Robert Roberson with daugh­ter Nikki. Courtesy of the Roberson family.

On July 16, 2025, Smith County District Judge Austin Reeve Jackson set an exe­cu­tion date of October 16, 2025 for Robert Roberson, a man with a strong inno­cence claim who has a habeas cor­pus peti­tion pend­ing at the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (TCCA). Judge Jackson, after hear­ing argu­ments from both defense coun­sel for Mr. Roberson and attor­neys from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s office, ruled that there was no legal basis for not sign­ing an exe­cu­tion order. It doesn’t seem like any­thing is going to get resolved with­out a date,” said Judge Jackson, who called this deci­sion unfor­tu­nate.” Counsel for Mr. Roberson object­ed to AG Paxton’s unusu­al” request to set an exe­cu­tion date, not­ing the court should not set a date as long as Mr. Roberson’s appeal remains pend­ing in front of the TCCA. Judge Jackson not­ed the motion has remained pend­ing in front of the TCCA for more than five months. 

In June 2025, AG Paxton filed a motion in the Anderson County District Court request­ing a new exe­cu­tion date for Mr. Roberson. AG Paxton has active­ly sought Mr. Roberson’s exe­cu­tion and has pub­licly dis­put­ed his claims of inno­cence; his office recent­ly took over Mr. Roberson’s case from Anderson County District Attorney Allyson Mitchell but has not pub­licly stat­ed the rea­son for doing so. Mr. Roberson was ini­tial­ly sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed in October 2024; how­ev­er, the Texas Supreme Court ulti­mate­ly stayed the exe­cu­tion after state law­mak­ers sub­poe­naed Mr. Roberson to tes­ti­fy on a date after his sched­uled exe­cu­tion. Just a week after the Court stayed Mr. Roberson’s exe­cu­tion, AG Paxton’s office issued a press state­ment, the orig­i­nal autop­sy report, and oth­er records to set the record straight” and cor­rect false­hoods” that he accused state law­mak­ers of mak­ing about Mr. Roberson. In response to the claims from AG Paxton, a bipar­ti­san group of leg­is­la­tors released their own report and char­ac­ter­ized the AG’s report as mis­lead­ing and in large part sim­ply untrue.” Mr. Roberson was not able to tes­ti­fy in front of law­mak­ers, as the Office of the Attorney General inter­vened to pre­vent the Texas Department of Criminal Justice’s com­pli­ance with the subpoena. 

Texans should be out­raged that the court has sched­uled an exe­cu­tion date for a demon­stra­bly inno­cent man. Everyone who has tak­en the time to look at the evi­dence of Robert Roberson’s inno­cence — includ­ing the lead detec­tive, one of the jurors, a range of high­ly qual­i­fied experts, and a bipar­ti­san group of Texas law­mak­ers — had reached the same con­clu­sion: Nikki’s death was a ter­ri­ble tragedy. Robert did not kill her. There was no crime.”

Gretchen Sween, attor­ney for Robert Roberson. 

In February 2025, coun­sel for Mr. Roberson filed a suc­ces­sive habeas appli­ca­tion with the TCCA, argu­ing that relief is required because new expert opin­ions and sci­en­tif­ic advance­ments have emerged since October 2024, when the TCCA acknowl­edged in a sim­i­lar case that the sci­en­tif­ic foun­da­tion for Shaken Baby Syndrome” (SBS) con­vic­tions lack reli­a­bil­i­ty. Filings indi­cate this new evi­dence serves two-fold: ratio­nal jurors would not find Mr. Roberson guilty of cap­i­tal mur­der today, and his con­vic­tion was mate­ri­al­ly influ­enced by sci­en­tif­ic and med­ical evi­dence now con­sid­ered out­dat­ed and unre­li­able. Counsel point­ed to the TCCA’s deci­sion in Ex Parte Roark, where the court over­turned a mur­der con­vic­tion based on the SBS tes­ti­mo­ny of the same expert who tes­ti­fied against Mr. Roberson. 

Mr. Roberson was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death in 2003 for the death of his daugh­ter Nikki, who med­ical experts have since deter­mined died from severe viral and bac­te­r­i­al pneu­mo­nia that doc­tors failed to diag­nose, not from abuse or Shaken Baby Syndrome” (SBS) as tri­al prosecutors alleged. 

According to the National Registry of Exonerations, at least 41 par­ents and care­givers across 21 states and the mil­i­tary have been exon­er­at­ed since 1992 after being wrong­ful­ly con­vict­ed based on the Shaken Baby” hypoth­e­sis. If Mr. Roberson’s exe­cu­tion date goes for­ward, he would be the first per­son exe­cut­ed based on a Shaken Baby” conviction. 

Citation Guide
Sources

Ashley Killough and Dakin Andone, Texas judge sets new exe­cu­tion date for death row inmate Robert Roberson, CNN, July 16, 2025; Michelle Pitcher, Robert Roberson Faces New Execution Date in Controversial Shaken Baby Syndrome’ Case, Texas Observer, July 162025