This article may lend undue weight to certain ideas, incidents, or controversies. (August 2023) |
The Fall River murders were a series of three homicides that took place in Fall River, Massachusetts, from October 1979 to February 1980 allegedly by a satanic cult.[1] It was the onset of a period in American history known as the Satanic panic.[2]
The first murder, that of 17-year-old Doreen Levesque, was committed on the night of October 13, 1979. Her body was found under the bleachers of Diman Regional Vocational Technical High School in Fall River the following morning.[3] No person was ever convicted of the Levesque murder.
The murder of the next victim, 19-year-old Barbara Raposa, was committed on November 7, 1979, but her body was not discovered until January 26, 1980. Andy Maltais was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for the Raposa murder.[4]
The third murder, that of 20-year-old Karen Marsden, is thought to have been committed on February 8, 1980. Portions of her skull were discovered on April 13, 1980. Her body has never been recovered.[5][unreliable source?] Multiple individuals were charged in the Marsden murder, but only Carl Drew and Robin Murphy were convicted. Carl Drew was convicted at trial and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Robin Murphy pleaded guilty to second degree murder as part of an agreement to testify on behalf of the prosecution, saying Drew orchestrated the killing. Murphy was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole, eventually being released in 2004.[6] She later recanted her confession, claiming she did not take part in the killing and only agreed to testify to ensure the other alleged participants would be jailed. She was returned to prison in 2011 for violating her parole.[7]
The Fall River murders are the subject of the 2021 documentary Fall River produced by Blumhouse and directed by James Buddy Day.[8]