Riley Fox
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Riley Fox (March 31, 2001 – June 6, 2004) was a 3-year-old girl from Wilmington, Illinois, who was murdered on June 6, 2004. After Riley's father was initially accused and then cleared by DNA evidence, paroled convict Scott Eby confessed to the crime and was convicted.


Disappearance

On June 6, 2004, the night of the disappearance, Riley's father Kevin Fox had picked up his children from their grandmother's house around 1 am. Because the kids' beds didn't have clean sheets and blankets on them, he laid Riley on the couch and Riley's older brother Tyler on the living room chair. He then went to his room, watched TV and went to sleep around 2:30. The next morning he was awakened by Tyler, who told him that Riley was gone. After searching and checking with neighbors, he called police.


Discovery of body

Later that day Riley was found dead in Forsythe Woods County Forest Preserve, a public park a few miles from Wilmington. She was found face down in a creek, having been bound, gagged, and sexually assaulted before being drowned.


Investigation

The girl's father, Kevin Fox, was initially charged based on a coerced confession. He spent eight months in jail before being cleared by DNA evidence showing that someone else had committed the crime. Fox's attorney
Kathleen Zellner Kathleen Zellner is an American attorney who has worked extensively in wrongful conviction advocacy. Notable clients Zellner has represented include Steven Avery (who was the subject of the 2015 and 2018 Netflix series ''Making a Murderer''), Ke ...
was responsible for discovering that DNA evidence existed and getting it tested. Police had found a pair of mud-covered shoes at the scene with the name ''Eby'' written inside, but did nothing with this evidence. They ignored other important clues as well, such as on the night Riley disappeared, a nearby house was burglarized. The Fox family later won a $15.5 million jury verdict (later reduced to $8.5 million) in a federal civil rights lawsuit against Will County Sheriff's Office and the detectives who had coerced Kevin Fox's confession. Scott Eby was later charged on five counts of
first-degree murder Murder is the unlawful killing of another human without justification or valid excuse, especially the unlawful killing of another human with malice aforethought. ("The killing of another person without justification or excuse, especially the c ...
and one count of predatory sexual assault after DNA evidence linked him to Riley. At the time he was charged, Eby was serving two consecutive seven-year sentences for other crimes. Eby confessed that he cut the screen of a neighbor’s home across the street and stole $40. Then he walked across the street to the Fox home. Eby entered through the back door of the Fox home because it was broken and couldn’t lock. He looked for things to steal but he found nothing worth taking. Eby saw Riley and her brother asleep on the couch and recliner in the living room and later stated he “fixated on the little girl”. He left the house, got into his car and backed into the Fox’s driveway. He then went back into the Fox home, covered Riley’s mouth, picked her up, walked out the front door, put her into the trunk of his car, and drove her to a nearby park. He assaulted her in a men’s restroom. He then drowned her in a nearby creek. He received a life sentence without the possibility of parole. He had been on parole and living about a mile from the Fox's home at the time of the crime.


See also

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List of kidnappings The following is a list of kidnappings summarizing the events of each individual case, including instances of celebrity abductions, claimed hoaxes, suspected kidnappings, extradition abductions, and mass kidnappings. Before 1900 1900–1949 ...


References


External links


20/20 on ID, Riley Fox: Daddy's Little Girl 2013
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fox, Riley 2004 in Illinois 2004 murders in the United States Child sexual abuse in the United States Deaths by drowning in the United States Deaths by person in Illinois Sexual assaults in the United States Incidents of violence against girls Female murder victims Will County, Illinois