Sunday, October 14, 2012
The Amityville Murders Trial Begins - 1975
On this date in 1975, Ronald DeFeo Jr. goes on trial for
the killings of his parents and four siblings in their Amityville, New York.
On the evening of November 13, 1974, Ronald “Butch” DeFeo
Jr. entered an Amityville bar and told people his parents had been shot inside
their home. Several bar patrons accompanied DeFeo back to his family’s home, at
112 Ocean Avenue, where a man named Joe Yeswit called Suffolk Country police to
report the crime. When officers arrived, they found the bodies of Ronald DeFeo
Sr., age 43, his wife Louise, 42, and their children Dawn, 18, Allison, 13,
Marc, 11, and John, 9. The victims had been shot dead in their beds. Ronald
DeFeo Jr., 22, initially tried to say the murders were a mob hit; however, by
the next day he confessed to committing the crimes himself. One aspect of the
case that puzzled investigators was the fact that all six victims appeared to
have died in their sleep, without struggle, and neighbors didn’t hear any
gunshots, despite the fact that the rifle DeFeo used didn’t have a silencer.
When DeFeo’s trial began in October 1975, his attorney argued for an insanity
defense; however, that November, he was found guilty of six counts of
second-degree murder and later sentenced to six consecutive sentences of 25
years to life in prison. DeFeo, who gave conflicting accounts of his story over
the years, later claimed his sister Dawn and two other accomplices were
involved in the murders. The DeFeo house was sold to George Lutz, who moved in
with his wife and three children in December 1975. The new owners resided in
the house for 28 days, before they fled, claiming it was haunted by the spirits
of the DeFeo family. Critics accused George Lutz of concocting the story to
make money, but he maintained he was telling the truth. In 1977, Jay Anson
published a novel titled The Amityville Horror. The book became a best-seller
and inspired a 1979 movie of the same name, as well as a 2005 remake.
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