By

John Miller /

CBS News/ December 13, 2012, 5:57 AM

Etan Patz suspect: He was alive when I left him

Pedro Hernandez, who confessed to killing Etan Patz, is seen along with 1979 poster from when Patz was abducted

Pedro Hernandez, who confessed to killing Etan Patz, is seen along with 1979 poster from when Patz was abducted

NEW YORK Pedro Hernandez told New York City Detectives that, when he left Etan Patz's body in a doorway, he believed the little boy was still alive.

The 1979 disappearance of the six year old became the most symbolic kidnapping case since the murder of the Lindberg baby, stirring the movement that put missing children on milk cartons and billboards.

The stunning revelation and other new details come in documents filed with the court just after Hernandez entered a not guilty plea to the very crimes he confessed to last May in a marathon session with police. In that session, he detailed the killing of the boy, during questioning and again on video.

According to the new documents, Hernandez was picked up at his home at 7 a.m. on May 23 and taken to the Camden County (N.J.) Prosecutor's Office. It was two days before the 33rd anniversary of the Patz disappearance.

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Confession flips Etan Patz murder case upside down

According to court documents filed by Hernandez's lawyer Wednesday, Hernandez had been questioned for eight hours when he told police, "He was at work that morning, that he saw the boy at the bus stop, asked him if he would like a soda, led him to the basement of the bodega where he was employed, and for no apparent reason immediately choked the boy until the boy went limp. The defendant said he then placed the boy in a plastic bag, placed the bag in a cardboard box, and tossed the boy's book bag behind a freezer in the basement. He then carried the box to the entranceway of a basement approximately one-and-a-half blocks away, where he placed the box on the ground just inside the open entranceway. According to the video-recorded statement by Mr. Hernandez, when he left the box, Etan Patz was still alive."

Later, Hernandez told prosecutors he believed his actions may have led to the boy's death.

Police said after his arrest, Hernandez took them to the location where he believed he'd left the body and told them he went back the next day to check on the box, but it was gone.

Hernandez's lawyers say his confession is false and part of more than 20 years of delusional behavior. His lawyer has supplied the district attorney with medical records documenting Hernandez's psychiatric history and an expert's opinion on false confessions.

The new details of Hernandez's statements to police and prosecutors give some indications of questions that may be raised at trial. Questions such as, when police searched the basements in the blocks around the boy's home, why was the book bag behind the freezer not discovered? Why did no witness remember seeing a man carrying a box big enough to contain the body of a 50 pound boy? And why, in the massive dragnet on the streets of the Manhattan neighborhood of SoHo that began the night of Patz's disappearance was the box with his body not found?

26 Photos

Decades later, new developments in Etan Patz case

For each question, there are possible explanations. Police might not have looked behind the freezer. A stock boy carrying a large box might not have struck passersby as unusual. The private carting company that served the streets where Hernandez says he left the box may have picked it up before the boy was reported missing.

In a motion to dismiss the indictment against Hernandez, his lawyer, Harvey Fishbein, argues that Hernandez's confession alone is unreliable because of his long psychiatric history. The document also states, "In the six months since Hernandez's arrest, the NYPD (New York Police Department) and the New York County District Attorney's Office have conducted an intensive investigation attempting to corroborate Mr. Hernandez's statements. However, I am told by the District Attorney's Office they have found nothing."

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Sister of Etan Patz murder suspect reported confession in 1980s

Hernandez emerged suddenly as a suspect last May when a family member reported to New York police that Hernandez had made statements over the years saying that "he had done a bad thing" and that "he had killed a child in New York."

In May of 1979, Hernandez worked as a stock boy in a small grocery store located just a block from the Patz's SoHo loft and on the same corner the six year old was to board a school bus.

For years before Hernandez's confession, another man, Jose Ramos was the prime suspect in the kidnapping. Ramos, who has a long history of arrests for sexually abusing young boys, had been the boyfriend of a woman who had been hired to walk Etan to school during a strike by school bus drivers. The day Patz vanished was the first time his parents had yielded to the boy's requests to walk the one block to the bus stop by himself. Young Etan was excited that day over his new independence, and because he had a dollar to buy a soda.

Reached at his office late Wednesday, Fishbein wouldn't not comment beyond what was contained in the motion to the court.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
  • John Miller

    John Miller is a senior correspondent for CBS News, with extensive experience in intelligence, law enforcement and journalism, including stints in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and the FBI.

3 Comments Add a Comment
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thetruthwillout says:
I would be dimes to dollars that he molested the boy and then killed him to hide the crime. I don't believe anything he is saying and I hope he is found guilty and sentenced to death. I don't believe he has mental issues -- that's just an excuse to get away with murder. This man murdered an innocent child and then went on with is life as if nothing happened. Meanwhile, the parents of this child have lived in hell since he went missing. They didn't know if he was dead or alive. This creature sickens me.
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mari1963 says:
Can someone please choke this loser and stick him in a plastic bag? Better yet, call Chuck Norris. He'll take care of him!

Stop giving this loser face time on the news!
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matt6052 says:
City sanitation crews don't put cardboard boxes that weigh 60 pounds into the garbage truck. They never, ever have.

A cardboard box won't contain an object that heavy without additional packing materials like wood reinforcements and/or heavy, corrugated cardboard splints that are specially designed for the object.

Sixty pounds is three boxes of photocopier paper. It's their story that a sanitation crew tossed something that heavy away without remembering it... or identifying it (heck, it could have been three boxes of photocopier paper)... or without it breaking the box or having it slide around inside as they lifted it.

If he killed him, he didn't do it the way he is saying he did.
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