Morbid - Episode 609: The DeFeo Family Murder
Episode Date: October 14, 2024On the evening of November 13, 1974, twenty-three-year-old Ronald DeFeo Jr. burst through the door of Henry’s Bar in Amityville, Long Island, frantically yelling for help and telling the pa...trons that someone had killed his parents. When a small group returned to the house with DeFeo, they discovered that not only had his parents, Louise and Ronald Sr., been killed, but so had his four brothers and sisters—all shot to death in their beds with a .35 caliber rifle.During a police interview that night, investigators became suspicious of Ronald DeFeo. Not only was his story of a mob hit difficult to believe, but he seemed incapable of keeping certain aspects of his story straight during the interview. The next day, DeFeo broke down and confessed to the murders, explaining that he had hated his father and telling investigators, “Once I started [shooting], I just couldn’t stop.”Ronald DeFeo’s trial was one of New York’s biggest news stories of 1975 and attracted considerable attention due to his attempt to mount an insanity defense and his frequent outbursts in the courtroom. In the end, the defense was unsuccessful and DeFeo was convicted of the murders and sentenced to life in prison. DeFeo’s conviction should have been the end of the story, but it turned out it was only the beginning of what would eventually become one of the most notorious supernatural claims in American history.Thank you to the Incredible Dave White of Bring Me the Axe Podcast for research and Writing support!!ReferencesCarter, A.J., Soper Susan , Dallas Gatewood, and Sam Washington. 1974. "DeFeo son is accused." Newsday, November 15: 3.Incantalupo, Tom, and Sam Washington. 1974. "A quiet drink turns into an invitation to disaster." Newsday, November 14: 3.—. 1974. "Six in Amityville family slain, each in bed, 1 bullet in back." Newsday, November 14: 1.New York Times. 1974. "Six in family found slain in bedrooms in L.I. home." New York Times, November 14: 97.Smith, Don. 1975. "Attack mounted on DeFeio's insanity plea." Newsday, October 25: 16.—. 1975. "Cellmate says DeFeo had insanity plan." Newsday, November 11: 6.—. 1975. "Cop quotes DeFeoL 'I... couldn't stop'." Newsday, September 24: 4.—. 1975. "Cop: DeFeo altered story." Newsday, October 22: 9.—. 1975. "DeFeo charges police beat him into confessing." Newsday, September 27: 13.—. 1975. "DeFeo defended as psychotic killer." Newsday, November 19: 17.—. 1975. "DeFeo guilty of family murder." Newsday, November 22: 3.—. 1975. "Doctor: DeFeo knew it was wrong." Newsday, November 13: 19.—. 1975. "Family clash is cited in DeFeo trial." Newsday, October 15: 22.—. 1975. "I killed a dozen others, DeFeo says." Newsday, November 7: 21.—. 1975. "'I left the room in awe of the horror'." Newsday, October 23: 17.Smith, Don, and Sam Washington. 1975. "DeFeo a heroin user, cop testifies." Newsday, October 18: 16.Stark, Thomas M. 2021. Horrific Homicides: A Judge Looks Back at the Amityville Horror Murders and Other Infamous Long Island Crimes. New York, NY : Archway Publishing.Sullivan, Gerard, and Harvey Aronson. 1981. High Hopes: The Amityville Murders. New York, NY: Coward, McCann & Geoghegan.Vecsey, George. 1974. "L.I. slayings suspect had used drugs." New York Times, November 16: 18.—. 1974. "Neighbors recall DeFeos as 'nice, normal family'." New York Times, November 15: 80.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, weirdos.
I'm Elena.
And I'm Ash.
And this is Morbid. Hello. Hello. How are you? I'm great. I'm tired, but I'm great. How are you? I'm also
tired and great. I love that. Great and tired. Yeah. We did all of the tour, the book tour. We just finished last night.
And it was so much fun. So cool. It was one of the coolest things I feel like we've gotten to do.
Yeah. You guys were rad as hell. Thanks for inviting me, bitch. Thanks for coming. No problem.
It was so much fun. I love. And it was awesome. But I think my body just like crashed at the end of it.
It's just like, okay, go to sleep.
Well, the thing is, the thing you have to know about me and Elena,
which most of you probably already know,
we don't fucking go anywhere.
Ever.
And we don't socialize with really anyone other than each other
and like some family and a couple of friends.
We're very...
I'm yawning right now, sorry.
I literally was yawning as I was talking.
My social battery has always been pretty little.
It doesn't hold a lot and it gets empty real quick.
Mine used to be so much larger and in charger.
It never was.
No, I know.
It never was. And it's only gotten smaller as I've gotten older.
Same.
I have to pick very carefully how I socialize.
You have to triage.
This was a great way to do it.
It was a great choice.
But now I'm exhausted.
As of this recording, this motherfucker sitting across from me is a number one New York Times
bestselling author!
I can't believe that.
I am so happy for you.
I was literally pooping my pants when you got the news.
It's I still am like honestly speechless about it still.
It's incredible.
Thanks so much for supporting me everybody.
You're amazing.
Yay.
And just know that I accidentally tackled her when she got the news.
She did.
She side tackled me.
I meant to hug, but it was way more forceful.
Full side tackle.
It's amazing though.
It's amazing and I can't believe it and I can't wait to make more books.
And yeah, it's crazy.
Hopefully the next one is also on the list.
I see it.
I see it.
Manifest.
We all manifested on tour.
Hell yeah, we did.
And you guys manifested, I'm sure of it.
You did it.
And you're just talented.
This is because you guys did it though.
You supported me.
You bought the book.
You pre-ordered the book.
You seem to be enjoying the book, which makes me pretty happy.
And I just needed to tell you, you are appreciated.
Your kind words have been unbelievably appreciated.
I can't tell you how much it has meant this whole time.
Seeing in person has been amazing and appreciated.
And you are the real ones.
So I just wanted to tell you that.
She's on the New York Times.
I just wanted to thank you
because you guys made it awesome.
Yay!
And you're the reason for the season, you know?
You are!
I think that's all the happy stuff we have.
Yeah, that's all the happy stuff.
And you know?
I like it.
And what we're going to do is we're going to, this is like, this is a two-parter,
but it's like a different kind of two-parter.
Whereas, you know, it's still sort of, well, not sort of, it is still very much spooky
season.
But this is straight up true crime.
This is straight up true crime, but it's connected to a spooky thing.
Because we wanted to give you like a little bit of both this season.
Yeah, you got to get both because that's what you're here for.
Makes everybody happy.
It does and I get it.
So this is one of the bigger ones that we've never covered before.
I know it's actually kind of crazy that we haven't.
Which is shocking.
So what we're going to do here is we're going to talk about the DeFeo family murders.
Those are largely connected to what came after, which is the Amityville Horror hoax.
That is a big old hoax.
But it's such a big, that's almost a true crime in and of itself because it's such a
massively orchestrated hoax. It kind of was, right? Yeah. But it's such a big, that's almost a true crime in and of itself because it's such a
massively orchestrated hoax.
It kind of was, right?
Yeah.
Like a true crime because isn't there like court transcripts about it?
I mean, that's like this, I mean, that's one of the biggest hoaxes ever.
Like it's huge.
Yeah.
So what we're going to do is in this episode, I am purely going to tell you the true crime
tale of the DeFeo murders. It's
really sad. It's really brutal. Trigger warning right off the bat. It's like pretty gruesome.
It's like gun stuff. It's, it's rough. Unfortunately, like the victim, some of the victims are children.
Some of the victims are children. So it's just really sad. But, and then in part two
of this series, almost, it'll be a totally different episode, but it's going to be talking
about the Ambedaville horror hoax and some of the real stuff that could be associated part two of this series almost. It'll be a totally different episode, but it's going to be talking about
the Amadeville Horror hoax and some of the real stuff
that could be associated with it.
We're gonna see Ed and Lorraine Warren again in part two.
They make, they always, they come to stay for spooky season.
They do, they just like, they really involve themselves.
So, so yeah, today we're gonna be talking about
the DeFeo family murder case.
So buckle up everybody.
Alrighty. So when 23 year about the DeFeo family murder case, so buckle up everybody. Alrighty.
So, when 23-year-old Ronald DeFeo Jr. borrowed his friend Bobby Kelsky's car on the night
of November 13th, 1974, so this was a while ago, it was with the understanding that he
was just going to be going down the street, just a few blocks to his house, and he was
going to be right back.
So since he'd gotten out of work that afternoon, Ronald had been trying to reach anyone at his house.
He said he just couldn't get anyone on the phone
and he was starting to make him nervous.
He couldn't get ahold of his parents,
any of his brothers or sisters.
And he was like, that's not normal.
I've been trying to get them, I can't.
So he had told Bobby, I'm gonna have to go home
and break a window to get in
because he was really worried at that point.
It was late.
Damn.
So he took off in the direction of his house and he was saying, I'm just going to go there,
check on things and I'll come right back with your car.
A bit later, Ron came skidding into the parking lot of Henry's bar where he had left.
And he had barely made it through the door of the bar when he said, Bob, you've got to
help me.
You've got to help me.
Someone shot my mother and father. I can't imagine hearing that. No. So everyone
in Henry's bar was just like, what the fuck? Like none of them knew how to respond. In
Henry's regular, John Altieri said he was hysterical. He was shouting, everybody come
on. Somebody shot my father and mother. Like hysterical, all upset, you gotta come now.
So of course, as he's saying that, like,
you gotta help me, a handful of guys jumped up,
went out to their cars and they were like,
we'll follow you there.
So at the time, no one knew what to expect
because they were like, are we really gonna like
walk into dead bodies?
Like, what's gonna happen here?
But when they got to their destination,
the scene at 112 Ocean Avenue was eerily quiet.
Ooh, I immediately hate that.
And it gets worse because it's eerily quiet,
and then there's just an alarm clock going off
from somewhere on the second floor of the house.
Oh, my entire body just warmed.
The sound, the feeling of that,
the sound of that was just like, oh, no.
I have come home from vacation before
and heard my alarm clock going off
because I'd forgotten to put it on or to put it off.
And it's just, when you walk into your house
and you just hear a faint alarm
and you're like, what the fuck?
There's something about that.
I don't know.
Ugh.
Yeah, I don't know.
Something about something being like so still and quiet and then-
And then a very normal thing disrupting it.
A very routine, and it's the why hasn't somebody shut that off.
Yes.
That's the thing.
And why is that still going?
And that's the thing.
They know that there's brothers and sisters in this house.
There's four other siblings in this house.
So hearing somebody shot my mother and father,
and then rolling up and hearing an alarm blaring
from the second floor and no one's shutting it off.
Oh my God, that's horrible.
I'd be like, what are we about to walk into?
So once he had the car in park, Bobby Kelsky and John Altieri
didn't hesitate for a second before rushing straight into the house,
which like, whoa.
Good for them.
The other people who showed up were a little more cautious.
They didn't run right in.
Also good for them.
Yeah.
Ron on the other hand waited outside with them.
And it was interesting.
Yeah.
Very interesting.
I wouldn't be outside if I thought my entire family was dead inside.
Nope, definitely not.
It was Altieri who found the bodies in the main bedroom, the father and mother.
Then they found the two young boys across the hall.
And Altieri was later quoted as saying, the little one was in pajamas and had blood all
over him. I couldn't see where the bullet hole was.
Just think of like a little boy in his pajamas in bed covered in blood is so horrific.
Yeah. Well, Altieri and Kelsky searched the house, another bar patron, Joey Jeswitt, called
the police from the phone in the DeFeo's kitchen.
He told the Suffolk County police dispatcher, we have a shooting here.
There's a guy here.
He says, there's been a shooting and everyone's dead.
Which that's interesting to me, that phrasing, because some people are saying like he's coming
into the bar. He says, my mom and dad are shot.
He's still saying that when they get to the house, they're thinking it's just the mom
and dad.
And then they find like, then they find the other two boys, John and Mark.
But then this patron, Joey was at Yes, which calls the police from the kitchen and says
that Ron came into the bar saying that everybody was shot.
Everybody's dead.
So in the commotion, the story got fucked up somewhere.
It's a weird little thing and that happens a little bit.
But officer Kenneth Grigusky was in his police car,
just a few blocks away from the house when the call came in.
So he was the first one to hear it over the radio
and he went right to the DeFeo house.
When he pulled in, Ron DeFeo was crying and he told Grigorski that his father and mother
were dead again.
And before taking any statement from anyone, Grigorski had DeFeo and Bobby Kelsky take
him into the house because he was like, whoa, like we got to figure out what's going on
here.
And he had them wait in the kitchen and he often searched the entire house to make sure
that the killer was not still inside the house.
Now upstairs, Grigorsky located the main bedroom, which was a very lavishly decorated, you know,
bedroom.
It had like ornate furniture.
There was a lot of religious statues.
They were a devout Catholic family.
The photos of Louise and Ronald Senior's five children in there.
This was a very nice home.
They were like pretty well-off.
It's a nice area.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Grigorski though was not, he could only look at that for so long because he immediately
saw two bodies laying face down on the bed.
Louise on the left and Ronald Senior on the right.
Louise was covered with the gold bedspread,
but Grigorski could see a large hole in her nightgown
and the blood had soaked all over the mattress between them.
I mean, it was a brutal scene.
Ronald senior was uncovered by that,
like did not have the blanket over him
and was dressed only in boxer shorts.
And his right leg was kind of like hanging
a little bit off the bed. And there was a bullet hole in the small of his back and a trail of blood
was leading down onto his boxers.
And they were both face down.
Face down. Everyone was face down. Now, Officer Grigusky made his way from the parents room
to the room across the hall and he said he could immediately tell this was like a young
boy's bedroom from the way it was decorated. he could see toys and games on the floor.
And Grigusky immediately saw the two boys, seven-year-old John and 12-year-old Mark lying
face down in their beds, just like their parents.
And he said the blanket covering the boy on the left had been pulled down to his ankles.
And Grigusky could tell his pajamas were soaked through with blood, and he could see a very ragged
bullet hole in his lower back.
The boy on the right was also uncovered.
His white t-shirt was pulled up around his chest, and it revealed a bullet hole in his
lower back.
So it's interesting how this is all laid out.
Shot in the back too, everybody, like lower back.
Yeah. Now, after discovering those four bodies
Grigorsky returned to the first floor and called the station to report what he'd just seen and he requested additional
Assistance more officers he wanted the coroner there and as he talked the officer could see Ron DeFeo out of the corner of his eye
He said he said Ron was crying he was crying softly
But he said he could tell that he
was also listening to what I was saying.
Like it was one of those things like the, uh, and then like the look over to see what's
happening.
And when Grigorski hung up the phone, DeFeo said immediately that he had sisters that
were also in the house.
One on the bedroom on the second floor,
and his oldest sister Dawn was in the attic bedroom.
And immediately it's like, I don't know if this is just me,
but like you find your parents,
you have four other siblings, correct?
Four? Yeah.
You don't immediately search for your little siblings
when you find your parents dead?
Thank you.
Because if I found my parents dead, my first thought would be my little sisters and
brothers are in danger. I need to gather them all up and get them the fuck out of this house.
Yes.
And then call the police.
Exactly.
But instead you left the house, left four children in the house with somebody who shot your parents?
Yeah.
That doesn't make sense. And also, you've just heard this officer now say that your two brothers are dead.
One, you would be losing your mind.
And two, what my first thought wouldn't be,
well, I have two sisters, one's on the second floor and one's in the attic.
I'd be like, are my sisters okay? Where are they?
Like, what's going on?
Like, you'd be like, wait a second, like, are they all right?
Tell me you didn't say anything about them.
The way he says it is almost like you haven't found these other two things.
These other two people.
Yeah.
Exactly.
So Grigorski heard that, heard those two sisters, raced back upstairs to Allison's room on the
second floor.
And like the boys bedroom, there were two beds in the room, but one was made up. Obviously it had not been slept in. And then in the other bed, Grigorski could
see that, and he was joined by another patrol officer at this point. They found the body
of 13 year old Allison lying face down and there was a pink bedspread covering her up
to her shoulders.
That's interesting.
She'd been shot in the side of the face.
Oh my God. And a large pool of blood had collected on the floor next to her shoulders. That's interesting. She'd been shot in the side of the face. Oh my God.
And a large pool of blood had collected on the floor next to her bed.
Oh, that's awful.
Hers was a very rough one.
Brutal.
The two officers found the stairs that went to Dawn DeFeo's attic bedroom and they went
up slowly, you know, wondering if the killer could possibly be up there.
Right.
But instead upstairs, they found 18 year old Dawn, like the rest of her family, she was
facedown in bed, covered by the blanket and shot in the chest.
So that tells you something different.
She's facedown, but she was shot in the chest.
By the look of things, nothing had been disturbed in any of the rooms and there was no apparent
sign of struggle.
Okay.
If they had to guess, both officers said, they looked like someone had entered the DeFeo
home in the middle of the night and killed all six of these people in their sleep in
the matter of like seconds.
Yeah.
Otherwise, and to this day, even though we'll get into everything, Ron DeFeo did this for
sure, but there is a question of how the fuck did he do this?
Without anybody running out of the house or getting away.
Systematically no one woke up?
Like what, why are they all in bed?
Like they're all where they were shot.
Right.
So like, how did this happen?
That's why there is like theories and I'm not saying they're like credible.
I'm just saying like, that's why people do question, like was someone else involved here?
Like, was there another person?
Like what happened here?
I only know that Ron DeFeo did it.
And that like, I don't know all the major details.
Or I know all the major details.
I don't know all the little details.
Yeah.
Well, the two officers returned to the first floor
and Grigorski called the station again to report,
actually we have six bodies in the house.
And they said there's no sign of a shooter, can't find anyone, just the DeFeo's only living
family member, Ronald DeFeo Jr.
Sus.
Now, over the next few hours, you know, homicide detective showed up, local and county, various
crime scene technicians, you know, the coroner, tons of people are at the DeFeo house.
And in the back of the house, they discovered the family sheepdog, Shaggy, but he was okay.
Shaggy.
Shaggy, he's very cute.
He was tied to the handle of the back door.
Shaggy did not sleep outside.
That's not how Shaggy slept.
Shaggy slept in the house.
Tied to the handle of the back door.
He was deliberately tied outside for what had happened.
He was very stressed out.
Yeah, of course.
Like barking like crazy, going nuts, all the activity in the house.
Like he was losing his mind.
Sheepdogs in particular too, like something happening to their family, it's their job
to round everybody up.
So he's probably like, I can't protect anybody.
Yeah, like I need to go get everybody.
And it is, it's amazing what dogs do for their family.
Like it's wild.
Like we have like just a little side note.
No, it's true.
Like Blanche in particular, our dog Blanche is obsessed with John, like literally would
crawl into his skin.
I always say she wants to live inside of his rib cage.
She wants to live inside of him.
Like she loves him so much.
If you talk to John, she starts barking at you.
She doesn't want you to talk to him.
But if John like pretends to tickle me or the girls
and like does it like he'll pretend to do it.
Like she like hee he to do it like, like, like
he he he I'm coming. Blanche will sail through the air and like go after him. Like, like
all loyalty ends there and the loyalty to like you are hurting the rest of my family
or what I see that I think you are hurting. She goes nuts. Like she is, and then like the same,
but then the same goes back.
If you pretend to hurt John, she gonna get you.
Like she's loyal to this family.
She says, like ride or die.
She says, Ohana means fucking family, baby.
But she's like, even family, you don't fuck with family.
And Sid too.
Yeah, and Sid will lose it.
Like they are, so it's like, it's wild how dogs just, they tell you a lot.
Well, because you're their pack.
Yeah.
Like it's just innate.
It's so crazy.
Like I fucking love dogs.
Dogs are great.
Dogs are so goddamn cool.
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Have you ever felt a sense of unease when you leave your home wondering if everything's
going to be safe while you're away? I know that I have, but you guys know it wasn't
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But so, so yeah, this is weird.
This poor dog Shaggy is tied up outside to the handle of the back door.
So officers searched every inch of the house and the property looking for any evidence
and by all accounts, there was very little, if anything, to be found.
It was like nothing had, they had been shot and this person just disappeared.
And there was also no signs of a robbery or a home invasion.
Nothing was missing or even out of place.
So what would the motive be?
There was no sign of a struggle.
To investigators, the lack of evidence was very confusing and very strange.
And the DeFeos lived in one of the most expensive houses in Amityville and would have been prime
targets for robbery.
But whoever killed the six members of this family appeared to have done so.
Just because.
For something other than money.
There was no, or an apparent, you know?
And it's also weird to me.
I wonder if people in Amityville are annoyed by this.
I associate Amityville with the word, like with the Amityville horror.
So when you hear it in reference of just like the residents of Amityville, I'm like, oh,
that's like a real place.
I'm just like, oh shit.
I was just thinking that as you were saying it. I was like, oh, that's like a real place. I'm just like, oh shit. I was just thinking that as you were saying it, it is, I was like, oh, Amityville is a
town. Just a regular town. Like it's not like a spooky town. It's supposed to just be like
a regular town. And it's a beautiful town. It probably is so fucking irritating. It's
probably so annoying. And I'm sorry for the people of Amityville. It's a lot less family.
Yeah. And it's like, and like this, like, you know, so it's like, I always think Amityville
is so synonymous with like, ooh, spooky. It's like, I always think Amityville is so synonymous with like,
ooh, spooky.
And it's like, I feel bad.
I'm sorry, you're a real place.
Isn't it just like a coastal town?
Yeah, I think it's just like a nice town.
And this particular, we'll get into it,
but they had to do a lot to keep people
from coming back to this house a lot.
No, I'm sure.
Got a little annoying.
I'm sorry, does the house still exist today?
I think it does.
I thought so, yeah.
But it's been renovated.
It looks a little different.
It is a beautiful home.
It is, yeah.
There was, they had a sign out front that said,
high hopes, that was always pointed at,
like this really tragic story.
And like, there's this little sign
that says high hopes outside.
And just like-
The DeFeo family had that out.
It was always just a really chilling thing.
Is that in reference to something?
I think it's just like, you know, prosperity and all that, like, you know, good luck.
I've never seen anything like that.
Now while canvassing the neighborhood, officers took statements from several neighbors that
kind of helped narrow down the timeline of what happened here.
According to one neighbor who didn't want to be identified in the press,
she said she had gone to bed around 10 p.m. the night before and noticed that all the lights were on in the house.
That's always weird.
And she described this as very unusual and something I've never noticed before.
And at 10 p.m. like what?
Yeah, she said usually at that late hours of the evening, she said there were lights on,
but that house was only like partially lit up.
And another neighbor, 15 year old John Nemeth
told officers he'd been woken up by barking
of one of the DeFeo's dogs at around 3 AM.
Okay.
And he claimed that this was,
and he said it was very unusual at that time of night,
the dog did not bark in the middle of the night.
And he said that the barking actually went on for about 20 minutes.
Oh, that's so sad.
So that's upsetting.
That's really sad.
And given that he was the only living member of the DeFeo family and the only obvious person
who stood to gain from the deaths of his parents, investigators quickly turned to Ronald to
say, what was
going on? What were you doing? And in their interview with Bobby Kelsky, you know, Ronald's
friend Bobby Kelsky, they learned that Ronald was what Kelsky described as a gun buff. He
owned several guns.
I know I'm only saying because because of what happened In Ronald's bedroom, investigators found a 22 caliber
semi-automatic rifle, a 12 gauge shotgun,
a 22 caliber bank revolver, a ton of ammunition.
But according to Kelsky's statement to police,
Ronald's 35 caliber Marlin rifle looked to be missing.
Remember that rifle.
Okay.
Now a little past 8 p.m
That night County detectives gasper Randa Randazo, excuse me and Gerard
Gozaloff sat down they all have very interesting last names they do
Gerard Gozaloff sat down with Ronald for what would be the first of many interviews with Ron DeFeo
Ron told detectives I'll do whatever I have to do. I'll help you in any way I can.
Okay.
And what's funny is like, I prod you to go
like watch an interview with him.
Yeah.
Because you can see how he comes off
as like he's got this New York accent
and he's like, you know, like one of those guys,
you know, I'm just talking to you.
I'm just talking to you about stuff. You can see how he would come off as very like, Oh,
I'll just help you. I'm just here to help. I'll cooperate in any way I can. I'm just
good guy over here. You know, like it's just, I'm obsessed with what we're doing here.
He comes off that way. Yeah. And you can see how if he continued that act and somehow got
through it, he could probably get away with this.
That's so scary.
Now, when they asked who he thought could be responsible for the murders, they were
expecting him to say, I have no fucking clue who would kill my entire family.
I don't know.
I could not think of anybody that would murder my entire family.
Well, Ron could think of someone.
I just need to side note here.
He was 23 when this all happened and I need you all to go look at his mugshot because
you could tell me this man is like 45 and I'd be like, yeah.
Yeah, he is.
That's a rough 23.
He lived a rough life.
Oh, did he?
Yeah.
Okay.
So I totally had to interrupt him.
Sorry.
Well, Ron knew of somebody who he thought would kill his whole family.
Tell me everything.
He thought of a guy named Tony Mazio.
He said he was the best suspect for this.
According to Ron, a faction of the New York mafia had a grudge against his family because
of his family's involvement in mob related activity.
Oh, and he just immediately gave that up.
He was just like, ba da boo.
I'm like, uh.
He believed Mazio, a supposed mafia hit man, had likely killed his family in order to send a message.
Now, this sounds like what, like, you know,
we're like, excuse me,
what you're bringing the mob into here,
but they weren't totally out of the realm of possibility
when it was brought up.
It seemed unlikely, but it wasn't one of those like,
you know, anybody else who says that,
that you're like, the
mob did it like really?
Because according to the Suffolk Police Department's Organized Crime Control Bureau, Ronald DeFeo
Sr.'s uncle, Peter DeFeo, was a captain in the Vito Genovese crime family.
That's kind of a big fucking deal.
And had been known to police as a member of the Genovese organization as early as 1934.
Holy shit.
Now that's interesting.
I find that shit so fascinating.
Very interesting.
But at the time of the murders, Peter DeFeo was 74 years old.
Right.
And he hadn't been involved in criminal activity for nearly a decade at that point.
He had kind of retired.
He's like Uncle June.
Yeah.
He's just, you know, I'm just over here.
Yeah.
I'm just Peter DeFeo. Okay. just, you know, I'm just over here. Yeah. I'm just Peter DeFeo, okay?
I don't know.
I'm not into this.
So any connection between him and the murders was seeming pretty unlikely because like,
why?
I don't think a 74 year old man could kill six men.
I mean, call me crazy when things happen.
But also like why?
A 74 year old man killing six members of a family and like,
And even if you say like, okay, maybe it wasn't him.
Maybe he did something that caused them to go after the family.
That still doesn't jive really because this is an Italian family.
We're talking about the Italian mafia, Italian mob.
There is a code of conduct and one of those very specific things in that code of conduct
for the Italian mob is you do not kill children.
So this doesn't fit.
Like it's just not something that would happen
because like, you know, that is a thing.
That's a real thing.
So in his statement to police,
Ron explained that the day before the murders,
he stayed home from work because he wasn't feeling well.
After sleeping for most of the day,
he woke up early the next morning around 4 a.m.
And he said, when he woke up,
he saw his brother Mark's wheelchair
in front of the bathroom door.
I know, like, I'm like, this poor kid didn't have a chance
to even get out of bed.
That's so sad.
And the light was on in the bathroom.
So he assumed his brother was in the bathroom.
Instead of waiting, he said he used another bathroom
then decided to go into work early
because he was up and why not?
Okay.
After work, he went to Henry's bar and had a few drinks with his friends
like he normally did.
And while he was there, he called the house several times
but didn't get an answer.
Because you always call your house multiple times
when you're out drinking with your friends.
Of course you do.
After a while, he said he became concerned
and borrowed Kelsky's car to go by the house and check on everyone.
Which is when he discovered
his parents' bodies in their bedroom.
And didn't bother to check if anybody else was okay.
Exactly.
He did not bother to check on his fucking siblings.
He said he had to force the kitchen window lock.
And since all the doors were locked and he didn't have a key to the house.
Now back at Henry's, he gathered all his friends, he returned to the house, but he never went inside again. Now to the detectives, DeFeo's narrative was a little
confusing.
Because also, how did the person get out of the house that did this to your entire family
if all the doors are locked and there's no sign of forced entry?
Yeah.
Just wondering.
It's a problem. They thought it was a pretty meandering narrative that he was giving.
Both the detectives found it difficult to follow up points.
They were like, wait, what?
Like, kind of like us, we're like, what?
You did what?
Yeah.
And while Ron talked, Detective Gozaloff watched his body language.
And he said, he definitely had some interesting body language.
And he said, but he also noticed some marks on his arms.
And when he asked about the marks, DeFeo confessed that he was a regular
heroin user and had shot up at a friend's house earlier that afternoon. But Ron was
very clear that he didn't want the detectives to get the wrong idea about him. He wasn't
an addict, he said. He explained he was a chippy shooter and only used drugs casually.
I don't think you can use heroin casually.
That's just me.
But it was an interesting note.
They just were like, okay, that's an interesting, because when you add that into it, you got
to look at a different avenues here.
So eventually the conversation got back around to the family's supposed mob connections and
the man Ron believed was responsible for the murders, Tony Masio.
According to DeFeo, he had been doing some work for his grandfather's car dealership
a few weeks earlier and was on his way to the bank to deposit several thousand dollars
when he was held up by two government.
All of a sudden this is coming out, okay.
And when he told his father about the robbery, Ronald Senior didn't believe him and got angry
with him.
This is what he's telling everybody.
Apparently, according to him, his father said, not only do I have to worry about you as far
as this phony robbery, but I've also got to lose a good friend.
Because Ronald had explained that Tony Mazzio and his father had been friends, but the robbery
had caused a rift between the men because his father believed Mazzio was the guy responsible.
Even though he didn't believe it happened.
Thank you.
This ended their friendship
and made the DeFeo's a target for a hit man,
according to Ron DeFeo Jr.
Did he like think about this at all?
No, I don't think he did.
You didn't run this by anyone?
Apparently not.
I mean, I'm glad you didn't.
Now at the time, the detectives found Ron
to be very cooperative
and the confusing parts of his story could be chalked
up. They said to now that they know he's using heroin, they were like, you know, he could
be under the influence also because he's admitted that he shot up like this afternoon essentially.
And also he's under a lot of stress. He just lost his whole family. So if it's a little
confusing or a little strange, we'll give them a minute. We'll have to look at it with
a benefit of the doubt kind of situation.
The statement, you know, and that's the thing, the statement could have ended there.
He gave a statement, told a little bit of a wild tale, but it could have just ended there.
But Ron just could not help it. He just wanted to add more details.
He's a yapper.
And what we will learn is when someone's just wanting to add detail after detail,
they're probably fucking lying.
Yeah.
Because you just, that's just the way it is.
So he explained that while he did own three rifles, his father had actually taken them
away from him a few weeks earlier and he'd actually sold one of them.
But he couldn't recall the caliber of the gun or the manufacturer.
Wouldn't that be so convenient though?
He just happened to sell
the one gun. And also, first of all, why the fuck would you ever do that? Second of all, why did they find the guns that were taken away from you in your bedroom?
Yeah. That doesn't make any sense. It's a little weird. He also told them about a cash box that
his father kept hidden in their bedroom. Tony Masio, he said, had helped them carve the hiding place in the floor where the box
was kept.
That's kind of sick.
So if they checked and the box was missing or empty, your killer is Tony over here because
he knew where that cash box was, Tony Mazio.
Okay.
So does Tony Mazio exist?
Yeah, actually.
So they, and they were like, so you just kind of, you kind of just know what happened then.
Well, you seem like you're just telling us like this, you know what?
I bet you'll find an empty cash box and I bet it's him.
Yeah. And you just, you didn't go straight to Tony, Tony Masio's house when you assumed that he killed your whole family.
Definitely not. Now, eventually DeFeo's eagerness to cooperate crossed over from very useful if exhaustive,
but then it got unnecessarily detailed and started to border on suspicious.
Like, as he talks, it's like, we, something's weird here.
He rambled on about his recent criminal past and what landed him on parole.
And he said, oh yeah, he was on parole. He said, I don't want you to think
I'm hiding anything from you.
And that's why he said he was telling all the details.
Okay.
And the interview process went on until nearly 2.30 AM.
Damn.
And when the detectives asked
where DeFea wanted to sleep that night,
he said he couldn't stay with family
because he was worried the hitman might find him.
So they allowed him to sleep on a cot
in the homicide division.
Cause they were like, well, we'll protect you, I guess.
He spent the night there?
Yeah, he spent the night there.
Cause they were like,
they didn't know where else to bring him
because he was like, I can't go anywhere.
The hitman will find me.
Can you protect me?
And they were like, okay.
So they just set up a cot for him
in like one of the holding cells
and were like, you can stay here.
That's insane.
So for Ron, this was preferable because it would allow him,
you know, to stay up to date on the investigation as well.
Oh.
Cause he could hear everything.
Yep.
While detectives looked into DeFeo's claim
about familial mob ties,
the medical examiner had begun the autopsies
on the six unfortunate victims.
Ronald and Louise DeFeo were each shot twice.
Ronald in the lower back, which had pierced his kidney and shattered part of his spine.
Oh, God.
Louise was shot in the side and the chest, which broke ribs and punctured one of her lungs.
According to the medical examiner, Dr. Howard Adelman,
both could have remained alive anywhere from a matter of seconds to a few minutes.
Wow, and just bled internally.
And based on her body position,
when she was found in the trajectory of the bullets,
Adelman did theorize that Louise had been shot second
and had partially risen out of bed
when her husband was shot.
Oh God, that's horrific.
Yeah, it breaks my fucking heart.
Like that poor woman. Yeah, I can't imagine.
John and Mark DeFeo were each shot one time
in the back at close range.
Adelman theorized that the killer had stood
between the boys' beds and fired in quick succession,
shooting each and roughly the same part of the back.
The bullets destroyed several organs
before exiting out the abdomen
and becoming lodged in the box springs of the bed.
The bullets?
Yeah.
Oh my God.
Adelman was almost certain neither boy had woken up before being killed.
Oh.
Which I guess is a good thing because they didn't wake up to know what was happening.
They just were shot in their sleep and never became conscious to know.
He didn't think that they could have woken up like when the parents were killed.
They didn't hear the shots?
That's the thing.
That's what doesn't really make sense.
I don't know a lot about guns.
Is it possible he used a silencer?
I don't think so.
I don't think they had any evidence
that referenced a silencer.
Okay.
Cause I'm like, did anybody like in the neighborhood report
hearing gunshots?
Cause an assault rifle is loud.
That's the thing.
By everything I could find, the gun was not fitted for a silencer.
There was no silencer involved.
They never found a silencer.
Your gun, like specifically, you have to like get it fitted for one.
It did not.
This is what makes no fucking sense.
And this is the parts of this that make people go, what the fuck happened in that house? Because like
you said, like we were talking about neighbors heard the dogs barking, but they didn't hear
the gunshots. And why is everyone on their stomach? Everyone's not sleeping on their
stomach. Did he turn them around so as not to see their faces? A lot of them were shot
in the back and a lot of them were shot while in bed and the shot went through to the box
spring.
I mean, like it was like they,
it's like they were ordered to do that or something.
The only thing that you can think of though,
is like, like in the middle of the night,
like, or like remember like when you would fall asleep
in the car and like your parents would carry you
up to your bed, maybe he turned them over
and they just didn't wake up.
But like he had already shot the parents
on the same floor.
That's the part
that across the hall. Like John and Mark were in a room across the hall from their parents
who just got shot four times total. Yeah. With a rifle. And that's like I was just saying
rifles are fucking loud. So it doesn't make sense that John and Mark wouldn't hear it. It doesn't make sense that-
The neighbors didn't hear it?
Allison wouldn't hear it. She's on the same floor. She's on the second floor as well.
Even Dawn, you'd hear that from upstairs.
She would probably hear it too, but the ones on the same floor, how?
That is weird.
How? It doesn't make sense. And no one's really been able to figure it out.
It's one of these like enduring mysteries. But luckily neither boy, John and Mark seemed
to have woken up. They seem to have, which again, very strange that they were both on
their stomachs.
Yeah.
It's just not a-
Not everybody is a stomach sleeper.
Not everybody sleeps on their stomach.
I don't sleep on my stomach.
No, I can't.
So Allison, on the other hand, had likely seen her killer as she rose from her bed.
Like she, it seems like she heard something.
But like again, it's very strange because her wound indicated that she had turned around
just in time to see her killer fire. The bullet entered her cheek and it lacerated her brain
before exiting through her skull and lodging in the wall behind the bed.
Oh my God.
Allison saw her killer.
Yeah.
Like that's horrific.
And she must've died like very quickly though
if it went through her brain.
Through her brain, just like,
and again, she was found in the bed.
But like he doesn't say anything.
Nobody says anything about like carrying them back to bed
or anything like that.
So I'm like, what is this?
Do they know like around what time everybody was shot?
They don't have like, not exact times.
Yeah. It's not weird that they would be in bed because it was nighttime. It was bedtime.
Yeah.
Like they would be in bed.
You're such a mom. It was bedtime.
It was bedtime. Everyone was in their pajamas.
Yeah.
I wonder if he ordered them to face down, but he obviously never brings that up in his
stories, but it's even weird. But the medical examiner thought the boys were sleeping?
The boys, it seems, were sleeping. But I don't, I don't know. It's like, this is what's so weird.
It doesn't make sense. None of it makes sense. Every time you think you can figure it out,
you're like, why though? And even if he had ordered them to stay down,
I feel, I mean, Don is 18. He obviously got rid of the parents first,
but like, I feel like Don could have like potentially overtaken him somehow, you know?
And it doesn't sound like there's evidence that she tried to.
Yeah, I mean, he's got a rifle, which is terrifying. So there's other guns in the house. If he's
holding a rifle at you and saying turn around, I guess, like, you know, I'm not going to
argue with a rifle pointed at me. No, I can understand that for like, you know, I'm not going to argue with a right foot pointed at me.
No, I can understand that for like the first couple. But like, then the rest of them are
hearing the shots. Why aren't they running? Hearing the shots? Yeah. They're waiting until
he gets to their bedroom and then
Well, okay, so maybe so he gets rid of the parents immediately. Like that makes sense.
Like they couldn't do anything. The two boys were sleeping.
Sometimes kids don't fucking wake up.
Like, it's crazy to think that, like, with a assault rifle shot,
they wouldn't wake up.
Yeah.
But maybe he walked in their room
and ordered them to turn around, and he just boom, boom.
And then Allison wakes up because she's heard all of that.
And that's why she's up and he shoots her essentially
in the face.
And then who knows, maybe Don did try to get past him.
And he ordered her back up the stairs with the assault rifle.
But like, why didn't any of the neighbors hear gunshots?
That I can't explain.
But they heard a dog barking.
That I can't explain.
Like it just, I'm so confused by it.
Or I don't, I mean, I know this is like a nice area.
Maybe people heard things and just didn't want to say that they did.
But why?
Like, people were found dead by gunshots.
Like, it's not like you'd be like weird to be like, oh, I heard something that I didn't
know was a gunshot.
Maybe they just didn't want to be involved at all.
But they were.
They were offering information.
They were saying, I heard the dog barking.
They were saying like, let me tell you about this family.
They were saying, I saw lights on.
It is bizarre.
It just doesn't make sense.
It really doesn't.
It's so strange.
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But Dawn's wounds were the most horrific, I would say. The killer had stood about two
feet away from her, according to the medical examiner, as she slept, shooting her in the
back of the neck, just below her left
ear.
And according to the autopsy report, the left side of her face had collapsed and brain particles
mixed with the blood saturating on her pillow.
She had a very disfiguring injury.
And nobody else really did aside, I guess, from Allison.
Yeah.
And she was shot right in the back of the neck.
And it's again, face down.
And from what the medical examiner was thinking was sleeping.
Can you know if somebody's sleeping?
Probably just because of the trajectory and what they're looking at.
They're saying like there was no movement.
You know, like they didn't try to move away from the bullet, like which your instinct
is to move away from something that's going to hurt you.
So if you're not moving away from it, they assume you have to be in an unconscious state.
But then if you're in bed and you know he's coming,
there's not really any way out of that. So maybe she just cowered in bed.
But she didn't even do that. Her head was on her pillow.
And she was shot right in the back of the neck.
If she had cowered, it would have like potentially like skimmed another side or like moved. That's
what they did. Like seeing where the bullet goes in and how there's no like movement to
get away from it will tell you that that person wasn't conscious.
I don't know.
Cause her head was right on her pillow.
Yeah.
And if she's trying to like power away. Like she was sleeping on her side.
And no, she was, she was face down as well.
Because she was shot right in the back of the neck.
But I think what happened was it like went out her.
Just the exit.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Okay.
All right.
The way it had hit like collapsed to the side of her face.
Yeah.
Kind of thing.
I don't know.
I'm trying.
Yeah.
I mean, people have been trying for decades.
I think it's just like, it doesn't make sense.
That's why this is such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such
a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a,
it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a,
it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such a, it's such I don't know. I'm trying. Yeah.
People have been trying for decades.
I think it's just like, it doesn't make sense.
That's why this is such a like, strange case.
Not only is the crime horrific, and when you look at it, there's really no fucking real
motive for this.
There's also just these weird parts of like, what?
And like the family's a little mysterious when you really dig into it.
And it's like, then you have those like,
you know, there's not mob ties, but it's like, you know,
like somewhere in that family, there's like mob ties.
And it's like, this has nothing to do with the mob,
but it's like, it's just like a weird layer on top of it.
It's all very strange.
But all six members of the DeFeo family had died from, quote, massive hemorrhaging due
to bullet wounds.
Yeah.
Now, when the news of the murders hit the press the next morning, everyone in Amityville
were stunned.
They were stunned that such a brutal crime was happening in that small town.
It's a very idyllic town, like we said.
Everyone described the DeFeos as a nice, normal family who were always willing to lend a hand when someone else was in need.
One of the neighbors said, like,
Ronald DeFeo Sr. drove her to work every day when her car died.
One neighbor told a reporter of Ronald and Louise
they could not do enough for their children.
The whole world was oriented around their children.
Wow.
They were very involved in their community as well, according to most, like, all the good things.
While the neighbors had nothing but kind words to say about the victims, most people were
decidedly less enthusiastic about Ronald DeFeo Jr.
According to one neighbor, Ronald was part of a crowd that would drink and then get into
fights but the next day they'd apologize.
She recalled an instance in recent months where Ronald had gotten into an argument while
at a bar with some friends and he had broken a pool cue in half because he was angry.
Now, neighbors referred to him as creepy, always lurking around.
It was theorized that because it was a big Italian family, the firstborn son is usually
like the heir, you know, and just supposed to carry, look to as an important
part of the family line.
Yeah, of course.
But according to those that knew him, Ronald DeFeo Jr. was like not the ideal heir.
He was a mess, like just a mess.
He was always in trouble, always getting into things.
He would go out partying and then he would bring those parties back to the DeFeo house
late at night, always causing issues.
There was a lot of theories about, you know,
his relationship with his father, which seemed to not be a good relationship.
Well, his dad was probably disappointed.
Yes. And I think they also had like a very volatile relationship where it got physical
a lot between the two of them. Like they would get into like a fist fight, like essentially.
That should never happen.
No, it's awful. Now, for their part, a spokesperson for local law enforcement told reporters the murders
were a real neat job, indicating that there was very little evidence left at the scene
and very few leads to work with.
They were like, there's literally nothing, very clean.
There was no signs of struggle, robbery, leading investigators to believe the motive had just
been murder.
Like a murder.
They were either going after one of the people and the rest were collateral or it was all
of them.
It was just...
So, while DeFeo slept in the homicide unit that night, investigators got word from the
medical examiner that all of the DeFeo's had been killed with a 35 caliber Marlin rifle.
Imagine that.
Exactly the model and caliber Bobby Kelsky had mentioned
when police interviewed him at the scene
and the only gun that Ronald DeFeo could not account for.
Like you really, you only lost that one?
Only that one.
A little bit later, they got word from one of the technicians
that upon a second search of the house,
they discovered a box for a 35 caliber Marlin rifle,
like a box of a, like to hold the gun,
hidden in Ron DeFeo's closet.
I gotta go.
The gun they couldn't find.
At the very least, the box indicated
that DeFeo had owned the same model gun,
used in the murders.
Until that point, investigators had given Ron
the benefit of the doubt.
You know, losing your whole family in one night, you know, he might be under the influence,
there's a lot going on.
Yeah, many factors here.
But now they were starting to wonder if they just had their suspect in custody already.
Willingly.
Literally. Around nine the next morning, November 15th, Detective Gozaloff and
several other homicide detectives returned to the office and woke up Ron,
who immediately asked whether they'd found Tony Mazio yet.
Okay.
Gozaloff told him,
well, we got people out looking for Tony Mazio,
but he said, to tell you the truth,
I think you're the guy we want.
Damn, just like...
Like woke him up in some...
Hit him, hit him.
DeFeo was like, what are you talking?
Like incredulous. Oh my God.
Insisted Tony Mazio was the guy they wanted,
but the detectives read him his rights
and took him into custody for the murder
of his parents, brothers and sisters.
Yeah.
When he was asked whether he wanted to speak to his lawyer,
Ron said he waived his right to counsel,
and he said he was willing to cooperate.
Ron began the second interview by insisting
that his family had been killed by the
New York mob. But by then, Gozaloff and the other investigators had assembled and presented the
evidence that strongly indicated that Ron was involved. At one point, he claimed that he was
just smoking pot in the basement when it happened and he didn't hear anything. Well that doesn't make sense.
And then later he claimed he heard the gunshots.
He came up with so many different things.
But before that, Gosaloff said, let's go back to the day before and let's start over.
And then he said, let's start with supper.
Now being confronted by all the evidence and the fact that they were like, we pretty much
know you were involved,
seemed to flip a little switch and run.
But before then he was crying, he was upset.
He was, I will do nothing but cooperate here,
whatever I can do.
But now it's like he took off a mask
and his true feelings came out.
So Gozalov said, let's start with supper.
And he said, my mother was a lousy cook.
And they were like, oh.
And she said, she cooked up some brown stuff in a bowl.
It looked like shit and it smelled like shit.
Nice.
And they were like, fun.
Nice to speak of your recently deceased
and murdered mother that way.
Yeah, and these unkind comments about his mother
seemed wildly inappropriate to the investigators.
So, and they were like, wow, okay.
But Rome was just getting started.
He wasn't done.
Oh no.
When they asked him about John and Mark,
his little brothers, he said,
my brothers is a couple of fucking pigs.
And he said, I often use the bathroom
that they used on the second floor
and I go in there and sometimes there's toilet paper
hanging out of the bowl.
I mean, yeah, they were like seven and 12, that checks.
Yeah, kids are gross a lot.
And it's like, try following up a bathroom after a kid.
Yeah, exactly.
And also they're your little brothers
who were shot in their beds.
And you're just talking about them calling them pigs.
And you're just calling them fucking pigs.
And like what?
They just were murdered.
And his feelings about his sisters were not any better.
About Don, and this is like terrible, just so everybody knows.
He said that fat fuck Don.
Oh my God.
And then he talked about the kind of music that she listened to over and over and he
used a racial slur over and over.
The one you're thinking.
Over and over, he said she listened to that music all day and all night.
And I can't even tell her to turn it down
because if I tell her to turn it down,
I get my fucking ass kicked.
Okay.
So now he's referring again to the allegations
that Ronald DeFeo senior was abusive to his family.
Okay.
Now, he claimed that now after this,
he claimed that Dawn shot all the family members, including
the kids, and then he shot her in a rage about it.
Okay.
And then he also claimed he shot Don in self-defense because she was going to shoot him with a
rifle.
Okay.
Yeah.
After ranting about his mother and the rest of the family and claiming that Don did it,
no, she didn't actually, she did, maybe not, I don't know, I shot her, but then whatever,
Ron launched into a big long rant about his father, who he referred to as a cheat bastard.
And he talked about his grandfather kind of equally the same way as unkind.
And the other members of the family.
When he was finally done giving his brutally honest roast opinion of his family, DeFeo
still hadn't confessed to the murders at this point.
But it was pretty clear.
But to Gosaloff and the others, it seemed like he was pretty ready to do that.
Without saying a word, the detectives got up from the table and left the room and were
replaced by Dennis Rafferty, who was a homicide detective with the Amityville police. Rafferty
spent the next six and a half hours with Ron. And during this, he completely confessed to
the murders of the family. It was clear that Ron hated his family. Like it was very clear.
He was acting all broken up before, but suddenly when that evidence was presented, it was like
mask off. They all suck ass. Let me tell you about all of them. He especially hated his father.
Yeah.
He fought with his father constantly,
but it seemed like his motive was not that,
and completely at least, his motive was money.
Okay.
According to DeFeo,
his parents had a life insurance policy worth $200,000.
Okay.
In 2024 money, that's over a million dollars,
over $1.2 million, actually. And
as the only surviving member of the family, Ron would have been the beneficiary of that
policy. On the night of the murders, Ronald woke up on the couch a little before 3 a.m.
He went up to his bedroom, loaded his rifle and went room by room shooting and killing
his whole family. He a.m. Yep.
He told Rafferty, I just started and it went so fast I couldn't stop.
He just woke up and just in that moment decided to kill them?
Uh-huh.
Okay.
When he killed everyone in the house, Ron collected the shell casings and his bloody
clothing into a pillowcase.
He took a shower, he trimmed his beard and then he left the house.
He threw the rifle into a pond down the, and then he left the house. He threw the rifle
into a pond down the street, and eventually he ditched the pillowcase and other evidence
in a storm drain in Brooklyn on his way to work. Then he just went to work.
What the fuck?
When he was finished giving his confession, Rafferty asked whether DeFeo would sign a
sworn statement that what he told them was true. But he refused and he told the detectives
he would not because he feared his grandfather,
Michael Brigante would see it.
Okay.
And it's like, he's gonna hear about it.
Uh-huh.
Now using the two diagrams Ron had drawn for them,
detectives were able to locate the gun
and the pillowcase full of shells and other evidence,
which were brought back to the precinct and DeFeo identified them as his belongings.
Meanwhile, the clothing Ronald was wearing
was taken as evidence, and he was charged and booked
with six counts of second degree murder.
And he was taken into custody and held in detention
until a grand jury was gonna be convened
in the coming days.
Now, Dave found an interesting tidbit here.
That first degree murder at the time was reserved for those who killed a police officer or a
prison guard.
Oh, so it had nothing to do with Melissa Porthol?
Yeah, it was just like that was at the moment that was what that in 74.
We have come across this before.
I'm fairly certain of it, but I always find it interesting.
Yeah, that is interesting.
Now, the news of Ronald's arrest shocked Amityville almost as much as the murders had shocked
Amityville.
DeFeo's friend, Glenn Hoffman, told a reporter, I can't believe it.
I can't believe it even if they say it's true.
He could have been set up for it.
You don't know what's involved.
Okay.
For many, Ron's original claim of mafia involvement seemed more plausible than a son and a brother
murdering his entire family for no fucking reason.
I mean, yeah, that is hard to swallow.
Even his probation officer, William Benjamin, was stunned and said nothing indicated he
could have resorted to violence of this kind.
That's kind of crazy.
Now, DeFeo was arranged in the first district court on November 15th, where his defense
attorney Leonard Simmons requested a psychiatric examination. DeFeo was arranged in the 1st District Court on November 15th, where his defense attorney,
Leonard Simmons, requested a psychiatric examination.
He told the judge, I have doubts about the defendant's ability to help in his own defense.
Simmons also claimed that DeFeo had bruises on his body, which implied that he'd been
abused by investigators while in custody.
Judge Donald Oparin refused the defense's request for a psychiatric examination and
refused bail. Wow. Nearly a year went by between the arrest and the trial. Damn. Yeah. Most
of it was like pre-trial hearings, the defense teams repeated and unsuccessful attempts to
get Ron's confession thrown out. Yeah. They wanted to get it thrown out on the grounds
that it was obtained through coercion.
During this whole period, the prosecution called on a lot of the detectives who were
involved in the interview process. And Dennis Rafferty said, it was a tricky situation.
We started out dealing with a guy who was the sole survivor of a family massacre. But
the more we questioned him, the more holes there were in his account. And he kept changing
things until finally he started crying, put his head on my shoulder and told me it just started. It went so fast. I just couldn't stop. Like,
what are you going to do? And Rafferty explains, they began to suspect if Fey was lying when
he went from telling them he'd heard nothing that night to then changing his story several
times to say he heard multiple gunshots and that he had even seen his brother
John's toes twitching at one point when he discovered them.
Cause then he went back and said, well, I did discover the bodies of my siblings and
I saw John was alive.
What?
Yeah.
You know, Rafferty said that indicated to me that he was there right after the shooting
took place.
Right.
And when Rafferty pointed that out, DeFeo changed his story again and said a hit man
came to do it, the mob story again, and that the hit man actually made him watch everything
at gunpoint.
And that's why he saw his brother John's toes twitching.
And you would totally be super down to then tell the cops everything.
Yeah.
And they said, so Rafferty had said to him, they wouldn't walk out without making you
a piece of it.
They must have made you, they must have made you do one of the shootings.
Like that's how hit men work.
Like that's how the mob works.
You're not leaving here unless you have blood on your hands.
So you'll shut your mouth.
You won't go and talk to the police.
It was at that point that DeFeo broke down and confessed to the murders.
Okay.
Now DeFeo on the other hand, claimed that while he was in custody, the detectives beat
him until he finally told them everything that they wanted to hear about how, quote,
I supposedly killed every member of my family.
Okay.
According to DeFeo's testimony, investigators started abusing him at the house next to the
DeFeo home, which they had set up as a command post at first, and continued abusing him
until he threw him being placed under arrest.
Okay.
So according to him, they think this man just lost his entire family and they started beating
the shit out of him.
Yeah, that makes sense. What happens when a hacker uncovers hundreds of murder plots targeting people all over
the world?
Each of them posted on a hitman for hire site on the dark web, with their photos, habits
and intimate details all used against them.
What happens when they learn that the threat is coming from the person
closest to them? Or what is the psychological profile of a father who would murder his own son
and wife all to hide a drug addiction and years of embezzlement? How do we understand the actions of
the most complex and twisted minds? From cases of serial killers, relationships turned dark,
to manipulative scammers preying
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Now he claimed they refused to let him eat or sleep during interrogation and they denied
him his request for an attorney even though he had waived his right.
And they gave him a cop to sleep on.
DeFeo told Judge Stark, I fell down, they stomped on my stomach, then my back and my
legs.
They put a telephone book on my head and hit me with blackjacks and then finally put a
shopping bag over my head and slammed my head into either the wall or the filing cabinet.
Totally.
Considering that the prosecution's case rested almost entirely on the confession, the claim
that it was obtained illegally was taken very seriously.
I'm sure.
And you have to take that seriously.
Yeah.
And the prosecution had to prove that it was.
The problem for DeFeo though, was that his claims were extraordinary.
And so they very much needed to be backed up by evidence of this supposed beating.
But the only injury anyone saw at the time of his arraignment was a small, mostly healed
cut above his eye.
And in the rebuttal, the prosecutor, Gerard Sullivan, called on one of DeFeo's school
friends who told the judge that he had been at the house about a week before the murder
and had seen Ronald and his father get into a fist fight.
And he said during that fist fight, he got that minor injury above his eye, which is
sad. Which is sad.
Now, Judge Stark later wrote, I found that DeFeo's testimony was largely untruthful.
His testimony was that he was given no food or drink, not permitted to sleep for over
24 hours.
It was seemed totally unreasonable and unbelievable.
His failure to complain to the district court judge on November 15th about the alleged extreme
police brutality the previous day, nor to mention it in any documents supporting his
pre-trial motions, was a factor leading me to believe it never occurred.
Yeah, because also if he walked in there after, first of all, I don't think the cops would
beat the shit out of him a day before he has to stand before a judge.
Yeah, it's not a good look.
And a judge would notice that and do something about it.
And he would complain about it.
Yeah.
He would say, you beat the shit out of me.
This is why I'm here.
Right.
So this was the biggest factor in Stark's decision.
And after considering the evidence and testimony,
he ruled that the confession was given voluntarily.
It was going to be admissible in the trial.
So with the pretrial hearings out of the way, Ron DeFeo's murder trial began on October 6th,
1975 in the Supreme Court of New York. In the opening statements, Gerard Sullivan laid out
the state's theory that DeFeo had murdered his family because of his quote, deteriorating
relationship with his parents and because of another separate and distinctive reason,
a thirst for money.
Sullivan told the jury the prosecution would prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Ron hadn't committed the murders impulsively, but had in fact acted on a methodical plan that began with
tying the dog outside. Because that's a big part of this. You tied the fucking dog up.
Exactly.
You didn't just walk up there and start shooting. You tied
the dog up. That shows a plan in action. And it ended with him calmly and methodically picking
up exhausted bullets and casings, taking off his bloodstained clothing, trimming his beard,
and getting rid of all of that in a Brooklyn storm drain.
Also the thought of him just trimming his beard in the house where all of his family
lay dead because of him is fucking horrifying.
Chilling.
Chilling to the bone.
Chilling. Meanwhile, the dog is tied up outside barking his ass off
because you tied him up because you planned it.
That's so scary.
In his opening remarks, the defense attorney, William Weber, who is a real piece of work,
told the jury they would prove that DeFeo's confession was beaten out of him and that
he was not mentally competent when the slayings took place, which is like, what?
Where did that come from?
Okay.
Weber assured the jury that DeFeo would take the stand and quote, tell you the truth about
what happened at that house that night.
I doubt it.
And they would also call multiple psychiatrists who would testify that Ronald DeFeo Jr. was
not of sound mind and thus couldn't be held responsible for whatever had happened that
night.
Okay.
The prosecution had a relatively straightforward tale to tell.
It was the one that most people were already familiar with because it had a lot of press
coverage.
The medical examiner testified to the extent of the victim's wounds, including
the fact that at least two of the victims, Louise and Don, had been conscious and aware
before they were shot.
I think also Allison, they believed, was possibly conscious.
In the days that followed, several investigators detailed their experiences at the crime scene
and their interactions with DeFeo before and after his arrest.
Detective Gozaloff, for example, told the jury about his various interviews with DeFeo
and Ron's disclosure that he was an active heroin user who had injected drugs as recently
as the day of the murders.
Now, the most important testimony came from those investigators who had taken multiple
statements from Ron DeFeo.
In his testimony, Dennis Rafferty
told the jury that Ron had given multiple accounts ranging from him simply discovering
some of the bodies to his hearing the shots and then eventually his confession that he
acted alone in killing all six members of his family. By then, the detective explained
that they already strongly suspected that he was the murderer
based on the inconsistency in his stories and the various pieces of evidence that they
got from the scene, which included the ammunition, tons of it, and the box for the Marlin rifle
that was used in the murders.
And hidden.
Yeah.
So Rafferty's testimony was backed up by the other detectives present during this time,
including Lieutenant Robert Dunn, who told the jury, I got up and left the room in awe of the horror of what I had
just heard.
Dunn, who was a member of the organized crime unit, explained that he was called in by the
local authorities because of that whole claim about the Tony Mazio thing, the members of
the mafia involved.
However, they investigated that claim and he said there's absolutely no ties to that
whatsoever.
Finally, Dunn also refuted the claim that DeFeo was mistreated and abused while in police
custody and he said as far as he knew and saw, he gave his confession completely voluntarily.
Now the state's case against DeFeo was strong and supported by evidence, but Sullivan nonetheless
anticipated an insanity defense and was prepared with
witnesses to combat that claim.
In her testimony for the prosecution, DeFeo's aunt, Phyllis Presedo, told the jury Ronald's
history of mental illness was a hoax perpetrated in order to keep Ron from being sent to Vietnam. According to Yeah. According to her... The plot fucking thickens.
It does.
According to the aunt, about a year before the murder, she was quote, introduced to a
man who claimed to have been paid $5,000 to keep Ron out of the US Army.
Oh, fuck.
This was among several examples where Ronald Sr. seemingly paid or otherwise compensated individuals
to keep his son out of trouble or to get him out of trouble that he had already been in.
On November 6th, Ron DeFeo Jr. took the stand to testify on his own behalf.
That must have been something.
And he wanted to provide support for that insanity defense.
According to his testimony, DeFeo told Weber and the jury that he felt quote duty bound to kill anyone he considered a threat. And he saw nothing wrong with killing
his entire family, which he claimed was done in self defense. Even the seven year old.
Yeah, that makes sense. He said quote, when I have a gun in my hand, I'm God. According
to DeFeo, he woke up on the couch the night of the murders and saw his sister Dawn standing
before him in the living room
with the rifle in her hands.
And she told him that she was gonna kill everyone.
Okay.
So he said, I took the rifle away from her
and she just disappeared.
And I walked a few feet into my parents' bedroom
and I just started to shoot.
That doesn't make any sense.
What?
When he was cross-examined by Sullivan,
DeFeo reiterated that he had killed all six members
of his family, but then later in his testimony to the prosecution, he claimed he believed
his sister, Dawn, had killed his brothers.
According to DeFeo, Dawn was constantly at odds with their parents and their arguments
did frequently escalate to violent confrontations between her and their father. This is according to Ram DeFeo. He said on the stand, he said, I should have
let them kill each other. I believe this was not a happy household all the time, but that's
all, you know, this is all just coming from his mouth as well.
Yeah. So you have to take it with a bit of a grain of salt.
In defense of his insanity plea, Ronald told the jury he frequently heard voices
in the house, coming from the house, which is where we get the next.
The haunting.
And had command hallucinations that instructed him to act out violently.
He said, for months before the incident, I heard voices.
And whenever I looked around, there was no one there.
So it must have been God talking to me.
Probably not.
When Weber asked if he thought anyone in the courtroom had been trying to kill him, he
replied, yeah, Phyllis Presedo, my aunt who was sitting out there.
That's new.
It's new information.
Yeah.
So upon redirection, Sullivan said, is there anyone else you think is trying to kill you?
And he said, you.
So he's really trying for that insanity defense.
It seems that Phyllis Presedo wasn't the only witness the prosecution had planned to undermine
DeFeo's claims of insanity. They also called out a former cellmate of his, a cellmate that
he had apparently boasted about his plan defense to. According to John Kramer, who shared a cell next to DeFeo in the sick bay, Ron had told
him about his plan to plead insanity and boasted that he was, quote, bigger than Charles Manson.
Oh, please.
Kramer told the jury he was in the cell next to me in the sick bay area of the jail, and
he kept telling me all these things, even after I told him I didn't want to hear anything
or get involved. Sullivan also subpoenaed several of the guards at the jail. And he kept telling me all these things, even after I told him I didn't want to hear anything or get involved. Sullivan also subpoenaed several of the guards at the
jail who testified that DeFeo had asked them how the mentally ill inmates acted when they
were locked up.
I always wonder why inmates will do that. Because I'm like, do you not think that these
people have like that they're not going to rat on you? Do you think that's a literal
job? Like, do you think they have to rat on you? Do you think they have? Like that's a literal job.
Like do you think they have any loyalty to you?
Do you just think?
Do you think at all?
Do you think?
So one of the guards, James DeVito, basically when DeFeo had asked him like how do they act,
he said he told him inmates burned things, pretended to forget the names of prisoners
and guards whom they knew, sat on a shelf in the cell and feigned suicide attempts.
Okay.
And according to DeVito,
right after I told him those things,
he began doing them all and yelling at me
to enter them in the log book, but I considered them silly
and refused to make any entries except for the incident
when he tried to set the cell on fire.
Oh my God.
Now towards the end of the trial,
Sullivan called Dr. Harold Zolan to testify as to his
experience evaluating Ron following his arrest.
Zolan testified that he diagnosed DeFeo with an anti-social personality.
I could see that.
But he added that the diagnosis did not affect his ability to tell right from wrong.
Right.
And insisted he, quote, was aware of what he was doing when he killed his parents and
four brothers and sisters.
Yep.
Zolan further said, if he was in any paranoid psychosis, there would be no compulsion for
him to hide the signs of his wrongdoings, such as trying to destroy the evidence or
lie to the police.
Right.
On November 19th, the trial came to a close after each side gave their closing remarks.
And in his statement, Gerard Sullivan went over all the evidence, all the testimony for
the jury and reminded them that DeFeo had confessed to the crime, but only recently
had started claiming that he was mentally ill when he killed his family.
Rather than insanity, Sullivan restated the state's belief that DeFeo callously, calmly
and coldly planned
the execution of his family, carried them out, and then went about carefully taking
the murder rifle and the used cartridges and his bloodstained clothing and hiding them
in an obscure Brooklyn storm drain to cover up his role in the murders.
He reminded the jury that no one was denying that DeFeo was sick, only that he wasn't
so impaired that he didn't know what he was doing was wrong.
Now William Weber, on the other hand, said while his client had committed the murders,
he had only done so because he was insane at the time and was heavily influenced by
psychedelic, psychotic delusions, excuse me.
Also he continued to assert that DeFeo had only confessed after being beaten and abused
by investigators.
Now at the time, Ron DeFeo's trial was the longest criminal trial held in Suffolk County.
Oh wow.
Outlasting nearly a month and a half. After almost three days of deliberation, the jury emerged
a little before noon on November 21st and announced that they had reached a unanimous decision,
finding Ron DeFeo guilty on all six counts of second-degree murder. Suffolk County District Attorney Henry O'Brien said in a statement to the press,
I'm extremely pleased the members of this jury realize the viciousness of
the defendant and have removed a menace to our community. When asked for comment
on the verdict, Defense Attorney William Weber shook his head and said, I'm glad I wasn't a member of that jury.
What does that even mean?
Okay. You are the defense attorney though. That's an even worse position.
I'm like, I don't really get it.
Because you lost. So for the jurors, it really all came down to his attempts to hide the
evidence and conceal his guilt after committing the murders.
That's what it would be for me.
Yeah, like the spent shells, his clothing.
The fact that he showered and trimmed his beard.
He was of sound mind. He knew what he was doing.
One of the jurors said that was a major sign of guilt. He knew what he was doing.
On November 4th, Ron was back before Judge Thomas Stark for sentencing.
And at the time, Sullivan urged the court to not show any mercy in handing down DeFeo's sentence,
describing the crime as an event so appalling
and cataclysmic that it is without equal.
It's true, it's an annihilation.
Like the jurors, Judge Stark couldn't ignore the extent
that DeFeo went to to conceal his criminal acts
and deflect the guilt onto innocent people as well. He's trying
to get someone else to go down for this. He said, I stated my intention to impose life sentences
with the longest minimum period possible. I then imposed six sentences of life imprisonment,
each with a minimum of 25 years to run consecutively with respect to each other. So he handed down six
life sentences to him. So I think that's what he deserved.
So I found this article by Marvin Scott from Long Island.
We'll include it somewhere, but he had followed the story closely and he'd spoken via letters
to DeFeo a lot.
And one of the letters with DeFeo, DeFeo said, he admitted there was absolutely no voices
in the house, even though he had claimed on the stand that there was.
He said there was no insanity.
And he wrote, there was no demon.
You know who the demon is.
I'm the demon.
Oh, that's even scarier.
And he also claimed later that there was never a question of sanity and everyone knew it.
He said his defense attorney, William Weber, capitalized on that and he wanted to get book
deals and a movie going about the case.
So he wanted that insanity defense.
And he actually tried to get a new trial later based on his claims of this with the previous
defense, but he didn't get one.
Now in the years that followed, Ronald DeFeo and his defense attorney, William Weber, did
file multiple appeals and petitions for parole at various points, maintaining his innocence and claims of mental illness, even
though later they would abandon that. But each of the attempts was denied by the appeal
courts and the parole board. And ultimately DeFeo would spend the rest of his life in
New York's prison system until his death on March 12th, 2021.
I was going to say. But no one knows how he died. life in New York's prison system until his death on March 12th, 2021.
I was going to say, but no one knows how he died.
How old was he?
He was 69.
And there's they don't know how he died at all.
They know how he died.
We don't know how he died.
It's undisclosed.
Do you think you can't find it anywhere?
Do you think it's just to add to the, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know why anybody would want to do that, but I don't know.
That's bizarre.
Yeah.
I don't know if someone took them out or what.
And under normal circumstances, this, you know, Ron DeFeo's post-conviction life would probably
have just like faded into obscurity, like resurfacing
every now and then, you know, as one does.
Sure.
But a few years after his conviction, DeFeo's crimes and his defense would become the basis
for one of America's most sensational and controversial paranormal stories.
You know what I'm talking about?
The Amityville Horror.
We're talking about Cathy and...
George? George what? So they
it ensured that his legacy went much further than his death. But next we will be talking
about the wild tale that is the Amityville horror and all that surrounds it.
The bleeding, oozing walls.
Yep.
The bleeding walls.
The pigs.
Yep.
We'll be talking about it all.
The sloths.
We'll be talking about the Ed and Lorraine Warren of it all.
The preachers.
We'll talk about all the things associated with it because there's so many things.
It's going to get wily as fuck next time.
Yes.
See you then.
See you then.
So we hope you keep listening.
And we hope you keep it weird. next time. See you then. So Thank you. If you like Morbid, you can listen early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus
in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts.
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