreversible mistake of executing an innocent man,” Sween said.

The board’s unanimous decision came as a committee of Texas lawmakers met Wednesday to hear testimony about Roberson’s case and discuss how a state law that allows for reviews of convictions based on so-called junk science could be invoked to delay his execution until the end of the 2025 legislative session.

In an interview from prison this month with NBC News anchor Lester Holt, Roberson urged Abbott to pardon him and “let me go home.”

“I would like the public to know that I’m innocent,” he said. “I’m not guilty of this.”

With his execution looming, Roberson’s case is a flashpoint in the ongoing debate over shaken baby syndrome and the broader implications of outdated medical science in criminal convictions.

He has steadfastly maintained his innocence in Nikki’s death after doctors and law enforcement quickly decided she was killed as a result of a violent shaking episode.

Prosecutors argued that Nikki must have been shaken to death because she had been diagnosed with “the triad” — a swollen and bleeding brain and retinal hemorrhaging — symptoms once believed to be indisputable evidence of shaken baby syndrome.

However, since Roberson was convicted in 2003, the science behind the triad’s being a sole diagnosis of abuse has come under intense scrutiny.

In 2009, the American Academy of Pediatrics changed the name of shaken baby syndrome to the more broadly defined “abusive head trauma” to include injuries caused by mechanisms other than shaking alone.

It is now medical consensus that the symptoms associated with shaken baby syndrome can also be caused by other medical conditions, including infections, accidental trauma and pre-existing illnesses.

The uncertainty surrounding shaken baby syndrome has also led to re-evaluations of many criminal cases. Since 1992, the convictions of at least 34 people in the U.S. have been vacated when allegations of shaken baby syndrome or abusive head trauma were a factor, according to the National Registry of Exonerations, which tracks sentences for wrongful convictions.

Roberson said that in January 2002, he and Nikki fell asleep in their east Texas home and that he later awoke after he heard a sound and found that she had fallen out of bed, according to court documents.

Later that morning, when Roberson discovered his daughter was unconscious and her lips were blue, he rushed her to a local emergency room. Roberson showed little emotion at the hospital, which furthered law enforcement’s suspicions.

Within a day, a Palestine police detective arrested Roberson on a capital murder charge.

The jury in Roberson’s trial never heard the extent of how sick Nikki was from the day she was born, nor that she’d been to the hospital more than 40 times in her short life. Two days before she died, she registered a 104.5-degree fever at the doctor’s office. She was sent home with a medication that has since been deemed too dangerous for children — a drug that now carries a “black box warning” from the Food and Drug Administration.

Brian Wharton, the detective who arrested Roberson, believes that he made a grave mistake and that Roberson is innocent.

Wharton, who has since retired, said in a recent interview with Holt that he arrested Roberson without knowledge of Nikki’s medical history and that he was unaware that Roberson is autistic, which would have explained his lack of emotion. (Roberson was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder only in 2018.)

Texas nearly executed Roberson in 2016, but the process was halted days before so another evidentiary hearing could be held. Ultimately, his bid for a new trial was rejected last year. 

Sween said the case has drawn significant support, including from dozens of distinguished scientists and doctors, a bipartisan group of Texas legislators, advocates for parental rights and organizations that support people with autism.

Abbott’s office has not responded to requests for comment. He has sparingly used his clemency authority, and he did so in May when he pardoned an Army sergeant convicted of murder last year in the fatal shooting of a Black Lives Matter protester in 2020.

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