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Pedro Hernandez: New York; Bulletin; False confessions: Defence rests as Etan Patz retrial enters final month, The Villager reports. Reporter Dennis Lynch; January 12, 2017...."Hernandez, now 55, was a grocery clerk in Patz’s Soho neighborhood at the time of the child’s disappearance. He confessed to police in 2012 to kidnapping and strangling the 6-year-old on a May morning before Etan could board his school bus. But the defense has argued it was a false confession, partially due to the defendant’s low IQ and his mental issues — they say he hallucinates. Patz’s parents long believed Ramos was responsible for their son’s disappearance, but changed their minds during Hernandez’s first trial."

Next: Guilty Plea Series: Part (6): Canadian cases: Anthony Hanemaayer..."After Anthony’s arrest, the Crown twice offered him a deal that would have guaranteed him less jail time in exchange for a guilty plea. But since Anthony knew he was innocent, he refused both deals, trusting that the truth would be enough. However, when the victim’s mother identified him as her daughter’s attacker, she was so persuasive in her testimony that he realized that he would probably be found guilty, even though he had done nothing wrong. His lawyer had informed him that if he were found guilty at trial, he would likely go to prison for 6-10 years. In other words, he could wind up spending his twenties behind bars.[4] On the second day of his trial, Anthony finally succumbed to the pressure to plead guilty in exchange for less prison time. It had become clearer and clearer to him that he would be found guilty at the end of his trial. His lawyer advised him to accept the Crown’s latest offer instead: if Anthony would plead guilty, he would receive less than two years in prison. Frightened and feeling hopeless, Anthony accepted this deal and agreed to plead guilty to a crime he did not commit.[5] On October 18, 1989, Anthony entered his guilty plea. He was sentenced to two years less one day of imprisonment. Anthony served eight months of this sentence before being released on parole. Since he had also spent eight months in pre-trial custody, Anthony spent a total of sixteen months in prison, despite being innocent.[6; Paul Bernardo’s Confession; As of October 17, 2005, police had reason to suspect that notorious serial killer Paul Bernardo was the real culprit."... Innocence Canada; Sarah Harland-Logan.
Previous: Guilty Plea Series: Part (5): Canadian cases; Maria Shepherd...Her address to AIDWYC'S (Innocence Canada's) annual meeting; May 28, 2016..."I would later discharge First Counsel and retained new Counsel, J. Thomas Wiley. Wiley would immediately take steps to have my Breach of Recognizance conviction overturned. Wiley would meet with me on a regular basis and for the first time, I would start seeing the Crown’s disclosure. I continued to advise Wiley that I had done nothing to harm our daughter and profess my innocence. Wiley would take steps to obtain authorization from Legal Aid to retain other experts, one locally and one in Philadephia. Wiley would retain the first Private Investigator named Jack. The feeling of hope started to come – but it did not stay for long. The two forensic experts concurred with Smith. The first Private Investigator was actually trying to get witnesses to make statements against me. No one would challenge Smith. No one. He was the God of Paediatric Forensic Science. Hope quickly started dying. I was later convicted based upon guilty plea to save what was left of my family. With a guilty plea, it would enable me to serve my sentence in a prison close to the children. I would be able to have touch visits. I would serve a shorter sentence and be recommended for early parole. I would have a better chance of regaining custody of my children because I was showing remorse. There was no other choice. At the time I entered my guilty plea and was sentenced, I was 3 months pregnant. It was possible that I could be paroled in time to deliver my youngest daughter, Chanel. I stood a better chance of not losing another newborn if I showed remorse. Remorse for a crime I did not commit. The guilty plea was strategic. I had to enter the plea before my Mother arrived to Orangeville Court that morning, or else my mother would die watching it happen. After my mother arrived, we told her. My mother cried loudly, began falling to her knees and kept asking my lawyer, why over and over again. Her voice and cries echoing in the quiet courthouse hallway. On the day I turned myself in to start my sentence, I was handcuffed and shackled at the feet. I was wearing a black maternity dress with a burgundy bow. I would start my sentence at Metro West Detention Centre where I would have an anxiety attack with hours. I was told to tell the inmates that I was there for murdering my husband, because baby killers get killed."
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 "The lead defense attorney for Pedro Hernandez, the man accused of kidnapping and murdering Etan Patz in 1979, hopes his client’s trial will wrap up by the end of this month. Attorney Harvey Fishbein said so early last week, before his team rested its case earlier than expected. The defense team chose not to call to the stand three witnesses who testified in Hernandez’s previous court case, which ended last year in a mistrial. Two of them were jailhouse informants whose testimonies supported the defense’s argument that longtime suspect and convicted child molester Jose Antonio Ramos was responsible for the young Patz’s disappearance. The other witness was a former F.B.I. agent, part of the ongoing investigation in the early 1990s into Patz’s disappearance. She said that Ramos admitted to her that he could have molested Patz and sent him on an uptown subway train the day the boy went missing. The move surprised prosecutors, who had planned to ask the ex-agent about the testimony of the defense’s other two previous witnesses. Hernandez, now 55, was a grocery clerk in Patz’s Soho neighborhood at the time of the child’s disappearance. He confessed to police in 2012 to kidnapping and strangling the 6-year-old on a May morning before Etan could board his school bus. But the defense has argued it was a false confession, partially due to the defendant’s low IQ and his mental issues — they say he hallucinates. Patz’s parents long believed Ramos was responsible for their son’s disappearance, but changed their minds during Hernandez’s first trial."

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