STORY: "Kathleen Folbigg has spent 14 years in jail for killing her babies, but experts say there's real doubt over her conviction," by reporter Joanne McCarthy, published by The Newcastle Herald on May 17, 2017.
GIST: Kathleen Folbigg is the Hunter woman guilty of the worst crimes imaginable – killing her four babies . But as Folbigg starts her 15th year in jail, and nears her 50th
birthday in June, NSW Attorney General Mark Speakman is considering a
brief of evidence arguing an alternative scenario – that she is at the
centre of an extraordinary miscarriage of justice requiring a judicial
review. Key to the petition for a review submitted in June,
2015 by three Newcastle barristers is what has been described as an
“overwhelming weight” of forensic pathology evidence to say the Folbigg
babies died of natural causes or sudden infant death syndrome.........The petition includes the view of internationally
respected Monash University forensic pathologist Professor Stephen
Cordner, that there is ‘‘no forensic pathology support for the
contention that any or all of these children have been killed.
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Technically she can be left in jail to serve out her full sentence but is it fair, is it just, when there are experts casting real doubt? I don’t think so, and I hope we get the opportunity to have it looked at again rather than the government just sit it out and wait for it to become someone else’s problem.If the convictions in this case are to stand, I want to clearly state there is no pathological or medical basis for concluding homicide,’’ Professor Cordner said. Folbigg was sentenced to 30 years' jail in 2003 for the manslaughter of her first child Caleb, 19 days old, and the murder of her three children Patrick, eight months, Sarah, 10 months, and Laura, 19 months, at Singleton between 1989 and 1999, but has always maintained her innocence. A 2005 appeal to the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal noted that each child died suddenly and unexpectedly because of "cessation of breathing", although post-mortems failed to establish exactly what had caused the cessation of breathing. Central to the Crown case in 2003 was evidence that there were no known cases in the world of three or more children in the same family dying of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). The evidence was not only wrong, but would have left the jury discounting SIDS, and “leaving multiple homicides as the only explanation”, leading United Kingdom statistician and professor of mathematics Ray Hill said in a review of the Folbigg case that forms part of the Newcastle petition. A large American study in 1987 included two families where four babies had died of SIDS and related conditions, and later British and Norwegian studies of SIDS included a number of families where three babies had died. The studies concluded that babies born in families where one child had already died of SIDS were up to 10 times more likely to become SIDS victims. The ‘‘risk of adverse outcomes [was] significantly greater’’ for babies where two or more previous siblings had died of SIDS, they found. In a 120-page report Professor Cordner, who is also head of international programs at the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine, found much of the forensic pathology discussed at the trial was ‘‘misconceived’’. He found the default diagnosis of murder was ‘‘wrong’’ and there was no forensic pathology support for the Crown case that Kathleen Folbigg smothered her four children.
It seems not to have been explicitly stated in the trial, but there is no forensic pathology evidence, no signs in or on the bodies, to positively suggest that the Folbigg children were smothered, or killed by any means.‘‘It seems not to have been explicitly stated in the trial, but there is no forensic pathology evidence, no signs in or on the bodies, to positively suggest that the Folbigg children were smothered, or killed by any means,’’ Professor Cordner said in his report. The petition will also include a psychological report challenging the suggestion Folbigg’s personal diaries included admissions of guilt about killing her children. A clinical psychologist found Folbigg’s diary entries were consistent with psychological literature of the thoughts and feelings of mothers whose children had died, and maternal grief reactions. There was no attempt by Folbigg to conceal her private writings, the petition said. In his review, Professor Hill said flawed statistical evidence about the probability of multiple SIDS deaths in families had led to serious miscarriages of justice in four United Kingdom cases where, in the past decade or so, women were charged with murder after three SIDS deaths in their families. A medical expert's 1989 report that stated, "one sudden infant death is a tragedy, two is suspicious and three is murder until proved otherwise," led to the UK women being charged despite significant evidence about the increased likelihood of SIDS deaths in families after one SIDS death. Challenges to that report from statisticians, including Professor Hill, played a significant part in the cases against the UK women being dropped. Professor Hill said he had no idea how widespread the "three is murder until proved otherwise" view was among pathologists and paediatricians worldwide, until he was asked to review the Folbigg case by Newcastle University Legal Centre. Newcastle barristers Robert Cavanagh, Isabel Reed and Nicolas Moir, and University of Newcastle Legal Centre director Shaun McCarthy, sent the petition to NSW Governor David Hurley in June 2015, seeking a judicial review, after serious concerns about the convictions were first raised by legal academic Dr Emma Cunliffe in her 2011 book, Murder, Medicine and Motherhood."
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PUBLISHER'S NOTE: I am monitoring this case/issue. 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. The Star has a "topic" section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at: http://www.thestar.com/topic/c