When was etan patz born
During his trial in , young boys testified against Ramos of trying to kidnap them. Based on his history and timing of the incident, Ramos became the prime suspect on the police list.
In , the New York prosecutor enlisted the Pennsylvania authorities for help in the case. In his confession, Ramos admitted that on the mentioned day, he kidnapped a minor to his apartment.
He identified the missing boy as his rape victim. He narrated how he dumped the body on an underground subway.
After years in custody, the prosecution failed to prove the confession. The police failed to link Ramos to the disappearance of Patz. The body of Patz was never found. Ramos was released from police custody. Stanley and Julie petitioned the court to declare Etan Patz dead in absentia.
Etan Patz was declared dead by the court in They dug through an apartment basement which was being constructed when Patz disappeared. The police reclosed the case after they failed to find any evidence. He confessed to killing Patz and dumping the body in the nearby garbage heap. The police lacked conclusive evidence to prosecute Hernandez. They said Hernandez confessed to their local church and the family of killing the schoolboy.
On November 14, , Pedro Hernandez was found culpable of the crime. He was arraigned in court on December 12, Anthony of Padua, a Roman Catholic church in Camden, New Jersey, indicated that Hernandez may have publicly confessed in the presence of fellow parishioners in the early s to murdering Etan. According to Hernandez's sister, it was an "open family secret that he had confessed in the church. His lawyer has stated that Hernandez was diagnosed with schizotypal personality disorder, which includes hallucinations.
The lawyer has also said his client has a low intelligence quotient IQ of around 70, "at the border of intellectual disability. On December 12, , Hernandez pleaded not guilty to two counts of murder and one count of kidnapping in a New York court. In April , Harvey Fishbein, Hernandez's legal aid criminal defense lawyer, filed a motion to dismiss the case, citing that Hernandez's "confession in one of the nation's most notorious child disappearances was false, peppered with questionable claims and made after almost seven hours of police questioning".
The next month, however, New York Supreme Court Justice Maxwell Wiley ruled that the evidence was "legally sufficient to support the charges" and that the case could move forward. He also ordered a hearing to determine whether the defendant's statements could be used at trial. This residence had been newly refurbished shortly after Etan's disappearance in , and the basement had been the workshop and storage space of a handyman. After a four-day search, investigators announced that there was "nothing conclusive found.
Stan and Julie Patz had the judgment against Ramos dismissed after the trial of Pedro Hernandez convinced them that Ramos was not responsible for their son's death. Etan's body was never found; he was declared legally dead in Stan and Julie Patz pursued and won a civil case against Ramos in Ramos has never been criminally prosecuted for the murder of Etan.
Every year, on Etan's birthday and the anniversary of his disappearance, Stan Patz sent Ramos a copy of his son's missing-child poster. On the back, he typed the same message: "What did you do to my little boy?
Ramos even drew a map of Etan's school bus route, indicating that he knew that Etan's bus stop was the third one on the route. In a special feature on missing children, the New York Post reported on October 21, , that Ramos was the prime suspect in Etan's disappearance. Ramos had been known by the Patz family and was the prime suspect all along, but in the early s authorities were unable to prosecute Ramos.
GraBois received the case in and identified Jose Antonio Ramos, a convicted child sexual abuser who had been a friend of Etan's former babysitters, as the primary suspect. In , multiple boys had accused Ramos of trying to lure them into a drain pipe in the area where Ramos was living.
When police searched the drain pipe, they found photographs of Ramos and young boys who resembled Etan. GraBois eventually found out that Ramos had been in custody in Pennsylvania in connection with an unrelated child molestation case.
In , GraBois was deputized as a deputy state attorney general in Pennsylvania to help prosecute a case against Ramos for sexually abusing children and to obtain further information about Etan's case. When first questioned by GraBois, Ramos stated that, on the day when Etan disappeared, he had taken a young boy back to his apartment to rape him. Ramos said that he was "90 percent sure" it was the boy whom he later saw on television.
However, Ramos did not use Etan's name. He also claimed he had "put the boy on a subway". In , the tribute spread worldwide. On the morning of May 25, , Etan left his SoHo apartment at Prince Street by himself for the first time, planning to walk two blocks to board a school bus at West Broadway and Prince Street. After all, the neighborhood was part of a city in crisis. Then, on May 25, , six-year-old Etan vanished.
That morning, Etan set out to walk the two blocks to his school bus stop, alone, for the first and last time. His mother Julie watched her son pass Wooster Street, just one street over from the bus stop at Prince and West Broadway. On that block, Etan stopped to buy a soda for lunch at a bodega where eighteen-year-old Pedro Hernandez worked as a clerk.
Hernandez then choked Etan to death, thrust his body into a plastic bag, fit the bag into a box, and threw the box into a dumpster. But none of these details became widely known until , when Hernandez confessed at the behest of his family. Etan Patz was considered a missing person from through , at which point a Manhattan surrogate court judge declared the boy officially dead.
Their ordeal changed them in ways that few people can understand. During those long, fruitless, frustrating years of searching, the city surrounding the Patzes changed dramatically as well. From that time on, we guarded our children so there would not be another Etan. But the specter of childhood innocence looms over all of these different considerations.
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