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In January 2002, Joel Steinberg testified at a
parole hearing in Southport Correctional Facility in New York. His
prior release hearing, which was denied, was on February 8, 2000.
Although Judge Rothwax’s recommendation was against Steinberg’s
parole, he is still entitled to apply for release, which can be
granted at anytime after a hearing and the state parole board’s
approval.
In his 2002 hearing, Steinberg maintained that
his conviction was based solely on his failure to obtain medical aid
for Lisa. He pointed out that Lisa had no “external injuries” and said
that fact was clearly stated by the medical examiner. “There are no
external injuries…and she (the medical examiner) says there is no
trauma to the brain,” Steinberg said. “That’s not even equivocal,” he
continued, “…the hospital reports from St. Vincent’s clearly show that
they examined Lisa upon entry.”
Steinberg was asked by parole board commission
Marietta Gailor for his version of the crime. “I have more
responsibility in my own heart and my own soul personally…it’s very
easy to realize how many things I did wrong and shouldn’t have done or
should have done,” he said. Steinberg went on to describe his
relationship with Lisa and Mitchell and said “I was extremely close to
and described as a doting parent, totally involved father who
maintained a friendship with these children and personally took them
for continual medical care and educational care and spent all my time
with them. This is a huge loss…it’s very painful.”
Despite his claims of dedication to Lisa and
Mitchell, Steinberg’s 2002 request for parole was denied. “During the
course of the instant offense,” the parole commissioner stated, “a
vulnerable child who was in your custody lost her life due to your
failure to get medical help for her in a timely manner.
Following Joel Steinberg's 2004 parole hearing, he was released from prison after serving 16 years of a maximum 25-year sentence. An uproar ensued.
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| Hedda Nussbaum |
Hedda Nussbaum remained under psychiatric
treatment for years after the trial and slowly got her life back on
track. Eventually, she joined a support group in Westchester County
where today she is a counselor for battered women. She has also
undergone several surgical procedures to fix broken bones in her nose
and her cheeks and to repair damage to her eyes. She was interviewed
in April 2002 for a newspaper article in which she said that although
she remains traumatized by her experience, she feels she must move on.
“They’re my children and they’ll always be my children,” she told
reporter Corey Kilgannon, “But I can’t live in the past. I have to
live my life now.” |