Wednesday, February 26, 2020
Shaken Baby Syndrome: (Extremely important article HL); 3News (WKYC) investigates the science behind the syndrome in a story sub-headed, "Many cases are unraveling, while others accused remain imprisoned."... "When Dan and Lee-Ann Dunkle look at their daughter, they see a soaring athletic teen, an honor roll scholar. They certainly don’t see a victim of shaken baby syndrome. But once upon a time, that's all doctors saw. Turns out, those doctors were dead wrong. Despite the passing years, the sting of that failed diagnosis isn't soothed. Instead, tearful memories flood a mother's thoughts. "I couldn't take my kid home. They said I would be arrested if I did. And that's when we were like, wait a minute, what's going on here." She soon learned. The Dunkles were at Akron Children's Hospital, where renowned pediatric doctor Daryl Steiner was uncovering case after case of shaken baby syndrome. Reached by phone, Dr. Steiner told 3News Investigates: “I’m retired and I’ve forgotten everything prior to 2016.” Today, shaken baby syndrome and abusive head trauma is a hotly debated diagnosis, both in the medical and the legal communities. More than 200 criminal cases are unraveling across the nation since 2001, according to an extensive study by the Washington Post and journalism students at Northwestern University. Over 1,600 cases, however, were left intact, leaving others to make pleas of innocence from behind bars."
QUOTES OF THE DAY: "There are definitely people serving long sentences, life sentences, for what I believe is bad science and bad medicine,” said Akron attorney Andrea Whitaker, who has defended about 10 shaken baby cases, including the Dunkles. "There's no question in my mind that there are innocent people in prison from the misdiagnosis.” Shaken Baby grew prominent in the 1990s, accentuated by the trial of British au pair, Louise Woodward. Afterward, the diagnosis of cases exploded, most notably around Akron, ranking the area third in the entire nation. Much of the credit went to Dr. Steiner, who gained national fame as an expert of shaken baby. One doctor testified in a hearing that Steiner became “cavalier” in his shaken baby work. "The pediatrician would become the doctor, the prosecutor, the police officer and the jury,” said Donald Caster, an attorney with the Ohio Innocence Project. “The pediatrician would say this is abuse and that put a parent or caregiver’s life into a living hell.""
-----------------------------------------------------------
ANOTHER QUOTE OF THE DAY: "Attorneys say there are others across the country who are wrongly convicted. "There are dozens of people in ohio who have been wrongly convicted of abuse based on the shaken baby hypothesis,” Caster said. "These are men and women who have been separated from their families for decades because of false claims by science.”
-----------------------------------------------------------
PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "There are definitely people serving long sentences, life sentences, for what I believe is bad science and bad medicine,” said Akron attorney Andrea Whitaker, who has defended about 10 shaken baby cases, including the Dunkles. "There's no question in my mind that there are innocent people in prison from the misdiagnosis.”
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
STORY: "3News investigates science behind shaken baby syndrome" by reporters Phil Trexler and Rachel Polansky, published by WKYC on February 24, 2020. (Phil Trexler is an Investigative Producer at wkyc studios in Cleveland, Ohio - Rachel Polansky is a 3News investigative reporter). Thanks to Dr. Michael Bowers of CSIDDS - Forensics and law in focus - for bringing this important article to our attention. (Dr. Bowers reports that "a cavalier and long time shaken baby expert will not admit his decades of misdiagnosis" - and notes, "Dr.Steiner's "saving the kids" mantra was later adopted by the bitemarkers.")
https://csidds.com/2020/02/25/forensics-a-cavalierand-long-time-shaken-baby-expert-will-not-admit-his-decades-of-misdiagnoses/
SUB-HEADING: "Many cases are unraveling, while others accused remain imprisoned."
GIST: "When Dan and Lee-Ann Dunkle look at their daughter, they see a soaring athletic teen, an honor roll scholar. They certainly don’t see a victim of shaken baby syndrome. But once upon a time, that's all doctors saw. Turns out, those doctors were dead wrong. Despite the passing years, the sting of that failed diagnosis isn't soothed. Instead, tearful memories flood a mother's thoughts. "I couldn't take my kid home. They said I would be arrested if I did. And that's when we were like, wait a minute, what's going on here." She soon learned. The Dunkles were at Akron Children's Hospital, where renowned pediatric doctor Daryl Steiner was uncovering case after case of shaken baby syndrome. Reached by phone, Dr. Steiner told 3News Investigates: “I’m retired and I’ve forgotten everything prior to 2016.” Today, shaken baby syndrome and abusive head trauma is a hotly debated diagnosis, both in the medical and the legal communities. More than 200 criminal cases are unraveling across the nation since 2001, according to an extensive study by the Washington Post and journalism students at Northwestern University. Over 1,600 cases, however, were left intact, leaving others to make pleas of innocence from behind bars. "There are definitely people serving long sentences, life sentences, for what I believe is bad science and bad medicine,” said Akron attorney Andrea Whitaker, who has defended about 10 shaken baby cases, including the Dunkles. "There's no question in my mind that there are innocent people in prison from the misdiagnosis.” Shaken Baby grew prominent in the 1990s, accentuated by the trial of British au pair, Louise Woodward. Afterward, the diagnosis of cases exploded, most notably around Akron, ranking the area third in the entire nation. Much of the credit went to Dr. Steiner, who gained national fame as an expert of shaken baby. One doctor testified in a hearing that Steiner became “cavalier” in his shaken baby work. "The pediatrician would become the doctor, the prosecutor, the police officer and the jury,” said Donald Caster, an attorney with the Ohio Innocence Project. “The pediatrician would say this is abuse and that put a parent or caregiver’s life into a living hell."