State's first female exoneree shares her story

Julie Baumer (second from left), Michigan’s first female exoneree, was the featured speaker during WMU-Cooley Law School Criminal Law Society’s Women’s History Month event on March 1. Pictured with Baumer are (from left): Leanna Pool, Criminal Law Society treasurer; Marla Mitchell, WMU-Cooley Innocence Project director; Maria Lowry, Criminal Law Society treasurer; Alison Zoltowski, Criminal Law Society Public Relations chair; and Elizabeth Trombley, Criminal Law Society secretary.

– Photo courtesy of WMU-Cooley

In honor of Women’s History Month, Western Michigan University Cooley Law School’s Criminal Law Society recently hosted Julie Baumer, the state’s first female exoneree.

Baumer was wrongfully accused and convicted of abusing her baby nephew in 2003.

She shared her story at the law school’s Auburn Hills campus on March 1.

Baumer was in the process of adopting her then five-month-old nephew.

That October, Baumer took him to the emergency room because he wasn’t eating.

After a series of tests at a local children’s hospital, doctors eventually discovered bleeding in his brain.

A few days later, the sheriff’s office called Baumer to come in for questioning.

She was compliant with the sheriff’s request, unaware she would be interrogated or need an attorney.

It was only later that Baumer realized she was the primary suspect in a child abuse case.

She was formally charged with first degree child abuse in February 2004. Her case was tried in 2005 and Baumer was convicted and sentenced to 10-15 years in prison.

She maintained her innocence the entire time.

“It just absolutely floored me,” Baumer told WMU-Cooley students. “I knew my innocence. My family knew my innocence. I couldn’t see how two doctors’ testimony and no other evidence made all the difference. It was unimaginable, but it happened.”

Baumer immediately began appealing her case while in prison.

After her second appeal was denied in 2007, Baumer and her family started to lose hope.

With the help from the Michigan Innocence Project, Baumer was able secure a new trial.

At the trial, her lawyers presented several expert witnesses to testify on her behalf.

This new evidence established that Baumer’s nephew had not suffered from shaken baby syndrome, as originally believed, but rather cerebral sinovenous thrombosis, a form of childhood stroke that caused the brain hemorrhage.

On Oct. 15, 2010, the jury acquitted Baumer and she was released at the age of 33 after serving nearly five years in prison.

“Her case demonstrates what can go wrong in the American legal system when pride and ego get in the way of what is right and just,” said Maria Lowry, student president of the WMU-Cooley Auburn Hills Criminal Law Society, which organized the event.

Lowry said that during the second trial, Baumer’s defense lawyer testified “that he hadn’t been knowledgeable enough about the medical aspects of her case to provide her with an adequate defense, just one of the many factors that led to her wrongful conviction and imprisonment.”

In 2016, Michigan passed a bill stating that individuals who have been wrongfully convicted, who later have their convictions overturned, are eligible to receive $50,000 compensation for each year that they were imprisoned.

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