Robert Roberson is scheduled to be put to death Oct. 17. His case — based on a syndrome shrouded in legal uncertainty — has led the original detective to call for his release.

A condemned man in Texas is set to die this month in what would be the country’s first execution for “shaken baby syndrome,” a scrutinized diagnosis that has been successfully challenged in some criminal cases.

After he filed a clemency petition with the state ahead of his execution, which is scheduled for Oct. 17, Robert Roberson told NBC News anchor Lester Holt in an interview airing Thursday that he is urging Texas Gov. Greg Abbott to pardon him and “let me go home.”

“Look at the support I’ve got, Mr. Governor, and I’m just hoping, praying that you do the right thing,” said Roberson, who was convicted of capital murder in his 2-year-old daughter’s 2002 death.

  • Omgpwnies@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I have 3 kids and it’s been my experience that the parents who are worried they might mess up tend to be the better parents, because they care enough to worry. It’s the ones who think they have it in the bag that tend to fuck up.

    You’ll do fine