Friday, May 1, 2026

Babysittter Meggin Van Hoof: On-Going trial in London, Ontario: The Toronto Star (Chief Investigative Reporter Kevin Donovan) report that an Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) officer has denied asking the mother of the dead toddler to gather evidence for him, noting that: Const. Todd Amlin was on the witness stand Wednesday in the long-running manslaughter case involving the toddler’s babysitter. Geoff Snow, babysitter Meggin Van Hoof’s lawyer, was questioning Amlin about his interactions with toddler Nathaniel McLellan’s mother in the weeks and months after her son’s October 2015 death. “Did you at any point tell Rose-Anne Van De Wiele to gather evidence in this case?” lawyer Snow asked Amlin, who was then serving as the victim-liaison officer for the toddler’s family. A victim-liaison officer is designated to providing trauma-informed support to a family member who has been a victim of a crime. Amlin said he never specifically asked Van De Wiele to dig up information, but he was open to her passing on information. “It would be, again, very open-ended in terms of if you have information that would be beneficial, please let us know,” Amlin said."



PASSAGE OF THE DAY: At one point, Amlin, assigned as the family’s victim liaison officer, secretly recorded a meeting with Nathaniel’s mother, telling court he wanted to avoid “confusion” over what was said at the meeting."

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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "As the Star has previously reported, Amlin, following his time on the Nathaniel probe, was charged in an unrelated matter with sexually assaulting a female OPP officer over a 2010 incident at the OPP academy training facility where they were assigned dorm rooms during a course. (The complaint was not made until years later.) Amlin, then a sergeant, pleaded guilty in criminal court to the lesser included charge of simple assault. In his guilty plea he admitted to entering a female officer’s darkened room, jumping on top of her and “dry humping” her. Amlin received a 12-month probationary order from the court, was allowed to remain as a police officer, but was reduced in rank to constable after a disciplinary hearing."

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STORY: "OPP officer defends work on sudden death of toddler Nathaniel. Police only charged babysitter six years later — after a Toronto Star investigation," by Toronto Star (Chief Investigative Reporter Kevin Donovan), published by The Toronto Star, on April 30, 2026.

SUB-HEADING: "Babysitter Meggin Van Hoof is charged with manslaughter over the sudden death of toddler Nathaniel McLellan in October 2015, six years before she was eventually charged."


PHOTO CAPTION: "Toddler Nathaniel McLellan was declared brain-dead and removed from life support on Oct. 31, 2015.


GIST: "An Ontario Provincial Police officer has denied asking the mother of a dead toddler to gather evidence for him, a London court has heard.

Const. Todd Amlin was on the witness stand Wednesday in the long-running manslaughter case involving the toddler’s babysitter. Geoff Snow, babysitter Meggin Van Hoof’s lawyer, was questioning Amlin about his interactions with toddler Nathaniel McLellan’s mother in the weeks and months after her son’s October 2015 death.

“Did you at any point tell Rose-Anne Van De Wiele to gather evidence in this case?” lawyer Snow asked Amlin, who was then serving as the victim-liaison officer for the toddler’s family. A victim-liaison officer is designated to providing trauma-informed support to a family member who has been a victim of a crime.

Amlin said he never specifically asked Van De Wiele to dig up information, but he was open to her passing on information. 

“It would be, again, very open-ended in terms of if you have information that would be beneficial, please let us know,” Amlin said.

Van Hoof was charged with manslaughter in 2021, following publication of a Star investigation into the case. Van Hoof has pleaded not guilty. Court has heard that Van Hoof was caring for 15-month old Nathaniel at her home daycare when the boy became unwell. Van Hoof called Van De Wiele, who was teaching at a nearby school. Van De Wiele rushed to pick up her son, who died of a serious head trauma several days later in hospital.


During Van De Wiele’s cross-examination, Snow has suggested that her goal was to have his client, Van Hoof, charged. In one email raised previously, Van De Wiele suggested to a senior detective that police dig into Van Hoof’s cellphone “pings” to track her location on the day Nathaniel became unwell. Van De Wiele, who police initially considered a suspect, has told court that her only goal was to find out what happened to her son. 

Wednesday, court was shown notes of a police meeting more than a year after Nathaniel died in which Amlin briefed other officers involved in the case on his recent contacts with Van De Wiele. In the note, Amlin reports to fellow officers that Van De Wiele “questions why Meggin Van Hoof has not been charged.”

Amlin agreed with Snow that Van De Wiele said that to him. He testified that Van De Wiele frequently reached out to him and described an “excessive amount of emails” sent to him by Van De Wiele about her son’s case.

At one point, Amlin, assigned as the family’s victim liaison officer, secretly recorded a meeting with Nathaniel’s mother, telling court he wanted to avoid “confusion” over what was said at the meeting. 

As the Star has previously reported, Amlin, following his time on the Nathaniel probe, was charged in an unrelated matter with sexually assaulting a female OPP officer over a 2010 incident at the OPP academy training facility where they were assigned dorm rooms during a course. (The complaint was not made until years later.) Amlin, then a sergeant, pleaded guilty in criminal court to the lesser included charge of simple assault.

In his guilty plea he admitted to entering a female officer’s darkened room, jumping on top of her and “dry humping” her. Amlin received a 12-month probationary order from the court, was allowed to remain as a police officer, but was reduced in rank to constable after a disciplinary hearing.

Trailer: ‘Death in a Small Town,’ a podcast hosted by Kevin Donovan


The trial in front of Justice Michael Carnegie, without a jury, resumes Thursday, then takes a break until June 8 for one week of testimony, then breaks again until the fall."

The entire story can be read at:

article_4c34bac6-1a3c-4114-b83e-8a85b939705c.html

PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system.   Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."Lawyer Radha Natarajan: Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;

FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;

May 1: Maria Montalvo: New Jersey: She was convicted of murder in 1996 after her children’s deaths in a fire, based on testimony from arson experts - and in a petition for a new trial, her attorneys argue that the conviction rests on ‘outdated beliefs and junk science', The Appeal (Consummate Criminal Justice analyst and commentator Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg) reports, noting that: "“All of the evidence relied on by the State’s experts to determine the origin of the fire has been debunked,” Montalvo’s attorneys wrote in their petition for a new trial filed last year. “There is nothing left of the State’s case but outdated beliefs and junk science.”


QUOTE OF THE DAY: "In February, a New Jersey judge denied Montalvo’s petition, ruling that changes in fire science over the past 30 years did not constitute new evidence in the case. Montalvo’s attorneys are appealing the decision, which they say highlights the difficulty people face when challenging convictions based on junk science.  “There is a general belief that wrongful convictions are the problems of other prosecutors, other judges, other jurisdictions,” Deputy Public Defenders Tamar Lerer and Josh Hood said in a statement to The Appeal. “That belief is wrong. Wrongful convictions happen here because junk science happens here. Until we confront that reality, we will never be free of the harmful human cost that comes with relying on it.”

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SECOND QUOTE OF THE DAY: "Despite the recent setbacks, Montalvo’s attorneys remain undeterred in their fight to clear her name. “Maria Montalvo has the right to a fair trial, grounded in reliable scientific evidence,” Lerer and Hood told The Appeal in a statement. “We reject the notion that a conviction based on bad science is justice and look forward to appealing the Court’s ruling.”

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PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "Despite the gravity of his testimony, (Prosecution Expert Witness) Dispensiere’s description of their investigation seemed more akin to a late-night study session than a scientific inquiry. “All of us got together in one corner of the garage,” he said. “We sat around and ate some pizza. Looked at the car, and we just discussed it. We just went around the group as a round table discussion, for lack of a better phrase, and everybody just voices their opinion as to what they thought actually happened. Where did the fire start? How did the fire start?”

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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "False or misleading forensic evidence has contributed to more than 1,100 known wrongful convictions, or more than a quarter of all exonerations, according to the National Registry of Exonerations“Though junk science is indisputably a leading cause of wrongful convictions, the system often ignores this reality when confronted with it in individual cases,” Montalvo’s attorneys told The Appeal in a statement."

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PASSAGE THREE OF THE DAY: "In Massachusetts, prosecutors are fighting a court’s ruling that tossed out James “Jimmy” Carter’s convictions for a deadly fire that killed 15 people, according to journalist Andrew Quemere, who has reported extensively on the case.  After his appellate attorneys presented evidence that the State’s arson expert proffered testimony that has since been debunked, a Massachusetts judge vacated Carter’s convictions. Last year, he was released from prison after serving more than 36 years for a crime that may not have even occurred. Quemere reported that if the prosecutors win their appeal, Carter may have to return to prison, despite overwhelming evidence of his innocence."

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STORY: "Debunked Arson Science Keeps Mother Imprisoned for Nearly 30 Years, Attorneys Say," published by The Appeal (Reporter Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg, on April 29, 2026. (Based in New Jersey, she writes on prison and jail conditions, wrongful convictions, and the criminalization of disabilities. Elizabeth has also written for The NationNew York Focus, and TruthOut. Partnering with CoLAB Arts, she has written two interview-based plays, which have been performed in the Northeast—“Life, Death, Life Again: Children Sentenced to Die in Prison” and “Banished: A Family on the Sex Offender Registry.” She worked for eight years at the Innocence Project as a case analyst where her work was instrumental in several exonerations. She is the recipient, with journalist Juan Moreno Haines, of the 2020 California Journalism Awards Print Contest. They were awarded first place for At San Quentin, Overcrowding Laid The Groundwork For An Explosive COVID-19 Outbreak, in the category: Coverage of the COVID-19 Pandemic – Fallout, weeklies, circulation 25,0001 and over.")

SUB-HEADING: "Maria Montalvo was convicted of murder in 1996 after her children’s deaths in a fire, based on testimony from arson experts. In a petition for a new trial, her attorneys argue that the conviction rests on ‘outdated beliefs and junk science.’"

GIST: "Attorneys with the New Jersey public defender’s office are seeking a new trial for Maria Montalvo, a former nurse who was convicted of burning her children to death more than two decades ago. Montalvo’s attorneys argue that advances in forensic science have undermined the expert testimony that prosecutors relied on to secure her conviction. 

Prosecutors accused Montalvo of intentionally setting a fire that killed 16-month-old Zoraida and 28-month-old Rafael. To support their case, the State proffered expert testimony that espoused the prevailing views of the day, but that her attorneys say has since been discredited.  

In February, a New Jersey judge denied Montalvo’s petition, ruling that changes in fire science over the past 30 years did not constitute new evidence in the case. Montalvo’s attorneys are appealing the decision, which they say highlights the difficulty people face when challenging convictions based on junk science. 

“There is a general belief that wrongful convictions are the problems of other prosecutors, other judges, other jurisdictions,” Deputy Public Defenders Tamar Lerer and Josh Hood said in a statement to The Appeal. “That belief is wrong. Wrongful convictions happen here because junk science happens here. Until we confront that reality, we will never be free of the harmful human cost that comes with relying on it.”

On the morning of February 22, 1994, Montalvo drove to see her estranged partner, Raul Aponte. Their two children were in the back seat. Aponte had moved out of their home and had been staying at his mother’s house in Long Branch, New Jersey. 

Montalvo parked the car in front of the home and brought a bag of the children’s things —some clothes and a couple of bottles of milk—into the house and then returned to the car. At trial, Montalvo’s counsel told the jury that it was too icy to carry the children from the sidewalk to the home, so she drove around the block and pulled into the driveway.

Montalvo told police that she went to light a cigarette even though she smelled gas, and the car immediately burst into flames. When she struck the match, it ignited vapors that were escaping from a can of gas she had bought that morning and was by the front passenger seat, according to her lawyers. A neighbor said he saw Aponte pull Montalvo from the burning car.

Neighbors, emergency personnel, and Aponte tried to rescue Zoraida and Rafael, but, despite their efforts, both children died in the fire. 

Prosecutors alleged that Montalvo, who had no history of child abuse, had doused the car with gasoline when she had purportedly driven away to move her car into the driveway. They say that when she returned, she stepped out and threw a match into the car, with her babies locked inside. 

The day after the fire, on February 23, 1994, Montalvo appeared in court. Bandages covered her face, head, and one hand, according to photos published in the Asbury Park Press at the time. 

Her trial began in November 1996. During the medical examiner’s testimony, the judge admonished her for sobbing and warned her not to have any more “outbreaks.” 

There were conflicting eyewitness reports about where Montalvo was when the fire started—either in the car, as she said, or outside it, as the State alleged. Raul’s mother testified that immediately before the fire began, Montalvo exited the car and threw “something” onto the floor by the front passenger seat. 

On cross-examination, the defense elicited testimony that she and Montalvo had an acrimonious relationship, attempting to cast her as a biased witness. The defense called a neighbor to the stand, who said that he saw Aponte “swing the car door out of the way and grab the woman.” He said that she “must have been in the car because he reached down and I saw him grab her.” 

With the imprimatur of scientific objectivity, the State’s experts told the jury that, in effect, Montalvo’s version of events was implausible. Their testimony fit squarely with the State’s theory that Montalvo had leaned into the car and tossed what the prosecutor described as “something flaming” into the car. 

They concluded that the fire began by the driver’s seat and, one expert said, no one in the car could have survived. (Their testimony conflicts with Raul’s mother’s claim that she saw Montalvo throw “something” on the floor by the passenger seat.)

V-type burn patterns “point down to where the fire originated,” testified Lt. Frederick Louis Dispensiere, an arson investigator with the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s office. “Some of these V patterns are not exactly the sharpest, straightest things, but to a trained investigator they are rather easy to discern,” he told the jury while referencing a photo of Montalvo’s car.  

Despite the gravity of his testimony, Dispensiere’s description of their investigation seemed more akin to a late-night study session than a scientific inquiry.

“All of us got together in one corner of the garage,” he said. “We sat around and ate some pizza. Looked at the car, and we just discussed it. We just went around the group as a round table discussion, for lack of a better phrase, and everybody just voices their opinion as to what they thought actually happened. Where did the fire start? How did the fire start?”

A second expert, David Campbell, an arson investigator with the North Carolina Bureau of Investigation, testified that he, too, determined that the fire began around the driver’s seat based on V-type burn patterns, as well as Montalvo and Aponte’s mother’s statements. Campbell was adamant that anyone in the car would have died. 

“There is not a chance that somebody could survive that,” he told the jury. “The person who lit the cigarette would perish where they are sitting.”

However, there have been numerous reports of people surviving fires in similar circumstances, and Montalvo’s appellate attorneys pointed out that Campbell had no medical training.

The experts’ testimony figured prominently in the State’s case.

“We know for a fact that no human being can outrun a gasoline fire,” the prosecutor told the jury during closing arguments. “We know for a fact that she wasn’t sitting in that car.”

The jury found Montalvo guilty on all counts. During the sentencing phase, Montalvo begged the jury to spare her life. The judge sentenced her to 100 years in prison after the jurors couldn’t unanimously agree to sentence her to death.

Twenty-five people have been exonerated of arson charges, according to the National Registry of Exonerations. Almost 70 percent of those exonerations occurred after Montalvo’s conviction. 

The field of arson science has undergone a “revolution” since Montalvo’s conviction and the  “evidence used to convict her has completely eroded,” her attorneys wrote in their petition for a new trial. 

Fire investigators often misidentify the origin of a fire. A 2007 study found that fire investigators were more likely to incorrectly identify the origin of a fire, the longer it burned. In that study, investigators correctly identified the origin of a fire that burned 30 seconds past full room involvement, 84 percent of the time. But when examining rooms that burned 180 seconds past full room involvement, they correctly identified the origin just 25 percent of the time.

In 2021, a subcommittee of the Organization of Scientific Area Committees, established by the federal government’s National Institute of Standards and Technology, published a groundbreaking report declaring that “problematic myths” were persistent and widespread in the field of fire investigation. The experts in Montalvo’s trial appear to have based their findings on several of those myths. 

Dispensiere, of the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s office, concluded that the fire originated in the area of the driver’s seat, in part, because that was the area that sustained the most damage. However, the government report says that the “origin will not necessarily be located where observable damage is most severe.”  

“In a fully involved enclosure fire, the most intense burning occurs where fuel vapors encounter oxygen entering the fire enclosure, and that may not be where the fire originated,” the report said.

In Montalvo’s case, the fire encountered oxygen when the driver’s side door was opened, which may have led to the driver’s seat sustaining the most severe burns.   

The State’s experts based their conclusions, in large part, on V-shaped burn patterns, but studies have revealed the fallibility of this method. A fire investigator’s ability to determine the origin of a fully-involved fire based exclusively on burn patterns “may be no better than random chance,” according to the government’s report.  

In the 2024 edition of the National Fire Protection Association’s Guide of Fire and Explosion Investigations, the association cautions investigators “that a V shape is not necessarily associated with the origin of the fire” and can be created by, among other things, “combustion due to ventilation flow paths.” The 1995 edition, however, says that V-shaped patterns “can often be traced back from the higher to the lower levels, towards a point of origin,” according to Montalvo’s petition.

Despite these developments, in February, a Monmouth County Superior Court judge denied Montalvo’s petition for a new trial. She ruled that a jury could have found Montalvo guilty beyond a reasonable doubt even if they had not heard the expert testimony. To suggest that the fire was accidental is a “dishonor to the memory of those two children,” the judge wrote. Montalvo’s attorneys are appealing the decision.

The court’s denial illustrates the Sisyphean struggles people face when challenging convictions based on outdated science. 

In Massachusetts, prosecutors are fighting a court’s ruling that tossed out James “Jimmy” Carter’s convictions for a deadly fire that killed 15 people, according to journalist Andrew Quemere, who has reported extensively on the case. 

After his appellate attorneys presented evidence that the State’s arson expert proffered testimony that has since been debunked, a Massachusetts judge vacated Carter’s convictions. Last year, he was released from prison after serving more than 36 years for a crime that may not have even occurred. Quemere reported that if the prosecutors win their appeal, Carter may have to return to prison, despite overwhelming evidence of his innocence.

False or misleading forensic evidence has contributed to more than 1,100 known wrongful convictions, or more than a quarter of all exonerations, according to the National Registry of Exonerations.

“Though junk science is indisputably a leading cause of wrongful convictions, the system often ignores this reality when confronted with it in individual cases,” Montalvo’s attorneys told The Appeal in a statement. 


In January, on his last day in office, Governor Phil Murphy granted Montalvo’s clemency petition, which made her immediately eligible for parole. The petition was filed on her behalf by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of New Jersey. 

Earlier this month, a two-person panel of the parole board denied her application and barred her from reapplying for 18 to 36 months, according to the Asbury Park Press

Aponte and the prosecutor’s office welcomed the parole board’s decision. 

Aponte’s attorney, Meghan J. Doyle, told The Appeal that it was a “hollow victory” because “every 18 months he will have to relive it.” Doyle said she was a former prosecutor in the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s office. Although she was not with the office at the time of Montalvo’s trial, she said the prosecutor who tried the case was her boss when she worked in the office. 

Doyle pushed back on the defense claims that the conviction was based on junk science.

“The pattern burning, if you just have that, you can’t really make a conclusion,” she said. “However, if you have an eyewitness saying, ‘This is what I saw, and this is what I watched,’ and the pattern burning matches that, they both corroborate each other. So to say it is just junk science, they are either making a misrepresentation or taking the studies so far out of context simply to get what they want.”

Monmouth County Prosecutor Raymond Santiago said in a statement that he was “elated” she was denied parole. Alluding to her innocence claim, he said, “releasing Maria Montalvo is incompatible with justice, especially for someone who refuses to fully accept their actions.”

Despite the recent setbacks, Montalvo’s attorneys remain undeterred in their fight to clear her name. 

“Maria Montalvo has the right to a fair trial, grounded in reliable scientific evidence,” Lerer and Hood told The Appeal in a statement. “We reject the notion that a conviction based on bad science is justice and look forward to appealing the Court’s ruling.”

The entire story can be read at: 

https://theappeal.org/maria-montalvo-arson-junk-science-new-jersey/

PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system.   Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."Lawyer Radha Natarajan: Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;

FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;

Thursday, April 30, 2026

April 30: Charles Flores: Robert Roberson; Areli Escobar: Texas: Question of the day: "Texas' top criminal court has stymied the state's 'junk science' law. Will SCOTUS intervene?" Asked by Staff Writer Michelle Pitcher in the Texas Observer, under the sub-heading, "If the U.S. Supreme Court renders a decision in favour of Charles Flores and others, it would likely force the Court of Criminal Appeals to relax its extremely strict handling of appeals based on shoddy and outdated science."…"As of 2023, evidence based on hypnosis is no longer admissible in Texas criminal courts. For decades before, though, law enforcement agencies, including the statewide Department of Public Safety, used hypnosis as an investigative tool in thousands of cases. Based on changing attitudes about hypnosis and a growing understanding of its flaws as a memory retrieval technique, Flores has attempted to use a 2013 law—Article 11.073 of the state’s Code of Criminal Procedure, often referred to as the “junk science law”—that offers an appeals avenue for people convicted because of faulty or outdated science. Three times, he’s asked the Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) to take another look at his case in this context, to determine whether he should get a new trial. But, like every other death-sentenced prisoner who has ever tried to use the law, Flores has been unsuccessful."


PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "In a more recent Texas case, Robert Roberson’s conviction and death sentence based on the largely discredited “shaken baby syndrome” diagnosis drew international and legislative attention. Scheduled to be executed in October 2024, Roberson was spared at the eleventh hour when a bipartisan group of legislators found an unprecedented loophole. Some members of the Texas House of Representatives subpoenaed Roberson to testify in front of a legislative committee about the application of the junk science law at a hearing set for after his execution date. That fall, members of the Texas House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence held multiple hearings about the state’s junk science law and Roberson’s case. “Although our focus is Robert Roberson, we’re here because his case has shined a light on our new [junk] science writ law,” said Democratic state Representative Joe Moody at one hearing. Kate Judson, executive director of the Center for Integrity in Forensic Sciences, said at the time that Roberson’s case is “one of the most egregious examples” of unreliable forensics being used to wrongly convict someone. Still, he faced another execution date in 2025, which was stopped when the CCA finally sent the case to a lower court to consider the arguments that the method used to determine shaken baby syndrome diagnoses has been debunked. The case is now pending in an Anderson County court.


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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "A third Texas case that got further than most was that of Areli Escobar. Escobar, who was convicted of murdering his neighbor Bianca Maldonado Hernandez in 2011, maintained his innocence, and the forensics lab that conducted the testing in his case was so problematic that it was shut down in 2016—five years after he was sentenced to death.  His lawyers argued the forensics from the case, including DNA findings and fingerprint analysis, were invalid.  The CCA sent the case down to a trial court, and in a rare move, attorneys for the state actually agreed with the defense, saying Escobar deserved a new trial.  Even with both sides’ support, his appeal was denied by the CCA. They said he hadn’t proved that the challenges to the DNA evidence would’ve changed the verdict.   “When the law came into effect, people were hopeful,” said Daniel Woofter, one of Escobar’s attorneys. “It turned out to not actually provide relief to very meritorious cases like Areli’s. We’re still hopeful that … there may be fresh eyes taking a look at this law and the text of this law once more.”


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STORY: by Staff Writer Michelle Pitcher, published by The Texas Observer, on April 28, 2026.  (Michelle Pitcher  is a staff writer at the Texas Observer covering criminal justice. She received her master’s in journalism from the University of California, Berkeley and was part of the team at The Marshall Project that won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting. Her reporting has been featured on NPR, FiveThirtyEight, The Dallas Morning News, and more. Michelle was born and raised in Dallas and is now based in Austin.)


SUB-HEADING: "If the U.S. Supreme Court renders a decision in favour of Charles Flores and others, it would likely force the Court of Criminal Appeals to relax its extremely strict handling of appeals based on shoddy and outdated science."


GIST: "In 1999, a Dallas County jury sentenced Charles Flores to death for capital murder after a burglary turned deadly in Farmers Branch. He had been placed at the scene of the crime by an eyewitness who identified him in court—but this was after an officer from the Farmers Branch Police Department hypnotized that witness during the investigation. (The Texas Observer recently released a six-part podcast about the caseThe Unforgotten: “Riding Shotgun”—in partnership with Free Range Productions.)


As of 2023, evidence based on hypnosis is no longer admissible in Texas criminal courts. For decades before, though, law enforcement agencies, including the statewide Department of Public Safety, used hypnosis as an investigative tool in thousands of cases. 


Based on changing attitudes about hypnosis and a growing understanding of its flaws as a memory retrieval technique, Flores has attempted to use a 2013 law—Article 11.073 of the state’s Code of Criminal Procedure, often referred to as the “junk science law”—that offers an appeals avenue for people convicted because of faulty or outdated science. 


Three times, he’s asked the Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) to take another look at his case in this context, to determine whether he should get a new trial.


But, like every other death-sentenced prisoner who has ever tried to use the law, Flores has been unsuccessful. 



THE UNFORGOTTEN: “RIDING SHOTGUN”

Texas legislators enacted the measure to address the evolution of forensics and the existing statutes’ inability to deal with changing science. 

But since then, no one on death row has been granted a new trial under the law, and many people who try to appeal based on it are shot down before a court even considers the facts or arguments.


In February, Flores’ attorney appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court to address whether—in consistently denying claims like his, which are ostensibly what the 2013 law was meant to address—the Texas court system is following the state’s own laws, or potentially violating people’s federal right to due process.


The Supreme Court has not yet decided whether to take up the case, but the decision could have massive implications for both Flores’ case and future appeals in Texas. If the highest court renders a decision in favor of Flores and other potentially wrongfully convicted people, it will likely force the CCA to relax its extremely strict handling of these junk science appeals. If not, relief based on the first law of its kind passed in the United States would remain a pipe dream for most who try to use it. 


More than a thousand people have been exonerated in the United States since 1989 after being convicted based on false or misleading forensic evidence, according to the National Registry of Exonerations. 


The Death Penalty Information Center reports that about a third of death row exonerations were in cases tainted by some type of junk science. 


Flores’ petition drew support from criminal justice experts, psychology leaders, and even renowned magicians Penn Jillette and Teller, who argue that, as experts in toying with perception, they see the hallmarks of manipulation in the case. 


This isn’t the first time the measure’s effectiveness has been scrutinized.


A 2024 report by the Texas Defender Service (TDS) found that the junk science law “is not working to provide relief to innocent people convicted based on false or unreliable forensic evidence.” 


Estelle Hebron-Jones, director of special projects with TDS, told the Observer that when the bill was passed, “It was seen as having the potential to be such a strong tool for people who had claims that were difficult to present in the existing post-conviction landscape.” 


In reality, cases that seem perfect for the legal pathway are meeting significant roadblocks. 

Flores’ petition to the Supreme Court argues that “copious evidence” in the case—including “junk science, false testimony, official misconduct, and, most critically, actual innocence”—should have been enough to earn him a new trial. 


But, attorney Gretchen Sween writes, “Texas’s highest criminal court, the sole arbiter of post-conviction relief in death-penalty cases, has dismissed those claims without considering the merits, an act that cannot be squared with the state law.” 


The report by TDS indicates this is a trend. Researchers analyzed appeals filed in the 10 years after the law took effect. In that time, just 15 people received relief based on shoddy forensic evidence—about 20 percent of those who tried. 


The report’s authors found that the CCA was holding applicants to a much higher standard than the junk science measure dictated. 


Under the statute, someone has to show that the science used at the time of their trial is suspect, either because new or previously unavailable evidence or science contradicts it. 

Then, they have to show that the new science or evidence would be admissible and likely would’ve affected the jury’s decision. 


“Instead, [the CCA] usually only grants relief if a person can show evidence strong enough to eliminate any rational basis for their conviction, such as exonerating DNA evidence or an alternate perpetrator,” the report’s authors wrote. 


This is a nearly impossible bar to surpass, and poses a particular problem when someone doesn’t have an attorney, or there’s no DNA evidence in the case.


Flores is among many on death row who have tried unsuccessfully to argue for a new trial based on shoddy forensic evidence, but he’s one of only seven who have had their cases actually reviewed on the merits. 



Even the case that helped inspire the 2013 law nearly didn’t pass muster with the CCA.

In 1999, the same year of Flores’ conviction, Neal Hampton Robbins was convicted by a Montgomery County jury of capital murder in the case that would be cited as the inspiration for Texas’ junk science law. 


Robbins was found guilty of killing his girlfriend’s 17-month-old daughter after the child was found unresponsive in her crib, for which he was sentenced to life in prison.


 In the following years, the associate medical examiner who’d determined the toddler’s cause of death had reevaluated the case and changed the cause to “undetermined,” but Robbins remained in prison.


 The CCA considered Robbins’ case before the junk science law was enacted, and judges pointed out that existing laws lacked a remedy for a case like  this, where new scientific knowledge called the evidence used in trial into question. 


Robbins filed another appeal just days after the law took effect, but some of the judges seemed to resent the new statute: Judge Larry Meyers reportedly referred to it as “a clear attempt at a power grab” by legislators. Robbins was ultimately granted a new trial and, rather than re-try the case, prosecutors dropped the charges for lack of evidence. He was released in 2016. 


In a more recent Texas case, Robert Roberson’s conviction and death sentence based on the largely discredited “shaken baby syndrome” diagnosis drew international and legislative attention. Scheduled to be executed in October 2024, Roberson was spared at the eleventh hour when a bipartisan group of legislators found an unprecedented loophole.


Some members of the Texas House of Representatives subpoenaed Roberson to testify in front of a legislative committee about the application of the junk science law at a hearing set for after his execution date.


That fall, members of the Texas House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence held multiple hearings about the state’s junk science law and Roberson’s case. “Although our focus is Robert Roberson, we’re here because his case has shined a light on our new [junk] science writ law,” said Democratic state Representative Joe Moody at one hearing.


Kate Judson, executive director of the Center for Integrity in Forensic Sciences, said at the time that Roberson’s case is “one of the most egregious examples” of unreliable forensics being used to wrongly convict someone.


 Still, he faced another execution date in 2025, which was stopped when the CCA finally sent the case to a lower court to consider the arguments that the method used to determine shaken baby syndrome diagnoses has been debunked. The case is now pending in an Anderson County court.


A third Texas case that got further than most was that of Areli Escobar. Escobar, who was convicted of murdering his neighbor Bianca Maldonado Hernandez in 2011, maintained his innocence, and the forensics lab that conducted the testing in his case was so problematic that it was shut down in 2016—five years after he was sentenced to death. 


His lawyers argued the forensics from the case, including DNA findings and fingerprint analysis, were invalid. 


The CCA sent the case down to a trial court, and in a rare move, attorneys for the state actually agreed with the defense, saying Escobar deserved a new trial. 


Even with both sides’ support, his appeal was denied by the CCA. They said he hadn’t proved that the challenges to the DNA evidence would’ve changed the verdict.  


“When the law came into effect, people were hopeful,” said Daniel Woofter, one of Escobar’s attorneys. “It turned out to not actually provide relief to very meritorious cases like Areli’s. We’re still hopeful that … there may be fresh eyes taking a look at this law and the text of this law once more.”


Although today’s Supreme Court is somewhat unpredictable when it comes to matters of criminal justice reform, Flores’ attorney is hoping that the justices can provide their own fresh eyes on appeals that the Texas courts have barely bothered to justify denying.


There was a moment, nearly a decade ago, when it seemed like Flores might succeed in his appeal fight. 


After he argued that the prosecution’s reliance on a witness who’d been hypnotized had undermined the trial, the CCA agreed the matter was worth considering and sent the issue back to a lower court to further flesh out the evidence before the state’s top criminal court would rule.


 Remanding the case, Judge David Newell wrote that the CCA owed “a clear explanation for our decision to the citizens of Texas.” 


A Dallas district court held an evidentiary hearing in October of that year.


Some of the key players from Flores’ 1999 trial again took the stand, including the witness who’d been hypnotized and the officer who conducted the session.


 Each side called scientific experts to opine on memory and hypnosis. 


Sween, Flores’ attorney, argued that the witness’ identification was so important to the state “because there had been so many inconsistencies among their other witnesses.” 


But after all of that, the CCA ultimately denied Flores a new trial without stating the reason—without the “clear explanation” Judge Newell promised."


The entire story can be read at:


https://www.texasobserver.org/texas-top-criminal-court-junk-science-law-supreme-court/


PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system.   Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog. 


FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."Lawyer Radha Natarajan: Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;


FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;