Friday, March 20, 2026

March 20: Danyel Smith: Georgia: Shaken Baby Syndrome: New science or same verdict? Atlanta News First (Reporter Andy Pierrotti) reports that a judge is considering whether expert testimony could change his 2003 conviction, noting that: "Danyel Smith has been in prison for more than 20 years following 2003 conviction in the death of his two-month-old son - and that a judge is weighing whether a father convicted of killing his infant son more than two decades ago should receive a new trial after his attorneys argued that updated medical science shows no crime occurred. Danyel Smith has been in prison for more than 20 years following his 2003 conviction in the death of his two-month-old son, Chandler Smith. Prosecutors at the time told jurors the child died from injuries consistent with what was then commonly described as “Shaken Baby Syndrome.”..."During a hearing Monday, Smith appeared in court by Zoom as his attorneys presented testimony from eight medical experts who say Chandler’s death may have been caused by underlying medical conditions rather than abuse. Smith’s legal team argues advances in medical science and new expert analysis undermine the original diagnosis presented at trial. According to their court filing, several specialists reviewed medical records and autopsy findings and concluded the infant’s injuries were more consistent with natural causes or medical complications than shaking. Prosecutors dispute those claims, arguing the new opinions are unreliable and do not meet the legal standard required to reopen the case."


PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "Three years ago, prosecutors offered Smith a plea deal that would have allowed him to leave prison if he pleaded guilty to a lesser charge and admitted responsibility. Smith declined the offer."

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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: Smith’s request for a new trial comes after the Georgia Supreme Court previously ordered the trial court to reconsider his motion using the proper legal framework for newly discovered evidence.

The judge did not immediately rule after Monday’s hearing and did not provide a timeline for a decision. If the court determines the new expert testimony could have affected the jury’s verdict, Smith could receive a new trial."

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QUOTE OF THE DAY: "Smith’s fiancée, LaTasha Pyatt, said the new testimony from medical experts shows the conviction should be reconsidered. “They are trying to disqualify ... renowned neurosurgeons that even Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta consults with,” Pyatt said. “How do you dispute anything like that? We’re not bringing random people off of the streets. We’re bringing in experts who actually do this on a daily basis.” Pyatt believes Smith is innocent. “It’s a gross miscarriage of justice in the beginning, but now it’s even more bizarre because at this point they are just holding an innocent man in prison for nothing,” she said."

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STORY: "New science or same verdict? Judge considers whether expert testimony could change 2003 conviction," by Reporter Andy Pierrotti, published by Atlanta News First, on May 16, 2026. (Andy Pierrotti is a national award-winning investigative reporter recognized with the duPont Columbia Award, George Foster Peabody, multiple Emmy and Edward R. Murrow awards. Andy’s investigations have changed state laws, put people in prison, freed a man from jail and led to historic state fines.)

SUB-HEADING: "Danyel Smith has been in prison for more than 20 years following 2003 conviction in the death of his two-month-old son."


GIST: "A Gwinnett County judge is weighing whether a father convicted of killing his infant son more than two decades ago should receive a new trial after his attorneys argued that updated medical science shows no crime occurred.

Danyel Smith has been in prison for more than 20 years following his 2003 conviction in the death of his two-month-old son, Chandler Smith. Prosecutors at the time told jurors the child died from injuries consistent with what was then commonly described as “Shaken Baby Syndrome.”

During a hearing Monday, Smith appeared in court by Zoom as his attorneys presented testimony from eight medical experts who say Chandler’s death may have been caused by underlying medical conditions rather than abuse.

Smith’s legal team argues advances in medical science and new expert analysis undermine the original diagnosis presented at trial. According to their court filing, several specialists reviewed medical records and autopsy findings and concluded the infant’s injuries were more consistent with natural causes or medical complications than shaking.

Prosecutors dispute those claims, arguing the new opinions are unreliable and do not meet the legal standard required to reopen the case.

In their response brief, the Gwinnett County District Attorney’s Office maintains that Smith’s experts rely on speculative theories and that the evidence would not have changed the outcome of the trial

The case centers on a key legal question: whether newly presented expert testimony could have led a jury to reach a different verdict.

If the judge determines the new evidence could have created reasonable doubt for jurors, she could grant Smith a new trial.

Three years ago, prosecutors offered Smith a plea deal that would have allowed him to leave prison if he pleaded guilty to a lesser charge and admitted responsibility. Smith declined the offer.

Family members on both sides attended the hearing and expressed sharply different views about the case.

Chandler’s mother, Marsha Brandon, said she still believes Smith was responsible for the baby’s death.


“My baby was abused,” Brandon said. “He was murdered by Danyel Smith. That’s why he’s in jail and I’m happy about it and he needs to stay there.”

Asked whether Smith’s decision not to take the plea agreement gave her any doubt about his guilt, Brandon said it did not.

“I think he’s looking for a story,” she said. “He’s looking to have a book, make a movie.”

Smith’s fiancée, LaTasha Pyatt, said the new testimony from medical experts shows the conviction should be reconsidered.

“They are trying to disqualify ... renowned neurosurgeons that even Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta consults with,” Pyatt said. “How do you dispute anything like that? We’re not bringing random people off of the streets. We’re bringing in experts who actually do this on a daily basis.”

Pyatt believes Smith is innocent.

“It’s a gross miscarriage of justice in the beginning, but now it’s even more bizarre because at this point they are just holding an innocent man in prison for nothing,” she said.

Smith’s request for a new trial comes after the Georgia Supreme Court previously ordered the trial court to reconsider his motion using the proper legal framework for newly discovered evidence.

The judge did not immediately rule after Monday’s hearing and did not provide a timeline for a decision.

If the court determines the new expert testimony could have affected the jury’s verdict, Smith could receive a new trial."

The entire story can be read at: 

https://www.atlantanewsfirst.com/2026/03/16/gwinnett-judge-weighs-new-trial-infant-death-conviction-amid-disputed-shaken-baby-science/

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, March 19, 2026

(Part 3): Sue Neill Fraser: Author/Journalist. commentator Andrew L. Urban spells out in his Wrongful Conviction Report how the jury was misled by the prosecutors in her murder trial, in a post sub-headed: "Yesterday, we published a letter from former Tasmanian DPP Tim Ellis SC in which he accused former barrister Hugh Selby of a failure of integrity in Selby’s article. Today Selby replies, to emphasize(sic) how the jury was misled by disclosure failures...Andrew Urban: "My own response to Ellis is the entirety of my book, The Exoneration Papers – Sue Neill-Fraser. Among those putting the case for a wrongful conviction in the book is Tony Jacobs, former Principal Crown Counsel and a Crown Law Officer in Tasmania for over 30 years, who lists errors that he claims show her (now deceased) defence counsel’s “flagrant incompetence”. Flinders University legal academic Dr Bob Moles, who has followed the case for over a decade, argues that the trial failed many legal rules. The 2:1 majority decision refusing the 2021 appeal was contradicted by dissenting judge Estcourt J who would quash the conviction. There is still hot anger about this case as comments on yesterday’s story clearly show. And no wonder. The case against Sue Neill-Fraser was entirely speculative, physically absurd on its face – and not supported by any evidence whatsoever: She killed Bob Chappell below deck (perhaps with a wrench) and winched him up. Alone. ABSURD She then manoeuvred his body into the dinghy alongside. Alone. Try it. ABSURD That was Ellis at work."


PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "There is still hot anger about this case as comments on yesterday’s story clearly show. And no wonder. The case against Sue Neill-Fraser was entirely speculative, physically absurd on its face – and not supported by any evidence whatsoever:

She killed Bob Chappell below deck (perhaps with a wrench) and winched him up. Alone. ABSURD She then manoeuvred his body into the dinghy alongside. Alone. Try it.  ABSURDThat was Ellis at work."

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STORY: "Selby v Ellis continued – how jury was misled in Sue Neill-Fraser murder trial | Wrongful Convictions Report," by Andrew L.  Urban on His Wrongful Conviction Report, published on March 19, 2026. (Andrew L Urban an author, journalist, and documentary filmmaker, fled Hungary as a child during the 1956 revolution, eventually settling in Australia. He has written for many publications and has authored investigative books on wrongful convictions. His first book, Murder by the Prosecution explored several wrongful convictions and was described by Margaret Cunneen SC as a ‘ troubling expose’ . He has published the online Wrongful Convictions Report since 2018. Since 1985, before turning his journalistic attention to miscarriages of justice (prompted by the Eve Ash documentary Shadow of Doubt).

GIST: " Yesterday, we published a letter from former Tasmanian DPP Tim Ellis SC in which he accused former barrister Hugh Selby of a failure of integrity in Selby’s article. Today, Selby replies, to emphasise how the jury was misled by disclosure failures. 

“My response to Mr Ellis’s attack upon me and my views (in my article) is that his letter is to be welcomed. I look forward to his appearing before a Royal Commission where his letter to you will provide opportunities for a telling cross-examination of him. By the way, Ms Etter and I interviewed Mr Lorraine whose memory then was sharp and clear,” says Hugh Selby.

Selby also posted a comment on the article, which states, in part: “…readers need to understand the following:

1. The reason for calling the decent Mr Lorraine was to establish that the Four Winds dinghy, a blue and white quick silver with an outboard, was at the yacht because that placed Ms Neill Fraser there.
2. The statement that Mr Lorraine signed did that.
3. His earlier phone chat showed beyond doubt that he was looking at a different yacht and a different dinghy/tender.
4. The differences between the phone notes and the signed statement are not trivial. They are discussed in detail in the 2021 Etter/Selby papers tabled in the Legislative Council.
5. There was an inexcusable time gap between the ODPP team being given those phone chat notes and any disclosure to the defence. The result was that the jury was misled.
6. Those phone chat notes should have been disclosed before trial by the police to both sides.
7. Mr Ellis, who interviewed Mr Lorraine before the trial, failed to pick up the falsity in the signed statement.
8. If the phone chat notes had been disclosed at the right time, or Mr Ellis/his team had properly proofed Mr Lorraine about his recollection, then Mr Ellis would not have called Mr Lorraine and the jury would not have been misled.”

Lara Giddings (Ellis called her “gullible”), says “I would encourage Mr. Ellis and the Tasmanian Government to support an inquiry that allows all aspects to be examined fairly, without the restrictions of court rules and procedures that prevent issues from being discussed if they were or could have been raised at trial. None of us should sleep easy if a miscarriage of justice has occurred in this case. Why stand in the way of supporting a forum which would put this case to bed for all involved.”

My own response to Ellis is the entirety of my book, The Exoneration Papers – Sue Neill-Fraser. Among those putting the case for a wrongful conviction in the book is Tony Jacobs, former Principal Crown Counsel and a Crown Law Officer in Tasmania for over 30 years, who lists errors that he claims show her (now deceased) defence counsel’s “flagrant incompetence”. Flinders University legal academic Dr Bob Moles, who has followed the case for over a decade, argues that the trial failed many legal rules. The 2:1 majority decision refusing the 2021 appeal was contradicted by dissenting judge Estcourt J who would quash the conviction.

There is still hot anger about this case as comments on yesterday’s story clearly show. And no wonder. The case against Sue Neill-Fraser was entirely speculative, physically absurd on its face – and not supported by any evidence whatsoever:

She killed Bob Chappell below deck (perhaps with a wrench) and winched him up. Alone. ABSURD

She then manoeuvred his body into the dinghy alongside. Alone. Try it. ABSURD

That was Ellis at work.

“As a result of meticulous research Urban argues calmly, logically and forcefully that the conviction of Sue Neill-Fraser has been the result of a police investigation that missed vital information and ignored possible suspects.” – Bruce Beresford, Australian film director of Best Picture Oscar winner, Driving Miss Daisy, Breaker Morant, Black Robe, Paradise Road, Mao’s Last Dancer, Ladies in Black and others.

 Tracking the case for a decade, Urban presents facts and findings that prove this is a wrongful conviction. And shows how ‘the system’ seeks to protect it. The Tasmanian Integrity Commission, the Legal Profession Board, the Tasmanian Law Society and the Bar Association have all failed to demand the proper administration of justice and the chance to correct this awful miscarriage of justice.

By the time Sue Neill-Fraser was convicted of murdering her partner Bob Chappell, the court had seen no murder weapon, heard from no witnesses to the murder, heard no evidence that puts Sue Neill-Fraser at the crime scene.

A contemptible conviction.""

The entire story can be read at:

https://wrongfulconvictionsreport.org/2026/03/19/selby-v-ellis-continued-how-jury-was-misled-in-sue-neill-fraser-murder-trial/


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;


March 19: (Part 2): Sue Neill-Fraser: Tasmania: (Another sore-spot in Australia's criminal justice system that just won't go away): Legal Commentator Hugh Selby explains why taken together, the non-disclosures in Sue Neill-Fraser’s case are so significant that her conviction cannot stand, on Andrew Urban's 'Wrongful Conviction Report, noting that: "In the 2010 Neill-Fraser murder trial the key witness to place her and the yacht dinghy at the yacht at the right time was a witness who was exercising on shore. He phoned police to describe what he saw and the officer took proper notes. It is clear from those notes that the witness was observing another yacht and another dinghy. He had nothing to offer. However, he was induced to sign a statement prepared by a second police officer that, falsely, had him identify the Neill-Fraser dinghy at the yacht. That statement was disclosed. The earlier notes were not. At trial he agreed that he had signed the statement. The defence had no knowledge of his prior phone chat with the first officer. They had no information with which to counter his “identification”. Please note that there is no suggestion that this witness ever intended to mislead. What was in the mind of the second police officer is unknown. The first officer advised a member of the prosecution team in court of the original notesThat should have resulted in the prosecutor being told of this “new” evidence, that new evidence being immediately shared with the defence lawyers, and the judge then being asked to decide whether the trial should proceed (with the witness being recalled) or be aborted. None of that happened."



INTRODUCTORY COMMENT: Andrew L. Urban: "In what can be seen as a companion piece to our article, Duty of disclosure lasts forever by Bibi Sangha and Dr Bob Moles, former barrister HUGH SELBY explains why the police and prosecutors are required to disclose to the defence before trial all relevant material that they have about a case and the consequences of its breach…. and says that “taken together, the non-disclosures in Sue Neill-Fraser’s case are so significant that her conviction cannot stand.” 


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PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "For several years before Neill-Fraser’s unsuccessful second appeal in 2021, the forensic services of the Tasmania Police were making inquiries, at the request of the prosecutor’s office, about the implications of the DNA of a young woman found on the deck of the scuttled yacht in late January, 2009.

Issues of interest included: first, whether the DNA was left by her, or left by way of a transfer from her to another person and then to the deck; second, whether it was left on the day of the killing or some days later; and, third, how long could the DNA survive on that metal deck in those weather conditions."

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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "Forensic services made inquiries of another Australian forensic laboratory. They also made inquiries overseas. They received replies a long time before the 2021 appeal hearing. We know all this because of Freedom of Information requests and titbits of released information over a couple of years. Neither the inquiries nor the responses were disclosed to Neill-Fraser’s lawyers then or at any later time. The appeal court, to whom the duty of disclosure is owed, was told nothing. Thanks to other research, we know why it was not disclosed. Forensic science has evolved since the 2010 trial when the prosecution told the jury that the DNA was left by transfer. At the 2021 appeal they claimed that if not Australia Day it was left a few days later when the yacht was at a marine yard. The better scientific explanation in 2026 is that it was left by the young woman on Australia Day. This is a lay-down case of a serious breach of the duty of disclosure."

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PASSAGE THREE OF THE DAY; 'This is a political issue, but it is one that goes to the heart of Tasmania’s legal system. Doing nothing, or standing on the sidelines waiting for others, is no longer a credible stance. The evidence of inadequate inquiry, blinkered thinking and failure to follow the rules is overwhelming. The reasons for these failures must be explored, explained, and be the bases for necessary reforms. Politicians, whatever their party or independent alignment, ought to demand the setting up of that inquiry with wide-ranging terms of reference, conducted by a highly regarded, interstate sitting or former judge with a wealth of criminal practice experience."

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POST: "Non-disclosures in Sue Neill-Fraser case mean no valid conviction," by legal commentator  (former barrister) Hugh Selby)  published by The Wrongful Conviction Blog (Publisher,  Author, Editor (and much more) Andrew L. Urban, on March 16, 2026. 


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GIST: "Examples are drawn mostly from the saga that is the Tasmanian case of Sue Neill-Fraser. Prepare to be appalled.

Disclosable material includes not only the material that supports the prosecution, but also material that is useful to the defence.

This requirement reflects our fundamental belief that we follow a fair process to ensure a fair trial.

Prosecutors must be exemplars of conduct that gives the community confidence that a finding of either “guilt beyond reasonable doubt” or “not guilty” properly reflects not just some of the available evidence but all of it.

Although the practical task is to provide the defence with all that material, the prosecution’s duty of such disclosure is to the court that will hear the case.

This is because it is the obligation of all lawyers to uphold the dignity of, and community confidence in our courts. The effect of non-disclosure is to cause injustice, including wrongful convictions, and those results engender a lack of confidence in our courts. [Ed: Non-disclosure can also result in being a ‘fraud on the court’.)

Example of breach: Around Australia Day 2009 when Sue Neill-Fraser’s partner, Bob Chappell, disappeared from their yacht on the Derwent River, Hobart, the police were investigating recent break-ins and thefts from moored boats in that area. A fire-extinguisher was missing from the yacht, which had been scuttled. The prosecution claimed at trial that Ms Neill-Fraser used it to weigh down her partner’s body.

The prosecution failed to adequately disclose to the defence those break ins, that the police had suspects, that the police failed to properly investigate those suspects, that one suspect had ready access to a boat with which to reach moored yachts, that a suspect had the experience to scuttle a yacht, and that they searched the room of a suspect looking for that fire-extinguisher.

Had that information been disclosed the defence could, for example, have pointed to intruders, not the accused, being on the yacht, attempting to sink it, the disappearance of the fire extinguisher being explicable as theft, and the shortcomings in the police inquiries as inexcusable: Neill-Fraser was charged because it suited police ineptness.

Why tactics, but not fairness, support non-disclosure

The obligation to disclose continues both during and after the trial. For example, the prosecution may be given information by the police during the trial that helps the prosecution. To be allowed to use that new material they must get the permission of the court.

That permission will not be given if the court forms the view that the late disclosure was an unfair ploy to gain a trial advantage.

This approach to “fair dealing” emerged only late last century. Earlier prosecutors, like defence lawyers in compensation cases, loved to give unpleasant surprises. A few examples will show why it detracts from either or both just outcomes and court efficiency:

The first example is a civil case seeking money compensation for a work or car accident. The applicant tells their lawyer what caused the accident, what treatment they have had, and what incapacity they still suffer. Based on that information the lawyer commences litigation and claims an amount of compensation that is based on comparable previous cases.

Traditionally the applicant gave evidence at the hearing about their pain and diminished ability to perform daily tasks. When cross-examined by the insurer’s lawyer they confirmed that pain and the physical limitations. The cross examiner then played a recent video made by an investigator showing the “disabled” applicant happily playing football or basketball or cleaning the gutters on the upper floor of their home. The applicant (and their lawyer) is taken by surprise.

What may have looked like a strong case was now, if not hopeless, weak.

The common result was that the case then settled with the applicant getting little, and possibly nothing. One of the factors leading to that outcome is that the applicant’s lawyers now know that the applicant has given them false instructions. The effect of being caught out with a brazen lie is that everything said by the liar client is now suspect: what else was not true? Better to settle, and at least recover enough for lawyer fees, than go on to disaster.

A key difference between civil and criminal cases is that good criminal defence lawyers, unlike civil lawyers for compensation applicants, do not get their client to give them all the facts.

Keep in mind that the civil applicant has to prove their case and they go first. Hence their lawyer needs the full story. But in a criminal case the prosecution goes first, which means that the defence counsel cross-examines the prosecution witnesses.

A lawyer must never knowingly mislead a court by making an argument they know to be untrue, or asking a question they know to have no proper basis.

Therefore, the best criminal defence lawyers are very selective about what they allow their clients to tell them before trial. This ensures that when cross-examining prosecution witnesses they are able to explore possibilities that will raise a reasonable doubt about the prosecution case. If their client told them the full story some of those possibilities might disappear.

Knowing and weighing up those possibilities depends upon the defence being fully informed as to the prosecution case and having been given any prosecution material that helps the defence.

When the prosecution was permitted to “surprise” the defence by calling a “new” witness the effect upon the defence was to upend their case strategy. While experienced and talented defence counsel might be able to quickly adjust their approach to a case and go with the new flow, that adaptability is beyond most lawyers.

Being “blindsided” or “sandbagged” by a prosecutor is an awful experience for both the inexperienced defence lawyer and their accused client. I know, because it happened to me twice. On the first occasion, an appeal case, I “froze” in disbelief because on my instructions (this was an appeal so I knew my client’s factual case from his evidence at the earlier trial) this witness could not exist, let alone give evidence.

Fortunately, the judge, long experienced in criminal cases, took pity and guided me out of that frozen mental state. That done I was able to effectively cross-examine. But if the judge had stayed silent then we would have lost the appeal. Looking back over decades I think it likely that the “new” witness was known for their availability to help police with perjured evidence in exchange for a favour or two, and that the judge recognised the signs.

The second instance was a jury trial. My client was accused of fraud. The case looked good until the prosecution called as a surprise witness a long time colleague of the accused who spilled the beans, all of them.

No cross-examination of that witness would have been effective. However, if we had known of that evidence before the trial then there would have been a plea of guilty and much time and public money would have been saved.


Indefensible examples of non-disclosure

If the new information during the trial assists the defence then it must be shared with them. There may have to be an adjournment to consider how that information affects the trial. Witnesses may have to be recalled. The trial may have to be aborted.

In the 2010 Neill-Fraser murder trial the key witness to place her and the yacht dinghy at the yacht at the right time was a witness who was exercising on shore. He phoned police to describe what he saw and the officer took proper notes.

It is clear from those notes that the witness was observing another yacht and another dinghy. He had nothing to offer.

However, he was induced to sign a statement prepared by a second police officer that, falsely, had him identify the Neill-Fraser dinghy at the yacht. That statement was disclosed. The earlier notes were not.

At trial he agreed that he had signed the statement. The defence had no knowledge of his prior phone chat with the first officer. They had no information with which to counter his “identification”. Please note that there is no suggestion that this witness ever intended to mislead. What was in the mind of the second police officer is unknown.

The first officer advised a member of the prosecution team in court of the original notes.

That should have resulted in the prosecutor being told of this “new” evidence, that new evidence being immediately shared with the defence lawyers, and the judge then being asked to decide whether the trial should proceed (with the witness being recalled) or be aborted.

None of that happened.

An accused may be convicted and then the police and prosecution obtain new material unknown to the accused or their lawyers which clears the convicted accused or casts significant doubt upon the safety of the conviction. It is the duty of the prosecution service to facilitate an appeal, or a fresh appeal (if there has been an earlier appeal by the convicted person that was lost).

Sue Neill-Fraser… paroled in October 2022 after 13 years in prison

For several years before Neill-Fraser’s unsuccessful second appeal in 2021, the forensic services of the Tasmania Police were making inquiries, at the request of the prosecutor’s office, about the implications of the DNA of a young woman found on the deck of the scuttled yacht in late January, 2009.

Issues of interest included: first, whether the DNA was left by her, or left by way of a transfer from her to another person and then to the deck; second, whether it was left on the day of the killing or some days later; and, third, how long could the DNA survive on that metal deck in those weather conditions.

Forensic services made inquiries of another Australian forensic laboratory. They also made inquiries overseas. They received replies a long time before the 2021 appeal hearing. We know all this because of Freedom of Information requests and titbits of released information over a couple of years.

Neither the inquiries nor the responses were disclosed to Neill-Fraser’s lawyers then or at any later time. The appeal court, to whom the duty of disclosure is owed, was told nothing.

Thanks to other research, we know why it was not disclosed. Forensic science has evolved since the 2010 trial when the prosecution told the jury that the DNA was left by transfer. At the 2021 appeal they claimed that if not Australia Day it was left a few days later when the yacht was at a marine yard.

The better scientific explanation in 2026 is that it was left by the young woman on Australia Day.

This is a lay-down case of a serious breach of the duty of disclosure. It is a breach that is exacerbated by the failure since the 2021 appeal to not only come clean about the science developments, but to go to great lengths to resist any and all freedom of information requests.

There is another intriguing aspect to this saga of misadventure that raises the issue of how active does a prosecution have to be in ensuring disclosure.

Around the same period when forensic services were making inquiries about those DNA issues, one of its staff prepared two reports on the DNA issue. The latter report (which updated the first) was clear that the DNA could have been left on Australia Day. It drew that conclusion without reference to several papers published in respected journals that supported that result.

The report was included in the appeal papers, that is, it was disclosed to Neill-Fraser’s legal team. The prosecution, as respondent to the appeal, indicated in court that they would call the author. However, they then failed to do so. Neill-Fraser’s legal team, for reasons unknown, did not demand that they do so.

The result was that the report was not disclosed to the court. This is a separate breach of the prosecution duty.

Consequences of failure to disclose

The consequences of a failure to disclose can range from nothing to an appeal court entering an acquittal.

A trial court may find that the non-disclosure is of no consequence, that it can be cured by further questioning or that the trial should be aborted.

An appeal court can find the non-disclosure of no consequence, that the effect of the non-disclosure is not enough to change the finding of guilt, that it is serious enough that the verdict of guilty should be set aside and the DPP can decide to go to a retrial or do nothing, or that it is so serious that a verdict of acquittal should be entered.

Taken together, the non-disclosures in Sue Neill-Fraser’s case are so significant that her conviction cannot stand. It is a matter for an appeal court to decide whether there should be the option of a new trial or an acquittal.

The Tasmanian Director of Public Prosecutions, Daryl Coates SC, has stood by for years while these non-disclosures have come to light. This has an obvious and continuing negative impact on the reputation of the Tasmanian courts.

It follows that it is up to the attorney-general to immediately instruct other solicitors and counsel to liaise with Neill-Fraser’s lawyers to expedite a fresh appeal. The attorney-general must also fund the full costs of Neill-Fraser’s lawyers. This is not a political question. It is a fundamental legal issue affecting not just Sue Neill-Fraser and her family and the late Bob Chappell’s family, but all Tasmanians.

Separately, a motion to set up a Royal Commission to inquire into the debacle and scandal that stems from the flawed police investigation into the disappearance of Bob Chappell from his yacht on Australia Day 2009, and continues to today, is to be debated in the Tasmanian Legislative Council on Tuesday, March 24.

This is a political issue, but it is one that goes to the heart of Tasmania’s legal system. Doing nothing, or standing on the sidelines waiting for others, is no longer a credible stance. The evidence of inadequate inquiry, blinkered thinking and failure to follow the rules is overwhelming.

The reasons for these failures must be explored, explained, and be the bases for necessary reforms.

Politicians, whatever their party or independent alignment, ought to demand the setting up of that inquiry with wide-ranging terms of reference, conducted by a highly regarded, interstate sitting or former judge with a wealth of criminal practice experience.

The entire post can be read at:

https://wrongfulconvictionsreport.org/2026/03/16/non-disclosures-in-sue-neill-fraser-case-mean-no-valid-conviction/

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;