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Dale, Shannon Hickman Convicted Of Manslaughter In Faith-Healing Death Of Their Infant Son

First Posted: 09/30/2011 7:14 pm Updated: 11/30/2011 4:12 am

By Steve Mayes
Religion News Service

OREGON CITY, Ore. (RNS) A jury on Thursday (Sept. 29) unanimously convicted an Oregon couple, Dale and Shannon Hickman, in the faith-healing death of their infant son.

Both parents were found guilty of second-degree manslaughter, a Class B felony that requires a sentence of at least six years and three months in prison under Oregon's mandatory sentencing law. However, because of a religious exemption that was eliminated after the Hickmans were indicted, they could face less than 18 months in prison and a $250,000 fine.

After the jury left the courtroom, the Hickmans stood and embraced. Shannon Hickman pressed her face against her husband's chest and sobbed.

The couple, who have two other children, will be sentenced Oct. 31. Prosecutors asked that they be held in jail until sentencing, but Judge Robert Herndon allowed them to remain free until then.

The Hickmans are members of Oregon City's Followers of Christ church, which has a long history of children dying from treatable conditions because their parents relied on faith healing rather than taking them to doctors. In response to such cases, legislators this year removed religious exemptions from Oregon's criminal statutes.

As word got out that the jury had reached a verdict, the Clackamas County courtroom filled with about 80 friends and family from the Followers of Christ church. Among those present were Carl and Raylene Worthington, another Followers of Christ couple tried in the faith-healing death of a child. Carl Worthington was convicted of criminal mistreatment and sentenced in 2009 to six months in jail. Raylene Worthington was acquitted.

David Hickman was born on Sept. 26, 2009, and lived less than nine hours.

His mother, Shannon Hickman, went into labor two months before her due date. Instead of going to a hospital, she and her husband opted to have the baby in her mother's home. At birth, he weighed 3 pounds, 7 ounces.

The Hickmans testified that David appeared healthy then took a sudden dire turn. Dale Hickman responded by holding his newborn son, praying for him and anointing him with olive oil. The parents said they never considered calling a doctor, and the baby died quickly.

In closing arguments, defense attorney Mark Cogan maintained it is unfair to fault the Hickmans for failing to call 911. "What opportunity was there?" he asked. "What benefit would there have been?"

Prosecutors contended that the Hickmans knew their son was born dangerously premature and that he struggled from the beginning, giving them plenty of time to seek medical assistance. If they had done so, medical experts testified, there was more than a 99 percent change the baby would have survived.

"There was plenty of time to do something," prosecutor John Wentworth said in closing arguments. "What did Shannon and Dale Hickman do? Nothing," he said. "They didn't even try."

Dale and Shannon Hickman both testified in their defense.

When asked why he didn't call 911 once he realized his infant son was failing, Dale Hickman responded, "Because I was praying."

Shannon Hickman said that as a woman in the church, she must defer to her husband. "That's not my decision anyway," she said. "I think it's God's will whatever happens."

Medical experts called by the prosecution challenged the defense assertion that the baby's health was fine until he suddenly died. They testified that a baby born two months prematurely would have struggled from birth with underdeveloped lungs.

Defense attorneys contended the Hickmans were singled out for prosecution because of their religious beliefs, noting that the district attorney waited a year to file charges against them, indicting them shortly after the arrests of Timothy and Rebecca Wyland, also members of the church.

The Wylands failed to take their infant daughter to a doctor for a growth that almost destroyed her left eye. They were convicted in June of criminal mistreatment and sentenced to 90 days in jail. The back-to-back arrests of the two couples further inflamed public animosity toward the church, the defense attorneys said.

Two days after the Wylands were convicted, Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber signed a law that removed the remnants of Oregon's legal protection for parents who rely solely on faith healing to meet their children's medical needs. The law, a direct response to the Followers of Christ cases, eliminates spiritual treatment as a defense against all homicide charges and subjects parents to mandatory sentencing under Oregon's Measure 11.

Unless the law changes again, the Hickmans will be the last Oregon parents protected by religious exemptions to state homicide statutes.

(Steve Mayes writes for The Oregonian in Portland, Ore.)

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05:38 PM on 10/26/2011
I wrote an article about this horrible incident on fourstory.org:

http://fourstory.org/features/story/religious-exemptions-modern-medicine-and-dead-kids

I promise to follow-up if anything happens with their appeal. Enjoy!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
trekie70
Lifelong bibliophile and political junkie
10:14 PM on 10/03/2011
Wow, a mere 18 mos. for what was essentially murder. What a gift! These two are unfit to be parents.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
way2sunny
06:16 PM on 10/03/2011
So their church "has a long history of children dying from treatable conditions because their parents relied on faith healing rather than taking them to doctors."

Why do they still believe this method works? Can't they be crazy for Jesus in some other way (there are so many to choose from!), a way that doesn't lead to their children dying? Time for one of their prophets or preachers to have a revelation.
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Bill J4321
01:26 PM on 10/03/2011
Those who can make you believe absurdites, can make you commit atrocities.

--Voltaire
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dbonedig
Digital Biographer of/on Noteworthy Events
02:05 AM on 10/03/2011
Religion is nothing more than an entertainment session for those who do not know how to read, write and add/subtract. The intelligent know that the soul possess all that is needed. The bottom line, is that ignorance is very expensive!
01:21 AM on 10/03/2011
I would like to know that those who are cynical toward Christianity and who make critical statements against Christ's church would have at least read the Bible. On the same note, I wish certain churches held to the truth and knowledge that is contained in God's holy word. Then they would know that the apostle Luke was actaully a physician. That not everyone is given certain spiritual gifts such as the power of healing. Miracles are not for the glorification of man, but are for the glorification of the Father. These bodies are worldly, they are physical and imperfect. God gave us the ability to learn and discover that we can take care of our bodies through science and technology. There is nothing evil about the good that science has given us. There are only evil people that use science foolishly. Although modern day miracles do occur, this is not the only avenue that God provides for us. Jesus did not fly across the air like a bird in His travels, He walked and suffered the pain of physical exertion. It is time we learn that it is the foolishness of man and not God that cause these terrible occurrances. Yes, I believe in the power of prayer. I also believe that God gave us common sense for a reason. We need to know the differences and purposes of the physical as well as the spiritual. I have experienced a few miracles, but I have also gone to the doctor.
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Craig 212
Tide goes in, tide goes out.
07:16 AM on 10/03/2011
I have read the Bible, and it has been my experience that most of the serious-minded atheists I've encountered have been more knowledgeable about the Bible than the majority of believers I know.
10:50 AM on 10/03/2011
Well, I'm not the majority.
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Shannon Barber
Gay, atheist, liberal and proud of it.
08:50 AM on 10/03/2011
The Bible, read with an open mind, not a fearful theistic one, is the best argument for atheism EVER. I spent three years researching as I was leaving religion. Rest assured, I know PLENTY about the Bible, as well as, literally, almost every sect of Christianity practiced today. Most self identified Christians can't even come CLOSE to knowing what I know. I was raised in this cult called Christianity. It is nothing but the most well told lie in the history of mankind. You will find that most atheists were not born into agnosticism or atheism. We are simply highly evolved enough to think for ourselves, rather than continue to be sheep.
10:49 AM on 10/03/2011
And now you have been left to your own devices, your own understanding. You will seek contentment from the world but none shall be found. You have hardened your heart and you stand on pride. You have left the child-like faith far behind. Rest assured, there will come a day when our breath shall slip away. Then we shall see. As for me and my house, we shall serve the Lord.
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kauaiphil
From the Alamo, to Sausalito, to St. Thomas VI, to
03:39 PM on 10/02/2011
I wonder what would have happened if the parents claimed that they believed their imaginary friend, "Lucy, in the sky of diamonds" would heal their child?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shannon Barber
Gay, atheist, liberal and proud of it.
12:36 PM on 10/02/2011
More proof that religiosity is a mental illness. How can these people justify letting their child die? An innocent, promising life is gone because these fanatical loons thought some magical being in the sky was going to do what modern medicine could have easily done with one 911 call. Organized religion is harmful brainwashing, and tragedies like this one are the undeniable evidence. May these people rot UNDER the jail for a very long time.
08:58 AM on 10/02/2011
its kinda like that story of a man floating in the ocean, while three ships come by and try to save him. he says, no! no! god will save me! then when he drowns and sees god. god gets mad, i sent you three boats what the @%$# are you thinkin!!
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AZLibDem
If you're speeding, you're an "illegal"
11:17 AM on 10/02/2011
Except that story isn't in the Bible.

According to the Bible, they did EXACTLY the right thing.
03:11 PM on 10/02/2011
you go to a hospital to go get help, theres nothing wrong with that, god wants us to work, live and learn together. what they demonstrated was an absence of god. they took it upon there own hands that everything is going to be fine and shut the door on opertunity. they were showing narsissism. god also wants you to make good judgement through life.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NeoConsAreFinished
Fight the Ah mer I cun talibanned
03:49 PM on 10/02/2011
Show me where in the bible it says that?
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Jelle NL
Unity in Diversity
08:26 AM on 10/02/2011
A sad story. I really don't understand the theology. In the Netherlands you have nice Christian people who don’t vaccinate their children, and yet build dykes because their houses, fields and businesses are below sea level.
06:45 AM on 10/02/2011
I thought the Taliban were retarded Fundies, but this takes the cake.
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cmitzinc
oh what the hel*
03:26 PM on 10/02/2011
Well said. Just fanned you.
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Lawyer13
retired Lawyer, General and Psychiatric Nurse, wit
05:26 AM on 10/02/2011
hysian heal thyself comes to mind
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joeyfoto
“Écraser l'infamie!”
05:04 AM on 10/02/2011
I care not at all to restrict the right of critically-ill adults to deny themselves medical care. I think they should fill out applications for a Darwin Award before they kick off. However, this cult is nuts — children must be protected from its cruel fanaticism.

America has far too many people in prison for "crimes" that harm no one. It is just to send people to prison for the negligent homicide of a child.

I believe that it would be sexist to send one of these "parents" to prison and not the other. They both belong in prison; thereafter the state has an obligation to remove all other children from a home that endangers their health. Any society that does not protect its children is senile.
03:34 AM on 10/02/2011
A child had to die before a religious exemption for murder was overturned. I guess that means unless someone chokes to death saying the words "Under God" the Pledge of Allegiance won't ever get changed.
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NeoConsAreFinished
Fight the Ah mer I cun talibanned
03:51 PM on 10/02/2011
Actually this group has killed many children..They are infamous here in Oregon..
If you believe in a pretend friend you get away with murder.
awckid3
No good deed goes unpunished.
11:44 PM on 10/01/2011
In closing arguments, defense attorney Mark Cogan maintained it is unfair to fault the Hickmans for failing to call 911. "What opportunity was there?" he asked. "What benefit would there have been?"

Tell me again why we need defense atty's like these? They make a mockery of the judicial system with these wild claims.
11:25 AM on 10/02/2011
Not good to quote a single line - but it looks like his argument is that it wouldn't have made a difference, so they weren't cause.

YOU need defense attorneys that will turn over every rock to defend you, just as the prosecution will - I guarantee you - turn over every rock to lock you up.