Woman challenges salt poison case
Susan Hamilton was convicted of endangering the child's life
A woman who was jailed for poisoning a young girl with salt
has said she will appeal against her conviction.
Susan Hamilton, from Edinburgh, was sentenced to four years
in 2003 after the eight-year-old girl suffered serious brain
damage from a stroke.
However, Hamilton has told the BBC that new medical evidence
shows the child's injuries could have had other causes.
It follows the case of Ian and Angela Gay, who had a manslaughter
conviction quashed earlier this month.
The couple, from Halesowen, were jailed for five years in 2005
for poisoning their three-year-old foster son, Christian Blewitt,
with salt.
Their lawyers argued Christian had a rare sort of salt diabetes,
which led to his high salt levels.
" Hopefully I get my appeal, we get our life back, the
child gets to know the truth and we can start again ".
Susan Hamilton
Hamilton, who has already served her sentence, will use similar
arguments in an attempt to have her conviction overturned.
During Hamilton's original trial, the court was told how the
girl - who cannot be named - had been admitted to Edinburgh's
Royal Hospital for Sick Children on several occasions.
In March 2000, the girl suffered a stroke and doctors found
high levels of sodium in her bloodstream, which they believed
could only have been administered deliberately.
'Nightmare began'
Hamilton, who always denied giving the girl an overdose, said
she first heard of salt poisoning when the child was in hospital.
"That's when our nightmare began," she said.
"The child is lying upstairs, possibly dying, we'd been
told to get family up, etc, and then they hit us with this.
"I just kept thinking this isn't real. But it was real
and I got questioned, questioned and questioned by two policemen.
"I can't remember much of it because I was in shock and
I just wanted to see the child."
Hamilton said the child developed a condition where her sodium
level increased when she had sickness and diarrhoea.
She added: "It kept going up and myself and my husband
asked on a lot of occasions why it was going up and they told
us it was an enigma."
'Want the truth'
Hamilton said there were parallels between her case and that
of Ian and Angela Gay.
"There are other cases I've heard of and another two cases
that I know are waiting to go to trial.
"If our case or the Gay case can help anyone else then
that's what I want. I want the truth, I just want an answer.
"Hopefully now we've got that answer and I get my appeal,
we get our life back, the child gets to know the truth and we
can start again."
Hamilton's appeal is expected to be heard in six to eight weeks.