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Murder charge dropped against Irish nanny in US girl’s death

BOSTON — A lawyer for an Irish nanny who was accused of killing a 1-year-old girl in her care and served more than two years in prison only to have a murder charge against her dropped yesterday (Aug 31) called the prosecution a “complete disgrace” and a “rush to judgment.”

In this July 30, 2015 file photo, Aisling Brady McCarthy leaves court proceedings at Middlesex Superior Court in Woburn, Mass. Photo: The Boston Globe via AP

In this July 30, 2015 file photo, Aisling Brady McCarthy leaves court proceedings at Middlesex Superior Court in Woburn, Mass. Photo: The Boston Globe via AP

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BOSTON — A lawyer for an Irish nanny who was accused of killing a 1-year-old girl in her care and served more than two years in prison only to have a murder charge against her dropped yesterday (Aug 31) called the prosecution a “complete disgrace” and a “rush to judgment.”

Ms Melinda Thompson said 37-year-old Aisling Brady McCarthy “can’t stop crying out of joy” but still faces uncertainty because federal immigration authorities want to detain her.

“It was a tragedy that a child died, but, quite frankly, the way this prosecution was handled was a complete disgrace,” Ms Thompson said hours after Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan dropped a first-degree murder charge against Ms McCarthy, who remains at an undisclosed location.

Ms Thompson said Ms McCarthy hopes to rebuild her life and her credibility and hasn’t ruled out legal action against prosecutors.

“This was an absolute nightmare,” Ms Thompson said of her client’s time in prison. “It changes a person. She can’t get those years back.”

Ms McCarthy was accused of killing Rehma Sabir in Cambridge in January 2013. She had been the girl’s nanny for about six months.

Ms McCarthy, an Irish national now married to a Boston-area man, travelled to the United States about 13 years ago under a visa waiver program that entitled her to stay 90 days.

She had been in prison from the time of her 2013 arrest until May, when she was released on bail and ordered to wear a GPS monitor while awaiting an October trial.

Yesterday’s announcement by prosecutors came after a state medical examiner reversed an earlier decision declaring the death a homicide caused by shaken baby syndrome.

Ms McCarthy had insisted she was innocent, and her lawyers vigorously challenged the medical examiner’s findings that Rehma died of complications of blunt-force head injuries.

The office issued an amended ruling changing the manner of death to “undetermined” after reviewing additional materials, including expert witness reports, transcripts of police interviews and grand jury testimony, additional medical records and lab testing.

The report notes Rehma had a history of bruising and suggests she may have been prone to easy bleeding with relatively minor trauma because of an undiagnosed disorder.

“Given these uncertainties, I am no longer convinced that the subdural hemorrhage in this case could only have been caused by abusive/inflicted head trauma, and I can no longer rule the manner of death as a homicide,” the medical examiner wrote, according to excerpts contained in Ms Ryan’s announcement yesterday.

“I believe that enough evidence has been presented to raise the possibility that the bleeding could have been related to an accidental injury in a child with a bleeding risk or possibly could have even been a result of an undefined natural disease,” the report continues. “As such I am amending the cause and manner of death to reflect this uncertainty.”

The Reverend Kevin Fay, a priest in Ms McCarthy’s hometown of Lavey in Ireland, told The Boston Globe, “It’s fantastic news, just fantastic news.”

“We all know the family very well,” he said. “There’s a sense of great relief for everybody,” Reverend Fay said.

Yesterday’s ruling is at least the second time in recent years that Middlesex prosecutors dropped charges in a murder case alleging a baby was shaken. In September 2014, they dropped charges against a father accused of killing his 6-month-old son in 2010. The state medical examiner said the manner of death could not be determined after the father’ lawyers discovered the family’s medical history included a rare genetic vulnerability to ruptured arteries or veins. AP

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