Metro

‘Baby Hope’ cousin admits fatal sex attack

It was a murder that wrenched the hearts of New Yorkers and baffled the ci🌸ty’s best detect𓄧ives and prosecutors for two decades.

On a summer day in 1991, the body of an emaciated 4-year-ওold girl was found naked and bundled with twine♍ inside a filthy cooler near the Henry Hudson Parkway.

Investigators called the girl “Baby Hope” — and on Saturday their own never-flagging hopes were fulfilled when they finally cracked t🎃he case.

The turning point came this summer, in a laundromat, when one woman overhear🅰d another woman say that years ago her little sister had disappeared.

Angelica Ramirez’s name has been put on the headstone of Baby Hope.Lorena Mongelli

The first woman🐟 had also seen one of the “Baby Hope” fliers police continued to post, and called the cop🥃s.

The tip led to the arrest of Conrado Juarez, 🍌52, who sources said was a Mexican illegal alien dishwasher at the Bleecker Street restaurant Pesce Pasta.

Juarez was the girl’s cousin,💜 and was staying with her in a crꦚowded Astoria apartment, officials said.

Now in custody for murder, he has made what sources ca𒀰lled a detailed confession to s꧋exually assaulting and smothering Anjelica Castillo — the girl in the cooler’s real name.

Juarez told cops that on the ni💞ght of her death, he came home drunk, according to Jerry Giorgio, a former detective on the case who𝔉 has seen the confession.

“It was nighttime, and she was in the hallway for some reason — maybe she was going to the bathroཧom,” Giorgio said. “He said he just took her𒈔 by the hand and she went with him.”

“She may at one point have started to yell or scream, looking for help. That’s when he put the pillo🐻w over h🅰er face.”

A poster soliciting information in the case of Baby Hope, who𓃲 died in 1991.AP

Juarez told cops it was his now-deceased sister, Balvina Juarez, who sugges🔯ted they put the body in a cooler and take it by livery cab to Washington H♚eights, where it would rot for more than a week, according to a source.

“A tip produced a lot of investigative work, and with great detective work we were able to track ▨people down a♏nd interview them,” Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said.

Cops recently tracked down Anjelica’s mother, also a Mexicꦗan immigrant, in early August and used a ruse to get her to lick an envelope, a source said. Late in September, DNA testing confirmed her maternity of the tragic tot, the source said.

The mom has nine oth🥀er children by three men, and never reported her child missing. Finally confronted by investigators, she blamed the father, who had custody at the time, said one law-enforcement source. The girl was being cared for by her d🐈ad’s sister, who was Juarez’s mother.

“She’s a piece of s–t,” one law-enforcement source said of the mother. “She tried to put all responsibility on the father.”

Law enforcement sources believe she kept silent for fear of deportation; she🍷 told cops she feared the “abusive” father.

Baby Hope’s funeral in 1991.Michael Schwartz

Anjelica’s sister, no✨w in her 20s, told police she remembers traveling to Mexicoꦗ with her father after leaving the girl with her mother, police sources said. She never saw her ­sibling again, she told police.

“Investigators never stopped searching for the person w🍌ho ended this young girl’s life,” DA Cyrus Vance said, noting that the original prosecutor, Melissa Mourges, now heads the DA’s Cold Case Unit and i♓s still on the case.

Juar🎀ez was ordered held without bail at his arraignment Saturday. His ෴lawyer complained that he had been questioned without representation for nearly 14 hours.