DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Supreme Court Restores Conviction in 1979 Murder of Etan Patz

June 22, 2026
in News
Supreme Court Restores Conviction in 1979 Murder of Etan Patz

The Supreme Court on Monday reversed a lower court decision that had reopened the case of the man convicted in the killing of Etan Patz, a 6-year-old boy whose 1979 abduction in Manhattan reshaped American childhoods.

The court’s unsigned opinion restores the conviction of the man, Pedro Hernandez, who the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit had said last year was entitled to a new trial.

The three liberal justices — Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson — noted their objection to the majority’s order.

Mr. Hernandez was found guilty in 2017 of kidnapping and murdering Etan, but an appeals court overturned that judgment in July. Months later, the Manhattan district attorney’s office, which prosecuted Mr. Hernandez, asked the nation’s highest court to review the decision.

On Monday, a defense lawyer for Mr. Hernandez, Harvey Fishbein, said the Supreme Court’s order meant his client would not get a new trial and that his team was “terribly disappointed.”

“We firmly believe that an innocent man is in jail for a crime that he did not commit,” Mr. Fishbein said.

In a statement, the Manhattan district attorney, Alvin L. Bragg, said the case had “changed a generation of New Yorkers.”

“This office has remained steadfast in its pursuit of justice for Etan and the Patz family and will continue to stand by this important conviction,” he said.

The Supreme Court’s action sends the matter back to the lower courts and is the latest development in a case that stumped investigators for decades. Mr. Hernandez, a handyman who lived in New Jersey, was arrested in 2012 and first put on trial in 2015. But after 18 days of deliberations, the trial ended in a hung jury. The case went back to trial and, in 2017, a Manhattan jury convicted Mr. Hernandez after nine days of deliberations.

The reversal of Mr. Hernandez’s conviction last year reopened a case that had appeared finally settled. From the first days Etan went missing, when he was walking the two blocks from his home in the SoHo neighborhood to a school bus stop, the case generated intense public interest. Etan’s abrupt disappearance — and the killing of 6-year-old Adam Walsh two years later — ushered in an era of heightened caution among American parents.

In its 10-page opinion on Monday, the Supreme Court said the Second Circuit got it wrong and exceeded its authority.

The lower court opinion “appears to reflect serious doubt about the reliability of Hernandez’s confessions,” the majority said, but the relevant statute does not permit federal courts to “disturb a state-court conviction based on such an evaluation of the evidence.”

The liberal justices did not explain their disagreement. The ruling was issued as part of the court’s routine orders and without the justices holding oral arguments.

For decades, investigators in Manhattan struggled to figure out what happened to Etan. His body was never found, and in 2001, he was declared legally dead.

The critical break in the case came in 2012, when one of Mr. Hernandez’s relatives contacted investigators. New York police officers traveled to Mr. Hernandez’s home in Camden, N.J. After about seven hours of questioning, the police said, Mr. Hernandez confessed — first before being read his rights, and twice more after.

Mr. Hernandez was 18 at the time of Etan’s disappearance and worked at a bodega where investigators believed Etan had been killed.

There was no scientific evidence linking Mr. Hernandez to the crime, and his confessions to investigators were quickly called into question.

Mr. Hernandez’s lawyers argued that the statements were invented to placate the police. They asked the court to suppress them, saying they were a result of Mr. Hernandez’s low I.Q. and the product of psychotic delusions. The judge nonetheless said that they could be used as evidence.

During jury deliberations at the second trial in 2017, the jury asked the judge whether they should disregard one of Mr. Hernandez’s later confessions if they found that his first one was not voluntary. The judge gave a one-word answer: No.

A federal appeals court found that the judge should have explained a Supreme Court precedent about such serial confessions and ordered that Mr. Hernandez be released from his 25-years-to-life sentence or get a new trial.

Prosecutors in Manhattan, led by Mr. Bragg, argued to the Supreme Court that Mr. Hernandez’s conviction should not have been overturned because it was not based on an “error in the decades-long investigation, in the admission of Hernandez’s confessions or in the evidence presented at trial.” The appeals court had said that the judge overseeing the trial, Maxwell Wiley, had violated federal law and therefore invalidated a jury’s verdict.

In their response, Mr. Hernandez’s lawyers said that the judge’s instruction to the jury had touched on the central issue in the case.

“Far from exhibiting the kind of clear error for which summary reversal is typically reserved,” his lawyers wrote, “the Second Circuit’s decision is correct.”

The post Supreme Court Restores Conviction in 1979 Murder of Etan Patz appeared first on New York Times.

‘Big trouble’: Analyst flags ‘severe cracks’ in key bloc over Trump’s broken promises
News

‘Big trouble’: Analyst flags ‘severe cracks’ in key bloc over Trump’s broken promises

by Raw Story
June 22, 2026

Republicans have signs of trouble ahead of the midterm elections after President Donald Trump has “failed to deliver on his ...

Read more
News

Clive Davis, mogul who nurtured musicians from Janis Joplin to Whitney Houston, dies at 94

June 22, 2026
News

Only one US state pays teachers an average of 6 figures. See how much teachers make in every state.

June 22, 2026
News

Clive Davis, recording executive and star-maker, dies at 94

June 22, 2026
News

Netflix Expands Kids Programming With New ‘Gabby’s Dollhouse’ and Over 100 Episodes of ‘Sesame Street’

June 22, 2026
China Tightens Rare Earth Grip on U.S. Firms, Threatening Trade Clash

China Tightens Rare-Earth Grip on U.S. Firms, Threatening Trade Clash

June 22, 2026
U.S. Oil Is Skipping the Chance to Grab Market Share From the Gulf

U.S. Oil Is Skipping the Chance to Grab Market Share From the Gulf

June 22, 2026
Netflix expands library of kid-centric programs

Netflix expands library of kid-centric programs

June 22, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026