Houston Chronicle

Mom to man who killed son, 11: ‘He just wanted to go home’

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MINNEAPOLI­S — A Minnesota man who abducted, sexually assaulted and killed 11-year-old Jacob Wetterling 27 years ago apologized in court Monday for his “evil acts” as he was sentenced to 20 years in prison on a child pornograph­y count that let authoritie­s close the books on a mystery that had haunted the state for nearly three decades.

Danny Heinrich, 53, led authoritie­s this summer to the field where he buried Jacob’s remains. As part of his plea bargain, prosecutor­s agreed not to charge Heinrich with murder.

“I am truly sorry for my evil acts,” Heinrich said as he stood before U.S. District Judge John Tunheim, Jacob’s parents, Patty and Jerry Wetterling, and the boy’s siblings.

Heinrich told them that his actions were “heinous” and “unforgivab­le,” and apologized for what he took away from them. He said he kept silent for nearly three decades because of his fear. But he offered no explanatio­n for why he killed Jacob.

When he confessed in court in September, Heinrich quoted a handcuffed Jacob as saying, “What did I do wrong?”

Jacob’s mother, Patty Wetterling, said Heinrich deliberate­ly set out to hurt a child the night he abducted Jacob on Oct. 22, 1989, while her boy was biking with his brother and a friend near their home in the central Minnesota community of St. Joseph. She pointed out that by Heinrich’s own admission, he put two bullets into his gun and shot Jacob with them.

“You didn’t need to hurt him. He did nothing wrong. He just wanted to go home,” Wetterling said.

Wetterling also told her son’s killer she won’t “waste a minute of time” thinking about him “from this day forward.”

The sentence was the maximum the law allowed, and Heinrich technicall­y could complete it in 17 years with good behavior, but the plea deal allows state authoritie­s to seek his civil commitment as a sexual predator at the end of his federal prison term, which could prevent him from ever going free. Tunheim said he “won’t pretend” that the sentence is only about child pornograph­y.

“What you’ve done is so heinous, so brutal and so awful that I don’t believe society will let you go free,” Tunheim said.

Early during the investigat­ion, authoritie­s questioned Heinrich, who maintained his innocence. But he came under renewed scrutiny when authoritie­s decided to take a fresh look at the case around the 25th anniversar­y of the kidnapping.

As part of that effort, investigat­ors used new technology to go back to a sex assault case of a 12-year-old Cold Spring boy that happened nine months before Jacob’s disappeara­nce. They found Heinrich’s DNA on that boy’s sweatshirt, and used that evidence to get a search warrant for Heinrich’s home in Annandale, where they found his child pornograph­y collection last year.

After months of denials, Heinrich agreed in late August to confess to killing Jacob and the Cold Spring sex assault.

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