Robert Roberson Murders Nikki Curtis in Texas

Robert Roberson was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for the murder of his daughter Nikki Curtis

According to court documents Robert Roberson would rush his two year old daughter Nikki Curtis to a hospital telling the doctors the little girl had fallen. Nikki Curtis would die the next day from her injuries and an autopsy would point the cause of her injuries to a beating and not a fall

Robert Roberson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

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robert roberson texas

Robert Roberson Case

NameRoberson III, Robert Leslie
TDCJ Number999442
Date of Birth11/10/1966
Date Received02/21/2003
Age (when Received)36
Education Level (Highest Grade Completed)10
Date of Offense01/31/2002
 Age (at the time of Offense)35
 CountyAnderson
 RaceWhite
 GenderMale
 Hair ColorBrown
 Height (in Feet and Inches)6′ 0″
 Weight (in Pounds)269
 Eye ColorBlue
 Native CountyWood
 Native StateTexas

Robert Roberson Case

Robert Roberson shuffled into a courtroom this week wearing a striped gray jumpsuit and handcuffs, his life once again hanging in the balance.

After 15 years on death row, his face has grown gaunt, and patches of dark hair shoot up from his balding head. But he has maintained during his time in prison that he didn’t kill his sickly two-year-old daughter, Nikki Curtis, though he was convicted of that crime.

He says that Nikki fell from the bed where they were sleeping in their home in this small East Texas town, and he awoke hours later to find her unresponsive. But as doctors and nurses struggled to revive her blue, limp body in the emergency room that morning, suspicions of child abuse quickly arose — they said a short fall wouldn’t have caused such damage.

At his trial, doctors testified that her injuries were consistent with what is often referred to as “shaken baby syndrome,” a now-questionably diagnosed condition his attorneys say helped jurors opt for the death penalty.

But instead of facing the state’s death chamber — which he narrowly avoided two years ago — Roberson was back in court Tuesday, again fighting against his conviction and for his life, thanks largely to a relatively new state law that allows courts to overturn a conviction when the scientific evidence that originally led to the verdict has since changed or been discredited.

“The only reason Mr. Roberson is still alive today is because the state of Texas passed a rather trailblazing statute,” his attorney, Gretchen Sween, declared to the courtroom.

The law, often referred to as the “junk science law,” was the first of its kind in the nation and passed with scant opposition in 2013. In pushing for its passage, state Sen. John Whitmire, a Houston Democrat, listed infant trauma as one of several examples of faulty science the bill was meant to target.

Since its passage, multiple death penalty cases have been sent back to court for further review, and it has been cited in cases like that of the “San Antonio Four,” where women convicted on faulty sexual assault evidence were exonerated after nearly 15 years in prison.

In June 2016, Roberson became one of the first death row inmates to have his conviction set for reviewed under the law — a decision the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals made just days before his scheduled execution. The court was instructed to decide whether Roberson would have been convicted if new scientific evidence — like new views on fatal short-distance falls and shaken baby syndrome injuries — were available at his original trial

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Home / Death Row Inmates / Robert Robertson Texas Death Row
Robert Robertson Texas Death Row
By mycrimelibrary.com
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On April 15, 2021
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In Death Row Inmates
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robert robertson

Robert Robertson was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for the murder of his two year old daughter. According to court documents Robert Robertson would bring his two year old daughter to a local hospital telling doctors the little girl had fallen out of bed. The two year old would be sent by helicopter to a major trauma center where she would die the next day from her injuries. Robert Robertson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

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Robert Robertson 2021 Information
Robert Robertson More News

Robert Robertson 2021 Information
Name Roberson III, Robert Leslie
TDCJ Number 999442
Date of Birth 11/10/1966
Date Received 02/21/2003
Age (when Received) 36
Education Level (Highest Grade Completed) 10
Date of Offense 01/31/2002
Age (at the time of Offense) 35
County Anderson
Race White
Gender Male
Hair Color Brown
Height (in Feet and Inches) 6′ 0″
Weight (in Pounds) 269
Eye Color Blue
Native County Wood
Native State Texas
Robert Robertson More News

Robert Roberson shuffled into a courtroom this week wearing a striped gray jumpsuit and handcuffs, his life once again hanging in the balance.

After 15 years on death row, his face has grown gaunt, and patches of dark hair shoot up from his balding head. But he has maintained during his time in prison that he didn’t kill his sickly two-year-old daughter, Nikki Curtis, though he was convicted of that crime.

He says that Nikki fell from the bed where they were sleeping in their home in this small East Texas town, and he awoke hours later to find her unresponsive. But as doctors and nurses struggled to revive her blue, limp body in the emergency room that morning, suspicions of child abuse quickly arose — they said a short fall wouldn’t have caused such damage.

At his trial, doctors testified that her injuries were consistent with what is often referred to as “shaken baby syndrome,” a now-questionably diagnosed condition his attorneys say helped jurors opt for the death penalty.

But instead of facing the state’s death chamber — which he narrowly avoided two years ago — Roberson was back in court Tuesday, again fighting against his conviction and for his life, thanks largely to a relatively new state law that allows courts to overturn a conviction when the scientific evidence that originally led to the verdict has since changed or been discredited.

“The only reason Mr. Roberson is still alive today is because the state of Texas passed a rather trailblazing statute,” his attorney, Gretchen Sween, declared to the courtroom.

The law, often referred to as the “junk science law,” was the first of its kind in the nation and passed with scant opposition in 2013. In pushing for its passage, state Sen. John Whitmire, a Houston Democrat, listed infant trauma as one of several examples of faulty science the bill was meant to target.

Since its passage, multiple death penalty cases have been sent back to court for further review, and it has been cited in cases like that of the “San Antonio Four,” where women convicted on faulty sexual assault evidence were exonerated after nearly 15 years in prison.

In June 2016, Roberson became one of the first death row inmates to have his conviction set for reviewed under the law — a decision the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals made just days before his scheduled execution. The court was instructed to decide whether Roberson would have been convicted if new scientific evidence — like new views on fatal short-distance falls and shaken baby syndrome injuries — were available at his original trial.

In the last decade, experts have become divided on shaken baby syndrome, where an infant is killed from being violently shaken back and forth. Many doctors strongly stand by the diagnoses, but others, including the doctor who is first credited with observing the condition, think it is used too liberally in criminal cases — that deaths are labeled as murder without considering other possibilities and medical histories. The Washington Post reported in 2015 that 16 shaken baby syndrome convictions had been overturned since 2001.

oberson’s attorneys argue in part that new scientific evidence has suggested it is impossible to shake a toddler to death without causing serious neck injuries, which Nikki did not have, and has linked the symptoms used to diagnose shaken baby syndrome to other conditions as well, including short-distance falls.

“There has been a tremendous amount of new scientific evidence,” said Gary Udashen, board president of the Innocence Project of Texas. “Biomechanical engineering studies have shown that you can generate enough force from a short-distance fall to cause serious head injuries.”

https://www.texastribune.org/2018/08/16/robert-roberson-death-penalty-junk-science-review/

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