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Man Charged in Idaho Slayings Is Suspect in Riverside County KillingConvicted rapist says he was connected to 'a Martinez case,' authorities allege. Anthony Martinez was 10 when he was kidnapped outside his Beaumont home in 1997 and killed.
Eight years after 10-year-old Anthony Martinez was snatched from outside his Riverside County home while playing with his little brother, authorities Wednesday named a drifter accused of killing four people in Idaho as a suspect in the boy's abduction and slaying. A partial right thumbprint found near the Beaumont boy's body, discovered in a shallow grave in a remote canyon near Indio 15 days after his abduction, matched a print taken from convicted sex offender Joseph Edward Duncan III, said Riverside County Sheriff Bob Doyle.
The fingerprint evidence was examined after Duncan, while in custody, told FBI agents that he was connected to "a Martinez case" in California, Doyle said. "We're pretty confident he's our guy," Doyle said at an afternoon news conference in Riverside. "This is huge for us." Anthony's abduction and slaying have weighed heavily on the small rural town of Beaumont, where billboards and fliers pleading for information — and a picture of the boy's smiling face — remained for years. The case returned to the national spotlight in May 2001 when it was profiled on the television show "America's Most Wanted" and received sporadic attention in news reports throughout the West when similar child abduction cases surfaced. "Throughout the years, we have followed 15,000 leads on this case," Doyle said. "It's been a frustrating case, one that has been seared into everyone's memory." Anthony's mother, Diana Medina, on Wednesday said she was still trying to make sense of the apparent break in the case. "I don't know; it's surreal," said Medina, 35, who now lives in Morgan Hill, Calif., southeast of San Jose, with her two children. "You always, always hope for this day. Yet some part of your rational mind tells you the chances are really slim." Anthony was playing with his brother and four friends in the fenced-in alleyway behind a friend's home early in the evening of April 4, 1997, when a man approached them and offered them $1 to help find his lost cat, Beaumont police Lt. Mitch White said. "He maneuvered the children into position to grab one," White said. "He first went after Anthony's [younger] brother, but that boy got away. He got Anthony." He abducted Anthony at knifepoint and fled in a large, four-door Chrysler. Fifteen days later, Anthony's bound, naked body was discovered buried under rocks 70 miles away in remote Berdoo Canyon north of Indio. He had been sexually assaulted, Doyle said. The case remained cold for years. Then, in early July, Duncan was captured at a Denny's restaurant near Coeur d'Alene with Shasta, who was missing from the home where her mother, 13-year-old brother and her mother's boyfriend were found killed with a claw hammer. The girl's 9-year-old brother was also missing, and his body was later found at a campsite in remote western Montana. Shasta told authorities that Duncan had repeatedly sexually molested them both. Duncan, 42, has been charged with three counts of first-degree murder and three counts of first-degree kidnapping in the deaths of Shasta's mother, Brenda, 13-year-old brother Slade, and Mark McKenzie, 37, her mother's boyfriend. Federal officials said additional charges were pending. FBI agents contacted the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children in July to check for crimes similar to the Idaho abductions and slayings, said FBI spokesman Brent Robbins in Salt Lake City. After the center red-flagged Anthony's slaying, FBI agents persuaded Duncan to discuss the Riverside County case "a little bit," Doyle said. "It was in a situation where they were asking him about his involvement in any other similar cases, and he said, 'Yeah, this boy Martinez in Southern California, Riverside County,' " Doyle said. "It was not a full, blown-out confession, though. We need more. We'll try to interview him again." Duncan told FBI agents the car used in Anthony's abduction was "his girlfriend's, and it was totaled in a 1999 accident," Doyle said. Detectives who had investigated Anthony's death said it was always unclear to investigators what prompted the abductor to strike in Beaumont. "I suspect he did his homework, but it may have been as totally random as just getting off the freeway," White said.
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