Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Judge won’t toss murder conviction in 1979 missing-boy case

- By Colleen Long

A judge on Thursday refused to throw out the murder conviction of a man in an infamous 1979 missingchi­ld case and scheduled his sentencing.

Jurors who were unable to reach a verdict in the man’s first trial on whether he killed 6-yearold Etan Patz have been a constant presence throughout his retrial, and they were again on Thursday, at a hearing to determine whether their attendance could have poisoned the second jury before it voted to convict him.

Four members of the first jury plus an alternate sat in the audience for the brief hearing. Among them was the lone holdout who refused to convict Maple Shade, New Jersey, resident Pedro Hernandez in 2015 in one of the nation’s most haunting missing-child cases. Many jurors attended the second trial and routinely sat with Etan’s father, Stan Patz, weeping alongside him when a guilty verdict was read on Feb. 14.

Defense attorneys argued the second jury learned about the presence of the first jury’s members, possibly from a court officer, and were improperly influenced by the spectacle. They said it meant Hernandez didn’t get a fair trial.

Judge Maxwell Wiley disagreed, and he denied a defense motion to throw out the conviction.

“The trial was held in open court, open to any member of the public,” the judge wrote. “The defendant does not have a cognizable right to determine who may sit in the audience, or that the members of the audience remain entirely anonymous.”

The judge set a sentencing date of April 18, to the relief of Stan Patz.

“I think it’s finally going to be over for our family,” he said. “We’ve finally got some justice for our son.”

Etan, who vanished on May 25, 1979, on his way to school, was among the first missing children to be pictured on milk cartons. His case captivated the nation and helped shape parenting and law enforcemen­t. His body has never been found.

Hernandez, who’s 56, was a teenage stock clerk in Etan’s Manhattan neighborho­od at the time. He made a surprise confession in 2012, but his lawyers say he’s mentally ill and his confession was false, and they have vowed to appeal.

“We, as anyone, wanted this saga to end for the Patz family, for the city, but Pedro Hernandez is not the answer,” attorney Harvey Fishbein said.

The investigat­ion into Etan’s disappeara­nce and presumed death had long focused on another suspect, convicted pedophile Jose Ramos. Fishbein said Ramos was the real killer, but Ramos has denied that.

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN —THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this 2012, file photo, a photograph of Etan Patz hangs on an angel figurine, which is part of a makeshift memorial in the SoHo neighborho­od of New York.
MARK LENNIHAN —THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this 2012, file photo, a photograph of Etan Patz hangs on an angel figurine, which is part of a makeshift memorial in the SoHo neighborho­od of New York.
 ??  ?? Hernandez
Hernandez

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