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

On June 15, 2023, five ami­cus briefs were filed with the United States Supreme Court in sup­port of Robert Roberson (pic­tured with his daugh­ter, Nikki), a Texas death-sen­tenced pris­on­er who has long claimed to be inno­cent of caus­ing the death of his daugh­ter. Mr. Roberson filed his peti­tion with the Supreme Court on May 11th after the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) denied his request for a new tri­al despite the pre­sen­ta­tion of new sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence that sound­ly dis­cred­it­ed the shak­en baby syn­drome” (SBS) the­o­ry the pros­e­cu­tion had relied upon at tri­al. A 2021 evi­den­tiary hear­ing had also pre­sent­ed com­pelling new med­ical evi­dence estab­lish­ing that the vic­tim, Mr. Roberson’s 2‑year-old daugh­ter, died of nat­ur­al and acci­den­tal caus­es. Mr. Roberson, who received an exe­cu­tion date in 2016, has asked the Supreme Court to over­turn the CCA’s decision. 

The ami­cus briefs filed today are authored by experts from a num­ber of dif­fer­ent dis­ci­plines. The brief of Concerned Physicians and Scientists states that pre­vi­ous­ly pre­vail­ing sci­en­tif­ic belief regard­ing SBS has been dis­cred­it­ed, and ami­ci file this brief out of con­cern that some courts, includ­ing those below, con­tin­ue to rely uncrit­i­cal­ly on out­dat­ed the­o­ries and refuse to con­sid­er the cur­rent state of the science… .” 

The Center for Integrity in Forensic Sciences writes that Mr. Roberson was sen­tenced to death based on sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence the foren­sic com­mu­ni­ty now under­stands to be out­dat­ed and deeply flawed. No con­vic­tion should be allowed to stand on this foun­da­tion, par­tic­u­lar­ly a death sentence.” 

In the brief of Retired Federal Judges, five retired fed­er­al judges, includ­ing one from Texas, write that, The Texas court sys­tem failed Roberson. It failed to ful­ly and fair­ly con­sid­er th[e] new evi­dence. It rub­ber-stamped a cap­i­tal con­vic­tion based on unre­li­able med­ical evi­dence. It denied Roberson the con­sti­tu­tion­al process he is due. And his life hangs in the bal­ance as a result. This Court’s review is need­ed to pre­vent that mis­car­riage of justice.” 

In addi­tion, an ami­cus brief filed by Witness to Innocence details the sto­ries of nine par­ents or care­givers in sev­en states who were false­ly con­vict­ed of harm­ing or killing a child under the dis­cred­it­ed SBS the­o­ry, only to be exon­er­at­ed after years or decades in prison. The brief also notes that wrong­ful con­vic­tions are often premised on inap­pro­pri­ate reac­tions” to ill­ness, injury or death. Robert Roberson was a spe­cial edu­ca­tion stu­dent when he dropped out of 9th grade, and he also has autism. Hospital staff did not know Mr. Roberson had autism and judged his response to his daughter’s grave con­di­tion as lack­ing emo­tion, which in turn raised the sus­pi­cions of inves­ti­ga­tors. The jury nev­er learned of Mr. Roberson’s autism. 

Finally, a brief filed by The Innocence Project of Texas raised addi­tion­al con­cerns, in addi­tion to the fact that the CCA sum­mar­i­ly denied relief, despite over­whelm­ing record evi­dence that [Mr. Roberson’s] under­ly­ing con­vic­tion and death sen­tence rest on tabloid sci­ence.” The brief notes that “[a]s courts in oth­er juris­dic­tions have held, uphold­ing a con­vic­tion in these cir­cum­stances vio­lates fun­da­men­tal due process prin­ci­ples. But the deci­sion below rais­es a sec­ond and inde­pen­dent con­sti­tu­tion­al con­cern: the courts failed to engage mean­ing­ful­ly with the post­con­vic­tion record, and instead uncrit­i­cal­ly adopt­ed near­ly word-for-word the prosecution’s pro­posed findings below.”

Mr. Roberson has spent 20 years on death row in Texas. 

Citation Guide
Sources

Read the ami­cus briefs in Roberson v. Texas.