PRESS RELEASE
14 September 2023

Exoneration Obtained In Pro Bono Matter

RD
Riker Danzig LLP

Contributor

Riker Danzig LLP has served the business community for 140 years, with offices in Morristown and Trenton, New Jersey and in Midtown Manhattan. Riker Danzig is regional counsel, national defense counsel, and deal counsel to clients ranging from Fortune 500 corporations to middle-market businesses.
Riker Danzig was pleased to assist a pro bono client in connection with obtaining the exoneration of Darryl Nieves in a case alleging abusive head trauma (also known as Shaken Baby Syndrome) of his infant son.
United States

Riker Danzig was pleased to assist a pro bono client in connection with obtaining the exoneration of Darryl Nieves in a case alleging abusive head trauma (also known as Shaken Baby Syndrome) of his infant son.

Nakul Y. Shah, an associate in the Firm's Products Liability, Toxic Tort, and Mass Tort Group, represented The Innocence Project and the Center for Integrity in Forensic Sciences, as pro bono amicus counsel, in the appeal. Our clients opposed the State's effort to overturn the trial court's decision to dismiss the indictment against Mr. Nieves, which was based on a ruling that the State's scientific evidence was inadmissible under the Frye standard.

Nakul developed the arguments in the brief and argued the appeal. The evidence against Mr. Nieves was based solely on the expert testimony of the State's expert who concluded that the injuries sustained by the infant could only be explained by abusive head trauma.

The Appellate Division issued a 64-page published decision on September 13, 2023. In the landmark decision, the Court held that the State's evidence of abusive head trauma was inadmissible because although such a diagnosis had support in the pediatric medical community, it lacked support from a biomechanical perspective and therefore lacked sufficient scientific reliability to be admissible. The Court reached the decision despite earlier judicial decisions that had accepted the admissibility of abusive head trauma diagnoses without factual corroborative evidence. The Court found that more recent scientific evidence showed that such a diagnosis lacked the scientific foundational basis required for admissibility.

Judge Victor Ashrafi provided invaluable advice on the brief and assisted Nakul in preparation for the argument.

Contributor

Riker Danzig LLP has served the business community for 140 years, with offices in Morristown and Trenton, New Jersey and in Midtown Manhattan. Riker Danzig is regional counsel, national defense counsel, and deal counsel to clients ranging from Fortune 500 corporations to middle-market businesses.

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