From Texas Public Radio:
In the early morning of Jan. 31, 2002, Robert Roberson entered an East Texas emergency room. His two-year-old daughter, Nikki, was in his arms. She was limp and non-responsive. Her lips were blue. The hospital staff put Nikki on life support and tried to resuscitate her.
And they called the police on Roberson. They thought they had a case of shaken baby syndrome on their hands.
But testifying Wednesday to the Texas legislative Committee on Jurisprudence, Dr. Roland Auer, a Canadian neurosurgeon who has testified in similar cases, said Nikki was not the victim of abuse.
“Nikki died of consequences of pneumonia— cardiac arrest — and she was basically brain-dead in a living body,” Auer said.
At that time, medical experts were told to watch out for shaken baby syndrome deaths. Auer said that medical diagnosis was wrong.
“But what are you going to do when you see bleeding in the inside and nothing on the outside? You’ve got to make up some theory and that’s how shaken [baby] theory came about,” he told lawmakers. And then it becomes a ‘who-done-it?’ rather than a ‘what happened?’”
The American Academy of Pediatrics says shaken baby syndrome — now called “abusive head trauma” — remains a significant cause of death and injury in children. The Academy recommends that pediatricians remain vigilant for the signs of abusive head trauma.
Roberson is on the autism spectrum. The arresting officer said the fact that he displayed little emotion to both the medical crisis and the death of Nikki contributed to his being arrested for her murder.