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Three “shaken baby” convictions quashed

Posted: 21 July 2005 | Subscribe Online


Appeal Court judges have quashed the convictions of three people found guilty of harming or killing children after their lawyers attacked the theory of "shaken baby syndrome".
 
Although the judges ruled each shaken baby case depended on its own facts, the court's decision may open the way for more than 90 other convictions to be challenged on the basis of doubts over expert medical evidence.

Raymond Rock, formerly of Perebrown Avenue, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, was convicted of murdering his girlfriend's daughter Heidi Smith, aged 13 months, in 1998. He was alleged to have shaken the child violently, but he insisted she wriggled out of his arms and fell to the floor.

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The conviction of Rock, the only one of the four people involved in the appeal to still be in custody,  was reduced from murder to manslaughter today by Lord Justice Gage, sitting with Mr Justice Gross and Mr Justice McFarlane.
 
The judges also overturned his life sentence and imposed a new term of seven years.  As he has already served almost six years behind bars, he will be immediately released on parole.
 
Lorraine Harris, 36, formerly of Kingsdale Close, Long Eaton, Derbyshire, who was jailed for the manslaughter of her four-month-old son Patrick McGuire in 2000. She said the baby became ill and stopped breathing after a vaccination. He had a blood disorder which was only discovered after his death.
 
She has already been released from custody and her conviction was today overturned as "unsafe".
 
Alan Cherry, 54, from Birmingham, but who was living in Millwall, London, when convicted at Birmingham Crown Court in 1995 of the manslaughter of his girlfriend's 22-month-old daughter, Sarah Eburne-Day. He denied shaking her in a fit of temper and claimed she fell off a stool on which she was standing.
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Cherry's conviction was upheld by the Appeal Court.
 
Michael Faulder, 36, formerly of Raby Street, Gateshead, jailed for two-and-a-half years at Teesside Crown Court in 1999 for causing grievous bodily harm to a boy aged seven weeks who has since made a full recovery. Faulder said he accidentally dropped the baby while trying to put him in his pushchair.  His appeal was allowed and his conviction quashed.
 
Although the judges ruled each shaken baby case depended on its own facts, the court's decision may open the way for more than 90 other convictions to be challenged on the basis of doubts over expert medical evidence.


 



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