Channel: Vsauce2
Category: Education
Tags: sally clark casetrue crime podcasttrue crime documentary murdersfbi framed him with sciencedo chairs existvsaucesurviving the deadliest gameuk crimevsauce2 birthday paradoxvsauce2statistics and probabilitysally clarkvsausemath crimetrue crimetrue crime documentaryvsause2vsauce2 money paradoxtrue crime storiesvsauce2 paradoxbritish crime documentaryroy meadowtrue crime youtubesally clark documentarybreaking newsstatistics
Description: Just think of all the questions that arise when a seemingly-healthy baby dies. Was there an illness that went undetected? Was there a rare genetic defect that couldn’t possibly have been known? Are any signs of physical trauma related to the resuscitation efforts of a fragile infant, or something more sinister? Every time a baby dies, police investigate with a host of complex questions to determine whether the death is natural and accidental, or… not. And the odds are anything but clear. So what do we do when it happens twice to the same person? What are the odds of THAT? A British mother named Sally Clark suffered two separate tragedies with the deaths of her infant sons. Her resulting trial for murder included expert testimony from Sir Roy Meadow, a noted expert on child abuse cases. And Meadow’s misuse of conditional probability painted Sally Clark as perpetrator rather than a victim. Math is often theoretical, but sometimes doing it right is the difference between life and death. *** PARTIAL LIST OF SOURCES *** Ben-Israel, Adi. “Using Statistical Evidence in Courts: What Went Wrong in the Case of Sally Clark?” ben-israel.rutgers.edu/711/Sally_Clark.pdf Dyer, Clare. “Falsely Convicted Sally Clarke Dies Suddenly.” BMJ: British Medical Journal, vol. 334, no. 7594, BMJ, 2007, pp. 602–03, jstor.org/stable/20506708. General Medical Council v. Meadow, England and Wales Court of Appeals (Civil Division), bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1390.html Nobles, Richard, and David Schiff. “A Story of Miscarriage: Law in the Media.” Journal of Law and Society, vol. 31, no. 2, [Cardiff University, Wiley], 2004, pp. 221–44, jstor.org/stable/1410525. Scheurer, Vincent. “Convicted on Statistics?” understandinguncertainty.org/node/545 Schneps, L., & Colmez, C. (2013). Math on trial: How numbers get used and abused in the courtroom. amazon.com/Math-Trial-Numbers-Abused-Courtroom/dp/0465032923 Watkins SJ. Conviction by mathematical error? Doctors and lawyers should get probability theory right. BMJ. 2000;320(7226):2-3. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1117305 Webster, Richard. “Roy Meadow and the Statistics of Cot Deaths.” richardwebster.net/cotdeaths.html *** LINKS *** Vsauce2: TikTok: tiktok.com/@vsaucetwo Twitter: twitter.com/VsauceTwo Facebook: facebook.com/VsauceTwo Talk Vsauce2 in The Create Unknown Discord: discord.gg/tyh7AVm Vsauce2 on Reddit: reddit.com/r/vsauce2 Hosted and Produced by Kevin Lieber Instagram: instagram.com/kevlieber Twitter: twitter.com/kevinlieber Podcast: youtube.com/thecreateunknown Research and Writing by Matthew Tabor twitter.com/TaborTCU Editing by John Swan youtube.com/channel/UCJuSltoYKrAUKnbYO5EMZ2A Huge Thanks To Paula Lieber etsy.com/shop/Craftality Vsauce's Curiosity Box: curiositybox.com #education #vsauce #crime