BBC PROGRAM SERIES PROBE COT DEATHS
A series of programs and articles on
British Broadcasting Corporation's (BBC) web site, published in 2003
Last year Angela Cannings was convicted of
murder after three of her children suffered cot deaths. From the moment she was
arrested Angela has always maintained her innocence.
BBC probe
suggests cot death injustice
A woman serving two life sentences
for murdering her two babies may have been wrongly jailed, a BBC investigation
suggests.
The acquittal of Trupti Patel has highlighted the
controversy over the science used to take parents of cot death victims to
court.
The label
with a life sentence
It is hard
to imagine a crueller agony: To lose not one but two, maybe even three babies,
and then to be accused of murdering them.
'Effects of drug
mistaken for child abuse'
08
Dec 03 | Real Story
Cot deaths advice and
helplines
08
Dec 03 | Real Story
Baby murder witness
'irrelevant'
04
Dec 03 | Wiltshire
Doubts cast over baby
deaths case
02
Nov 03 | Real Story
Accused of abuse, but
never tried
01
Jul 03 |
Jailed mother's appeal
date
24
Aug 03 | Wiltshire
Baby deaths mother to
appeal
16
Apr 02 |
Few cot deaths 'are murder'
21
Jul 03 | Health
Protest over mothers'
arrests
30
Jun 03 |
'Tide turned' on cot
death cases
12
Jun 03 |
Solicitor accused of
killing sons freed
29
Jan 03 |
A
jury gives its verdict on Meadow's Law
By Eric Roberts
Victims
of child care errors win right to sue
By Clare Dyer
The rise and
fall of a medical "expert"?
Professor's
obsession with child deaths has robbed me of my little girl too
Parents
'are wrongly blamed over sudden child deaths'
By Hannah Start