Current:Home > ContactTexas sets execution date for East Texas man accused in shaken baby case -Summit Capital Strategies
Texas sets execution date for East Texas man accused in shaken baby case
View
Date:2025-04-18 04:37:56
A Texas court on Monday set an execution date for Robert Roberson, who was sentenced to death in 2003 for killing his 2-year-old daughter but has consistently challenged the conviction on the claim that it was based on questionable science.
Roberson has maintained his innocence while being held on death row for more than 20 years. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals previously halted his execution in 2016. But in 2023, the state’s highest criminal court decided that doubt over the cause of his daughter’s death was not enough to overturn his death sentence.
His new execution date is set for Oct. 17.
Roberson’s attorneys objected to the scheduling of an execution after Anderson County prosecutors requested on June 17 that a date be set. His attorneys said they have new evidence to bolster their case and that they planned to file a new request to overturn his conviction.
As a result, his attorneys argued, setting an execution date would be “premature and unjust.”
Roberson was convicted of killing his sickly 2-year-old daughter, Nikki Curtis, after he rushed her blue, limp body to the hospital. He said that Nikki fell from the bed while they were sleeping in their home in the East Texas town of Palestine and that he awoke to find her unresponsive. But doctors and nurses, who were unable to revive her, did not believe such a low fall could have caused the fatal injuries and suspected child abuse.
At trial, doctors testified that Nikki’s death was consistent with shaken baby syndrome — in which an infant is severely injured from being shaken violently back and forth — and a jury convicted Roberson.
The Court of Criminal Appeals in 2016 stopped his execution and sent the case back to the trial court after the scientific consensus around shaken baby syndrome diagnoses came into question. Many doctors believe the condition is used as an explanation for an infant’s death too often in criminal cases, without considering other possibilities and the baby’s medical history.
The Court of Criminal Appeals’ decision was largely a product of a 2013 state law, dubbed the “junk science law,” which allows Texas courts to overturn a conviction when the scientific evidence used to reach a verdict has since changed or been discredited. Lawmakers, in passing the law, highlighted cases of infant trauma that used faulty science to convict defendants as examples of the cases the legislation was meant to target.
Roberson’s attorneys, in their opposition to setting an execution date, cited “overwhelming new evidence” that Nikki died of “natural and accidental causes” — not due to head trauma.
They wrote that Nikki had “severe, undiagnosed” pneumonia that caused her to stop breathing, collapse and turn blue before she was discovered. Then, instead of identifying her pneumonia, doctors prescribed her Phenergan and codeine, drugs that are no longer given to children her age, further suppressing her breathing, they argued.
“It is irrefutable that Nikki’s medical records show that she was severely ill during the last week of her life,” Roberson’s attorneys wrote, noting that in the week before her death, Roberson had taken Nikki to the emergency room because she had been coughing, wheezing and struggling with diarrhea for several days, and to her pediatrician’s office, where her temperature came in at 104.5 degrees.
“There was a tragic, untimely death of a sick child whose impaired, impoverished father did not know how to explain what has confounded the medical community for decades,” Roberson’s attorneys wrote.
They have also argued that new scientific evidence suggests that it is impossible to shake a toddler to death without causing serious neck injuries, which Nikki did not have.
And they cited developments in a similar case in Dallas County, in which a man was convicted of injuring a child. His conviction was based in part on now partially recanted testimony from a child abuse expert who provided similar testimony on shaken baby syndrome in Roberson’s case. Prosecutors in Dallas County have said the defendant should get a new trial.
In 2023, when the Court of Criminal Appeals denied Roberson a new trial, prosecutors argued that the evidence supporting Roberson’s conviction was still “clear and convincing” and that the science around shaken baby syndrome had not changed as much as his defense attorneys claimed. Witnesses also testified at trial that Roberson had a bad temper and would shake and spank Nikki when she would not stop crying.
The scheduling of Roberson’s execution triggers a series of deadlines for any last filings in state and federal court to seek relief and begin a request for clemency.
___
This story was originally published by The Texas Tribune and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- You'll Love the Way Eminem Pays Tribute to Daughter Hailie Jade on New Song
- Trump rally shooter killed by Secret Service sniper, officials say
- Jacoby Jones, a star of Baltimore’s most recent Super Bowl title run, has died at age 40
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- These Secrets About Shrek Will Warm Any Ogre's Heart
- Reviving Hollywood glamor of the silent movie era, experts piece together a century-old pipe organ
- Jennifer Lopez Shares Rare Glimpse Into Bond With Ben Affleck's Daughter Violet
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- The first Titanic voyage in 14 years is happening in the wake of submersible tragedy. Hopes are high
Ranking
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Renowned Sex Therapist Dr. Ruth Westheimer Dead at 96
- Richard Simmons, fitness guru, dies at age 76
- Is 'Fly Me to the Moon' based on a true story? What's behind fake moon landing movie
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Winston, beloved gorilla at San Diego Zoo Safari Park, dies at 52 after suffering health problems
- USA vs Australia: Time, TV channel, streaming for USA Basketball Showcase game
- Did he want a cat scan? Mountain lion makes surprise visit to Arizona hospital
Recommendation
Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
Dodgers pitcher Dustin May has season-ending surgery on esophagus
Lifeguard shortage grips US as drownings surge, heat rages
Cincinnati Reds prospect Cam Collier homers, is MVP as NL wins Futures Game
Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
Can a Medicaid plan that requires work succeed? First year of Georgia experiment is not promising
Australian gallery's Picasso exhibit that sparked a gender war wasn't actually the Spanish painter's work
Hershey, Walgreens sued by family of 14-year-old who died after doing 'One Chip Challenge'