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♪♪
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♪♪
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Berkowitz: I had made a pact with the devil,
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and I felt these paranormal powers.
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And I felt somehow invincible,
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and I was slowly being led down a path of destruction.
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♪♪
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[Gunshot]
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♪♪
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♪♪
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♪♪
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Welcome to "Very Scary People." I'm Donnie Wahlberg.
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He was known as the Son of Sam ...
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a cold-eyed serial killer who terrorized New York City
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and the nation.
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David Berkowitz stalked his victims
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across three different boroughs,
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wounding seven people and killing six.
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Berkowitz taunted police
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and the seven million citizens of New York,
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creating widespread hysteria in the city that never sleeps.
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The final terrifying three months of his killing spree
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would come to be known as the "Summer of Sam."
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Why did this seemingly unassuming postal worker
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commit these vicious attacks?
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And how did he elude investigators for so long?
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Here is part one of "Son Of Sam: the Duke of Death."
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♪♪
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[Siren wailing]
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New York City in the mid-'70s
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was discotheques, Studio 54.
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Klausner: And in the midst of this...
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suddenly, horrific acts occur.
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♪♪
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Jordan: In 1976, Donna Lauria
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was an 18-year-old living in the Bronx.
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She's out with her friend Jody Valenti.
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They go out to play some backgammon.
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Borrelli: They had returned.
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They were sitting in the car in front of Donna's home.
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Kamen: They had no idea that in moments to come,
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a strange man would appear out of nowhere,
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like something out of a nightmare.
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He walks almost right up to the passenger window.
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And Donna even says to her friend, "Who is this guy?
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What does he want?"
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He took the gun out of a paper bag.
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Jordan: The man crouches...
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and fires a big gun at them.
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[Gunshots]
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Kamen: Five times.
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Put a bullet into the leg
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of the woman who was behind the wheel.
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She fell forward. Her body struck the horn.
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He shot both people and then left.
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Donna dies almost instantly, but Jody survives.
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[Siren wailing]
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The police come to the scene.
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Jody gives a description of this person that she sees fleetingly.
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Jordan: She can describe him in general terms, the shooter ...
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an average white guy, kind of young, nondescript.
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Who shoots at young women sitting in a car?
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Hopkins: Their belief at the time
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was it could have been a lover's quarrel.
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[Gunshot]
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Borrelli: They determined the caliber of the gun that was used
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was a .44-caliber.
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And there had been a boyfriend of Donna,
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and he possessed a .44-caliber.
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But ballistically, it was no match for the gun.
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This was cold right at the beginning.
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There was nothing to do.
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Just one paper has it
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that a girl is shot in the Bronx and killed.
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And then for the public, it's lost.
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[Siren wailing in distance]
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The '70s in New York, crime was bad.
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There was guns all over the place, shootings.
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Kamen: Let's face it, in 1976,
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there were 1,622 murders in the city of New York.
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For a case to stand out,
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it had to have some special characteristics.
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♪♪
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♪♪
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The second shooting really begins the pattern.
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Rosemary Keenan is out with her companion, Carl Denaro.
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♪♪
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Someone walks up behind the car.
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♪♪
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[Gunshot, glass shatters]
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Borrelli: They both survived in that shooting.
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But they really were not able to provide
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any kind of definitive information about the person,
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and that made it difficult.
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There seemed to be no real apparent motive.
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Borrelli: There really wasn't too much to go with.
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The bullets were badly deformed.
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Klausner: The kind of gun was pretty big. They knew that.
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But the police don't have a theory.
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Kamen: It took a while
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before some of the smartest detectives
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in the city of New York began to say, "Wait a minute.
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We may have a serial killer at work."
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♪♪
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David Berkowitz was born June 1, 1953.
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He was raised by Nathan and Pearl Berkowitz.
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He seemed to have a relatively normal childhood at first,
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but then behavioral issues started to bubble up.
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Berkowitz: It goes back, really, to childhood
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and the struggles I had as a child,
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many psychological problems growing up.
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I was so disruptive in school
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and had so many emotional problems, behavioral problems,
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that the school officials told my parents,
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"You're gonna have to take him to a child psychologist."
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I went for about two years, once a week.
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I had very bad bouts of depression when I was a child.
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I was very suicidal.
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His parents took him to a rabbi, they took him to psychologists,
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they took him to school counselors,
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but none of them were able to help him in any way.
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Berkowitz: I didn't get along all that well with my dad.
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It was just my mean spirit towards him.
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I don't know why that was.
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I definitely mistreated him, and there were times
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I wouldn't talk to him.
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I was a very moody and spiteful child,
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and there were so many walls between us.
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I remember seeing my dad cry.
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He said, "David, you're my son.
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I love you so much, but you don't talk to me.
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You walk out of the house without saying anything."
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I don't know what was ... what the problem was.
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I don't know why I was so mean.
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♪♪
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Glassman: So, in the summer of 1977,
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my father moves into 35 Pine Street in Yonkers.
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He didn't know what he was about to face.
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Klausner: Craig Glassman worked as an auxiliary deputy sheriff
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in Westchester County.
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[Telephone rings]
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Glassman: He started getting
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threatening letters and phone calls.
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He'd be asleep with the TV on,
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and I guess he had it on too loud.
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[Rings]
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He'd get a phone call screaming at him to shut it off.
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At first, wouldn't think anything of it.
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He thought, "Well, okay. Well, someone has a temper.
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I'll just try to be more respectful."
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And then one night, he went to the door,
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and he heard crackling.
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[Fire crackling]
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He opened his door and found a fire.
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Glassman: It was trash that someone had put there,
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put bullets in, and set it on fire,
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hoping that my dad would open the door
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and get hit by one of the bullets.
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Jordan: Craig Glassman came to realize
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that the man harassing him with these letters
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and this fire was his upstairs neighbor...
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...but he had no way of knowing it was the Son of Sam.
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Nobody put it together. Nobody.
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♪♪
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♪♪
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Klausner: November 27th, there is another attack.
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Two young ladies, Joanne Lomino and Donna DeMasi,
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go into Manhattan to see a movie.
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It's about 11:45 in the evening.
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They're walking back from the bus stop.
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Jordan: Donna notices a man standing under a streetlight,
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watching them.
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They don't like it.
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So they head directly to Joanne's house.
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Clark: The worst thing about these ...
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these girls did nothing to put themselves into harm's way.
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He went after them as someone would go after prey.
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Klausner: They reach Joanne's home
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and are climbing up the steps.
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They saw this fellow approach them.
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Jordan: Joanne is fumbling for her keys.
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♪♪
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He crosses the street, coming directly towards them.
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♪♪
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The killer would pull out the gun, look at them...
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[Gunshots]
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...and then fire and fire and fire.
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Both teens were shot but survived.
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Lomino, however, would always be paralyzed from the waist down.
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Police are confounded about who would do this
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to these two young teenagers.
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They simply weren't connecting the dots
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to the other two shootings.
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[Gunshot]
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Hopkins: In order to make a comparison with a bullet,
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it has to be intact.
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If the bullet strikes a hard object,
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even bones in a human body,
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it could deform it.
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Borrelli: We had three pieces of a bullet that looked like
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from a very large-caliber weapon.
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Hopkins: But if you don't have those characteristics
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where you can match it up, it's of no value.
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Hopkins: There was really no direction to go.
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January 30th, it came around about 10 to 1:00
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that there was a shooting.
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I remember it was a cold night.
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Little did I realize it would turn the city upside down.
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The fourth shooting was with Christine Freund and John Diel.
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The police come, and they begin questioning John.
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All he remembers was...
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[Gunshot]
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...a loud noise, glass coming in.
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And he looked at Christine, and she's covered with blood.
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Diel: All of a sudden, there's a crash, and I turned.
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And I seen Chris falling, like this, towards me, you know?
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And I grabbed her, I started screaming,
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"Chris, Chris, Chris!"
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And then there was one more bang, you know?
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Hopkins: He has not been hit, but she has.
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She will die.
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Borrelli: At the scene, there was a bullet
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that had glanced off the windshield
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and was laying on the dashboard.
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Hopkins: It was an unusual bullet ... a large caliber,
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.44 caliber.
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And normally, you don't see that.
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My father said that the .44-caliber gun
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is only made for one thing only.
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It's made for maiming and killing.
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Borrelli: I was talking to one of the detectives, I said,
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"That's a big bullet."
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And he said, "You know, we had a shooting in our precinct
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where the caliber of the bullet was large."
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He said, "And there's something up in the Bronx."
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And I said, "Hey, maybe we ought to look into it a little more."
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Klausner: Now they're calling around.
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"Does anything in your precinct sound the same
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as what just happened?"
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The pattern started to emerge.
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You had female victims in every single case.
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It's also the witnesses who saw certain things ...
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the approach to the car,
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to getting into a crouch position,
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and shooting with two hands.
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[Gunshot]
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And he would get away very quickly.
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The bells started going off.
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There was a feeling that maybe this is the same gun.
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Maybe it's the same guy pulling the gun.
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Detectives are starting to wonder,
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"What are we dealing with here?"
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♪♪
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Jordan: David Berkowitz had a complete fascination
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with death and dying.
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David's mother, Pearl, had a pet parakeet.
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David had slowly poisoned the bird
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with cleaning fluid to kill it,
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because his mother paid too much attention to her pet
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and not enough to him.
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Collarini-Schlossberg: He got experience in being inhumane.
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When you can start killing an animal,
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the next step is to kill a person.
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Berkowitz: They tried to help me, but that didn't work.
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The problem was with me.
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Kamen: The nightmare doesn't start to sprout full
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onto the city until the next killing.
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The fifth shooting, in Forest Hills,
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was Virginia Voskerichian, a young girl coming from school.
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She's a 19-year-old student at Barnard, studying Russian.
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She's by herself in a quiet neighborhood.
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A man coming in the opposite direction
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walks towards her.
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And he stops directly in front of her, pulls out a gun.
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[Gunshot]
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He fires one time,
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right through the center of the schoolbooks
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into her face, and she dies.
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♪♪
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Clark: It was such a brutal event.
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That upset a lot of guys
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because she was a beautiful young girl
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who apparently did nothing.
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Hopkins: When you have a woman shot on the street
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for no apparent reason, everybody wants to know why.
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It wasn't actually until after Voskerichian
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that we were able to connect
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the previous shootings in Queens and the Bronx.
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Jordan: With the shooting of Virginia Voskerichian,
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we now had five shooting episodes.
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So, now, the bullet that was recovered
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with that went to ballistics.
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It all hinged on making the match between the bullets.
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And ballistics, even though couldn't say definitively,
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they felt very strongly that it was the same gun
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that was used in each of those shootings.
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The same person was doing the shootings.
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Patrick: That's when they put it together
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that there's a serial killer on the loose in New York.
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Klausner: This is someone going out
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and just destroying lives, and that's scary.
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♪♪
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Klausner: Mayor Abraham Beame
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and then police commissioner Michael Codd
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decide to hold a press conference.
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McLoughlin: You owe something to the public.
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Jordan: To warn them
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that basically a killer was on the loose.
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Kamen: What they essentially said was,
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"We're looking for one guy,
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using a large handgun, a .44-caliber revolver."
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Although the description of the perpetrator was vague,
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everyone agreed that it was a young white male
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between 25 and 30 years old,
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about 6 feet tall,
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with a medium build and dark hair.
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Hopkins: Very mobile, has a car.
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And the M.O. was to surprise his victims,
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usually who were in a car, mostly attractive young women,
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at times making out with a boyfriend.
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McLoughlin: So, the natural reaction
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was to form a task force that would deal
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with all the homicides connected to this person.
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Man: We will catch this individual.
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Our only hope is that we catch him before he does it again.
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Wax: At that point, the public begins to feel,
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"We've got a serial killer in our midst."
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It got the city up in arms.
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When it first came out in the newspapers,
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they dubbed him as the .44-caliber killer.
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It was everywhere. Everywhere.
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And it was on the front page of every paper ...
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The "Daily News," the "New York Post."
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Everybody was afraid.
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Collarini-Schlossberg: It's scary because
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they really don't know where he's going to turn up next.
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I won't walk home anymore in the dark.
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It's just scary. It's frightening.
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You don't know what's gonna happen.
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Patrick: That's when alarms came to the house and locks
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00:19:08,000 --> 00:19:10,000
and "stay close to home."
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Clark: At the time, there was the misconception
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that these women that were being shot
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all had the same similar characteristics.
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Heller: They assumed that it was someone
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00:19:21,000 --> 00:19:25,000
that was going after brunette women.
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One day, my secretary, Cynthia, came in,
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and she had had long brown hair,
349
00:19:31,000 --> 00:19:35,000
and she cut it short and made it blond.
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And she said, "Everybody in the city who has long brown hair
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is cutting it and bleaching it blond
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00:19:43,000 --> 00:19:46,000
so that they don't end up as one of the victims."
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Reporter: Civilian patrols took to the streets.
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00:19:51,000 --> 00:19:52,000
Women were afraid to go out at night.
355
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Teenagers stopped sitting in cars.
356
00:19:57,000 --> 00:20:01,000
There was a lot of hysteria going on.
357
00:20:01,000 --> 00:20:05,000
Heller: He really put a tremendous fear
358
00:20:05,000 --> 00:20:08,000
in the city of New York.
359
00:20:08,000 --> 00:20:10,000
He was, in my view,
360
00:20:10,000 --> 00:20:13,000
the original terrorist that gripped the city.
361
00:20:13,000 --> 00:20:15,000
Glassman: People weren't going out.
362
00:20:15,000 --> 00:20:19,000
Clubs and venues weren't really making as much money.
363
00:20:19,000 --> 00:20:21,000
Heller: That's when the Hamptons became popular.
364
00:20:22,000 --> 00:20:26,000
Everybody left the city and went out to the Hamptons.
365
00:20:26,000 --> 00:20:29,000
Justus: This was a horror we couldn't get away from.
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00:20:32,000 --> 00:20:33,000
Borrelli: After the fifth shooting,
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00:20:33,000 --> 00:20:37,000
I was being interviewed by a reporter from CBS News,
368
00:20:37,000 --> 00:20:42,000
and I mentioned all our victims so far had been women,
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00:20:43,000 --> 00:20:45,000
so I guess he doesn't like women.
370
00:20:46,000 --> 00:20:48,000
Klausner: One of the outcomes of this interview
371
00:20:48,000 --> 00:20:50,000
was there were a lot of people listening.
372
00:20:50,000 --> 00:20:55,000
What they didn't understand is the killer was listening.
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♪♪
374
00:21:01,000 --> 00:21:06,000
♪♪
375
00:21:08,000 --> 00:21:14,000
♪♪
376
00:21:14,000 --> 00:21:17,000
Welcome back to "Very Scary People."
377
00:21:17,000 --> 00:21:21,000
By March 1977, David Berkowitz had fatally gunned down
378
00:21:21,000 --> 00:21:23,000
three women and injured four others,
379
00:21:24,000 --> 00:21:25,000
escaping from each scene so quickly,
380
00:21:25,000 --> 00:21:28,000
there were very few clues for detectives to go on...
381
00:21:29,000 --> 00:21:31,000
until April 1977.
382
00:21:31,000 --> 00:21:32,000
And while it would still be months
383
00:21:32,000 --> 00:21:34,000
until this killer was caught,
384
00:21:34,000 --> 00:21:36,000
at the scene of the sixth shooting,
385
00:21:36,000 --> 00:21:37,000
he made an unusual move ...
386
00:21:37,000 --> 00:21:40,000
reaching out to the very cops trying to bring him down.
387
00:21:40,000 --> 00:21:46,000
♪♪
388
00:21:46,000 --> 00:21:49,000
Collarini-Schlossberg: Investigators were hoping
389
00:21:49,000 --> 00:21:52,000
that they could figure out who this killer was
390
00:21:52,000 --> 00:21:54,000
before he would strike again.
391
00:21:54,000 --> 00:21:58,000
But, unfortunately, they were not so lucky.
392
00:21:59,000 --> 00:22:03,000
Klausner: On April 17, 1977,
393
00:22:03,000 --> 00:22:06,000
there will be another attack.
394
00:22:08,000 --> 00:22:12,000
Jordan: Valentina Suriani and her date, Alexander Esau,
395
00:22:12,000 --> 00:22:15,000
pulled off the Hutchinson Parkway in the Bronx,
396
00:22:15,000 --> 00:22:16,000
and they started making out.
397
00:22:16,000 --> 00:22:22,000
♪♪
398
00:22:23,000 --> 00:22:25,000
Then a man approached the car.
399
00:22:29,000 --> 00:22:33,000
[Gunshots]
400
00:22:33,000 --> 00:22:35,000
And four shots rang out.
401
00:22:35,000 --> 00:22:38,000
He came, he did it, he left.
402
00:22:38,000 --> 00:22:40,000
And they were dead.
403
00:22:40,000 --> 00:22:43,000
Berkowitz: I knew it was wrong,
404
00:22:43,000 --> 00:22:47,000
but when a mind is captured by Satan,
405
00:22:47,000 --> 00:22:49,000
you can't look at things and evaluate things
406
00:22:49,000 --> 00:22:51,000
in their right perspective.
407
00:22:54,000 --> 00:22:57,000
Borrelli: I was up in the Bronx, at the scene.
408
00:22:57,000 --> 00:23:01,000
The scene was similar, and yet there was a difference.
409
00:23:01,000 --> 00:23:05,000
The difference was there was a letter found at the scene.
410
00:23:05,000 --> 00:23:08,000
And that letter was addressed to me.
411
00:23:08,000 --> 00:23:10,000
"Dear Captain Joseph Borrelli,
412
00:23:10,000 --> 00:23:14,000
I am deeply hurt by your calling me a 'wemon' hater."
413
00:23:14,000 --> 00:23:15,000
And he misspells "woman."
414
00:23:16,000 --> 00:23:19,000
"I am not. But I am a monster."
415
00:23:19,000 --> 00:23:21,000
And the killer names himself.
416
00:23:25,000 --> 00:23:28,000
"I am...the Son of Sam."
417
00:23:30,000 --> 00:23:32,000
[Gunshot]
418
00:23:36,000 --> 00:23:37,000
Hopkins: "I feel like an outsider.
419
00:23:37,000 --> 00:23:41,000
I am on a different wave length 'then' everybody else,
420
00:23:41,000 --> 00:23:43,000
programmed 'too' kill."
421
00:23:43,000 --> 00:23:46,000
Borrelli: "I say goodbye and goodnight, police.
422
00:23:46,000 --> 00:23:49,000
Let me haunt you with these words;
423
00:23:49,000 --> 00:23:52,000
I'll be back!
424
00:23:52,000 --> 00:23:54,000
I'll be back!
425
00:23:54,000 --> 00:24:02,000
To be interpreted as ... bang, bang, bang, bang."
426
00:24:05,000 --> 00:24:10,000
"Yours in murder, Mr. Monster."
427
00:24:10,000 --> 00:24:12,000
I still get a chill.
428
00:24:12,000 --> 00:24:15,000
It's a pretty horrible kind of a letter.
429
00:24:15,000 --> 00:24:17,000
Justus: A psycho.
430
00:24:17,000 --> 00:24:20,000
Would a normal person do that? No.
431
00:24:20,000 --> 00:24:22,000
Hopkins: The letter that was left for Borrelli
432
00:24:22,000 --> 00:24:24,000
put a different slant on things.
433
00:24:24,000 --> 00:24:27,000
Now it's become very, very personal.
434
00:24:28,000 --> 00:24:30,000
Borrelli: When Berkowitz wrote that letter,
435
00:24:30,000 --> 00:24:33,000
it was kind of like a taunt.
436
00:24:33,000 --> 00:24:37,000
Jordan: In the history of serial killers, before these episodes,
437
00:24:37,000 --> 00:24:40,000
we have a handful of examples of killers taunting the police.
438
00:24:40,000 --> 00:24:43,000
But we really had not seen somebody writing a letter,
439
00:24:43,000 --> 00:24:48,000
a detailed letter, directly to a police detective.
440
00:24:49,000 --> 00:24:51,000
Hopkins: Now the news media picked up on this,
441
00:24:51,000 --> 00:24:56,000
and everybody knew the shooter as Son of Sam.
442
00:24:56,000 --> 00:24:59,000
That's when mass hysteria started.
443
00:24:59,000 --> 00:25:02,000
Reporter #2: In Central Park, t-shirts went on sale ...
444
00:25:02,000 --> 00:25:05,000
"Get Son of Sam before he gets you."
445
00:25:09,000 --> 00:25:11,000
Klausner: The task force is now growing
446
00:25:11,000 --> 00:25:15,000
because the mayor's getting a tremendous amount of pressure.
447
00:25:15,000 --> 00:25:18,000
Hopkins: When we started to expand our task force,
448
00:25:18,000 --> 00:25:20,000
we had the best of the best.
449
00:25:20,000 --> 00:25:23,000
Jordan: It consisted of 200 to 300 officers
450
00:25:23,000 --> 00:25:26,000
and basically every single patrol officer
451
00:25:26,000 --> 00:25:28,000
looking out for clues.
452
00:25:28,000 --> 00:25:30,000
Each murder, it grew.
453
00:25:30,000 --> 00:25:33,000
This becomes the single biggest manhunt in the history
454
00:25:34,000 --> 00:25:36,000
of the city of New York at the time.
455
00:25:36,000 --> 00:25:38,000
Phones rang 24 hours a day.
456
00:25:38,000 --> 00:25:40,000
It was bedlam.
457
00:25:40,000 --> 00:25:42,000
Collarini-Schlossberg: At that point,
458
00:25:42,000 --> 00:25:43,000
they were going on every possible lead
459
00:25:43,000 --> 00:25:44,000
that they could get.
460
00:25:45,000 --> 00:25:46,000
Justus: Every time we got a phone call,
461
00:25:46,000 --> 00:25:49,000
that was a different lead that had to be investigated.
462
00:25:49,000 --> 00:25:51,000
And there were thousands of phone calls coming in.
463
00:25:52,000 --> 00:25:54,000
We had a lot of dead leads. [Chuckles]
464
00:25:54,000 --> 00:25:57,000
A lot.
465
00:25:57,000 --> 00:25:59,000
Jordan: There are a number of witnesses and survivors
466
00:26:00,000 --> 00:26:02,000
in each of these episodes.
467
00:26:02,000 --> 00:26:07,000
Over the next year, different drawings were made.
468
00:26:11,000 --> 00:26:13,000
Clark: But each one was different from the other.
469
00:26:13,000 --> 00:26:16,000
Because the shootings were at night
470
00:26:16,000 --> 00:26:19,000
and it's very traumatizing to look up
471
00:26:19,000 --> 00:26:22,000
and get shot almost immediately.
472
00:26:23,000 --> 00:26:25,000
Reporter #3: Police blanketed Queens and the Bronx
473
00:26:25,000 --> 00:26:29,000
with cops in unmarked cars.
474
00:26:29,000 --> 00:26:31,000
Justus: The police got orders to chase everybody away
475
00:26:31,000 --> 00:26:33,000
from lovers' lanes,
476
00:26:33,000 --> 00:26:37,000
to do increased patrols around social areas.
477
00:26:37,000 --> 00:26:42,000
We went to Alexander's, a department store.
478
00:26:42,000 --> 00:26:44,000
And we got these mannequins,
479
00:26:44,000 --> 00:26:49,000
and we put them in a car with a detective.
480
00:26:49,000 --> 00:26:53,000
And then the guys themselves said, "No good.
481
00:26:53,000 --> 00:26:56,000
If he's looking at us, he's got to realize right away
482
00:26:56,000 --> 00:26:59,000
something's wrong because there's no movement."
483
00:26:59,000 --> 00:27:04,000
So then we decided, "Well, we'll get some females."
484
00:27:04,000 --> 00:27:09,000
We were turned down by police headquarters ... too risky.
485
00:27:09,000 --> 00:27:12,000
Next thing we did, we went out and we got wigs.
486
00:27:12,000 --> 00:27:15,000
So there would be a male detective
487
00:27:15,000 --> 00:27:18,000
and an alleged female detective.
488
00:27:19,000 --> 00:27:21,000
McLoughlin: There were guys going out
489
00:27:21,000 --> 00:27:23,000
with kerchiefs on their head.
490
00:27:23,000 --> 00:27:26,000
They were being used as decoys,
491
00:27:26,000 --> 00:27:30,000
hoping to catch someone running away.
492
00:27:31,000 --> 00:27:38,000
In 1976, my husband was asked to help the NYPD
493
00:27:38,000 --> 00:27:39,000
to figure out the kind of person
494
00:27:39,000 --> 00:27:43,000
who would commit the kinds of murders
495
00:27:43,000 --> 00:27:45,000
that this killer was committing.
496
00:27:45,000 --> 00:27:52,000
He is the founder of the NYPD Psychological Services Unit.
497
00:27:52,000 --> 00:27:55,000
Borrelli: The profile of the individual
498
00:27:55,000 --> 00:27:57,000
was he's in his late 20s,
499
00:27:57,000 --> 00:28:00,000
maybe early 30s, lives alone.
500
00:28:00,000 --> 00:28:02,000
Justus: A sexually inadequate male
501
00:28:02,000 --> 00:28:04,000
who has access to a weapon.
502
00:28:04,000 --> 00:28:07,000
Hopkins: The guy is paranoid, schizophrenic.
503
00:28:07,000 --> 00:28:09,000
McLoughlin: Lived in a sloppy apartment,
504
00:28:09,000 --> 00:28:10,000
not a well-adjusted person
505
00:28:10,000 --> 00:28:13,000
in terms of his relationships with women,
506
00:28:13,000 --> 00:28:14,000
possibly with his family.
507
00:28:15,000 --> 00:28:18,000
A person who was relatively intelligent,
508
00:28:18,000 --> 00:28:21,000
in all likelihood was not insane.
509
00:28:21,000 --> 00:28:25,000
He knew what he was doing and was planful in his act.
510
00:28:25,000 --> 00:28:27,000
And it proved to be right on the money
511
00:28:27,000 --> 00:28:31,000
when eventually we arrested the perpetrator.
512
00:28:31,000 --> 00:28:35,000
Klausner: But they don't really have anything to go on.
513
00:28:36,000 --> 00:28:39,000
Collarini-Schlossberg: In a city of millions,
514
00:28:39,000 --> 00:28:41,000
it's like finding a needle in a haystack.
515
00:28:41,000 --> 00:28:42,000
Hopkins: So, what's your next step?
516
00:28:43,000 --> 00:28:44,000
That's what we all kept on saying ...
517
00:28:44,000 --> 00:28:46,000
"What do we do next?"
518
00:28:46,000 --> 00:28:49,000
Because we had no real good leads.
519
00:28:49,000 --> 00:28:50,000
Where do you go from here?
520
00:28:51,000 --> 00:28:57,000
The police department was trying to capture a ghost.
521
00:28:57,000 --> 00:29:04,000
♪♪
522
00:29:08,000 --> 00:29:11,000
Kamen: So, who was this monster
523
00:29:11,000 --> 00:29:14,000
that was stalking the city of New York?
524
00:29:14,000 --> 00:29:15,000
Interviewer: You were adopted, right?
525
00:29:15,000 --> 00:29:17,000
Berkowitz: Yes. I had great parents.
526
00:29:17,000 --> 00:29:19,000
What went wrong there, do you think?
527
00:29:19,000 --> 00:29:23,000
Well, no, with my parents, nothing at all.
528
00:29:24,000 --> 00:29:30,000
As an infant, David was adopted by Pearl and Nathan Berkowitz.
529
00:29:30,000 --> 00:29:32,000
Collarini-Schlossberg: He seemed to have
530
00:29:32,000 --> 00:29:36,000
a relatively normal upbringing with the Berkowitz family.
531
00:29:37,000 --> 00:29:43,000
His adoptive mother died of cancer when he was around 14.
532
00:29:43,000 --> 00:29:45,000
What was that like for you?
533
00:29:45,000 --> 00:29:47,000
Berkowitz: Completely devastating.
534
00:29:47,000 --> 00:29:49,000
My mom was, at that time, the anchor of my life.
535
00:29:49,000 --> 00:29:53,000
When I saw my mom, when I went into the hospital to see her,
536
00:29:53,000 --> 00:29:55,000
I couldn't believe what I saw.
537
00:29:55,000 --> 00:29:58,000
My heart was broken, but I was, back then, as a child,
538
00:29:58,000 --> 00:30:01,000
I had trouble expressing my emotions.
539
00:30:02,000 --> 00:30:05,000
I just kind of divorced myself from her,
540
00:30:05,000 --> 00:30:06,000
realizing she was gonna die.
541
00:30:06,000 --> 00:30:10,000
Jordan: He felt like his life had slipped away from him.
542
00:30:10,000 --> 00:30:13,000
Without her, he had no sense of security.
543
00:30:13,000 --> 00:30:14,000
Berkowitz: I couldn't deal with the loss.
544
00:30:14,000 --> 00:30:16,000
I couldn't deal with the pain.
545
00:30:16,000 --> 00:30:17,000
I didn't know what the future held.
546
00:30:17,000 --> 00:30:20,000
I had nobody to really talk to.
547
00:30:20,000 --> 00:30:25,000
The nurturing figure in his life is gone.
548
00:30:25,000 --> 00:30:27,000
Max: He graduated from high school
549
00:30:28,000 --> 00:30:31,000
and was perhaps a bit of a loner.
550
00:30:31,000 --> 00:30:35,000
He joined the Army and he was stationed in Korea.
551
00:30:35,000 --> 00:30:37,000
When he came back, he had a difficult time
552
00:30:38,000 --> 00:30:40,000
adjusting in other ways, socially.
553
00:30:40,000 --> 00:30:42,000
Berkowitz: I enrolled in community college.
554
00:30:42,000 --> 00:30:44,000
Living where? In the Bronx.
555
00:30:44,000 --> 00:30:46,000
I got my own apartment.
556
00:30:46,000 --> 00:30:49,000
I had saved up some money from when I was in the service.
557
00:30:49,000 --> 00:30:50,000
And I just wanted to start my life,
558
00:30:50,000 --> 00:30:54,000
and friends had moved away, and I didn't know anyone.
559
00:30:54,000 --> 00:30:55,000
How old were you?
560
00:30:55,000 --> 00:30:57,000
21 at the time.
561
00:30:57,000 --> 00:30:59,000
And were you dating girls?
562
00:30:59,000 --> 00:31:01,000
Well, I was dating a little bit here and there,
563
00:31:01,000 --> 00:31:03,000
just very, very casually.
564
00:31:03,000 --> 00:31:06,000
I wouldn't really call it even a date.
565
00:31:06,000 --> 00:31:07,000
He never really enjoyed
566
00:31:07,000 --> 00:31:12,000
a boyfriend-girlfriend type of romantic relationship.
567
00:31:12,000 --> 00:31:15,000
Jordan: His father remarried and, with his new wife,
568
00:31:15,000 --> 00:31:18,000
moved to Florida,
569
00:31:18,000 --> 00:31:21,000
leaving David on his own.
570
00:31:21,000 --> 00:31:27,000
♪♪
571
00:31:27,000 --> 00:31:33,000
♪♪
572
00:31:33,000 --> 00:31:36,000
In June, out of the blue,
573
00:31:36,000 --> 00:31:38,000
another letter is sent from the killer.
574
00:31:38,000 --> 00:31:41,000
Only this one isn't sent to the cops. Oh, no.
575
00:31:41,000 --> 00:31:44,000
This is sent to one of the most high-profile journalists
576
00:31:45,000 --> 00:31:48,000
in America, named Jimmy Breslin.
577
00:31:48,000 --> 00:31:52,000
Jimmy Breslin was a famous reporter for the "Daily News."
578
00:31:52,000 --> 00:31:55,000
Patrick: It came to the "Daily News," to the newspaper,
579
00:31:55,000 --> 00:31:56,000
and I believe my father was at home.
580
00:31:57,000 --> 00:32:01,000
All I remember is him ... whew! Out the door.
581
00:32:02,000 --> 00:32:04,000
"Hello from the gutters of New York City,
582
00:32:04,000 --> 00:32:06,000
which are filled with dog manure,
583
00:32:06,000 --> 00:32:10,000
vomit, stale wine, urine, and blood."
584
00:32:10,000 --> 00:32:13,000
The first line in this proves that this guy's not stupid.
585
00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:14,000
That was the first thing my father said,
586
00:32:14,000 --> 00:32:16,000
"This guy knows punctuation."
587
00:32:16,000 --> 00:32:19,000
"Hello from the cracks in the sidewalk of New York City,
588
00:32:19,000 --> 00:32:21,000
and from the ants that dwell in these cracks
589
00:32:21,000 --> 00:32:24,000
and feed on the dried blood of the dead.
590
00:32:24,000 --> 00:32:28,000
Sam's a thirsty lad, and he won't let me stop killing
591
00:32:28,000 --> 00:32:30,000
until he gets his fill of blood.
592
00:32:30,000 --> 00:32:32,000
Mr. Breslin, sir,
593
00:32:32,000 --> 00:32:33,000
don't think that because you haven't heard from me
594
00:32:34,000 --> 00:32:35,000
for a while that I went to sleep.
595
00:32:36,000 --> 00:32:40,000
No. Rather, I am still here, like a spirit roaming the night.
596
00:32:40,000 --> 00:32:43,000
Thirsty, hungry, seldom stopping to rest,
597
00:32:44,000 --> 00:32:46,000
anxious to please Sam.
598
00:32:46,000 --> 00:32:47,000
I love my work.
599
00:32:47,000 --> 00:32:49,000
Perhaps we shall meet face-to-face someday,
600
00:32:49,000 --> 00:32:53,000
or perhaps I will be blown away by cops with smoking .38s.
601
00:32:54,000 --> 00:32:58,000
Not knowing what the future holds, I shall say farewell,
602
00:32:58,000 --> 00:33:00,000
and I will see you at the next job.
603
00:33:00,000 --> 00:33:04,000
Or should I say, you will see my handiwork at the next job?
604
00:33:04,000 --> 00:33:07,000
In their blood and from the gutter,
605
00:33:07,000 --> 00:33:10,000
Sam's creation, .44."
606
00:33:10,000 --> 00:33:13,000
And then, "Here are some names to help you along.
607
00:33:13,000 --> 00:33:14,000
The Duke of Death.
608
00:33:14,000 --> 00:33:16,000
The Wicked King Wicker.
609
00:33:16,000 --> 00:33:18,000
John Wheaties.
610
00:33:18,000 --> 00:33:21,000
PS: J.B., please inform all the detectives working the case
611
00:33:21,000 --> 00:33:23,000
that I wish them the best of luck.
612
00:33:23,000 --> 00:33:27,000
Keep them digging, drive on, think positive,
613
00:33:27,000 --> 00:33:30,000
get off your butts, knock on coffins, et cetera.
614
00:33:30,000 --> 00:33:33,000
Son of Sam."
615
00:33:33,000 --> 00:33:35,000
That's a really scary letter.
616
00:33:35,000 --> 00:33:37,000
It's disturbing.
617
00:33:37,000 --> 00:33:39,000
There was something seriously wrong with him.
618
00:33:40,000 --> 00:33:42,000
It scared the shit out of, you know,
619
00:33:42,000 --> 00:33:45,000
7 million people that lived in the city.
620
00:33:45,000 --> 00:33:47,000
My father didn't get rifled around much,
621
00:33:47,000 --> 00:33:50,000
but I think he was scared.
622
00:33:50,000 --> 00:33:53,000
Klausner: The Breslin letter is important on several levels.
623
00:33:53,000 --> 00:33:56,000
First of all, it tells the police that he reads
624
00:33:56,000 --> 00:33:59,000
Jimmy Breslin's column.
625
00:33:59,000 --> 00:34:01,000
Jordan: He was reading about himself
626
00:34:01,000 --> 00:34:04,000
and the investigation in the local papers.
627
00:34:04,000 --> 00:34:08,000
He had a flair for publicity.
628
00:34:12,000 --> 00:34:15,000
McLoughlin: If anybody gets to the point of writing letters...
629
00:34:17,000 --> 00:34:19,000
...he wants to be caught.
630
00:34:19,000 --> 00:34:24,000
He wants the attention or the credit for what he has done.
631
00:34:24,000 --> 00:34:26,000
Hopkins: I think it was to taunt us a little bit.
632
00:34:26,000 --> 00:34:29,000
It was to throw us off.
633
00:34:29,000 --> 00:34:30,000
Clark: By sending the letters,
634
00:34:30,000 --> 00:34:32,000
he took everything up to a new level.
635
00:34:32,000 --> 00:34:35,000
You know, he made it very personal with the police
636
00:34:35,000 --> 00:34:38,000
and made us want him that much more.
637
00:34:38,000 --> 00:34:42,000
Hopkins: From the letters itself, we all tried to figure,
638
00:34:42,000 --> 00:34:45,000
"What is the meaning of each of these phrases?"
639
00:34:45,000 --> 00:34:47,000
Serial killers, you know,
640
00:34:47,000 --> 00:34:50,000
they'll feed you little bits of information ...
641
00:34:50,000 --> 00:34:54,000
sometimes to throw you off, sometimes not to throw you off.
642
00:34:54,000 --> 00:34:59,000
But whatever it is, it's not enough to find that person.
643
00:34:59,000 --> 00:35:00,000
Patrick: No one could figure out,
644
00:35:00,000 --> 00:35:02,000
you know, where his name came from.
645
00:35:02,000 --> 00:35:06,000
Jordan: It turns out, these letters would contain clues
646
00:35:06,000 --> 00:35:08,000
as to who the killer really was.
647
00:35:08,000 --> 00:35:12,000
And as later they will find out,
648
00:35:12,000 --> 00:35:14,000
there is a Sam.
649
00:35:14,000 --> 00:35:21,000
♪♪
650
00:35:21,000 --> 00:35:22,000
Borrelli: Within a day or two,
651
00:35:22,000 --> 00:35:26,000
they released the whole letter in the paper.
652
00:35:26,000 --> 00:35:29,000
Max: When people living in the city
653
00:35:29,000 --> 00:35:31,000
were able to see something
654
00:35:31,000 --> 00:35:34,000
that came from the hand of the killer,
655
00:35:34,000 --> 00:35:35,000
that had an impact.
656
00:35:35,000 --> 00:35:40,000
It said, "There is a madman in our midst.
657
00:35:40,000 --> 00:35:41,000
Who's next?"
658
00:35:42,000 --> 00:35:43,000
Klausner: Now there was a frightening aspect
659
00:35:43,000 --> 00:35:47,000
added to this cauldron of shootings,
660
00:35:47,000 --> 00:35:51,000
of murders, of maimings.
661
00:35:51,000 --> 00:35:54,000
Justus: You want to get this guy off the street
662
00:35:54,000 --> 00:35:57,000
'cause every day that this person is on the street,
663
00:35:57,000 --> 00:35:59,000
somebody else could die.
664
00:35:59,000 --> 00:36:05,000
♪♪
665
00:36:08,000 --> 00:36:12,000
♪♪
666
00:36:12,000 --> 00:36:15,000
While the panic about the serial killer began to swallow up
667
00:36:15,000 --> 00:36:17,000
New York City...
668
00:36:17,000 --> 00:36:19,000
There's a strange thing happening
669
00:36:19,000 --> 00:36:22,000
just north of the city, in Yonkers.
670
00:36:26,000 --> 00:36:29,000
Jordan: In May, somebody threw a Molotov cocktail
671
00:36:29,000 --> 00:36:32,000
into the backyard of a man named Sam Carr.
672
00:36:32,000 --> 00:36:34,000
[Glass shatters, fire whooshes]
673
00:36:34,000 --> 00:36:37,000
It was alarming because he was just an average Joe
674
00:36:37,000 --> 00:36:39,000
in Yonkers, with his three kids,
675
00:36:40,000 --> 00:36:44,000
who included a daughter named Wheat Carr.
676
00:36:44,000 --> 00:36:50,000
Then, April 1977, he received an interesting letter in the mail.
677
00:36:51,000 --> 00:36:53,000
Sam Carr had a dog named Harvey.
678
00:36:55,000 --> 00:36:56,000
Glassman: The letter complained bitterly
679
00:36:57,000 --> 00:36:59,000
about the dog's incessant barking
680
00:36:59,000 --> 00:37:03,000
and told Sam he'd better do something about it.
681
00:37:03,000 --> 00:37:04,000
[Barking]
682
00:37:05,000 --> 00:37:07,000
The letter writer said it tormented him
683
00:37:07,000 --> 00:37:11,000
and said that he would seek revenge on the dog's owner.
684
00:37:14,000 --> 00:37:17,000
And on April 27th, Sam Carr's dog,
685
00:37:17,000 --> 00:37:21,000
Harvey, was shot in the backyard.
686
00:37:21,000 --> 00:37:23,000
The dog survived.
687
00:37:24,000 --> 00:37:27,000
Clearly, Sam Carr knows someone is out to get him,
688
00:37:27,000 --> 00:37:30,000
but he doesn't know who, and he doesn't know why.
689
00:37:34,000 --> 00:37:37,000
In June, another family ...
690
00:37:37,000 --> 00:37:39,000
Cassara family of New Rochelle ...
691
00:37:39,000 --> 00:37:41,000
gets a card in the mail.
692
00:37:41,000 --> 00:37:43,000
It's a get-well card.
693
00:37:43,000 --> 00:37:46,000
But the interesting thing is that Mr. Cassara
694
00:37:46,000 --> 00:37:48,000
isn't sick or ill at all.
695
00:37:48,000 --> 00:37:52,000
And the card is signed by a Mr. Sam Carr.
696
00:37:52,000 --> 00:37:55,000
But they don't know a Sam Carr.
697
00:37:55,000 --> 00:37:57,000
And it disturbs them.
698
00:37:57,000 --> 00:38:00,000
Jordan: The Cassara family looks up Sam Carr
699
00:38:00,000 --> 00:38:02,000
in the phone book, and they get together
700
00:38:03,000 --> 00:38:06,000
and they compare notes, literally.
701
00:38:06,000 --> 00:38:10,000
Then the Cassara family remember that they had a tenant
702
00:38:10,000 --> 00:38:14,000
the year before in their house, and he really hated dogs.
703
00:38:14,000 --> 00:38:16,000
Glassman: The Cassaras said, "Oh, yeah.
704
00:38:16,000 --> 00:38:18,000
He used to yell about our dog, too."
705
00:38:18,000 --> 00:38:21,000
Jordan: His name was David Berkowitz.
706
00:38:21,000 --> 00:38:23,000
Sam Carr then realizes
707
00:38:23,000 --> 00:38:26,000
that David Berkowitz is a neighbor of his,
708
00:38:26,000 --> 00:38:29,000
a man who lives right next to his home.
709
00:38:29,000 --> 00:38:33,000
He has to be the person who is harassing them.
710
00:38:33,000 --> 00:38:37,000
They take all of this evidence to the Yonkers police.
711
00:38:37,000 --> 00:38:41,000
But nothing had gotten to the point where there was enough
712
00:38:41,000 --> 00:38:45,000
to even bring David in for questioning.
713
00:38:46,000 --> 00:38:49,000
Jordan: Then, once the Son of Sam letters are published
714
00:38:49,000 --> 00:38:50,000
in the "New York Daily News,"
715
00:38:50,000 --> 00:38:54,000
Sam Carr is convinced that the David Berkowitz
716
00:38:54,000 --> 00:38:58,000
who he believes shot his dog could be a good suspect
717
00:38:58,000 --> 00:39:00,000
in the Son of Sam killings.
718
00:39:00,000 --> 00:39:04,000
After all, he is Sam Carr, and the guy is Son of Sam.
719
00:39:04,000 --> 00:39:10,000
And now Sam Carr actually went to the task force.
720
00:39:10,000 --> 00:39:14,000
Carr came down and wanted to talk to us about this,
721
00:39:14,000 --> 00:39:18,000
what he described as this crazy guy up in Yonkers.
722
00:39:18,000 --> 00:39:19,000
"Could be the killer."
723
00:39:20,000 --> 00:39:21,000
He said, you know, "There's a fellow named David Berkowitz,
724
00:39:21,000 --> 00:39:24,000
and I think he's the one that could be the Son of Sam."
725
00:39:24,000 --> 00:39:26,000
He sounded like everybody else.
726
00:39:26,000 --> 00:39:28,000
And he left.
727
00:39:28,000 --> 00:39:32,000
Berkowitz had written a thing called "the Wicked King Wicker."
728
00:39:33,000 --> 00:39:36,000
He had a thing about wicker.
729
00:39:36,000 --> 00:39:40,000
The night that Berkowitz was caught, I went to the house,
730
00:39:40,000 --> 00:39:42,000
and this fellow Carr lived on the corner,
731
00:39:42,000 --> 00:39:45,000
and the trees rustled in the breeze,
732
00:39:46,000 --> 00:39:50,000
and I saw the street sign said Wicker Street.
733
00:39:50,000 --> 00:39:52,000
I actually went into tears.
734
00:39:52,000 --> 00:39:54,000
I said, "If this guy had only said
735
00:39:54,000 --> 00:39:56,000
that he lived on the corner of Wicker Street,
736
00:39:56,000 --> 00:40:00,000
it would have just set off a fire alarm right there."
737
00:40:00,000 --> 00:40:02,000
[Siren wailing]
738
00:40:02,000 --> 00:40:06,000
Had the New York police seen the firebombing of Sam Carr,
739
00:40:07,000 --> 00:40:08,000
the shooting of Sam Carr's dog,
740
00:40:08,000 --> 00:40:12,000
they would've had a suspect to focus on.
741
00:40:12,000 --> 00:40:14,000
But they didn't.
742
00:40:14,000 --> 00:40:16,000
Jordan: They took down the information,
743
00:40:16,000 --> 00:40:18,000
put it in a file to be followed up on later
744
00:40:18,000 --> 00:40:22,000
and investigated, and there it sat.
745
00:40:22,000 --> 00:40:27,000
And they didn't discount it, they just never acted on it.
746
00:40:27,000 --> 00:40:30,000
"We'll get to it. We have other things."
747
00:40:33,000 --> 00:40:37,000
I, like most of the guys who I knew who were covering this
748
00:40:37,000 --> 00:40:39,000
or who were the detectives,
749
00:40:39,000 --> 00:40:41,000
wanted to get my hands around his throat and kill him.
750
00:40:41,000 --> 00:40:44,000
We got to get this guy and stop him, whatever that takes.
751
00:40:45,000 --> 00:40:49,000
Klausner: The whole populace now is primed for the next act,
752
00:40:49,000 --> 00:40:54,000
and it's going to happen, and it's going to be terrible.
753
00:40:54,000 --> 00:40:56,000
[Gunshot]
754
00:40:56,000 --> 00:41:01,000
Unless something happened where the killer made a mistake,
755
00:41:01,000 --> 00:41:05,000
it was going to be very difficult to find this man.
756
00:41:05,000 --> 00:41:07,000
Eventually, you're gonna make a mistake,
757
00:41:07,000 --> 00:41:09,000
and we're gonna get you.
758
00:41:09,000 --> 00:41:13,000
It will fall on a few detectives in a single precinct
759
00:41:14,000 --> 00:41:17,000
who will actually capture the killer due to a fluke.
760
00:41:17,000 --> 00:41:21,000
Inevitably, killers make mistakes,
761
00:41:21,000 --> 00:41:23,000
and so did the Son of Sam.
762
00:41:23,000 --> 00:41:25,000
I had always said, "If he comes to Brooklyn,
763
00:41:25,000 --> 00:41:27,000
he's going to get caught."
764
00:41:27,000 --> 00:41:29,000
And that's exactly what happened.
765
00:41:29,000 --> 00:41:35,000
♪♪
766
00:41:35,000 --> 00:41:37,000
With seven shootings in two different boroughs
767
00:41:37,000 --> 00:41:39,000
and no real leads,
768
00:41:39,000 --> 00:41:42,000
the investigators working this case were grasping at straws.
769
00:41:42,000 --> 00:41:44,000
They desperately wanted to catch this monster
770
00:41:44,000 --> 00:41:47,000
before he struck again, but it seemed impossible.
771
00:41:47,000 --> 00:41:50,000
Ultimately, it would take some old-fashioned police grunt work
772
00:41:51,000 --> 00:41:52,000
and a little bit of luck
773
00:41:52,000 --> 00:41:54,000
to bring an end to the Summer of Sam".
774
00:41:54,000 --> 00:41:56,000
The extraordinary story
775
00:41:56,000 --> 00:41:59,000
of how David Berkowitz was brought down, next time
776
00:41:59,000 --> 00:42:00,000
on part two of "Son of Sam."
777
00:42:00,000 --> 00:42:02,000
I'm Donnie Wahlberg.
778
00:42:02,000 --> 00:42:05,000
Thanks for watching. Good night.
59878
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