Stephanie Spurgeon ran a daycare facility from her home in Pinellas, Florida, for 15 years. On August 21, 2008, a 1-year-old baby, Maria Harris, fell ill after staying in her care. Maria was taken to the hospital, where she died after 10 days.
An autopsy showed that the baby had bleeding inside her brain, which means she must have been abused physically. However, there was no sign of physical abuse like skull fractures or anything else.
The case was taken to court, where the prosecution argued the defendant had thrown the baby onto a soft surface, such as a mattress. And with that, Spurgeon was sentenced to 15 years in 2012.
After serving nine years, a new team of pathologists discovered the brain bleed had happened about 10 days before the baby was admitted to the hospital. Not only that, they also discovered the baby had an unusual level of blood glucose in her system. The baby had died of complications from undiagnosed diabetes.
A Florida woman, Stephanie Spurgeon was serving a jail term for a crime she did not commit. The date of her release was August 3, 2020. Spurgeon was charged with manslaughter in the August 2008 death of Maria Harris, a baby who went unresponsive during the vehicle journey home after spending her first day in Spurgeon's care.
Spurgeon was a married mother of two and a home childcare provider for fifteen years. Maria Harris, a new one-year-old in her care, fell ill after being picked up at the end of the day; Maria fell asleep and never awoke. Eight days later, she died of a cerebral hemorrhage.
Stephanie Spurgeon reacts to the jury finding her guilty of manslaughter at the Pinellas County Criminal Justice Center in 2012.
According to doctors, the brain hemorrhage was caused by abuse. This was the case despite the fact that the youngster did not exhibit any obvious evidence of harm or trauma. There were no scrapes, broken bones, or neck injuries. But, according to the prosecution, the brain enlargement was caused by the infant being repeatedly hurled on a soft surface, such as a mattress. Instead than focusing on the charges that the girl was thrown onto a soft surface, Spurgeon's attorney refuted a hypothesis that the kid died as a result of being shaken, a theory on which prosecutors did not rely throughout the trial.
In 2018, Stephanie Spurgeon was granted a trial on the basis of fresh evidence to demonstrate her innocence.
Spurgeon was found guilty and sentenced to 15 years in jail in 2012. Spurgeon was found guilty of manslaughter after prosecutors at her trial stated that the girl's brain enlargement could only have resulted from abuse.
Maria Harris
Spurgeon's defense counsel want to contest her conviction using scientific evidence ranging from biomechanical engineering to clinical pathology. Our filmmaker, Seth Miller, contends that Spurgeon's defense attorney failed to submit evidence that could have led to an acquittal. Spurgeon's attorney chose to refute the idea of Shaken Baby Syndrome (SBS) rather than the prosecution's true theory, which involved the baby being tossed into a soft surface.
Typically, shaken infant syndrome arises when a parent or caregiver violently shakes a child out of irritation or anger, generally because the youngster won't stop crying. Death or permanent brain damage may follow.
Symptoms include agitation, trouble staying awake, convulsions, strange breathing, poor eating, bruising, and vomiting.
What Really Happened
A variety of diagnostic tests conducted on Maria when she was hospitalized revealed that she was experiencing an untreated diabetic crisis. Maria's blood glucose was greater than four times the normal amount, and she had a blood clot in a vein at the crown of her head.
Staphanie in Court
A pathologist specialist in blood diseases, Dr. Michael Laposata, testified that the clot formed approximately ten days before Maria was hospitalized. In addition, there were no bruises on her head that could have suggested physical abuse.
Chris Van Ee, a specialist in biomechanical engineering from Michigan, also testified that tests conducted on infant-sized dummies demonstrate that Maria's brain injury could not have been caused by falling onto a mattress.
Stephanie maintained her innocence, and two Innocence Programs took up her case. Three judges reversed Stephanie's conviction, granted her a new trial, and set her bond after attorneys presented their findings. Her family paid her bond.
The biographies of over 200 SS women serving at Auschwitz death camp and their 'after work parties' have been published online in an effort to show the world that it wasn't just men involved. Entitled 'Women working for the SS', the project from the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum documents the women's lives from birth and how they ended up serving Adolf Hitler. One of the women was Maria Mandl, a senior SS guard in Auschwitz from October 1942 to October 1944 who was nicknamed 'The Beast' by prisoners Born in 1912 the daughter of a shoemaker, she first started work in a Nazi concentration camp in Lichtenburg Germany in 1938 before being transferred to the camp for women in Ravensbruk, also in Germany. In 1942 she was sent to Auschwitz where she became infamous for her sadism and sending 'an estimated half a million women and children to their deaths in the gas chambers.' In 1942 she was sent to Auschwitz where she became infamous for her sadism...
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In April 1981, the body of a young white woman was found in a ditch on Greenlee Road in Newton Township, Ohio. She was wearing a buckskin poncho, so investigators called her the "Buckskin Girl." That same day, her body was examined. It was found that she had suffered serious injuries to her head and neck before being strangled to death about 48 hours before her body was found. Despite many years of hard work by investigators, the identity of the Buckskin Girl remained unknown for over 30 years. On April 9, 2018, the Miami Valley Regional Crime Laboratory announced that they had identified the woman as 21-year-old Marcia Lenore King from Little Rock, Arkansas. Marcia had last been seen by her family in 1980. Although she wasn’t officially reported missing, her family had kept searching for her. The identification was made possible by detailed DNA testing. Sadly, the person who caused her death has still not been found. Continue reading
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