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1979 New York child murder trial gets underway

Published: 30 Jan 2015 - 09:15 pm | Last Updated: 17 Jan 2022 - 11:56 am

 

New York - The man accused of kidnapping and killing a six-year-old boy in one of America's most famous missing child cases went on trial in New York on Friday, 35 years after the crime.

Pedro Hernandez, 53, is accused of luring Etan Patz into the basement of the grocery store where he worked, before killing and dumping his body out with the trash on May 25, 1979.

Patz vanished after leaving his parents' Manhattan townhouse to walk alone for the first time to the bus stop to go to school.

His parents only realized he was missing when he failed to return home at the end of the day. His body has never been found.

The case became a national cause celebre and awakened millions of Americans to the dangers of child abduction, fuelling a generation of hyper-vigilant child rearing by parents terrified of letting their offspring out of sight.

Hernandez was arrested on a tip off in 2012 and confessed to police to killing the boy.

He has since recanted his confession and pleads not guilty.

His lawyer Harvey Fishbein says his client suffers from mental illness and has "borderline-to-mild mental retardation."

Hernandez sat quietly in packed New York State Supreme Court, dressed smartly in trousers, and a pin-striped shirt and tie.

Legal experts say the prosecutors will have a hard time to prove their case, in a trial could last until April. 

Judge Maxwell Wiley has already presided over a three-week process to select the 12-person jury who will hear the case.

Police are understood to have struggled to find supporting evidence against Hernandez.

Few clues were ever found to Etan's disappearance in the SoHo neighbourhood where he lived with his parents and disappeared.

His father was a photographer and the boy was the first missing child to be featured on milk cartons as part of a national search.

In 1983, then US president Ronald Reagan declared the anniversary of his disappearance National Missing Children Day.

Etan was declared legally dead in 2001.

AFP