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Longtime Etan Patz Suspect Jose Antonio Ramos Dies at 82

Jose Antonio Ramos, long suspected but never charged in the 1979 disappearance of New York first grader Etan Patz, died March 7 at Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan, according to a court filing by prosecutors in the ongoing case against Pedro Hernandez. Ramos, 82, denied abducting 6‑year‑old Etan and Manhattan prosecutors have long said they lacked sufficient evidence to charge him, but his history as a convicted child sex offender in Pennsylvania made him a central figure in the nearly half‑century investigation and in a civil wrongful‑death suit the Patz family brought against him. His death comes as Hernandez faces a third criminal trial after his prior murder conviction was overturned; his defense team says they will continue using Ramos as an alternative suspect despite his passing. The Patz case helped make missing children a national cause in the U.S., with Etan among the first kids pictured on milk cartons and May 25 later designated National Missing Children’s Day, and the loss of Ramos closes off any chance of further direct questioning of a man whose alleged statements have fueled public suspicion but never met the legal bar for indictment.

Cold Cases and Wrongful Convictions New York City Crime and Justice

📌 Key Facts

  • Jose Antonio Ramos died March 7, 2026 at Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan at age 82, as disclosed in a court filing.
  • Ramos was a longtime suspect in the 1979 disappearance of 6‑year‑old Etan Patz but was never criminally charged in the case.
  • Pedro Hernandez, whose earlier murder conviction in Etan’s case was overturned, is facing a third trial in which his lawyers still plan to argue Ramos was the real culprit.

📊 Relevant Data

Black children comprise approximately 33-40% of all missing child cases in the US, despite making up only about 13-14% of the population.

Nearly 1 in 3 missing children in the US are Black, driving Pennsylvania and other states to propose ‘Ebony Alerts’ to ensure equal protection and public safety — The Conversation

Missing Black children receive significantly less media coverage, comprising only about 7% of media references despite representing 33% of cases.

America's Black Children are Missing at Disproportionately High Rates — Elon University

Stranger abductions of children are rare, with about 100-115 cases per year in the US, representing less than 1% of missing children reports.

Let Grow Takes a Look at Crime Statistics — Let Grow

In non-family child abductions, 81% of victims are 12 years old or older, and the abducted children are predominantly female, with 86% of perpetrators being male.

Facts & Stats on Missing Children — Child Find of America

According to 2024 FBI NCIC data, for missing persons under 18, Black individuals account for about 40.5% of entries (141,620 out of 349,557), while White individuals account for about 52.6% (183,979 out of 349,557), with more females (189,424) than males (160,040) reported missing.

2024 NCIC MISSING AND UNIDENTIFIED PERSON — FBI

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