An incredible story. A woman convicted of murdering her four children has been pardoned after serving 20 years in Australia.
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An incredible story. A woman convicted of murdering her four children has been pardoned after serving 20 years in prison Jail In Australia, which appears to be one of the country’s biggest miscarriages of justice. New South Wales Attorney General Michael Daley ordered it Release of Kathleen Folbigg, based on the preliminary findings of an inquest that found “reasonable doubts” about his culpability for all four deaths. Daley said he spoke to the governor and recommended an unconditional pardon, which was granted.
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“It was a terrible ordeal for everyone involved and I hope that our actions today can put an end to this 20-year affair,” Daley said, adding that she had informed Folbigg’s ex-husband and father of the murdered children of her decision .
STORY
Almost 20 years after the woman’s conviction, the case is reopened by a scientific discovery: the woman suffers from a genetic mutation that could have led to the children’s deaths, the Calm2 gene. Bathurst has conducted the second inquest into mother’s guilt. The woman was serving a 30-year sentence that would expire in 2033. She would not be eligible for parole until 2028. The children died individually over a decade, between 19 days and 19 months, and the mother insisted they died from “natural causes”.
The children had all died between the ages of 19 days and 19 months. All were found smothered in the cradle. For the judges and public opinion, it was her mother who killed her who has been described as “Australia’s worst serial killer”.
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