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Saturday, October 24, 2009 - 2:01 PM
On David Berkowitz's
official home page, the convicted serial killer explains how he has
been locked up for the past two decades. "My criminal case," Berkowitz
says, "is well known and was called the Son of Sam shootings."  David Berkowitz
Eleven
years prior to penning these opening Web lines, Berkowitz adds, while
he was "living in a cold and lonely prison cell," God grabbed hold of
his life and set him on the righteous path. He says his story—or,
rather, his path toward righteousness—is an example of "hope."  Book cover: Every Move You Make
This letter to his readers was written in 1999. The date is important to what you are about to read — because my book, Every Move You Make, where I first published excerpts from the lost Son of Sam letters, was published five years later, in 2005. Today,
Son of Sam claims to be "free" from the confines of prison. He claims
Jesus Christ has led him to the light of a new way. He calls his Web
page, "Forgiven for Life."  M. William Phelps
This
Crime Library story is about the real Son of Sam, not the façade Mr.
Berkowitz wishes to display in his Web writings. It is about the person
who murdered six people and tormented and terrorized a city. As for
prison life, Berkowitz says his days and nights behind bars are a
constant "struggle," and that he's had his "share of problems, hassles
and fights." He claims another inmate cut his throat once and he almost
died. "Yet all through this—and I did not realize it until later—God had His loving hands on me," he writes. Further
along on his Website, Berkowitz says that while he was "reading Psalm
34" one night, he "began to pour out [his] heart to God." He says this
moment of clarity, when God entered his soul, took place in 1987; he
gives no specific date, just the year. "Everything seemed to hit me at
once," Berkowitz claims. "The guilt from what I did ... the disgust at
what I had become ..." And then, he says, he "got down on [his] knees
and ... began to cry out to Jesus Christ." Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
This
revelation by Mr. Berkowitz is a complete fabrication. Pay close
attention to the date he gives us—1987—as you read this Crime Library
story. For when you get to the lost Son of Sam letter excerpts I
quote, you'll have a hard time believing God's hands were resting on
the shoulders of Mr. Berkowitz as he wrote them.
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