Pedro Hernandez: New York: Evidence in 1979 disappearance of 6-year-old Etan Patz found in New York police station, while Hernandez is on trial for the killing. (Must Read. HL); Update: February 24, 2015: Trial continues; No mistrial motion yet. L.A. Times.
STORY: "Evidence in 1979 disappearance case found in N.Y. police station," by Associated Press reporter Colleen Long, published by the Toronto Star on February 23, 2015.
SUB-HEADING: "Three boxes of evidence from the
investigation into 1979 disappearance of Etan Patz have turned up while a
suspect is on trial for the killing."
PHOTO CAPTION: "Julie Patz, the mother of Etan Patz, returns to a New York
courthouse after a break in her testimony on Feb. 2. Three boxes of
evidence from the investigation into the boy's 1979 disappearance were
found recently at a Harlem police station."
GIST: "Three boxes of evidence from the
investigation into the 1979 disappearance of 6-year-old Etan Patz have
turned up while a suspect is on trial for the killing, and his attorney said Monday that she may have to seek a mistrial or at least recall witnesses who have already testified. The boy’s disappearance in New York City on
May 25, 1979, helped catalyze a national missing-children’s movement.
Etan, whose body was never found, was one of the first vanished children
whose case was publicized in what became a high-profile way: on milk
cartons. Alice Fontier, one of the attorneys representing suspect Pedro Hernandez, said there were more than 1,400 pages of relevant information in one box alone. “Given this massive disclosure at this point,
in the middle of the trial, there may be issues,” she said. “We may need
to recall some of their witnesses, we may need to move for a mistrial,”
she said. Hernandez confessed in 2012
to choking Etan in the basement of the convenience store where he
worked as a stock clerk. He told police he put the boy’s body in a bag,
stuck the bag in a box and walked it down the street where he dumped it
with some curbside trash. His defence says the admissions were the
fictional ravings of a mentally ill man with a low IQ who didn’t
understand his right to silence.......... The boxes of evidence were found recently at a
Harlem police station that covers public housing complexes in the
neighbourhood, prosecutors said late last week. The location is
kilometres from the precinct near where Etan went missing as he walked
to school. They contain police records from the
investigation, notes from assistant district attorneys who worked on the
case and handwritten memos from a detective who investigated Jose
Ramos, a longtime suspect in the case who was never charged."
See related story: Trial to continue: No mistrial application yet: "Documents
recently discovered from the investigation into a missing boy's case
dating back 36 years include notes from a police officer's interviews
with people who claimed to have seen the child, Etan Patz, in the
apartment building of a man other than the defendant on trial in his
murder.Defense
attorney Alice Fontier said the team representing Pedro Hernandez, who
is on trial in Etan Patz's 1979 disappearance, had not yet had time to
go through the more than 3,000 items recently discovered in three boxes
in a Harlem police station. Nobody has been able to explain how the
three boxes containing the material ended up at the police station,
which is in a different precinct and far from the Soho neighborhood
where Etan, who was 6 at the time, disappeared. The defense did
not demand a mistrial and Fontier said she was not accusing prosecutors
of intentionally concealing any of the information. But she said there
were 39 pages of documents in the boxes that were records from a police
officer involved in the investigation, who lived in the same apartment
building where a man once eyed as a possible suspect lived at the time
Etan vanished.According
to the officer's notes, "many residents positively identified Etan Patz
as having been in that building with Jose Ramos," Fontier said. Ramos
never was charged in the boy's murder, but he was convicted in other
child sexual abuse cases and is in prison in Pennsylvania.Ramos
had been a boyfriend of a woman who worked at times as a baby sitter for
the Patz family, and defense attorneys have made clear they see him as a
more likely suspect than Hernandez. Ramos has denied involvement in
Etan's murder. The boxes' discovery was the latest in many twists in one of the nation's most infamous missing child cases."