Exploring the Truth About What Was So Horrifying in Amityville

News

His lawyer, William Weber, who sued for a share of proceeds from the book and 1979 film, alleging he had shared details about the house with the Lutzes, denied that his involvement with the various projects influenced the defense of his client in any way. (He settled his $60 million lawsuit for $2,500, according to the New York Times.) 

Weber said Ronald told him so many versions of what happened that he felt pleading insanity was the only way he could hope for an acquittal. Ronald reiterated his story that he only killed Dawn at his first parole hearing in 1999.

The panel determined that releasing him would be “incompatible with the safety and welfare of the community.”

On the 2006 A&E special First Person Killers: Ronald DeFeo, forensic psychiatrist Dr. Steven Hoge said that, after interviewing Ronald for several hours, “he didn’t find anything credible about the Dawn story.” Rather, he added, “I wouldn’t be able to say this was absolutely true, but it made me believe that, in fact, he had killed them.”

Ronald spent most of the rest of his life at the Sullivan Correctional Facility in Fallsburg, N.Y., until he died at an Albany hospital in 2021 at the age of 69. And the why went with him.

Amityville: An Origin Story premieres Sunday, April 23, at 10/9c on MGM+

Articles You May Like

Linda Cardellini and Liz Feldman on Crafting Complex Queer Characters in ‘No Good Deed’
Babygirl’s Director Explains Why Working With Intimacy Coordinators Is Like Working With Stuntmen
Kelly Clarkson Appears to Shade Ex Brandon Blackstock With Easter Egg
‘The Lady of the Lake’ – Documentary Explores the Legend of Lake Crescent December 17 [Trailer]
‘I Never Want To Play Something This Evil Again’: Ahead Of Nosferatu, Bill Skarsgård Gets Real About The ‘Hardest’ Parts Of Developing His Vampire Character