Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Bulletin: Trudy Munoz; Virginia: Innocence Project at the University of Virginia has taken on her shaken baby syndrome case: "In 2009, a Virginia woman who operated a daycare center in Fairfax was sent to prison for 12 and a half years. An infant in her care had died, and she was able to revive him, but doctors who examined the child found three things: blood under his skin, bleeding inside the eyes and swelling of the brain. Those symptoms have – for years – prompted a diagnosis of shaken baby syndrome. Now, however, medical experts say those things could also be caused by disease. “Genetic abnormalities, clotting disorders, some of the retinal hemorrhaging is even caused by efforts to resuscitate a child,” says Deirdre Enright, Director of the Innocence Project at the University of Virginia. She fears doctors are often ignoring things that could lead to another diagnosis. “Blood work that looks unusual or the presence of an infection is ignored by doctors in favor of, ‘We have these three things. We’re calling this trauma.’” And she’s working to free Trudy Munoz, the woman who ran the daycare center."


"In 2009, a Virginia woman who operated a daycare center in Fairfax was sent to prison for 12 and a half years.  An infant in her care had died, and she was able to revive him, but doctors who examined the child found three things: blood under his skin, bleeding inside the eyes and swelling of the brain.  Those symptoms have – for years – prompted a diagnosis of shaken baby syndrome. Now, however, medical experts say those things could also be caused by disease. “Genetic abnormalities, clotting disorders, some of the retinal hemorrhaging is even caused by efforts to resuscitate a child,” says  Deirdre Enright, Director of the Innocence Project at the University of Virginia.  She fears doctors are often ignoring things that could lead to another diagnosis.  “Blood work that looks unusual or the presence of an infection is ignored by doctors in favor of, ‘We have these three things.  We’re calling this trauma.’”   And she’s working to free Trudy Munoz, the woman who ran the daycare center. “You know it was licensed, it was meticulous.  The other people who went there, had their children there for years said she was fantastic, very patient, college educated, tiny – there was an expert who testified at her trial that she couldn’t possible have shaken the baby to the extent that would cause these symptoms.”  .........So far, higher courts have refused to hear an appeal, so the Innocence Project will ask the governor for clemency.  In the mean time, it’s hosting a preview of the new film Syndrome – about wrongful convictions based on an erroneous diagnosis of shaken baby syndrome.  The fundraiser takes place April 26th at 6 in UVA Law School’s Caplin Auditorium." (Thanks to the Wrongful Convictions Blog for drawing our attention to this case.)
http://wvtf.org/post/lawyers-challenge-evidence-shaken-baby-syndrome#stream/0

See 'The Evidence Professor Blog': Editor: Colin Miller; Univ. of South Carolina School of Law; (At the link below);  "Defense attorneys had argued that Trudy E. Munoz Rueda had not shaken the baby and that the concept of "shaken baby syndrome" was "junk science" that has not been proven by scientific evidence. The lawyers on both sides of the courtroom launched a battle of national experts on the issue, with the jury taking only five hours to side with those who say it is certainly possible to severely injure an infant merely by shaking the child. But are those experts right? The UVA Innocence Project, which was featured on the Serial Podcast, has taken on the case. “Genetic abnormalities, clotting disorders, some of the retinal hemorrhaging is even caused by efforts to resuscitate a child,” says  Deirdre Enright, Director of the Innocence Project at the University of Virginia.  She fears doctors are often ignoring things that could lead to another diagnosis. “Blood work that looks unusual or the presence of an infection is ignored by doctors in favor of, ‘We have these three things.  We’re calling this trauma.’” Pediatric neuroradiologist Patrick Barnes, who used to testify for the prosecution in baby shaking cases, agrees.  Barnes, a professor at the Stanford University School of Medicine, looked at scans of the baby's head at the request of defense attorneys and came to a different conclusion: The baby had likely suffered from an infection that caused blood clots in the brain, leading to a series of strokes. "All of the treating physicians simply assumed trauma and stopped looking for alternative explanations," Barnes wrote in a 2012 affidavit. "That is not sound science and cannot be the basis of a reliable prosecution."  Barnes is not alone.  Other doctors have also stepped forward to defend parents and caregivers, including George Nichols, the former state medical examiner of Kentucky, who made a surprising offer at a meeting for public defenders shortly after he retired in 1997. "I said if they had a case in which I had testified that somebody had died as a result of Shaken Baby Syndrome alone, that they were to contact me and that I would now testify for a reversal," Nichols said. "Shaken Baby Syndrome is a belief system rather than an exercise in modern-day science.. Muñoz Rueda's fate will soon be in the hands of the Governor of Virginia, with the UVA Innocence Project planning to ask him for clemency."
 tp://lawprofessors.typepad.com/evidenceprof/2016/04/the-case-of-tracymu%C3%B1oz-rueda-is-a-tragic-one-no-matter-how-you-slice-it-munoz-ran-a-daycare-in-fairfax-virginia-at-a-wid.html