Robert Roberson | |
---|---|
![]() Undated photo of Robert Roberson | |
Born | Robert Leslie Roberson III November 10, 1966 Wood County, Texas, U.S. |
Conviction(s) | Capital murder |
Criminal penalty | Death |
Details | |
Date | January 31, 2002 |
Location(s) | Anderson County, Texas |
Imprisoned at | Allan B. Polunsky Unit |
Robert Leslie Roberson III (born November 10, 1966) is an American man convicted and on death row for the murder of his two-year-old daughter in 2002. Roberson was accused of shaking his daughter and causing her death, and was tried and convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death in 2003. He has lost his appeals since. [1] [2]
Roberson's conviction was based on blunt force trauma through shaken baby syndrome, which has been argued by some to be "junk science", leading to controversy over the conviction. [3] In addition, Roberson's lawyers argued that his daughter had suffered from pneumonia which had progressed into sepsis by the time of her death. [4] However, the use of the 2013 "junk science law" as a defense was not successful. Roberson maintained his innocence throughout the appeal process. Roberson was originally scheduled to be executed on October 17, 2024, [5] but the Texas Supreme Court granted a stay of execution to allow his testimony before the Texas House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence. [6] However, the committee ultimately refused to hear Roberson's testimony but allowed testimony from others, including a juror on the case who said that the new evidence would have led her to find Roberson "not guilty". [7]
Robert Leslie Roberson III was born on November 10, 1966, in Wood County, Texas. Official records showed that between 1991 and 1999, Roberson was convicted of burglary, theft and parole violations; he was released from prison in 2000. [8]
Prior to 2002, Roberson was divorced with two children, and he also fathered a daughter with another woman, who was reputedly a habitual drug abuser and sex worker. The girl, Nikki Michelle Curtis, was born on October 20, 1999, and entrusted to the care of her maternal grandparents; Roberson was granted custody of Nikki after he underwent DNA testing, which confirmed that he was the biological father of Nikki. Nikki was said to have had several chronic health problems soon after her birth. [9]
On January 31, 2002, two years after the end of his most recent time in prison, Roberson brought an injured Nikki to the hospital. He stated to hospital authorities that his daughter had fallen from her bed and sustained head injuries, and was unconscious and not breathing when he awoke and found her. In spite of medical treatment, two-year-old Nikki Curtis was later pronounced dead after attempts to revive her failed. [9]
The doctors and nurses, however, did not believe that the injuries were caused by a fall and suspected they could have been caused by child abuse. Moreover, doctors and investigators reported that they observed unusual behavior from Roberson as he reported his daughter's injuries. Therefore, a police report was launched and Roberson was arrested the following day after his daughter's death. He was charged with murder, an offense that carries either life imprisonment or the death penalty under Texas state law. [9]
At trial, the prosecution argued that Roberson intentionally murdered Nikki by means of lethal head injuries through severe abuse. During the court trial, medical experts theorized that Nikki’s death was, in part, caused by "shaken baby syndrome", which involves the violent shaking of an infant resulting in severe head injuries. Roberson denied that he inflicted the fatal injuries to Nikki, although testimony given at trial suggested that Roberson had abused his ex-wife and two older children in the past. [9] Additionally, Roberson's ex-wife testified that he choked and punched her when she was pregnant. [10] The defense suggested that Roberson’s ex-wife and Nikki’s mother were unreliable witnesses. They believed she had motivation to lie, having lost custody of their two children years prior in a drawn-out court battle, noting that she was flown in from Alabama to testify. [11] Multiple witnesses, all related to Teddie Cox, testified that they had seen Roberson shake Nikki on prior occasions. [12]
According to prosecutors, physicians reported that Nikki suffered and ultimately died of "massive head trauma". Prosecutors argued that in the emergency room, Nikki was found to have "a bruise on the back of her shoulder, a scraped elbow, a bruise over her right eyebrow, bruises on her chin, a bruise on her left cheek, an abrasion next to her left eye, multiple bruises on the back of her head, a torn frenulum in her mouth, bruising on the inner surface of the lower lip, subscapular and subgaleal hemorrhaging between her skin and her skull, subarachnoid bleeding, subdural hematoma, both pre-retinal and retinal hemorrhages and brain edema." [13] Additionally, four separate doctors testified Nikki had "multiple blows to different points on the head", which could not have been caused by falling off a bed. [14] At trial, Roberson's defense expert admitted that Roberson "lost it" and shook Nikki because he could not stop her from crying. [14]
On February 21, 2003, Roberson was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death by an Anderson County jury. [9]
Roberson filed an appeal to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals but the appeal was dismissed on July 22, 2007. [15] [16] Another two appeals were rejected in May and August 2015, respectively, by the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. [17] [18]
Throughout the following years, the case of Roberson began to garner attention due to the fact that a key factor of his conviction was "shaken baby syndrome", a scientific theory that some critics label junk science despite the majority of researchers in the field recognizing that some patterns of injury are suggestive of abuse which may at least partially be the result of shaking. [19] Apart from the theory, Roberson's lawyers also argued that the conviction should not stand, since the medical experts at trial had failed to consider alternative explanations behind the cause of death or take into account the chronic health conditions which Nikki suffered prior to her death. [20] [21] [22] Among the new evidence submitted was that Nikki suffered from pneumonia and which had developed into sepsis, and Roberson's defense argued that this led to her death rather than the head injuries, adding that the medicine administered to Nikki by doctors during her treatment was no longer prescribed to children in the present day due to its serious complications. [4] [23] However, the prosecutors maintained that Roberson's new evidence did not dispute that Nikki died from the head injuries inflicted by her father. [24] Alternatively, bruising and internal bleeding could have been caused via reorientation of the skull to adjust for urgent intubation in an effort to prevent brain death. [25]
Another factor in this controversy was that, after his trial, Roberson was reportedly diagnosed with autism, a neurodevelopmental disorder that could lead to difficulties in social communication. According to a former detective, the revelation of this undiagnosed condition made him realize that the strange behavior displayed by Roberson in response to his daughter's death, behavior which prompted investigators' suspicions of Roberson, was likely due to autism and possibly not an indication of his guilt. [26] [27]
Originally, Roberson was slated to be executed on June 21, 2016, after he exhausted all his appeals against the death sentence; however, four days before the execution date, Roberson was granted a stay of execution and a court hearing was convened to review his case. [28] [29] The main point of the hearing was to determine whether Roberson's conviction should stand in light of the discredited theory of shaken baby syndrome, and there were past cases of individuals whose murder convictions based on shaken baby syndrome were overturned by the courts under a new law which mainly target cases of convictions based on junk science. [30] The evidentiary hearing came to an end on March 19, 2021. [31]
On January 11, 2023, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals decided that there was insufficient basis for the court to intervene in Roberson's case after they found that the doubt surrounding the death of Nikki and purported concerns with theory of shaken baby syndrome was not enough to bring Roberson off death row or revoke his conviction for murder. [32] Similarly, the U.S. Supreme Court also rejected another appeal from Roberson on October 2, 2023. [33] [34]
On July 1, 2024, the trial court in Anderson County approved a death warrant for Roberson, and his execution was scheduled for October 17, 2024. [35] [36] Roberson was reportedly the first death row prisoner convicted on the grounds of "shaken baby syndrome" to have an execution date scheduled in the United States. [37]
When the scheduling of Roberson's execution was publicized, his case was heavily debated over whether his murder conviction and death sentence should stand in light of criticisms of "shaken baby syndrome", and the lingering concerns of Roberson's alleged innocence were heightened after the announcement of his execution date. [38]
In a final series of legal attempts to escape the death penalty, Roberson and his lawyers appealed to the state courts to overturn his conviction and sentence, stating that he was innocent and never killed Nikki. Roberson also brought up his undiagnosed autism to seek mercy and argued that it had hindered him from having a fair trial. [39] An appeal to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals was rejected on September 11, 2024. [40]
There was considerable support coming from lawmakers and law enforcement personnel to stave off Roberson's execution. Reverend Brian Wharton, a former police officer who investigated Roberson's case and whose testimony helped send Roberson to death row, advocated for the commutation of Roberson's death sentence, stating he believed at this stage that the conviction or sentence should not have happened if there were proper investigations made in the case, especially since Roberson's autism went undiagnosed. [27] [41]
A clemency petition signed by 84 lawmakers from the 150-member state House, bestselling novelist John Grisham, medical experts, death penalty attorneys and former detectives of the case was submitted to the state Pardons Board for the commutation of Roberson's death sentence to life without parole. [42] [43] [44] One of these supporters, John Grisham, cited his reason behind his support for clemency, stating that no crime had taken place to begin with and that Texas was about to execute an innocent man. [45] Under Texas state law, the final recourse for inmates awaiting their scheduled execution was to appeal for clemency and the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles would decide whether to recommend clemency, with the governor having the final say, although it was noted that the governor Greg Abbott had rarely granted clemency throughout his tenure. [46] [47] Two weeks before he was to be executed, Roberson also made a personal plea to the governor to spare his life. [48]
On October 8, 2024, Roberson was granted a new hearing of his appeal against the death sentence but on October 11, 2024, Roberson's appeal was dismissed by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. [49]
On October 15, 2024, Administrative Judge Alfonso Charles, who was the Tenth Administrative Judicial Region presiding judge, rejected the appeal of Roberson to vacate his death warrant. [50] On that same date, the Texas Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence approved a subpoena to allow Roberson to testify before a Texas House committee in relation to his case. [4]
On October 16, 2024, the Texas parole board voted unanimously, 6–0, against recommending Roberson's sentence be commuted or his execution delayed. Abbott can only grant a pardon at the parole board's recommendation; the only remaining path to prevent Roberson's execution would be if Abbott awarded a 30-day reprieve to allow litigation to continue, and Abbott expressed no intention to do so. Roberson's counsel urged the governor to grant him a reprieve to allow them more time to prepare their case for continuing to fight for Roberson's life. [51] [52]
Simultaneously, as a last resort to evade the death penalty, Roberson appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Texas Attorney General's office had responded that Roberson had failed to prove his innocence and it had been upheld by multiple court proceedings that the cause of Nikki Curtis's death was "inconsistent with a short fall from a bed or complications from a virus". [53] [54] The U.S. Supreme Court rejected this final appeal hours before the scheduled timing of Roberson's execution. [55]
Roberson was slated to be put to death via lethal injection at 6:00 pm CDT on October 17 in the Huntsville Unit. [56] However, a Travis County judge issued an order to temporarily block the execution. [57] The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals subsequently overturned the stay after the prosecution appealed and ordered the execution to move forward. [58] [59] However, the Supreme Court of Texas intervened and temporarily halted the execution after Roberson's attorney and state lawmakers filed a last second appeal for a stay. [60]
Roberson was scheduled to testify before the House committee on October 21, 2024, where the lawmakers were to consider his testimony when determining whether amendments should be made to Texas law governing "junk science". [61] However, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton barred Roberson from appearing in-person to testify, saying it wouldn't be safe to bring a death row inmate to the Capitol. [62]
On November 15, 2024, the Texas Supreme Court ruled that state lawmakers had "exceeded their power" when they called on Roberson to testify before a House committee. A new execution date can be set, but the court also said lawmakers could still call Roberson to testify, and that the executive branch would have to accommodate such a request. [63]
On December 2, 2024, the judge who signed Roberson's death warrant, Judge Deborah Oakes Evans, voluntarily recused herself from the case. [64]
As of October 17, 2024, Robert Roberson remains on death row for the murder of his daughter. A new execution date has yet to be set. [65]
Capital punishment is a legal punishment under the criminal justice system of the United States federal government. It is the most serious punishment that could be imposed under federal law. The serious crimes that warrant this punishment include treason, espionage, murder, large-scale drug trafficking, or attempted murder of a witness, juror, or court officer in certain cases.
Capital punishment is a legal penalty in the U.S. state of Texas for murder, and participation in a felony resulting in death if committed by an individual who has attained or is over the age of 18.
William Charles Morva was an American-Hungarian man convicted of the 2006 shooting deaths of Sheriff's Deputy Corporal Eric Sutphin, 40, and hospital security guard Derrick McFarland, 32, in the town of Blacksburg, Virginia. He was sentenced to death for the crime and was executed on July 6, 2017. Morva was the last inmate to be executed by the Commonwealth of Virginia before capital punishment in the state was abolished on March 24, 2021.
Richard Eugene Glossip is an American prisoner currently on death row at Oklahoma State Penitentiary after being convicted of commissioning the 1997 murder of Barry Van Treese. The man who murdered Van Treese, Justin Sneed, had a "meth habit" and agreed to plead guilty in exchange for testifying against Glossip. Sneed received a life sentence without parole. Glossip's case has attracted international attention due to the unusual nature of his conviction, namely that there was little or no corroborating evidence, with the first case against him described as "extremely weak" by the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals.
Rodney Rodell Reed is an American death row inmate who was convicted on May 18, 1998, by a Bastrop County District Court jury for the April 1996 abduction, rape, and murder of Stacey Stites, a 19-year-old resident of Giddings, Texas.
Melissa Elizabeth Lucio is the first woman of Latino descent to be sentenced to death in the U.S. state of Texas. She was convicted of capital murder after the death of her two-year-old daughter, Mariah, who was found to have scattered bruising in various stages of healing, as well as injuries to her head and contusions of the kidneys, lungs and spinal cord. Prosecutors said that Mariah's injuries were the result of physical abuse, while Lucio's attorneys say that her death was caused by a fall down the stairs two days prior.
Carl Wayne Buntion was an American man convicted of capital murder in Texas and sentenced to death. On April 21, 2022, at the age of 78, he became the oldest inmate to be executed in Texas and the state's first execution of 2022.
Richard Bernard Moore was an American man executed in South Carolina for murder. He was convicted of the September 1999 murder of James Mahoney, a convenience store clerk, in Spartanburg, South Carolina. In 2022, Moore's case received international attention when he was scheduled for execution and opted to be executed by firing squad under the state's new capital punishment laws. He was set to become the first person executed in South Carolina in over a decade and the first to be executed by firing squad in the state. However, his execution was stayed by the South Carolina Supreme Court on April 20, 2022.
On November 20, 1994, 22-year-old nurse technician Stacy Rae Errickson was abducted from a gas station in Jacksonville, Arkansas, near Little Rock. The kidnapper, Marcel Wayne Williams, forced Errickson to withdraw money from various ATMs before he raped and killed Errickson near the Arkansas River. Williams confessed to the crime when he was arrested nine days later for unrelated cases of rape, and he was charged with the kidnapping, rape, and murder of Errickson. Williams was convicted and sentenced to death on January 14, 1997, and he also received three life sentences plus 70 years for separate rape incidents he committed on two women. Williams was incarcerated on death row for 20 years before he was executed on April 24, 2017.
On July 6, 1984, in Elk City, Oklahoma, 7-year-old Layla Cummings was abducted, raped, and murdered by Richard Norman Rojem Jr., who was previously convicted and jailed for sex offenses. Rojem, who was formerly married to Cummings's mother before their divorce, was convicted of murdering Cummings and sentenced to death in 1985. Rojem, who failed in multiple attempts to overturn his death sentence, was incarcerated on death row for close to 40 years before he was executed via lethal injection on June 27, 2024, after the state parole board rejected his appeal for clemency.
On January 24, 1985, in Oklahoma City, 35-year-old schoolteacher Linda Reaves and her boyfriend Douglas Ivens were both shot by Bigler Stouffer. Stouffer was the boyfriend of Ivens' estranged wife Velva Ivens, who targeted Ivens for his $2 million life insurance policy. Ivens survived three gunshot wounds to his body, but Reaves was mortally wounded and died from two gunshot wounds to the head.
Freddie Eugene Owens, alias Khalil Divine Black Sun Allah, was an American man convicted and executed in South Carolina for the 1997 killing of Irene Grainger Graves, a convenience store clerk. Owens was 19 when he and an 18-year-old accomplice killed Graves during a robbery in November 1997.
On June 19, 1992, in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States, 31-year-old convenience store owner Kenneth Meers was murdered during a robbery perpetrated by two gunmen. The murderers, Glenn Bethany and Emmanuel Littlejohn, were arrested and charged with robbing and murdering Meers. Littlejohn was sentenced to death, while Bethany received a life sentence in separate trials between 1993 and 1994.
On December 23, 2006, in New Bloomfield, Missouri, 25-year-old Sarah Ann Bonnie and her 28-year-old husband Benjamin Wade Bonnie were both shot and murdered by her 34-year-old cousin Brian Joseph Dorsey, whom they hid at her house to help him evade the drug dealers who were searching for him to collect their debts. After surrendering himself to the police, Dorsey was found guilty of the double murder and sentenced to death in 2008. After losing his appeals and clemency plea, Dorsey was executed on April 9, 2024, 18 years after the murders.
Joseph Edward Corcoran was an American convicted mass murderer who was executed for a quadruple murder case in Indiana. Corcoran was found guilty of the 1997 murders of his brother, his sister's fiancé, and two of their friends at his house in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and he was sentenced to death in 1999. Corcoran was previously charged in 1992 with murdering his parents when he was nearly seventeen years old, but he was acquitted of all the charges. Corcoran, who had since exhausted all avenues of appeal against his sentence, was executed on December 18, 2024. Corcoran was the first person in Indiana to be executed after the state's 15-year moratorium on executions.
On September 5, 1998, at Brownsville, Texas, an 85-year-old elderly woman named Escolastica Cuellar Harrison was robbed and murdered by a group of three men, who stabbed her 13 times with two screwdrivers and stole her money, and Harrison died from her injuries. Through police investigations, all three robbers were arrested, but before the trial process, one of them, Pedro Gracia, absconded while out on bail and he remains on the run till today.
On July 29, 1997, in Houston, Texas, 48-year-old Nancy Adleman, a mother of three, was abducted and murdered while jogging. Her body was found in a forested area along Brays Bayou the day after she failed to return home. Adleman's murderer, Arthur Lee Burton, was later arrested and charged with her murder. Burton confessed that he had kidnapped and attempted to rape Adleman, ultimately strangling her with her own shoelaces. Although Burton later retracted his confession, claiming he admitted to the crime under duress and had an intellectual disability, he was found guilty of murder and sentenced to death in 1998. Burton was executed at age 54 on August 7, 2024.
David Russell Hosier was an American ex-soldier who was convicted of the murder of his ex-lover Angela Gilpin in 2009. Hosier had killed both Angela and her husband Rodney Gilpin out of anger due to his then girlfriend having reconciled with her husband despite their romantic relationship that lasted for years, although Hosier protested his innocence. Hosier was put on trial and found guilty, and sentenced to death on November 27, 2013. Hosier spent 11 years on death row before he was executed by lethal injection on June 11, 2024.
On January 15, 2001, 18-year-old Bridget Fay Townsend, the girlfriend of a local drug dealer, disappeared from her boyfriend's home in Bandera County, San Antonio, Texas.
On November 9, 1994, 33-year-old Farah Fratta was gunned down at her home in Atascocita, Texas. Investigations revealed that Robert Alan Fratta, a police officer and the estranged husband of Farah, had masterminded her murder by hiring two men to kill her, for which the motive was related to the unresolved divorce lawsuit between the couple and their fight for custody of their children.
Courtney said that she once witnessed the appellant shake Nikki by the arms in an attempt to make her stop crying. Rachel Cox then testified that the appellant had a "bad temper", and that she had witnessed him shake and spank Nikki when she was crying. Rachel said she had seen this happen about ten times. ... Teddie also testified that she witnessed the appellant, when he was angry at Nikki, pick her up off the bed, shake her for a few seconds, and throw her back on the bed.