Expert Reaction

EXPERT REACTION: Kathleen Folbigg's convictions quashed

Publicly released:
Australia; NSW; SA; ACT
Photo by Tingey Injury Law Firm on Unsplash
Photo by Tingey Injury Law Firm on Unsplash

The NSW Court of Criminal Appeal has quashed the convictions of Kathleen Folbigg over the deaths of her four young children. This decision comes after she was pardoned following an inquiry led by Hon Thomas Bathurst AC KC which focused on new genetic evidence and the possibility of identifiable natural causes of death.

Expert Reaction

These comments have been collated by the Science Media Centre to provide a variety of expert perspectives on this issue. Feel free to use these quotes in your stories. Views expressed are the personal opinions of the experts named. They do not represent the views of the SMC or any other organisation unless specifically stated.

Associate Professor Xanthe Mallett is from the School of Law and Justice at the University of Newcastle

Kathleen Folbigg has waited over 20 years to be exonerated of the murders and manslaughter of her children. I hoped, but never really believed I would see, justice finally served with Kath’s acquittal today. This case should rock the foundations of the criminal justice system in Australia, which has moved at glacial pace to acknowledge and then act upon irrefutable scientific evidence that Kath was innocent. Through its representatives, the system obfuscated when it should have acted, shied away when it needed to be bold – in the name of justice. And justice is what we all deserve.

There is no way to compensate Kath for the years she has lost, the milestones she has missed, the memories she simply doesn’t have; but that she should be financially recompensed is beyond dispute. This was always a case where there was clear reasonable doubt, I have been saying so publicly since 2014. And whilst I am thrilled to see Kath fully exonerated today, this cannot be the end of the story. The journey continues – we must now vigorously pursue mechanisms such as an independent criminal case review commission and associated law reform, to ensure we never see an Australian miscarriage of justice as egregious as this again.

Last updated:  14 Dec 2023 3:55pm
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Professor Jozef Gecz is Professor of Human Genetics and Channel 7 Children's Research Foundation Honorary Chair for the Prevention of Childhood Disability at The University of Adelaide

As a signatory of the Petition, I am delighted for Ms Kathleen Folbigg that her convictions were quashed today by the NSW court.  As a human geneticist and fellow of the Australian Academy of Science, I am excited to see the latest scientific evidence significantly contributing to this decision. As an Australian, I am proud to live in a country where science and law communities worked tirelessly together to support such an outcome.

Last updated:  14 Dec 2023 1:34pm
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Professor Carola Vinuesa is Co-Director of the Centre for Personalised Immunology at the Australian National University. Carola and her team identified the CALM2-G114R genetic variant in Sarah and Laura Folbigg. The inquiry found there was a 'reasonable possibility' this variant occasioned their deaths.

Science has changed someone’s life here.

I do feel there has been a miscarriage of justice. I personally can’t comprehend what Kathleen has gone through. She’s clearly a strong and forgiving woman.

I have received requests from parents around the world that have unfortunately experienced similar successive infant deaths. 

Sequencing the entire genome is becoming cheaper and more accessible. I think it’s likely all newborns will be screened for calmodulin variants one day soon. 

Genomic diagnosis brings understanding, closure and the hope of having healthy children by screening future embryos.

Last updated:  14 Dec 2023 1:33pm
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Anna-Maria Arabia is Chief Executive of the Australian Academy of Science

Australian scientists have welcomed today’s decision by the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal to quash Kathleen Folbigg’s convictions.

While justice has finally been served for Ms Folbigg, wrongful convictions will continue to occur without major reforms to justice systems across Australia.

New genetic evidence available in 2019 played a significant role in bringing about the second Inquiry into Kathleen Folbigg’s convictions and subsequent pardon in 2023; however, basic scientific principles were not upheld from the time of her trial.

For example:

  • Kathleen Folbigg was convicted for murdering her children by suffocation, yet there was no pathology-based evidence of suffocation of the children
  • medical and pathological evidence was available to indicate natural causes of death of the Folbigg children
  • the case against Kathleen Folbigg was premised on an incorrect logic that four children could not die in a family from natural causes unless it was one unifying cause of death
  • circumstantial evidence (including non-scientific opinions about Ms Folbigg’s diaries) was given more weight than medical and pathological evidence available at the time of trial
  • at the first Inquiry, erroneous interpretation of data held in the International Calmodulinopathy Registry was presented and accepted
  • no journalling, trauma or grief experts were given the opportunity to provide expert evidence in a formal legal process until the 2022 Inquiry.

Australia must be open to learning from the gross miscarriage of justice in Ms Folbigg’s case. The Academy’s role in Ms Folbigg’s case has always been to ensure that science is being heard in the criminal legal system.

Our role in this case has reinforced our view that in every Australian state and territory, a more science-sensitive legal system is required.

As a matter of urgency, Australian jurisdictions must adopt a reliability standard to determine the admissibility of evidence.

Until Evidence Acts across the country are amended to introduce a reliability standard, there is a significant risk that unreliable evidence will be admitted into courts. Australia remains well behind other nations in its absence of a legal reliability standard.

When the Academy petitioned the Governor of NSW to pardon Kathleen Folbigg based on additional scientific evidence uncovered by its Fellow, Professor Carola Vinuesa FAA FRS, it took nearly three years for Ms Folbigg to be pardoned.

This unacceptable time delay is because Australia lacks effective post-conviction review mechanisms. In countries such as the United Kingdom, Norway, New Zealand and, most recently, Canada, criminal cases review commissions have been established.

These commissions are independent, dedicated bodies that investigate miscarriages of justice. It is time Australia introduced an independent, transparent and accountable review mechanism. This is particularly important in an age of rapid scientific and technological discoveries.

The Australian Academy of Science acted as an independent scientific adviser to the second Folbigg Inquiry – a unique and rare interaction between a learned academy and a legal system. It assisted by independently recommending experts to assist the Inquiry. This meant that the Inquiry could hear from the best available experts from the relevant scientific disciplines wherever they resided in the world.

A mechanism to enable the courts to routinely hear from independently identified experts who are available to all parties for cross-examination must be found.

The Academy looks forward to working with the Attorneys General across Australia to develop and implement more science-sensitive legal systems.

Last updated:  14 Dec 2023 1:32pm
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