The Texas Supreme Court halted Thursday night’s scheduled execution of a man who would have become the first person in the U.S. put to death for a murder conviction tied to a diagnosis of shaken baby syndrome.

The late-night ruling to spare for now the life of Robert Roberson, who was convicted of killing his 2-year-old daughter in 2002, capped a flurry of last-ditch legal challenges and weeks of public pressure from both Republican and Democratic lawmakers who say he is innocent and was sent to death row based on flawed science.

  • Melkath@kbin.earth
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    10 hours ago

    Happy to murder women for miscarriages and black people for sport, but wont put down actual baby killer.

    Jesus, please just get out of my country.

    • SwingingTheLamp@midwest.social
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      9 hours ago

      Did anyone tell you that his daughter had recurrent health issues, and had two forms of pneumonia at the time of her death, either one of which could have caused the symptoms that the hospital thought could have indicated “shaken baby syndrome”?

      No? Actually, nobody told the jury at his trial, as well. This case was a mockery of justice from the start.

    • Boinkage@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      Tell me you didn’t read the article without telling me you didn’t read the article. Shaken baby syndrome was fabricated by a handful of iffy doctors and has never been substantiated. Child abuse prosecutors have clung to it and propped it up because it makes for (inaccurate) open and shut convictions. Very few symptoms in the medical field are as cut and dry as what SBS claims is true.

    • prole
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      10 hours ago

      Bad take. Maybe read about the specifics of this case before making such a bold claim. I believe even the arresting officer is haunted by basically ending this man’s life

    • bluGill@fedia.io
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      10 hours ago

      Every time I look into Shaken baby syndrome I find plenty of people with real medical credentials say either it doesn’t exist, or it could exist but there are other much more likely causes of death that share similar evidence. That leave plenty of doubt in my mind and thus I can never convict anyone of it.