An Australian inquiry has began investigating whether a woman convicted of smothering her four children to death over a decade ago might be innocent.
Kathleen Folbigg appears via video link during a convictions inquiry at the NSW Coroners Court in Sydney, Australia on May 1, 2019. An Australian inquiry began investigating on Monday, Nov. 14, 2022 whether the woman convicted of smothering her four children to death over a decade ago might be innocent. – An Australian inquiry began investigating on Monday whether a woman convicted almost two decades ago of smothering her four children to death might be innocent.
“The central question at all times has been whether Ms. Folbigg caused the death of one or more of her four children or whether they died of natural causes,” Callan said. A second phase of the inquiry that begins in February will focus on the dairies which prosecutors in her trial presented as “intimate, personal and exact analysis of ... her thinking” when she wrote them, Callan said.
Similarities included that all died unexpectedly under the age of 2. Folbigg was the only one at home or awake when the children died and they were always still warm to touch. She lived at the time with her former husband Craig Folbigg. Callan said that reasoning had been widely discredited and urged Bathurst to reject any expert evidence that relies upon that reasoning.
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