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In the Court of Criminal

Appeals of Texas

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No.’s WR-63,081-03, 04

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EX PARTE ROBERT LESLIE ROBERSON,

Applicant

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On Suggestion for the Court to Reconsider Previous Rulings

on its Own Motion

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YEARY, J., filed a concurring opinion.

In order to be entitled to relief under Article 11.073, a habeas

applicant must show that, if relevant, newly available scientific evidence

had been presented at trial, “on the preponderance of the evidence” he

would not have been convicted. TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 11.073(b)(2).

Considering the new evidence Applicant presented in his -03 and -04

writ applications, as well as the evidence presented at his trial,

Applicant’s new evidence does not meet that burden.

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This is not just a “shaken baby” case. Applicant has suggested the

possibility that the two-year-old child victim had been ill and simply fell

out of the bed. But evidence in this case showed that the tiny victim

suffered multiple traumas.

Applicant told hospital personnel (and law enforcement) that he

woke up around 5:00 a.m. to find Nikki, the victim—who had been

sleeping in bed with him—lying on the floor near the foot of the bed with

blood on her mouth. Emergency room nurses and doctors—in both

Palestine and Dallas—did not believe that Nikki’s injuries were

consistent with the type of fall Applicant described to them. It is true

that the victim had been treated in the emergency room three days

earlier for a “viral syndrome[,]” but an emergency room doctor testified

that her injuries “didn’t fit the picture of a virus that went bad quickly.”

The victim 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.

It is true that the State invoked a “shaken baby” theory. But it

also invoked a beating theory. And the evidence was consistent with

both theories.

But even if we set to one side—for the moment—the evidence of

shaking, the evidence also showed multiple impacts to Nikki’s head. At

trial, Dr. Jill Urban testified that she was confident, given the separate

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areas of dense hemorrhage in different areas of the head, that there were

“multiple blows to different points on the head.” She concluded that the

victim died as a result of “blunt force head injuries.”

Applicant now suggests there is new scientific evidence calling

into question what some people call “shaken baby syndrome.” Applicant

also suggests that a short fall could have caused the victim’s injuries.

But the new evidence challenging “shaken baby syndrome” is not

sufficient to overcome the evidence of trauma to multiple places on the

victim’s body. His theory also would force this Court to simply ignore the

testimony presented at Applicant’s trial from a defense expert to the

effect that Applicant admitted that he “lost it” and shook the victim

because he could not stop her from crying.

For these reasons, and other reasons as well, the Court is right to

deny both (1) the suggestion to reconsider Applicant’s previous

subsequent writ applications and (2) the request to stay his execution.

I join the Court’s ruling.

FILED: October 10, 2024

DO NOT PUBLISH