Los Angeles Times

After 15 years, father in prison for fatally shaking baby is freed

- Associated press

SACRAMENTO — A man who spent 15 years in prison for shaking his baby to death was freed Saturday, one day after a judge set aside his conviction.

Zavion Johnson, 34, walked out of the Sacramento County jail, where he was being held while his court case was heard. He had been serving a sentence of 25 years to life at a state prison in Vacaville.

Johnson was “both loving and trying to adjust to freedom,” said his attorney, Paige Kaneb of the Northern California Innocence Project at the Santa Clara University School of Law.

Johnson was convicted of second-degree murder in the 2001 death of his daughter, Nadia.

At trial, more than a dozen witnesses described him as a gentle and caring father.

Johnson testified that he accidental­ly dropped the 4-month-old in the bathtub while rinsing her off in the shower. She hit her head and later stopped breathing, he said.

Medical experts testified that the girl had a fractured skull and that her injuries were evidence of abuse.

But two prosecutio­n experts later repudiated some of their testimony and said that based on new scientific views, the evidence didn’t clearly rule out an accident.

On Friday, a state judge set aside Johnson’s conviction.

“I’m hoping for a positive future — for my life to begin,” Johnson said in a statement released by his attorneys. He will remain free while prosecutor­s decide whether to seek a new trial.

His is among a nationwide series of recent legal challenges to what used to be accepted evidence of “shaken baby syndrome.”

At least 14 people nationwide have been exonerated since 2011 in shaken baby cases, attorneys said, citing the National Registry of Exoneratio­ns. “Research and scientific studies conducted after the date of Zavion Johnson’s trial have altered the opinions of the prosecutio­n experts,” Sacramento County Chief Deputy Dist. Atty. Steve Grippi said in a statement Friday. “A prosecutor’s duty is not simply to win cases but to ensure that each defendant is accorded procedural justice and guilt is decided upon the basis of sufficient evidence.”

Johnson’s attorneys have filed a motion seeking to have any new charges dismissed at his next hearing on Jan. 19, based on a lack of evidence beyond the experts’ medical testimony.

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