A Boy, 4, Vanished on Way to Summer Camp. Then a Family Friend’s Teenage Son Started Asking Alarming Questions
More than 30 years after Derrick Robie’s murder, his killer is now free and living in New York
More than 30 years ago, 13-year-old Eric Smith raised a worrying concern with his family when he asked what might happen if it was a kid who killed their 4-year-old neighbor Derrick Robie.
Earlier in the morning on Aug. 2, 1993, investigators discovered Robie’s body and quickly determined the young boy had been strangled and beaten to death, according to CBS News’ 48 Hours, which has long reported on the case and its decades-long fallout in the small town of Savona, New York.
“[Eric] asked me what would happen if it turned out to be a kid. I said, ‘I think they seriously need some psychiatric help.’ And he– ‘Oh, OK,’ you know. And he walked away,” Marlene Heskell, a family friend of the Smiths, recalled to 48 Hours. “And that’s when it all kind of came together for me that, OK, he might really know something or have seen something.”
Less than a week later, Heskell and Eric’s mother brought the 13 year old to the police station, where he confessed to the killing after spotting him walking alone to his summer camp. About a year later, Eric was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to nine years-to-life in prison.
While the nightmare appeared over for the village of 940 people, the trauma recurred every two years for Robie’s family when Smith went up for parole. In 2021, Smith, by then 41-years-old, was granted parole and moved to Queens, New York, according to CBS.
What Drove the Teenager to Murder?
In the years after his 1994 conviction, Smith occasionally spoke to media outlets about his crime and the possibility he’d see life outside of prison once again. In a 2004 interview, Smith opened up about childhood bullying he faced and how he saw the chance to dole out violence on others as a way to turn his situation around.
Smith grew up in an abusive household, the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle reported. Further, he told a parole board, he was bullied by classmates for “my ears, my glasses, being short, my red hair, pretty much all of those.”
“Instead of me being hurt, I was hurting somebody else,” Smith said at a 2004 parole hearing, according to 48 Hours.
Years of Therapy, and Alleged Change
After 28 years behind bars, Smith eventually claimed in a parole hearing that he was a changed man, according to CBS, citing years of therapy that he said helped him manage his emotions.
“You can label me a monster, a cold-blooded killer, a demon child, Satan incarnate,” Smith told local WENY in 2009. “Doesn’t mean that’s who I am.”
Smith wanted to become a counselor and help other children who were being bullied, according to the local CBS affiliate.
“I want to, you know, get married and raise a family,” he said. “You know, hold down, you know, a job. Pursue the American dream.”
Eric Smith’s Controversial Release
Smith’s chance came in 2021 when a parole board agreed to allow his release from prison, according to the Democrat & Chronicle.
Dale and Doreen Robie vehemently opposed Smith’s pleas for parole over the years, according to the newspaper, even pushing for state legislation that would require more years between parole hearings for convicted criminals who committed violent felonies.
“I wasn’t so much worried about us as I was everybody else,” Doreen told 48 Hours when asked how she felt after Smith’s release.
“I don’t let him take space in my head,” the mother added. “I do not focus on where he is, what he’s doing. … ’cause I don’t care.”