
WARNING: This story is about the sudden death of a baby and may be upsetting for some readers
February 18 and June 5, 2016 are the two dates tattooed on Stanley Pinder鈥檚 chest.
The first is when his daughter was born. The second is the day she died.
Less than a week after her birth, Chloe Vera Nicholson was taken from her parents by Child Youth and Family Services (CYFS, now called Oranga Tamariki) and placed into the care of two approved caregivers.
It was there that she died from suspected Sudden Unexpected Death in Infancy (SUDI) after being fed by her caregivers and put down for a sleep.
Today, at the coronial inquest held in Wellington, the surrounding events leading up to Chloe鈥檚 death are under the microscope in an effort to establish a cause.
Approximately one week after her birth, the Family Court at Palmerston North granted an interim custody order and Chloe was placed into the custody of two experienced CYFS-approved caregivers.
At the time, the couple, who have name suppression, had fostered 107 children in 23 years, but had in the last eight years only been taking care of babies.
At approximately 2.30pm on June 6, 2016, after feeding Chloe, her foster mother put her down for a sleep in her bassinet.
At 5pm, the woman came in to check on the baby and found her still asleep. Twenty minutes later, she returned to the room and talked to Chloe, but she didn鈥檛 react, and was pale with a blue tinge to her lips.
Chloe鈥檚 caregivers began CPR and called an ambulance, but she was unable to be resuscitated and was pronounced dead at the property.
Stanley Pinder holding his newborn daughter in 2016. Photo / Supplied
Police investigated and found the death was not suspicious, but because her death was unexpected, it was referred to the Coroners Court, where, at the time, it was mandatory for an inquest to be held if a person died while in state care.
Nine years later, an inquest was finally held into Chloe鈥檚 death. Her father travelled from Timaru for the hearing, but her mother did not wish to attend.
鈥楾his is not a result of a previous brain injury after this child was born鈥
A forensic pathologist, Kate White, told the coronial inquest that following an autopsy, which is more extensive when performed on babies, there was no evidence of any injury of any kind.
White鈥檚 conclusion was that Chloe had died from SUDI, because there was no obvious cause.
She said there was some white matter gliosis found in Chloe鈥檚 brain, which was a form of scarring, which was common in babies who had died from SUDI.
White said that it was a kind of cellular damage that no one really knew how it occurred, but current literature theorised that it occurred while in utero.
鈥淭he cause is not truly understood,鈥 she said.
鈥淲e should think about it like a cellular insult, rather than a traumatic injury.鈥
When asked if gliosis could be caused by a baby being shaken, White said that there would be other obvious signs if that were the case.
鈥淭his is not a result of a previous brain injury after this child was born.鈥

Pinder has the dates of his daughter's birth and her death tattooed on his chest. Photo / Jeremy Wilkinson
White said that white matter gliosis was perhaps best thought of as a possible vulnerability in babies who had died of SUDI.
鈥業t didn鈥檛 kill Chloe immediately鈥
One of New Zealand鈥檚 leading experts in SUDI, Dr Edwin Mitchell, who helped a landmark research called the Cot Death Study, also gave evidence.
That study found that babies who were put to sleep on their stomachs were more likely to die, as were babies who lived in homes with smokers, or whose mothers smoked during pregnancy.
On the whole, though, he said diagnosing SUDI was a process of exclusion and was defined essentially by the absence of any other factors.
Mitchell said that Chloe didn鈥檛 have any of the common risk factors common to babies vulnerable to SUDI. She slept on her back, wasn鈥檛 bed sharing, and there were no drugs or alcohol in the home, wasn鈥檛 low birth weight and was ethnically European.
鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 identify any factor that would be in that group of intrinsic factors.鈥
Mitchell said that the only factor he could identify was that she was at a critical age where the majority of SUDI deaths occur.
He noted that there are roughly 50 similar deaths per year, six of which will not have an identifiable factor. Mitchell said Chloe was in this category.
As for the scarring found on the white matter in Chloe鈥檚 brain, Mitchell said it was possible that something happened in the womb that caused a lack of blood flow to her brain.
鈥淚t didn鈥檛 kill Chloe immediately,鈥 he said, but noted that it could have damaged parts of her brain that were important for breathing.
鈥淚t might just make the baby more vulnerable.鈥
Mitchell said it was something that was seen in SUDI cases, that was not seen in babies who had died due to other means.
鈥淚s it the primary cause ... well it鈥檚 possibly the primary cause. I can鈥檛 say,鈥 he said.
鈥淚t seems more likely that the brain has been injured at a cellular level, it may just be a marker for that.鈥
Coroner Robin Kay said that SUDI left parents who had lost an infant with many questions that medical science currently couldn鈥檛 answer.
鈥淚 hope one day that will change,鈥 he said.
Coroner Kay said that while the evidence didn鈥檛 explain why Chloe had died, he hoped that it brought some comfort because it showed she didn鈥檛 die because of something someone had done to her.
He will deliver his written findings at a later date.
Jeremy Wilkinson is an Open Justice reporter based in Manawat奴, covering courts and justice issues with an interest in tribunals. He has been a journalist for nearly a decade and has worked for 九一星空无限 since 2022.

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