A Judge Says Shaken-Baby Cases Rely on 'Junk Science'
The pediatric neurosurgeon who first popularized shaken-baby syndrome has doubts about how it is used in courtrooms today.

After his 11-month-old son showed signs of neurological damage in 2017, Darryl Nieves was charged with aggravated assault and endangering the welfare of a child. The indictment alleged that Nieves had injured the toddler, who was born prematurely with severe medical problems, by violently shaking him—an example of "abusive head trauma" (AHT), a.k.a. "shaken baby syndrome." But earlier this year, the judge presiding over Nieves' trial expressed appropriate skepticism about the very concept of AHT, which has been crucial in many dubious child abuse cases.
In a January 7 decision, New Jersey Superior Court Judge Pedro J. Jimenez Jr. barred testimony from AHT experts, saying the diagnosis is "akin to 'junk science.'" Jimenez is one of many critics who have questioned the reliability of shaken-baby convictions.
Child abuse specialists identify suspected AHT cases by a "triad" of symptoms: bleeding in the brain, bleeding in the eyes, and neurological impairment. But as Jimenez explained, that diagnosis is not supported by a scientific consensus, and even the pediatric neurosurgeon who first popularized it in 1971 has doubts about how it is used in courtrooms today.
"There is no proof provided that AHT is, in fact, a valid diagnosis explaining an inflicted trauma which causes a pathology," Jimenez wrote. "Instead, what the literature and testimony have clearly shown is that AHT is an assumption packaged as a medical diagnosis, unsupported by any medical or scientific testing." It is nevertheless "proffered in cases like this one as proof beyond a reasonable doubt as to the cause of the infant's injuries."
Despite its speculative foundation, Jimenez said, AHT has been used to bolster a "highly prejudicial" accusation. That prejudice can be disastrous for defendants.
Since 1989, according to the National Registry of Exonerations, 26 people convicted based on AHT evidence have been exonerated. Last October, Kim Hoover-Moore was released from an Ohio prison 17 years after she was wrongly convicted, based on AHT evidence, of killing a baby in her care.
Meanwhile, Robert Roberson is sitting on death row in Texas after being convicted of murdering his 2-year-old daughter by shaking and beating her. In briefs filed with the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in April, forensics experts and three exonerees wrongly convicted of murder based on AHT diagnoses argue that Roberson's conviction should be overturned. While AHT "is presented as a medical 'diagnosis,'" the exonerees say, "it is really nothing of the kind."
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "A Judge Says Shaken-Baby Cases Rely on 'Junk Science'."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
"A" judge. A hell of a lot more judges need to be a hell of a lot more skeptical of "expert" witnesses who come up with this sort of bullshit. I remember years ago reading an article in Omni magazine warning about the dangers of allowing non-expert judges to become the gatekeepers for deciding who was and who was not an expert witness, correctly predicting that, since judges were not scientists, their default position would be to admit anybody who could baffle then with scientific-sounding hokum to call themselves an expert witness. Too many people watch CSI-type shows and believe that shit is real.
A different recent example is glyphosate AKA Roundup. Thousands of scientific reports show it is about as safe an herbicide as you can get, effective, easy to apply. Hundreds of government environmental agencies have said it is safe. Yet some recent trial found it at fault because the judge let a fraudulent expert testify and barred mention of all those other reports, IIRC, and they jury awarded hundreds of millions in damages.
Yeah, that seemed to be an activist judge who just wanted to stick it to Monsanto, since, iirc, they weren't allowing in all the evidence that Round-up was NOT a carcinogenic, but allowed one junk study to be offered to the jury. They couldn't even definitively link the single case to that man's exposure to Round-up.
Trial by jury and universal democracy both deliver on the promise that letting our peers determine our fate is the most just method. Or not.
I made $30,030 in just 5 weeks working part-time right from my apartment. ggh. When I lost my last business I got tired right away and luckily I found this job online and with that I am able to start reaping lots right through my house. Anyone can achieve this top level career and make more money online by:-
Reading this article:>>>> https://extradollars3.blogspot.com/
"I remember years ago reading an article in Omni magazine warning about the dangers of allowing non-expert judges to become the gatekeepers for deciding who was and who was not an expert witness, correctly predicting that, since judges were not scientists, their default position would be to admit anybody who could baffle then with scientific-sounding hokum to call themselves an expert witness."
But what is the alternative.
I see only two practical alternatives.
1. Admit all self identified "experts" and let the jury sort it out. I suspect that this would end up being even worse than the current situation.
2. Disallow all "expert" testimony.
I ultimately don't know the answer. The balancing factor should be the adversarial system: you've got someone on the opposite who is looking to poke holes in what you've got to say. If they do their job, they should be able to poke holes in junk science. Sometimes, though, you have public defenders who are overworked and don't have the time or resources to research what they'd need to know in order to dispute some experts.
Expert witnesses are privileged beyond other witnesses - they can testify to hearsay and give opinions. Which as a general rule can't be given to a jury.
To earn such privileges, a witness better bring something to the table, as in real credentials.
Credentials, as evidenced by Drs. Hughes and Spiegel in the Depp v Heard trial, mean jack fucking shit.
This sounds like the kind of thing where professional societies should be certifying members as experts, using an explicit set of requirements for that certification.
Further, courts should require experts to distinguish their own personal opinion from accepted facts in the discipline, to distinguish these types of claims in instructions to the jury, and to provide opposing council citations or documentation from the relevant literature supporting claims they make (or stipulate they have no such literature basis). (Most useful if the defense has their own expert witness, since the expert will be better at handling the literature than the attorney will be).
I mean, it would be nice if our juries were educated enough to handle expert testimony in a more sophisticated manner, but since that's not a reasonable expectation... properly cautioning the jury when expert claims cannot be backed by the literature, and making sure the defense is aware of any literature supporting the experts opinion so they can properly direct their own expert, is probably the best we can hope for.
The problem is that the "professional societies" are nothing more than collections of the very same people whose expertise is being questioned. Professional societies are no more guaranteed of independence or actual expertise than the judges now serving in the role.
Courts are already supposed to require the separation of personal opinion. They are also supposed to disclose and discuss potentially-contrary research. Unfortunately, actually carrying out that responsibility usually falls to the opposing counsel (through objection or cross-examination) and many of them are not as good at that part of the job as they should be.
Obviously create a class of experts on who is an expert to testify at court.
The point of a trial is to get an conviction. And the judge is on the same team as the prosecutor. So of course the judge will accept any bullshit "expert" testimony. For the same reason they treat police testimony as the truth when it's an open secret that they lie about literally everything in court. Nobody is the system cares about truth or justice. They just want to lock people up and steal their stuff.
A hell of a lot more judges need to be a hell of a lot more skeptical of "expert" witnesses who come up with this sort of bullshit.
The problem, until now, isn't judges, it's juries. I could see states or judges putting a cap on the number of expert witnesses in the name of expediency or setting up some expert witness horse trading scheme to ensure each side has a fair chance to bounce whacko science. Ultimately, if the jury believes that babies just start bleeding in their eyes or brain for no reason or that every baby with even a slight hematoma anywhere on their body has always been abused, it's definitively up to the lawyers (and their experts) to convince them otherwise.
In this case, the judge is effectively saying you can't mount a prosecution or defense on non-legal technical grounds which, IMO, is akin to legislating from the bench.
Judges are supposed to be gatekeepers. They're supposed to keep out improper or bad evidence. The Frye and Daubert standards, on their face, would exclude most forensics, but judges elide their role by relying on precedent: some other judge allowed it in, so they do.
Juries are also a problem: they don't really apply the presumption of innocence and are too easily gulled by a lab coat.
Judges are supposed to be gatekeepers. They're supposed to keep out improper or bad evidence. The Frye and Daubert standards, on their face, would exclude most forensics, but judges elide their role by relying on precedent: some other judge allowed it in, so they do.
Uh, you've got some oxymorons wrapped up in your tautology, and you can't have it all three (or four or n) ways.
Daubert says the Judge is gatekeeper. End of story. You may argue Frye on appeal but, per your assertion and Daubert, judge is gatekeeper. Don't like it? Change Daubert.
No, Frye and Daubert only exclude most forensics if you assume experts, scientists, or forensic technologists largely rely on a wide array of non-standardized and non-repeatable methods. Some experts do rely on some dubious methods or interpretation of those methods but neither Frye nor Daubert refutes such methods exist and are actually codified around them.
Judges elide their role as gatekeeper by looking at the legal history to decide which methods are common, which aren't, and which should go and which should stay? I don't think you know what the word gatekeeper means.
And, again, re-write Frye and Daubert all you like, either the expertise is going to lie with judges or gullible juries are going to be a/the problem. The notion that Frye and Daubert should exclude most forensic evidence (plaintiff or defense) doesn't guarantee more just and factually-accurate outcomes, rather the opposite.
Shake Joe Biden
I see what you did there
1985 a friend of mine was convicted of killing his daughter. Shaken Baby Syndrome was given as the cause. No other proof was given. Several of us were prepared to testify at his Trial, but, the Navy sent us out on a Detachment until the trial was over. At that time there was a big argument between the Navy and the City we were based in. Prosecutors said that the Navy assumed jurisdiction over incidents involving it's personnel and was too lenient. So the Navy turned my friend over to the City even though this happened in Base Housing and was under it's jurisdiction.
But, by extension, this implies Fauci might be wrong!
The effectiveness of cloth masks is, and was always, junk science.
Like most saints and other holy people, Fauci can never be wrong. We simply cannot understand properly.
Paper infallibility pissed off Martin Luther, my being pissed off at Fauci is just keeping the Lutheran Tradition alive.
Child abuse specialists identify suspected AHT cases by a "triad" of symptoms: bleeding in the brain, bleeding in the eyes, and neurological impairment.
Uh, so without expert testimony we're left to assume bleeding in the brain and eyes just happens to babies?
After his 11-month-old son showed signs of neurological damage in 2017, Darryl Nieves was charged with aggravated assault and endangering the welfare of a child.
Given Reason's standard fair on this bullshit, I'm going to posit a guess: Darryl Nieves has a rap sheet for domestic abuse and the kid was found with a broken nose, fractured skull, and multiple other broken bones. That's not to indict Nieves, he may be completely innocent and the facts will bear that out, but the reporting source has a proven track record of reporting incidents that numerous public health workers testify as the worst case of child abuse they've ever seen as *literally* 'the kid just fell down the stairs'.
Let's see... State v. Eric Nieves... Ismael Nieves... Humberto Nieves... Demitri Nieves...
I suppose it's too much to ask for links to the details of any given case. Better to just shut up and emote like a bleating sheep.
And, while not the Nieves case, sure enough it turns out that in the Roberson Case, Roberson was an ex-con and has released statements not that the baby wasn't shaken but, quite the opposite, *he knows who shook the baby* and it wasn't him, junk science be damned.
Fuck you, Reason.
So if you can't abort them, shake them till they stop moving? Is that what I'm supposed to get from Reason?
Using science* to prove that you can't kill babies is the epitome of White Male Supremacy.
*Not The Science!
Most exonerations include false confessions, incompetent counsel, false misleading testimony, official misconduct (rare). Article is certainly one sided, and ignores e.g. '...The reported rates of child abuse homicide have been documented to be underreported by as much as 50 to 60%....' because many doctors don't see it enough or are not trained to see it. Most put wrongful convictions at about 5%; however, that may be the best we can expect given the limitations of our legal system which isn't designed to find the truth.
Great, now let's see them go after "recovered memories".
I've lived long enough to start to be suspicious of my own memories, especially those that I hold most dear and replay over and over (thinking of a magical third birthday morning or watching a Gemini launch).
It can be pretty easy to plant memories. Heck, I've got my grandmother's memories of the hurricane of 1938 - two decades before my birth - just from hearing the stories so many times.
Junk science often sound "cool", a wonderful source of new, life-changing knowledge, but it generally just mysticism dressed up with pseudoscience buzzwords. (And don't forget to uncouple the Heizenberg Compensators if you want to have some really great BS fun!)
Jeeze, we need the damned preview function back!
Well, let's remember that the now debunked "science" of DNA analysis historically claimed to be able to accurately identify a specific individual, and it turned out that DNA can't even accurately tell male from female.
I want to believe it but this article provides no evidence aside from "some people have doubts." This isn't journalism, this is a moral panic piece.
See above, one of the people Reason claims to be defending from Junk Science claims not that he knows his baby wasn't shaken, but that he knows who shook his baby (Spoiler Alert: Not him!).
For the moment, at any rate, we're dependent on defence attorneys to do a proper examination of the alleged expert witnesses' credentials before allowing them to testify in open court.
"Can you cite one of your peer-reviewed articles about topic X?"
"I have not written any, but..."
"Then fuck off...apologies, your honor".
What you wrote sounds good.
But there have been a lot of articles that you can write pure gibberish and it will be acceptable for publication.
So the “expert “maybe publisher multiple journals and still be a charlatan