WISCONSIN LAW REVIEW: SHAKEN BABY SYNDROME: MEDICAL UNCERTAINTY CASTS DOUBT ON CONVICTIONS
SHAKEN BABY SYNDROME: MEDICAL UNCERTAINTY CASTS DOUBT ON CONVICTIONS
Excerpts from pages 2-4 (702-704)
I. INTRODUCTION
On April 3, 2004, emergency personnel received a call that six month-
old
Riley Owen Bilkewas “red in the face and breathing
heavily.”2 Later that day, despite rescue efforts, he died from symptoms
commonly associated with shaken baby syndrome (SBS).3 His father,
Todd Dittberner, was charged with first-degree reckless homicide.4 The
state’s medical experts testified that Riley suffered from the triad of
symptoms that traditionally lead to a diagnosis of SBS—brain
hemorrhaging, retinal hemorrhaging, and brain swelling.5 They
suggested, as is typically assumed with SBS,6 that the baby was probably
crying inconsolably, and that Dittberner became so frustrated that he
shook the baby to death.7 They concluded that only SBS could have
caused those symptoms.8
Dittberner, however, maintained that he did not shake his son.9 He
said that, when he was burping his son, the child had a seizure, 10
“stiffened up,” and slipped out of his arms.11 He asserted that the child
fell on the floor and landed on the top of his head.12 Dittberner was alone
with the baby, except for a two-year-old child he was babysitting at the
time.13 Upstairs neighbors—who claimed that they could hear everything
in Dittberner’s apartment—stated that they heard neither the baby crying
nor any yelling on the day of Riley’s death.14
Deborah Crawford was one of the first emergency workers to arrive
on the scene.15 Testifying for the prosecution, she stated that Riley’s
mother was upset, but that Dittberner was “emotionless.”16 She did not
think that the baby could have sustained such injuries from a short fall,
noting that “generally a baby doesn’t fall such a small amount and go
unconscious.”17
In his defense, Dittberner presented several experts who stated that
the type of injuries that Riley exhibited could have been caused by a
combination of other factors.18 Horace Gardner, “one of the country’s
foremost experts on the human eye,”19 testified that the baby would not
have sustained the type of injuries that he found if the child had been
shaken to death.20 Although Riley had retinal hemorrhaging,21 Gardner
explained that retinal injuries more commonly result from a lack of
oxygen.22 He testified that he had not seen any cases of SBS in which the
victim exhibited the particular type of retinal hemorrhages that Riley
had,23 and suggested that the injury could have come from an improper
insertion of the breathing tube during the emergency treatment.24
Apparently, the emergency personnel had serious difficulty trying to
intubate the baby, depriving him of oxygen.25
The defense also introduced the testimony of Patrick Barnes, a
pediatric neuroradiologist and child-abuse expert.26 He testified that
Riley had a history of health problems, including bronchitis and
pneumonia.27 Barnes stressed that doctors should not accuse a parent or
caregiver of child abuse until they have ruled out every other
possibility.28 Because the Dittberners had adopted Riley, doctors did not
know all of his medical history, nor did they perform certain tests that
might have helped determine Riley’s cause of death.29
Although Dittberner was ultimately acquitted,30 his case exemplifies
the difficulties with charges of child abuse based on allegations of SBS.
Often these cases become a battle of experts in which the state’s
witnesses claim that the child must have died from being violently
shaken, and the defense’s (if the defense can retain them)31 provide
alternative explanations for the symptoms.32 It may be difficult for the
fact-finder when there is no corroborating evidence, and only medical
testimony that the child suffered from the triad of SBS symptoms.33 The
jury, possibly confused due to the complicated nature of an SBS
diagnosis,34 might return a guilty verdict because of the nature of the
crime—the tragic death or severe injury of a baby35; on the other hand,
the jury might acquit, wanting to believe that no one could intentionally
harm an infant.36 Dittberner was fortunate because his neighbors were
able to testify in his favor and he had the support of some of the leading
medical experts in the country.37
Excerpts from pages 8 and 9 (708 and 709)
B. Summary of Significant SBS Convictions
The earliest SBS convictions happened about twenty-five years
ago,70 and the number grows each year.71 The Woodward case was one
of the most famous SBS cases, and the subject itself has been of growing
interest to the media and society.72
1. EARLIEST CASES
In another early appellate case,
Janet Ostlundwas convicted of
second-degree murder for shaking her adopted daughter,
Maria,who had
a history of health problems at the time of adoption.81 Ostlund claimed
that, while alone with Maria, she turned her back, heard a thump, and
then saw Maria on the floor near the couch.82 The baby died from brain
swelling, and there was subdural bleeding.83 The state’s theory, based on
circumstantial evidence, was that “a violent shaking” caused Maria’s
injuries.84 Each side presented six expert witnesses, who provided the
primary evidence in the case.85 Despite the minimal and circumstantial
evidence against Ostlund,86 she was convicted of second-degree murder
and sentenced to 105 months in prison.87