Updated
Updated · The Associated Press · Jun 22
Supreme Court Reinstates Pedro Hernandez Conviction in 1979 Etan Patz Case by 6-3 Vote
Updated
Updated · The Associated Press · Jun 22

Supreme Court Reinstates Pedro Hernandez Conviction in 1979 Etan Patz Case by 6-3 Vote

3 articles · Updated · The Associated Press · Jun 22

Summary

  • A 6-3 Supreme Court ruling restored Pedro Hernandez’s murder conviction in the 1979 disappearance of 6-year-old Etan Patz, reversing a federal appeals court that had thrown out the verdict.
  • The justices said the Second Circuit overstepped under a 1996 law limiting federal review of state criminal cases, rejecting its finding that the trial judge mishandled a jury question about Hernandez’s confessions.
  • That ruling halts plans for a third trial. Hernandez, 64, is serving 25 years to life after a 2017 retrial conviction; his first trial ended in a 2015 deadlock.
  • Hernandez’s lawyers argued his admissions were false and shaped by mental illness after hours of police questioning before Miranda warnings, but prosecutors said the appeals court had discounted a five-month trial with 66 witnesses.
  • Etan Patz vanished on his way to a Manhattan school bus stop on May 25, 1979, in a case that became a national symbol of missing children and helped inspire National Missing Children’s Day.

Insights

How does this ruling on judicial oversight affect the fight against wrongful convictions based on false confessions?
Does a 1996 law now block federal courts from reviewing potentially coerced confessions from state trials?
With his conviction final, what does science say about the reliability of confessions from the mentally ill?