KERAN HENDERSON
PRESS RELEASE ANGELA CANNINGS FOUNDATION
In light of recent revelations in which serious concerns about the safety of Keran Henderson’s conviction have been raised, The Angela Cannings Foundation, which has supported Keran Henderson since her conviction on the 13th November 2007, makes an appeal to the Lord Chief Justice Lord Philips and the Attorney General Baroness Scotland, to make an exception under the rules governing the courts of this land and grant Keran bail, so that she may be home with her children for Christmas.
The Angela Caninngs Foundation was set up to support and help victims of a miscarriage of justice. It saddens us that we have to make such an appeal in light of the recent high profile cases which were eventually thrown out of court. And yet another innocent person is currently in prison, convicted of the most heinous of crimes, the murder of a child.
We recognise that children are abused and killed at the hands of their parents and carers. However we also recognise that cases that involve complex medical evidence are open to misinterpretation and misunderstanding by members of the jury.
We thank the jury members who have spoken out in this case and we hope that this is the legacy that both Angela and Sally Clark have left behind, that ordinary members of the public that serve on a jury in cases in which they question the outcome will have the tenacity to come forward and say so.
Angela is available for telephone interviews only and can be contacted on:
Tel: 01752 xxxxxx
Penny Mellor can be contacted on: 01902 xxxxxx
The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie -- deliberate, contrived and dishonest, but the myth, persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic. Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought. John F. Kennedy 35th president of US 1961-1963 (1917 - 1963)
Wednesday, 19 December 2007
Jurors in Keran's case break ranks to speak out

Was the foreman a lawyer or even a judge I have to ask myself, certainly his quotes are not those of a lay person. This is unprecedented and I hope is a legacy for Sally Clark, nobody wants that sort of tragedy to happen again. It also bolsters my belief that human beings are inherrently good.
In writing to the Attorney General and the Lord Chief Justice, the jury foreman shows that they know the route to follow and have done so, the fact they have given an interview t the Times is indicative of the strength of feeling with regard to this case.
Keran should be released on bail immediately.
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/law/article3071072.ece
From The Times
December 19, 2007
Jurors break silence to insist childminder did not kill babyFrances Gibb, Legal Editor
Two jurors have spoken out to question the guilty verdict in a case last month in which a childminder was jailed for shaking a baby to death.
In an unprecedented move, the two jurors – a man and a woman – say they believe that Keran Henderson, 42, a childminder and mother, was wrongly convicted of killing 11-month-old Maeve Sheppard by shaking her so violently that she was left blind and brain damaged.
Henderson, a respected Scout leader, allegedly lost her temper and shook the baby so hard that she was taken to hospital, blind and unconscious. She died two days later.
But the jury foreman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, has told The Times that he does not think the case should ever have come to court.
“A case relying on document evidence and forensic opinion based on evidential proof from other cases should never have reached a court,” he said. He added: “I think that although the trial was very carefully run, the case in my view was flawed and the accused innocent.”
He said: “I think Mrs Henderson’s heartrending response [she broke down in uncontrolled weeping] to the verdict confirms that it was flawed.”
A second juror named as Carol told BBC Radio 5 Live yesterday: “I believe a miscarriage of justice has occurred and there’s nothing I can do about it.
“I don’t think you can get a fair outcome. I will never know, as long as I live, whether the verdict was right or not because we have not got all this medical expertise and I think if medics can’t decide between themselves, what chance have we got?”
Jurors are prohibited by law from disclosing the secrets of the jury room and the discussions as to how a verdict was reached. But the readiness of two of the 12 in this trial to speak out is an indication of how strongly they feel.
A campaign has already begun by friends and relatives who maintain that Henderson is innocent and want to secure her release. She was jailed for three years. And yesterday an MP called for an inquiry into the use of medical experts in trials.
At the time of the trial, some media commentators suggested that the verdict was unjust. They said that it raised a question mark over majority verdicts, implying that given more time the jury might have reached a different verdict.
But the foreman of the jury insisted that the verdict was understandable on the basis of medical expert evidence presented.
Henderson qualified as a childminder in 2000 and often had up to eight children in her care at her home in Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire. She had looked after Maeve since January 2005, having been recommended to her parents, Ruth and Stephen, by a mutual friend.
On the day Maeve died she was described as “full of energy” although she had been unwell in the weeks before her death.
The jury foreman told The Times that there was no question, as has been suggested, of the jury being rushed. It was given ample time and the decision was 10-2 against, all based on the evidence.”
He added: “The jury majority voted guilty because it could do no other.
“The medical evidence was overwhelming. All the necessary ingredients of what the experts call the ‘triad’ [a collection of features typically caused by shaking that lead to hypoxic-ischaemic brain injury and death] were there.
“But many expert witnesses vouchsafe that the literature on shaken baby syndrome is contentious and far from complete. And so who caused the death, or whether anyone did, is not proved. The evidence, whether expert or other, was merely document – probabilities, therefore uncertainties.”
The juror said that the defence was good; but up against “the weight of a dozen medical and forensic experts, was clearly on a hiding to nothing.
“The document were that of amateurs made to do a professional’s job.
“Such a complex case was made easier by the judge’s excellent, well-rounded summary . . . although we were told we could not have a transcript.” Had the jury been given a transcript they might have reached a better verdict, he added.
What was not proved, he said, was who caused the death “or indeed whether anyone did”.
He added: “Ultimately the case was decided by laymen and laywomen using that despicable enemy of correct and logical thinking, that wonderfully persuasive device, common sense.”
The outcome has left him disillusioned with the jury system. “One’s peers, however good and true, are generally not up to the job.”
The Liberal Democrat MP John Hemming, chairman of Justice for Families, called on the Government and the judiciary to set up a review of medical expert evidence. “Keran Henderson’s case had been taken up by the Angela Cannings Foundation, who believe that a miscarriage of justice has occurred,” he said.
“This makes it clear that the way in which our courts use expert evidence, and particularly medical expert evidence, has insufficient intellectual rigour. Evidence which is clearly unreliable and based upon pet theories without proper research groundings is accepted as fact in court.” He said he had written to the Lord Chief Justice and the Attorney-General.
Monday, 17 December 2007
Juror expressed doubt over Keran's conviction
BBC News
Juror queries baby death verdict
Keran Henderson had denied violently shaking the child
A juror has expressed doubts a childminder jailed for shaking an 11-month old baby to death was guilty.
Speaking on BBC Five Live, the juror in the trial of Keran Henderson said a "miscarriage of justice had occurred".
Henderson, 43, of Iver Heath, Bucks, was last month jailed for three years for the manslaughter of Maeve Sheppard on a majority verdict.
But complicated medical evidence had prevented the jury from making informed decisions, the juror claimed.
At the end of a five week trial, and deliberating for more than 12 hours, the jury at Reading Crown Court found Henderson guilty of the baby's manslaughter.
I will never know as long as I live whether the verdict was right or not because I haven't, we haven't, got all this medical expertise
Juror
Maeve, whose parents Ruth and Mark live in Slough, Berks, was taken unconscious to hospital in 2005 from Henderson's home where she was being looked after.
The court had heard from experts who said injuries were caused by the baby's neck being violently snapped back and forth.
However, the juror said the verdict, based on a 10-2 majority, was unsafe as the medical evidence was too complicated for jurors to assess.
She told the BBC: "I believe that a miscarriage of justice has occurred and there's nothing I can do about it.
"I don't think you can get a fair outcome.
"I will never know as long as I live whether the verdict was right or not because I haven't, we haven't, got all this medical expertise, and I think if the medics can't even decide between themselves, what chance do we have?"
Juror queries baby death verdict
Keran Henderson had denied violently shaking the child
A juror has expressed doubts a childminder jailed for shaking an 11-month old baby to death was guilty.
Speaking on BBC Five Live, the juror in the trial of Keran Henderson said a "miscarriage of justice had occurred".
Henderson, 43, of Iver Heath, Bucks, was last month jailed for three years for the manslaughter of Maeve Sheppard on a majority verdict.
But complicated medical evidence had prevented the jury from making informed decisions, the juror claimed.
At the end of a five week trial, and deliberating for more than 12 hours, the jury at Reading Crown Court found Henderson guilty of the baby's manslaughter.
I will never know as long as I live whether the verdict was right or not because I haven't, we haven't, got all this medical expertise
Juror
Maeve, whose parents Ruth and Mark live in Slough, Berks, was taken unconscious to hospital in 2005 from Henderson's home where she was being looked after.
The court had heard from experts who said injuries were caused by the baby's neck being violently snapped back and forth.
However, the juror said the verdict, based on a 10-2 majority, was unsafe as the medical evidence was too complicated for jurors to assess.
She told the BBC: "I believe that a miscarriage of justice has occurred and there's nothing I can do about it.
"I don't think you can get a fair outcome.
"I will never know as long as I live whether the verdict was right or not because I haven't, we haven't, got all this medical expertise, and I think if the medics can't even decide between themselves, what chance do we have?"
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)