The Supreme Court on Monday reinstated the murder conviction of the man convicted in the 1979 killing of 6-year-old Etan Patz, ending another chapter in one of the nation’s most notorious missing-child cases.
The justices overturned a lower federal court ruling that had thrown out the conviction of Pedro Hernandez, who was found guilty in 2017 of kidnapping and murdering the New York City boy whose disappearance helped transform how America responds to missing children.
Etan disappeared on May 25, 1979, while walking alone to a school bus stop in Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood. His disappearance became one of the first major missing-child cases to receive extensive national media coverage and eventually led to Etan becoming one of the first children featured on milk cartons distributed across the country.
Breaking News: The Supreme Court restored the conviction in the murder of Etan Patz, a 6-year-old boy whose abduction when walking to school reshaped childhoods. https://t.co/kXRy08NYWf
— The New York Times (@nytimes) June 22, 2026
Confession at Center of Appeal
The Supreme Court’s ruling focused on statements made by Hernandez to police in 2012. His attorneys argued that investigators improperly questioned him despite concerns about his mental health and intellectual limitations.
Federal appeals judges previously concluded that the confession should have been excluded because investigators failed to adequately determine whether Hernandez understood his constitutional rights.
The Supreme Court disagreed, finding that the lower court failed to give sufficient deference to New York state court findings that Hernandez knowingly waived those rights before confessing.
Hernandez, a former convenience store clerk, told investigators he lured Etan into a basement, strangled him and placed the child’s body in trash bags. No physical evidence or remains were ever recovered.
Case Changed Missing Child Investigations
Etan’s disappearance had a lasting impact on law enforcement and public awareness efforts involving missing children. His case contributed to the creation of new missing-child notification systems and heightened parental concerns about child abductions during the 1980s.
The first trial of Hernandez ended in a deadlocked jury in 2015. A second trial resulted in his conviction two years later on charges of murder and kidnapping.
The Supreme Court’s decision effectively restores the conviction and life sentence imposed by New York courts, leaving Hernandez with few remaining legal avenues to challenge the verdict.
For the Patz family, the ruling brings additional finality to a case that has stretched across nearly half a century and remains one of the most significant child-abduction cases in American history.
This is a breaking news story. Please check back for updates.
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