The Texas House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence heard tes­ti­mo­ny on Monday October 21, 2024 from nov­el­ist John Grisham, talk show host Dr. Phil” McGraw, but not its expect­ed star wit­ness, Robert Roberson, whose sub­poe­naed tes­ti­mo­ny result­ed in a dra­mat­ic last-minute stay of exe­cu­tion on October 17th from the Texas Supreme Court. Legislators said they could not reach an agree­ment with the Office of the Texas Attorney General to facil­i­tate Mr. Roberson’s in-per­son tes­ti­mo­ny, and Committee Chair Joe Moody indi­cat­ed that leg­is­la­tors did not believe Mr. Roberson’s tes­ti­mo­ny via video link would be appro­pri­ate giv­en the com­mu­ni­ca­tions chal­lenges relat­ed to his autism spec­trum dis­or­der. Mr. Roberson’s lawyer Gretchen Sween sent a let­ter to the House Committee explain­ing why Mr. Roberson’s appear­ance by video would not be effec­tive and cit­ed mate­r­i­al mis­rep­re­sen­ta­tions about record facts” by the Office of the Attorney General. Chair Moody not­ed that nego­ti­a­tions were con­tin­u­ing with his expec­ta­tion that a quick res­o­lu­tion” would allow Mr. Roberson to testify.

At the hear­ing, leg­is­la­tors heard from a num­ber of wit­ness­es who recount­ed the facts of the case and the con­clu­sions of many experts that no crime caused the death of Mr. Roberson’s young daugh­ter, Nikki. Dr. Phil tes­ti­fied for more than two hours, not­ing his pri­or work as a clin­i­cal psy­chol­o­gist and describ­ing his sup­port for the death penal­ty in gen­er­al before express­ing his absolute belief in Mr. Roberson’s innocence. 

Novelist John Grisham tes­ti­fied by video. Mr. Grisham not­ed his expe­ri­ence as a for­mer crim­i­nal tri­al lawyer and a cur­rent board mem­ber at the New York-based Innocence Project. He described Mr. Roberson’s tri­al as gross­ly unfair” and tes­ti­fied that the junk sci­ence was ter­ri­ble. We know it’s bad science.”

Both Mr. Grisham and Dr. Phil not­ed the prej­u­di­cial effect of hav­ing the jury hear about alle­ga­tions of sex­u­al abuse – alle­ga­tions made by just one hos­pi­tal staff mem­ber and nev­er proven. Mr. Grisham said he believes Mr. Roberson should receive a new tri­al, with as many lawyers as the pros­e­cu­tion, and as many experts as the pros­e­cu­tion” so he will have a fair pro­ceed­ing. Mr. Grisham also described why junk sci­ence is a huge fac­tor” that caus­es wrong­ful con­vic­tions, and not­ed the many exon­er­a­tions that have occurred after foren­sic sci­ence was revealed to be unreliable. 

Terre Compton, one of the jurors at Mr. Roberson’s tri­al, tes­ti­fied that the only thing” jurors were told by pros­e­cu­tors was that Nikki’s death was caused by shak­en baby syndrome”(SBS) – in con­trast to recent state­ments from a Texas Attorney General plead­ing stat­ing that SBS just does­n’t play a role in this case.” Ms. Compton expressed being very pissed off” at how offi­cials now describe what hap­pened at the tri­al; she added that she would have nev­er vot­ed to con­vict Mr. Roberson if any oth­er expla­na­tion for Nikki’s death had been pro­vid­ed. Former Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Judge Elsa Alcala, who has been crit­i­cal of how Texas’ junk sci­ence” law has been used, also tes­ti­fied at Monday’s hear­ing and offered sug­ges­tions about ways that the law could be changed. 

Gov. Greg Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxton object­ed to the hear­ing, argu­ing that House mem­bers over­stepped their author­i­ty in call­ing it, and by sub­poe­naing Roberson to testify. 

The hear­ing con­tin­ued for close to 9 hours, with addi­tion­al tes­ti­mo­ny from Mr. Roberson’s long­time coun­sel, Gretchen Sween, attor­ney Donald Salzman, and autism expert Natalie Montfort. 

Citation Guide
Sources

Elizabeth Wolfe et al, CNN, How a stun­ning 11th-hour race to save a Texas death row inmate from exe­cu­tion in shak­en baby’ case unfold­ed, Oct. 18, 2024; Kayla Gua et al, Death row inmate Robert Roberson sched­uled to tes­ti­fy in unprece­dent­ed leg­isla­tive hear­ing, Oct. 212024.

Pictured: Representative Jeff Leach asks a ques­tion dur­ing the hearing.