TRENTON — New Jersey's Supreme Court on Tuesday threw out the 2016 conviction of a woman for killing her 5-year-old son 25 years earlier, ruling that despite the jury’s verdict, prosecutors failed to present enough evidence to prove she had purposely caused the boy’s death.

It was a stunning turnaround in one of New Jersey's most infamous cold cases, which had remained unresolved for years even though Michelle Lodzinski was considered a prime suspect from the outset after she gave varying accounts of what happened on the day Timothy Wiltsey was last seen.

Michelle Lodzinski
Michelle Lodzinski, right, sits beside her attorney Gerald Krovatin during her arraignment in State Superior Court, Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2014, in New Brunswick, N.J.(AP Photo/The Star-Ledger, Robert Sciarrino, Pool)
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Appellate Judge Jose Fuentes — called up to the Supreme Court to serve as a tiebreaking vote after the justices split 3-3 while upholding Lodzinski’s conviction in May — cast the deciding vote in favor of acquittal Tuesday.

“After reviewing the entirety of the evidence and after giving the state the benefit of all its favorable testimony and all the favorable inferences drawn from that testimony, no reasonable jury could find beyond a reasonable doubt that Lodzinski purposefully or knowingly caused Timothy’s death,” the court wrote in its majority decision.

Middlesex County Assistant Prosecutors Christie Bevacqua shows jurors a blanket found in a marshy area of Raritan Center in Edison during the murder trial of Michelle Lodzinski on Wednesday, March 16, 2016 in New Brunswick, N.J. Lodzinski is charged with killing her 5-year-old son, Timothy Wiltsey in 1991. (Patti Sapone/NJ Advance Media via AP, Pool)
Middlesex County Assistant Prosecutors Christie Bevacqua shows jurors a blanket found in a marshy area of Raritan Center in Edison during the murder trial of Michelle Lodzinski on Wednesday, March 16, 2016 in New Brunswick, N.J.(Patti Sapone/NJ Advance Media via AP, Pool)
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An attorney for Lodzinski did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday. The prosecutor's office that tried her declined comment.

Lodzinski was a single mother in central New Jersey in May 1991 when she told investigators Wiltsey had disappeared while they were at a carnival in Sayreville.

She later gave conflicting accounts describing strangers she had seen who could have kidnapped the boy. Wiltsey’s body was found nearly a year later, in a marshy area near an office complex where Lodzinski had once worked.

Don Mattingly
Don Mattingly of the New York Yankees holds a flyer about Timothy Wiltsey, a missing five-year-old child, in New York, June 4, 1991. The Sayreville, New Jersey boy has been missing since May 25. Timothy's picture will be shown on the scoreboard during the sixth inning and Mattingly posters on child safety will be given out at Yankee Stadium today. (AP Photo/Mark D. Phillips)
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'In the modern annals of New Jersey legal history, to my knowledge, no murder conviction has ever been upheld on such a dearth of evidence.'

As time passed and no charges were filed, Lodzinski went on with her life and had two other children. She was living in Port St. Lucie, Florida, in 2014 when authorities in New Jersey charged her with killing Wiltsey. Investigators said a break in the case had come when Wiltsey’s former babysitters identified a blue blanket, found along with the boy’s body, as belonging to Lodzinski.

Trial begins for mother accused of killing her son 20 years ago
Defense attorney Gerald Krovatin, left, shows the jurors Timothy Wiltsey's kindergarten graduation robe during his opening statements in the Michelle Lodzinski murder trial on Wednesday, March 16, 2016 in New Brunswick, N.J.(Patti Sapone/NJ Advance Media via AP, Pool)
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During her 2016 trial and on appeal, Lodzinski’s lawyers argued that no forensic evidence tied her to the blanket and that prosecutors didn’t produce enough evidence to show Lodzinski purposely caused the boy’s death. A cause of death couldn’t be determined because Wiltsey’s body had deteriorated in the time between when he died and when the body was found.

“If you can’t find a cause of death, I submit you don’t have a homicide by definition,” attorney Gerald Krovatin told the court during arguments in October.

US-Cold-Case-Mother
Michelle Lodzinski reacts as her attorney reads letters from family and friends on her behalf as she is sentenced to 30 years for the 1991 murder of her 5 year-old son Timothy Wiltsey, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2017, at Middlesex County Court in New Brunswick, N.J. (Patti Sapone/NJ Advance Media via AP, Pool)
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'No reasonable jury could find beyond a reasonable doubt that Lodzinski purposefully or knowingly caused Timothy’s death'

Prosecutors, who had portrayed Lodzinski at trial as a struggling young mother who felt burdened by the boy, argued on appeal that the totality of the evidence, including her evasive answers during initial questioning, was enough to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. An appeals court agreed in 2019 when it upheld Lodzinski’s conviction.

The plot thickened after a deeply split state Supreme Court ruling in May upheld the appeals court’s decision. With Chief Justice Stuart Rabner not participating, the court split 3-3, but it was enough to leave the conviction undisturbed.

Writing for the three dissenters, Justice Barry Albin wrote, “In the modern annals of New Jersey legal history, to my knowledge, no murder conviction has ever been upheld on such a dearth of evidence.”

APMichelle Lodzinski watches the jurors enter the courtroom before opening statements in her murder trial on Wednesday, March 16, 2016 in New Brunswick, N.J. Lodzinski is charged with killing her 5-year-old son, Timothy Wiltsey in 1991. (Patti Sapone/NJ Advance Media via AP, Pool)
APMichelle Lodzinski watches the jurors enter the courtroom before opening statements in her murder trial on Wednesday, March 16, 2016 in New Brunswick, N.J. Lodzinski is charged with killing her 5-year-old son, Timothy Wiltsey in 1991. (Patti Sapone/NJ Advance Media via AP, Pool)
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In October, the state Supreme Court took the rare step of agreeing to rehear the case, conceding it had made a procedural mistake by ruling on an appellate court decision that had applied an incorrect legal standard. For the rehearing, the court added an appellate judge to serve as a tiebreaking vote.

“Even if the evidence suggested that Timothy did not die by accident, no testimony or evidence was offered to distinguish whether Timothy died by the negligent, reckless, or purposeful or knowing acts of a person, even if that person were Lodzinski,” the majority decision read.

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