Los Angeles Times

Patz trial looks at another suspect

- By Tina Susman tina.susman@latimes.com Twitter: @TinaSusman

NEW YORK — The mother of Etan Patz, a 6year-old boy who vanished on his way to school nearly 36 years ago, retook the witness stand Tuesday in the trial of her son’s accused killer as prosecutor­s sought to undermine defense claims that police arrested the wrong man.

Julie Patz was the first witness to testify for prosecutor­s when Pedro Hernandez’s murder and kidnapping trial opened in January. At that time, she grew emotional as she described the last time she saw Etan, walking to his school bus stop in what was then the quiet, mainly industrial section of Manhattan’s SoHo neighborho­od.

On Tuesday, Patz was again the first witness as prosecutor­s began their rebuttal to the defense case. Under questionin­g from Assistant Dist. Atty. Joan Illuzzi-Orbon, Patz gave testimony that called into question the defense claim that Jose Ramos, not Hernandez, likely was Etan’s killer.

Patz said she could not recall ever meeting Ramos, who was dating one of Etan’s babysitter­s at the time. She also testified that she had no knowledge of Ramos ever meeting Etan and that she never knew the babysitter to invite Ramos to the Patz home while she was watching Etan. “Not to my knowledge,” Patz said.

Asked why she has not attended the trial daily since it began on Jan. 30, Patz replied, “I chose not to subject myself to hearing the details” of Hernandez’s confession.

Jurors have watched police video of Hernandez confessing to having abducted Etan on the morning of May 25, 1979. On that day, Patz allowed Etan to walk to the bus stop alone for the first time. The boy never was seen again, and his body never has been found.

In his confession, Hernandez said he strangled Etan, bundled his body into a box and left it in an alley in SoHo.

Hernandez was not arrested until 2012, eight years after a New York civil court declared Ramos responsibl­e for Etan’s disappeara­nce. Ramos never was charged in the case and has always maintained his innocence. He remains in prison in Pennsylvan­ia after his conviction on unrelated child molestatio­n charges.

The defense’s case has hinged on trying to show jurors that Ramos is the likely killer, and that Hernandez’s confession three years ago was the result of police coercion.

“The only evidence against Pedro Hernandez are his words,” defense attorney Harvey Fishbein said Tuesday after court adjourned. “His words are unreliable.”

Fishbein has portrayed Hernandez as feeblemind­ed and unable to stand up to the pressure of hours of police questionin­g. He also says Hernandez lacks the mental capacity to commit a heinous crime and conceal it for more than 30 years.

Prosecutor­s say Hernandez is sly and manipulati­ve. “He’s a slipster,” Illuzzi-Orbon said.

At the time of Etan’s disappeara­nce, Hernandez was an 18-year-old employee of a shop near the bus stop. He was arrested after people who knew him told police they recalled Hernandez confessing years earlier to having killed a child.

 ?? Seth Wenig
Associated Press ?? JULIE PATZ, shown in February, testified about an earlier suspect in her son Etan’s death.
Seth Wenig Associated Press JULIE PATZ, shown in February, testified about an earlier suspect in her son Etan’s death.
 ?? Stanley K. Patz ?? ETAN PATZ in an undated photo. Defense attorneys say their client’s confession is false.
Stanley K. Patz ETAN PATZ in an undated photo. Defense attorneys say their client’s confession is false.

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