Summary:
The Death of Innocents
offers an unbelievable but true tale that fulfills the promise of its tagline: Murder, medicine, and high-stakes science.
Following prosecutor Bill Fitzpatrick in Onondaga County, New York, journalists
Richard Firstman and Jamie Talan unravel the tale of Sudden Infant Death
Syndrome, otherwise known as SIDS, in upstate New York in the 1970s. They first
reveal the details of the case of Stephen Van Der Sluys, a father convicted of murdering
his child for insurance money, establishing that parents don’t always have the
best interests of their children at heart; this then lays the groundwork for
the story of the successful prosecution of a mother whose children’s deaths had
been considered as the basis for the theory of prolonged apnea as the cause of
recurrent SIDS. With the prodding of Fitzpatrick, the prosecutor in nearby Tioga
County then investigated and called in a slew of local and state investigators
and national experts. Waneta Hoyt confessed to and was convicted of the murders,
upending the research based on the prolonged sleep apnea theory, millions of
dollars of NIH-funded research, and the careers of several research scientists. Although nurses
and other pediatricians questioned Waneta’s maternal attachment and even
suggested that the deaths were not natural, their voices went unheard.
Politicians like Walter Mondale and Ronald Reagan jumped onto a bandwagon led
by parents angry that the federal government had not done more to find out why
their babies had died without explanation. National conferences on SIDS were
held where theories were expounded based on published cases starring the “H”
children. And commercial interests entered the stage as apnea monitors, which
had never been used at home, became an unproven (and lucrative) recommendation
for parents to prevent SIDS.
In addition to Waneta and Tim Hoyt and their five children (who
ranged in age from 1 to 28 months) who were murdered between 1965-1971, there is a cast of characters out of a
Hollywood script. The leading player is Alfred Steinschneider, MD, PhD, a
pediatrician and researcher at Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, New
York. Others include Drs. Michael Baden, Milton Halpern, Janice Ophoven and Marie
Valdes-Dapena. Pediatric luminaries such as Abe Bergman, Jerold Lucey, Frank
Oski, and even T. Berry Brazelton played roles.
The book takes us through the story using court and medical
records, interviews, television and audio recordings, conference notes, publications
and other publically available information, some of which the authors
painstakingly retrieved and obtained through the Freedom of Information Act. We
hear the sad story of Waneta and Tim, from high school sweethearts to life partners
in rural poverty, and of their family members who tried to help but were often
rebuffed. The story takes us to early pregnancy and early death, with
inadequate evaluations, lack of autopsies or of more than cursory investigation,
and wishes to not upset the Hoyts or their community with insinuations of
murder. We hear about the years after the deaths, with the Hoyts’ attempts at
adoption, mental health treatment and eventually their confession to heinous
acts. We also hear about Steinschneider’s rise, fall and eventual ostracism by
the medical community.
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