22 Years Later, a Father Seeks to Clear His Name After His Son's Death
Ester Clark has been living a nightmare for the past 22 years, ever since her grandson Danyel Smith was sentenced to life behind bars for the death of his infant son — a tragedy they both say he did not cause.
'They never tried to find out what really happened,' Clark, 81, told Capital B Atlanta of Smith's prosecution. 'I can't really explain the hurt and the tears and the heartaches and pain that I've been through over the years. … It's just horrible.'
Smith was convicted of murder by a Gwinnett County jury in 2003 based on the theory that his 2-month-old son Chandler's death the year prior was caused by abusive head trauma, more commonly known as shaken baby syndrome.
The Supreme Court of Georgia is now deciding if Smith, who rejected a 2022 plea deal that would've sent him home, will get a new trial based in part on an updated scientific understanding of shaken baby syndrome that largely undercuts the theory presented by the prosecution at trial.
Dr. Steven Dunton, the prosecution's medical examiner who testified in 2003 that Chandler's skull fracture occurred on the day he became non-responsive, reversed his previous testimony last year, claiming he now believes it is likely that the fatal injury was sustained earlier because it was already showing signs of healing.
'They owe Danyel a whole lot,' said Latasha Pyatt, Smith's fiancée. 'They will never be able to repay him for the time that he's lived away from his children and away from his family and what he's seen in that place and [what] he has endured.'
'They never tried to find out what really happened,' said Esther Clark, seen with Danyel Smith in 2001. (Courtesy of Latasha Pyatt)
Compared to children of other races, Black children are disproportionately identified as victims of abuse, according to a 2022 Stanford University study.
Marsha Brandon, Chandler's mother, could not be reached for comment. She told Atlanta News First in 2023 that despite her previous praise of Smith's attentive parenting, her stance changed to a belief that Smith killed their son and should remain in prison.
Mark Loudon-Brown, an attorney with the Southern Center for Human Rights, became Smith's lawyer in 2021 and has since been focused on getting Smith a new trial.
A Gwinnett County Superior Court judge dismissed their first motion for a new trial without a hearing, but the Supreme Court of Georgia unanimously ruled in 2022 that Smith be given a hearing.
Smith, who has denied abusing his son in any manner, received a time served plea deal from the Gwinnett County district attorney's office shortly after the supreme court's ruling, but he rejected it as he refused to plead guilty.
Loudon-Brown argued during the April 2024 hearing that if presented with evidence of the current scientific understanding of shaken baby syndrome, a reasonable juror would have cause for reasonable doubt.
The attorney bolstered his argument via testimony from five doctors, who each explained how the medical understanding of infant skull fractures has evolved.
Dr. Saadi Ghatan, director of pediatric neurosurgery with the Mount Sinai Health System, testified in 2021 via a sworn affidavit that he would not conclude that Chandler Smith was abused, based on improved imaging technology and studies performed on non-abused babies that showed symptoms formerly used to diagnose shaken baby syndrome. He opined that the infant's death was caused by pre-existing conditions due to birth injury and other events that don't include being shaken.
Despite the new expert testimony, Smith was denied a new trial by now-retired Gwinnett County Superior Court Judge Ronnie Batchelor in October 2024. The ruling was later upheld by the Georgia Court of Appeals before the Supreme Court of Georgia granted him a hearing.
Loudon-Brown argued last month that Judge Batchelor did not properly apply Federal Rule of Evidence 702, a law related to how a judge determines whether an expert witness is qualified and their testimony is credible enough to be presented at trial. Loudon-Brown said the court improperly dismissed the new evidence and expert testimony he presented, resulting in Smith being denied a new trial.
'There are two options: The Supreme Court could send the case back and tell the trial court to apply the correct law, or the Supreme Court could apply the correct law itself and reverse [the lower court's decision],' Loudon-Brown told Capital B Atlanta. 'We're asking them for the second, but it's possible they could do either one of them.'
A spokesperson for the Gwinnett County district attorney's office declined to comment to Capital B Atlanta about the case while it is actively under the Supreme Court of Georgia's consideration.
The post 22 Years Later, a Father Seeks to Clear His Name After His Son's Death appeared first on Capital B News - Atlanta.

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Black America Web
an hour ago
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Op-Ed: R. Kelly Asking Trump To Save Him From A White Supremacist Murder Plot Was Not On My 2025 Bingo Card
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Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


Los Angeles Times
2 hours ago
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Why they protest: Voices from the downtown L.A. ICE demonstrations
During a week of protest, Los Angeles is the center stage of the national immigration debate, with pundits on both sides characterizing the fight through the lens of their respective viewpoints. Not everyone is pleased with the actions — there has been vandalism, destruction and injuries — isolated yet striking moments that have at times overshadowed peaceful demonstrations. But for many out in the demonstrations, there was a message that they wanted to be heard. During these demonstrations, Los Angeles Times reporters on the ground have interviewed protesters and asked them why they're demonstrating. Here's what they had to say: Alejandra Flores attended a protest in front of Westin LAX Friday with her daughter and her mother, who had recently become a U.S. citizen. Maritza Perez Huerta attended her first protest this week. She couldn't make it out to protests a couple of years ago because she was younger and her mother was afraid. Priscilla Ramos spent her first day of protesting in front of the Metropolitan Detention Center this week, where Marines were expected to arrive. Cynthia Guardano was born in the United States in a mixed-status family. She was downtown demonstrating on Friday. Jason Petty, a 46-year-old musician from Boyle Heights, told The Times he went to a rally because 'this is our community — immigration is us.' Petty, a former ninth-grade history teacher, said he was born and raised in Los Angeles and was here during the 1992 riots. He is Black, and his grandmother lived in Watts during the 1965 Watts riots. His father was a Black Panther. Petty said he has a daughter in fourth grade and that immigration agents recently came to the neighborhood near her school. He said he has had to have difficult conversations with her, assuring her she's safe, and why it was important to go to the rally. Outside City Hall in Santa Ana this week, Alicia Rojas observed a protest from afar. The Colombian native had her amnesty application denied as a child. Now a U.S. citizen, Rojas grew up during the era of Proposition 187 and remembered all the racism against people like her at the time. Michelle Hernandez, 19, marched at the federal building with a Mexican flag draped over her shoulders. A daughter of Mexican immigrants, she said she had been worried about family members and friends during the ICE raids. Franchesca Olivas drove two hours alone from Hemet to attend the anti-ICE demonstration this week outside the Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown Los Angeles. She was carrying an upside-down American flag attached to the Mexican flag because she's half-white and half-Mexican. Aaron Fontan, 24, said he also has participated in Black Lives Matter protests and felt familiar police pushback and militance this time around. However, he felt that not as many people are willing to show up to anti-ICE protests. Beyond the protests, some civic leaders have also voiced their opposition to the escalation in immigration enforcement. Los Angeles Unified School District Supt. Alberto Carvalho, the son of immigrants, has been outspoken about his mission to protect students: Service Employees International Union California President David Huerta was injured and detained while documenting an immigration enforcement raid in downtown L.A. last week. Times staff writers Christopher Buchanan and Annie Goodykoontz contributed to this report.