Letters from hell
‘Son of Sam' stalked the streets of New York City
By David Cocksedge
‘HELLO FROM the gutters of New York City which are filled with
dog manure, vomit, stale wine, urine and blood. Hello from the sewers of
New York City which swallow up these delicacies when they are washed away
by the sweeper trucks. Hello from the cracks in the sidewalks of New York
City and from the ants that dwell in these cracks and feed on the dried
blood of the dead that has seeped into these cracks.'
Thus began a letter sent to columnist Jimmy Breslin of the
New York Daily News dated 30 May 1977 . The letter concluded, ‘Mr
Breslin, sir, don't think that because you haven't heard from me for a
while that I went to sleep. No, rather, I am still here, like a spirit
roaming the night. Thirsty, hungry, seldom stopping to rest.' It was
signed, ‘Son of Sam' and came from a serial killer New York Police had
named ‘The .44 killer' because he used a .44 caliber handgun to shoot his
victims in the areas of the Bronx and Queens in this vast, teeming city.
Breslin called it a letter from hell.
Post Office worker David Berkowitz was a man of letters.
He even may have personally overseen, through the city's mail system, the
chilling notes he wrote and sent to police and media giving tantalizing
clues to one of the USA 's most wanted serial killers during the 1970's.
Berkowitz was a stalker of young women who prowled the
streets of NYC at night searching out his prey. No one who worked
alongside him by day could ever have guessed at the deadly double-life
that this loner was leading. The plump, angel-faced bachelor brought
terror throughout his year-long reign, and as he got bolder, he could not
resist taunting the police with a series of letters bragging about his
deeds.
Between 29 July 1976 and 1 August 1977 , Berkowitz killed
six women and badly wounded another seven. Pressure grew on the New York
City Police Department crime division to capture the gun-toting killer. It
was a pressure that Berkowitz noted with glee. So he took to his tiny
suburban apartment to pen letters bragging about his murders. One of his
‘epics' read: ‘And huge drops of lead poured down upon her head until she
was dead. Yet, the cats still come out at night to mate, and the sparrows
still sing in the morning.'
David Richard Berkowitz was born in Brooklyn , New York
City on 1 June 1953 . His given name was Richard David Falco and Berkowitz
was the name of his adoptive parents. His birth parents were Betty Broder,
who grew up into a poor Jewish family and Joseph Kleinman, with whom
Broder whilst had an affair whilst still married to her husband, Tony
Falco. The ‘Son of Sam' nickname came from his neighbor Sam Carr.
According to Berkowitz, Carr was a ‘high demon' who sent his evil Labrador
retriever named Harvey to command Berkowitz to go out and kill. He later
shot the dog following one of his murders, but it survived. Berkowitz now
asserts that he made up the whole crazy story to reinforce a defense that
he was legally mad.
Criminal psychologists are divided on just what drove
Berkowitz to become a murderer, but his case file perfectly fits the
classic profile of a serial killer: a loner with no friends, seemingly
harmless to all that know him, but a man harboring a hidden obsessive
streak. Berkowitz enlisted in the army at the age of 18 in 1971 and before
he left three years later, he converted from Judaism to fundamentalist
Christianity.
He became a fanatic, often trying to convert fellow
troopers and local residents of Louisville , Kentucky , where he was
stationed. He would preach to them from a street-corner pulpit, warning of
“the burning fires of Hell” that lay in wait for all sinners. “Repent
before it is too late!” he would shout.
In the spring of 1974 Berkowitz returned to New York City
and rented an apartment in the Bronx . After a spell as a security guard,
he joined the postal service where he sorted mail. By now he kept largely
to himself, nursing perverted fantasies which he put into practice two
years later.
Berkowitz struck first near his home in the early hours of
29 July 1976 . Donna Lauria, a pretty dark-haired 18-year-old was just
getting out of a car belonging to her friend Jody Valente outside an
apartment belonging to Donna's parents. Suddenly a man ran from the
shadows, stood on the footpath and pulled a handgun from a brown paper
bag. From a crouching position, he fired five rounds. Donna was hit by
three bullets and died instantly; Jody caught the other two and fell badly
wounded. In a city over-run with murder, it was just another senseless
shooting as far as the New York City Police Homicide Division was
concerned. Donna's parents were left to grieve as their daughter's death
became yesterday's news.
The killer opened fire again on 23 October 1976 . This
time the target was a courting couple in a parked car at Flushing in
Queens . Carl Denaro (20) had his plans to enlist in the US Air Force
shattered as he was struck in the head by a .44 caliber round. His
girlfriend, Rosemary Keenan (18) remarkably was not hit as Berkowitz fired
three shots at the parked vehicle. Again, the crime had no special
significance for New York 's finest who in fairness were dealing with an
average of thirty murders a week.
Even when two other young women were shot and seriously
wounded just over a month later in the Bronx, detectives still did not
realize that the city was in the grip of a serial killer, shooting
citizens at random. It was not until Christine Wheeler (18) was shot to
death in Queens in February 1977 that police became alerted to the
possibility that a maniac with a .44 handgun and a grudge against pretty
girls was on the loose.
The ‘0.44 killer Task Force' (‘Operation Omega') was
organized in March 1977, following the death of Virginia Voskerichian, a
Bulgarian resident in NYC. Hundreds of leads were followed up by a special
squad of over 300 men, but no motive could be found. The only common links
were that young women were being targeted and ballistics tests confirmed
that the same weapon was used on all the victims.
NYPD murder squad detectives were called to a bloody scene
in Queens on 17 April 1977 where Valentina Suriana (19) and her boyfriend
Alexander Esau (21) had both been shot dead. This time the killer had left
more than bodies and .44 caliber cartridges in his wake. Under the woman's
body was a letter from ‘Son of Sam'. He wrote that he was ‘deeply hurt'
that newspapers were calling him a women-hater. ‘I am not', wrote
Berkowitz, ‘but I am a monster. I am the Son of Sam. I am a little brat.
Sam loves to drink blood. Go out and kill! Commands father Sam. I am on a
different wavelength to everybody else – I am programmed to kill. To stop
me, you must kill me. Attention all police: shoot me first. Shoot to kill
or else! Keep out of my way or you will die! I am the monster – Beelzebub,
the chubby behemoth. I love to hunt; prowling the streets looking for fair
game – tasty meat. I live for the hunt; this is my life. I don't belong on
this earth. I'll be back! I'll be back. Yours in murder, Mr. Monster, Son
of Sam.'
Police felt sure that Son of Sam would strike again on 29
July 1977 , the anniversary of his first attack. Berkowitz instead used
his gun the very next night, killing Stacy Moskowitz and injuring her
boyfriend, Robert Violante as they sat in the latter's car parked in a
Brooklyn street.
By now the Son of Sam murders were getting maximum
publicity worldwide, and citizens of New York City walked the nights in
terror. Berkowitz was writing his twisted letters to Breslin, who
published them, along with his replies, urging the maniac to give himself
up. Circulation of the New York Daily News soared. But by August
1977 the reign of terror inflicted by Son of Sam was about to end.
Ten days after the Moskowitz murder Yonkers police
received a call from Detective James Justus at the 10 th Precinct in
Brooklyn . Justus had been calling the owners of several cars which had
been given parking tickets around the vicinity of the murder scene, hoping
that one of them might have seen something of relevance to the
investigation. It was boring, routine police work, and no-one seriously
expected anything to come of it. But Justus was an experienced cop, and he
knew that such mundane tasks had to be done.
Justus noted that his repeated calls to the owner of a
1970 Ford Galaxie were never answered. The vehicle had been ticketed for
parking too close to a fire hydrant just thirty minutes before the murder
of Ms Moskowitz. He recommended to Yonkers police that the driver be
tracked down and interviewed. On 10 August, two detectives, (Ed Zigo and
John Longo) duly went up to Yonkers to meet this latest suspect: a certain
Mr. David Berkowitz.
After locating his apartment building on Pine Street , the
detectives spotted his vehicle, license plate 561XLB, parked thirty yards
away and strolled over to investigate it. Through the windows, they
noticed a rifle butt protruding from a duffel bag and decided to probe
further. They radioed for a search warrant, citing ‘probable cause' and
broke into the car. In the glove box was an envelope addressed to Timothy
Dowd, the deputy inspector who led the Operation Omega Task Force. Zigo
carefully opened it and read the enclosed letter in shocked amazement.
Berkowitz had intended to leave the letter by his next victim, writing it
in advance. Son of Sam promised more attacks, including a bloody massacre
at a night club on the eastern tip of Long Island . This was to be his
chance to ‘go out in a blaze of glory.' He planned to execute as many
people as possible and then die by his own hands.
The Task Force at last had their ‘smoking gun' in the Son
of Sam case. In answer to further calls, more police swiftly arrived at
the scene and put a ‘trigger' on the car. Whilst Zigo and Longo waited for
a search warrant for Berkowitz's apartment, the night stalker himself
walked out of the building and headed for his car just before 10pm. He was
dressed in a white shirt, jeans and brown boots, and carried a brown paper
bag in his right hand which contained a .44 caliber handgun.
Berkowitz sauntered casually to his car, opened the
driver's door, got in and switched on the ignition. But he never got to
drive his car again. Suddenly, he was looking at the business ends of
handguns and shotguns being leveled through the car windows. Son of Sam
looked amazingly relaxed as he smiled at the police officers pointing
weapons at him. “Okay, you got me,” he said. “What took you guys so long?”
Berkowitz was handcuffed, read his Miranda rights and then
ferried to Manhattan police headquarters. Senior police alerted Mayor Abe
Beame with the blockbuster news: we finally got ‘Son of Sam'! Waiting
newsmen at Manhattan Police HQ expected to see a chained, wild-eyed
monster snarling at them. Instead they stared at a meek, smiling postal
worker, looking about as dangerous as a cherub.
Berkowitz was grilled for almost two hours, confessed to
all the murders, and the news was spread over the front pages of
newspapers the next morning. New Yorkers in general felt relief mixed with
anger towards this cowardly killer who had stalked their streets. When
Berkowitz was arraigned at the Brooklyn Courthouse, a mob of several
hundred angry citizens tried to rush the police cordon and summarily lynch
the prisoner. Numerous death threats were phoned in to the switchboard at
the King's County Hospital , where he was subsequently taken for
psychiatric evaluation. Berkowitz was still blurting out obscure threats.
“I am one of the devils of Satan; a force beyond the wildest imaginations
of people,” he declared. “Sam is not human. When I killed, I really saved
many lives. You will understand this later. People want my blood but they
don't want to listen to what I have to say. There are other Sons out
there. God help the world!”
After a brief trial where he pleaded guilty to all
charges, he was sentenced on 12 June 1978 to six life terms in prison.
Effectively these concurrent terms meant that he would serve at least
thirty years in jail.
In 1997, Berkowitz said that he did not act alone in the
killings. He claimed to have met people who convinced him to join an
occult group which routinely sacrificed animals to Satan. He said that he
was not the ‘Son of Sam' shooter, but merely one of the many ‘lookout
men'. His neighbor John Carr owned a black Labrador named Harvey that
Berkowitz said was a ‘high demon' which spoke to him and ordered him to go
out and kill young women.
The oddball Berkowitz became a born-again Christian and
now works as a prison chaplain. In March 2002, he wrote to New York
governor George Pataki asking that his parole hearing be cancelled,
stating, “I can give you no good reason as to why I should even be
considered.” In June 2004, he was denied a second parole hearing after
stating that he did not want one. The parole board noted that Berkowitz
had a good record in the prison program, but decided that the brutality
of his crimes called for him to stay behind bars.
As in England 's ‘Yorkshire Ripper' case, check book
journalism surfaced soon after Berkowitz was sent to prison. This led to
‘Son of Sam laws' enacted by the state of New York after editors offered
Berkowitz large sums of money for his story. Publishers surmised that
Berkowitz's bizarre literary bent combined with his notoriety virtually
ensured that he was capable of writing a chilling, offbeat best seller.
The new law authorized the state to seize all money earned from such a
deal for five years, and use the seized funds to compensate victims (and
victims' families) of the crimes. (The US Supreme Court however overturned
the ‘Son of Sam laws' in 1991, declaring them to be ‘unconstitutional.')
Berkowitz is currently writing his memoirs, which he plans
to publish despite outrage from the families of his victims and victims'
rights advocates. When he finally goes to print, we can expect further
litigation on this issue.
Psychiatrist Dr David Abrahamsen, who examined Berkowitz
in 1978 and judged him sane, said, “He found sexual gratification in
killing women. He could not approach a woman as any man would do and date
her and perhaps have sex with her later. That was not for him. He
developed a great deal of contempt for women that he kept well hidden.”
It seems that in spite of all his Christian preaching, David Berkowitz remains a very dangerous man.
(Research: wikipedia.org. Son_of_Sam).