Robert Roberson of Texas is scheduled to die by lethal injection despite doubts over shaken baby syndrome, the scientific ...
Robert Roberson, convicted of killing his daughter, is scheduled to die Thursday by lethal injection after a district court ...
A district judge issued a temporary order halting Texas' execution of Robert Leslie Roberson III on Thursday, just over an ...
HOUSTON (AP) — A Texas man this week could become the first person executed in the U.S. from a murder conviction tied to the diagnosis of shaken baby syndrome. Robert Roberson, 57, is scheduled ...
Roberson's supporters say doctors misdiagnosed Curtis' injuries as being related to shaken baby syndrome and that new evidence has shown the girl died not from abuse, but from complications ...
Clemency has been denied for a man facing execution this week for the 2002 death of his daughter in a case related to shaken baby syndrome. On Wednesday, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles ...
What is shaken baby syndrome? The diagnosis refers to a serious brain injury caused when a child’s head is injured through shaking or some other violent impact, like being slammed against a wall or ...
The Texas Supreme Court halted the execution of Robert Roberson in an 11th-hour decision Thursday night, after a flurry of legal appeals in the high-profile shaken baby syndrome case.
The Supreme Court declined to block Texas from executing Robert Roberson, who insists his conviction for murdering his 2-year-old daughter rests upon a debunked version of shaken baby syndrome ...
The prosecution said he took her to the hospital where scans showed she had internal brain trauma of the sort that at the time was thought to indicate a baby had been violently shaken by someone.
The execution of Robert Roberson, the man at the center of a controversial “shaken baby syndrome” case, is set to proceed after the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles unanimously voted against ...
The prosecution said he took her to hospital where scans showed she had internal brain trauma of the sort that at the time was thought to indicate a baby had been violently shaken by someone.