PLAY PODCASTS
BONUS | The science that cleared Kathleen Folbigg
Season 3 · Episode 240

BONUS | The science that cleared Kathleen Folbigg

Crime Insiders · LiSTNR

August 11, 202530m 57sbonus

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (enrichment.soundstack.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

Kathleen Folbigg is front page of every newspaper and news website this morning after we learned the NSW government had paid her just $2million in compensation after she served twenty years in prison after being wrongfully jailed for the deaths of her four children.

NSW Premier Chris Minns has said Ms Folbigg should sue his government if she wants more compensation.  Ms Folbigg told News Ltd the suggestion is a slap in the face.

After her convictions were quashed in 2023, many touted forensics as the saviour for Kathleen Folbigg. But, how did they fail her in the first place, and what led to one of Australia's greatest ever miscarriages of justice? 

In 2021, Professor Stephen Cordner was one of 90 eminent scientists who signed a groundbreaking petition calling for the immediate pardon and release of Kathleen Folbigg.

Let’s revisit our interview with Professor Cordner to try to understand the forensics behind Kathleen's final and successful bid for freedom, and unpack why her case was such a gross miscarriage of justice in the first place. 

If this content raised issues for you, call Red Nose Grief and Loss on 1300 308 807. 

Red Nose provides specialised bereavement support free of charge to any person affected by the sudden and unexpected death of a baby or child during pregnancy, birth, infancy or childhood.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Topics

criminal justice systemcatastrophic asphyxiating eventSouth Walesnineteen monthgenetic testingsudden infant deathacute catastrophic asphyxiatingstrong support groupword AsphyxiaKathleen fahlbergNineteen dayslow oxygencardiac arrestwrong convictionwrongly convictedbrain damagemeadows lawforensic scienceurban dictionarysingle deathattorney generalRed nosedoctordeathrepresentative