David Berkowitz, the deranged serial killer who stalked the streets of New York between 1976 and 1977, was lastly captured 48 years in the past — ending a homicide spree that claimed six lives and left seven others wounded.
“Caught!” blared the entrance web page of the New York Publish on Aug. 11, 1977, saying the top of the reign of terror of the cold-blooded killer referred to as “Son of Sam.”
Berkowitz was discovered responsible of eight shootings in June 1978 and slapped with six consecutive life sentences. Since he first turned eligible for parole in 2002, Berkowitz has vied to be launched each two years like clockwork.
Final Could, he was denied for the twelfth time on the maximum-security Shawangunk Correctional Facility in Wallkill, the place he’s been incarcerated since age 24.
Over a 13-month interval, beginning in April 1976, Brooklyn-born Berkowitz, a postal worker and former US Military soldier, terrorized the Large Apple — notably younger girls and {couples} — armed with a .44-caliber Bulldog revolver, taking pictures a lot of his victims by automotive home windows.
Following his crimes, Berkowitz would incessantly go away notes on the scene, or boast about what he did in letters to police or journalists. He earned his nickname from one of many missives, an obvious reference to his neighbor’s canine, Sam.
“I’m a monster. I’m the Son of Sam,” bragged Berkowitz in a word left close to the our bodies of victims Alexander Esau, 20, and Valentina Suriani, 18, on April 17, 1977.
The NYPD shaped a 200-person activity drive to crack the case, with many undercover officers working within the streets in a single day on the hopes of catching the shooter within the act.
The shootings spanned Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens, “Sam” claiming his final sufferer, Stacy Moskowitz, 20, on July 31, 1977 — lower than two weeks earlier than cops busted Berkowitz at his Yonkers dwelling.
Authorities had traced the killer by linking site visitors tickets issued within the space of the ultimate killing to his automotive.
“I’m Sam. David Berkowitz,” he instructed cops swarming his constructing on Aug. 10, 1977.
“What took you so lengthy?” he requested chillingly.
Now 72, Berkowitz claims to have discovered God behind bars.
The convicted assassin additionally likened himself and his means to “change lives” along with his writing to that of Anne Frank, the Jewish teen creator whose diaries chronicling her life hiding from Nazis together with her household had been printed across the globe following her demise through the Holocaust.
“She impacted the lives of tens of millions,” Berkowitz stated. “Little Anne modified the world with a pen. So I ask myself, what can I do with my trusty typewriter? Possibly I can change lives, too, with my message of hope in God?” he stated.
Even 48 years later, the “Son of Sam” case continues to attract curiosity. Berkowitz’s notorious crimes at the moment are the topic of a Netflix docuseries, “Conversations With a Killer: The Son of Sam Tapes.”
The collection contains conversations with victims’ surviving members of the family, in addition to newly unearthed recordings of a 1980 jailhouse interview with former Rochester Democrat and Chronicle reporter Jack Jones.