NEW YORK (AP) — When her 6-year-old son was late getting home from school, his mother called a classmate's mom and got the news that would launch one of the nation's most infamous missing-child cases. With Etan's 2-year-old brother and a 2-year-old friend running around the family's apartment in the then-artsy-industrial SoHo section of Manhattan, his 8-year-old sister dragging her feet about getting ready for school and children due shortly for in-home day care at the Patzes' apartment, Julie Patz walked Etan downstairs and watched him walk a block and look both ways before crossing the street. Nearly 35 years later, Hernandez — who had worked at a corner store by the bus stop — told authorities he lured Etan into the store basement by promising him a soda, then choked him.