Etan Patz, the first missing child pictured on a milk carton, has been gone for 30 long years but has not been forgotten.
Six year old Etan Patz
went missing on May 25, 1979. It was the Friday before Memorial Day. He
disappeared from his Soho, New York neighborhood while on his way to
school. He insisted on being able to walk to the bus stop by himself
just like all the other kids. Etan's parents were not keen on the idea.
But, after arguing the point with Etan, his parents finally relented,
and let him walk alone to the bus stop. It was not until late in the
afternoon that anyone realized that Etan was missing.
Etan's mother, Julie Patz, found out her son had not been in class
after he did not return home after school. She then called the homes of
all his friend but could not locate Etan. She then called the police
and filed a missing persons report. By that night more than "...100
police officers and searchers had gathered with bloodhounds" had joined
the search for the missing boy. They were unable to find any trace of
Etan. Believing that the boy was kidnapped Etan's father, Stan Patz,
speculated about why he had been taken.
"In our minds there were only two possibilities," said Stan
Patz, the boy's father. "Either Etan was taken by a stranger and killed
or he was taken by a very sad woman desperate for a child of her own,
and we hoped that such a woman would at least take care of him and keep
him safe."
It was not until 1982 before there was any kind of break in the case.
This was when the family learned about the arrest of a one Jose Antonio
Ramos. It turns out that there was a connection between he and Etan's
former babysitter. The article says
Ramos was a drifter who in 1979 lived in Alphabet City, a
neighborhood not far from Soho. In 1982 he was arrested after boys in a
neighborhood in the Bronx complained that he had stolen their book bags
while trying to coax them into a drainpipe under a bridge, where he
lived, said the Patzes and federal prosecutor Stuart GraBois, who spent
years investigating the case.
When police found Ramos in his drainpipe home, they found he had
many photographs of small blond boys. They noticed that they looked a
lot like Etan Patz, according to author Lisa R Cohen's book about the
case, "After Etan: The Missing Child Case that Held America Captive."
Bronx police questioned Ramos, and he denied having anything to do
with Etan's disappearance. But he did tell police that his girlfriend
used to baby-sit for the boy, GraBois said.
The Bronx and Manhattan Prosecutors followed the leads but decided that
there was not enough evidence to link Mr. Ramos to the crime. He was
released only after Etan's parents decide not to press charges. The
case went cold and Mr Ramos disappear for 6 years until federal
prosecutor Stuart GraBois reopened it.
He discovered that, in 1988, Ramos had a child molestation
conviction, and that he was serving his time in a Pennsylvania prison.
GraBois decided to have Mr. Ramos brought to NY for questioning. In
what seemed like a Law and Order moment GraBois put a surprise
questions to Ramos hoping to get him to confess. He asked "How many
times did you have sex with Etan Patz?" Ramos at that point admitted to
having take "a little boy" to his lower East Side apartment on the same
day Etan went missing. He also said "he was 90 percent sure it was the
same he'd seen in the news that was missing."
His story was that he released the boy at a subway station so that he
could go visit his aunt in Washington Heights. Etan had no aunt in
Washington Heights. Trying to press him further about the incident
Ramos refused to talk and requested to see a lawyer.
Ramos 10 to 20 year term for his child molestation conviction will
be up in 2012. GraBois had him transferred to federal prison where he
planted informants as cell mates. GraBois would give no details about
what the informants had told him but "...he's convinced he's eyeing the
right suspect."
That information has been given to the Manhattan District
Attorney's Office, but no charges have been filed. Without a body the
District Attorney does not believe there is enough evidence to get a
conviction. Etan's disappearance is still on the NYPD's cold case list.
If anyone does have information about the case they can contact the FBI/NYPD Etan Patz hotline: 212-384-2200.