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Kathleen Folbigg petition for pardon being considered by NSW Attorney-General

Lawmakers will now consider a massive petition from some of Australia’s high profile experts to pardon Kathleen Folbigg.

New petition for Kathleen Folbigg's freedom

NSW Attorney-General Mark Speakman will consider an extraordinary petition lodged by dozens of Australia’s most eminent scientists and medical professionals calling for a pardon for the woman convicted of killing four of her children, Kathleen Folbigg.

The confirmation comes after News Corp revealed 76 of Australia’s most respected scientists had joined 14 international experts to call for Folbigg to be immediately released from jail, saying new medical evidence “creates a strong presumption that the Folbigg children died of natural causes.’’

Nobel laureates Professor Peter Doherty and Professor Elizabeth Blackburn are among those who signed the petition, lodged with NSW Governor Margaret Beazley on Tuesday.

The Governor will take advice from Mr Speakman as to what action she should take, including whether Folbigg, who has served 18 years of her 30-year jail term, should be pardoned and released.

The Hunter Valley woman was convicted in 2003 of smothering her four tiny children – Caleb, Patrick, Sarah and Laura – over a 10-year period from February 1989 to March 1999.

Mr Speakman’s office said the petition would be given “appropriate consideration.’’

However, a spokesman noted Folbigg’s case had been tested previously in several judicial arenas.

Murder victim infant Sarah Folbigg with her mother Kathleen Folbigg.
Murder victim infant Sarah Folbigg with her mother Kathleen Folbigg.

“Ms Folbigg’s convictions for the murder of her children Patrick, Laura and Sarah, and the manslaughter of her son Caleb, have been examined in two appeals to the Court of Criminal Appeal, one special leave application to the High Court of Australia, and one inquiry,’’ the spokesman said.

“The inquiry, conducted by the former Chief Judge of the District Court, the Hon Reginald Blanch AM QC, concluded that “the investigations of the Inquiry have … produced evidence that reinforces Ms Folbigg’s guilt”.

“Proceedings seeking judicial review of the inquiry are currently before the Court of Appeal with judgment yet to be delivered.

“As the Attorney-General will make a recommendation to Her Excellency the Governor to resolve the petition, it would not be appropriate for the Attorney-General to provide further comment at this stage.’’

Murder victim infant Laura Folbigg daughter of NSW mother Kathleen Folbigg.
Murder victim infant Laura Folbigg daughter of NSW mother Kathleen Folbigg.

Folbigg has always maintained her innocence, and scientists have always been deeply concerned about her conviction, as no scientific evidence exists that she smothered the children. Rather, diary entries which a jury believed went to her guilt, and the extremely unlikely proposition that four children from the same family could die of natural causes, weighed strongly against her.

New scientific evidence behind the petition to have convicted child killer Kathleen Folbigg freed

The scientific experts say new genomic sequencing carried out on Folbigg and her two daughters showed they carried a gene mutation which was linked to sudden death in babies and small children.

The experts, many of whom have not been involved in the case but have concerns that the findings ignored medical and scientific evidence, now argue there has been a miscarriage of justice.

Patrick Folbigg who was Kathleen Folbigg’s son.
Patrick Folbigg who was Kathleen Folbigg’s son.

A Government House spokeswoman said: “In exercising the Royal prerogative of mercy, the Governor acts on the advice of the responsible Minister, the Attorney-General. Such advice is submitted to the Governor in Executive Council. The Governor awaits the Attorney-General’s advice.’’

The prosecutor who secured the convictions against Folbigg, Mark Tedeschi, said it would be “quite unprofessional’’ for him to comment.

Reginald Blanch, the QC who conducted last year’s inquiry which upheld her convictions, is now the chief commissioner of the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. He declined to comment on the basis the matter was still before the Court of Appeal.

Pardons are rare but not unprecedented.

Murder victim infant Caleb Folbigg.
Murder victim infant Caleb Folbigg.

In 2012, Fred McDermott became the first person in NSW to receive a posthumous pardon. He had been wrongly convicted over the 1936 death of local shopkeeper Harry Lavers in Grenfell, NSW and served many years in jail for a murder he did not commit. He died in 1977.

Johann Ernst Siegfried Pohl was pardoned in 1992 after serving 10 years for the murder of his wife in Queanbeyan in 1973. His pardon came after another man admitted to carrying out the murder.

Alexander McLeod-Lindsay was pardoned in the mid-90s. He had served nine years in jail for the attempted murder of his wife Pamela in Sydney in 1964 before his conviction was eventually overturned.

Originally published as Kathleen Folbigg petition for pardon being considered by NSW Attorney-General

Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/crimeinfocus/kathleen-folbigg-petition-for-pardon-being-considered-by-nsw-attorneygeneral/news-story/31b58c82fee4f4715dee9cfa98011d97