ABA Home
 
Careers

Nanny Convicted in Baby’s Death Moves from Law to Dance

Posted Jun 5, 2008, 06:39 am CST
By Debra Cassens Weiss

Louise Woodward, the teen nanny convicted in 1997 for the shaking death of her 8-month-old charge, was close to becoming a British lawyer before changing her career in 2005.

Woodward has kept a low profile since a Massachusetts judge reduced Woodward’s conviction to involuntary manslaughter and sentenced her to time served, the Boston Herald reports. In England, she attended law school and was training at a solicitor’s firm when she changed careers.

Now Woodward is a dance instructor who teaches salsa, tango and ballroom dance.

The star prosecution witness in Woodward’s case later had doubts about the existence of shaken baby syndrome. He wrote in a 2007 paper that science today could have exonerated Woodward.

A hat tip to Legal Blog Watch.


Comments not appearing after a few seconds? Try emptying your cache ("Temporary Internet files"), making sure Javascript is activated, and refresh this page.


Add Comment

We welcome your comments, but please adhere to our comment policy.


Most Read



Subscribe

Get the ABA Journal the way you want it — in print, online, by e-mail — and when you want it — monthly, weekly, daily or as news breaks.



Subscribe via RSS
Subscribe to the mobile edition
Subscribe to the monthly magazine


Return to top