Cape Breton Post

Portrait of a city

‘Son of Sam’ film brings to life New York 40 years ago

- BY DAVID BAUDER

Geraldo Rivera dates the low point in modern New York City history to Aug. 9, 1977.

That was the day before police arrested David Berkowitz, the serial killer who called himself “Son of Sam.’’ He terrorized the city for a year with latenight shootings, killing six and wounding seven, and primarily targeted young women sitting in cars.

The time is vividly brought to life in the Smithsonia­n Channel documentar­y, “The Lost Tapes: Son of Sam,’’ premiering Sunday at 9 p.m. EDT. The Investigat­ion Discovery network is airing its own retrospect­ive on the crime spree that airs Aug. 5.

Producer Tom Jennings has made similarly styled documentar­ies on Pearl Harbor, the assassinat­ions of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King and the 1994 Los Angeles police riots. The idea is to trace the story through news reports shown at the time, trading in retrospect­ive for a “you are there’’ feel.

Since police were largely flummoxed until the end, news producers sent crews out on the streets to interview New Yorkers about how they were coping. As such, “The Lost Tapes’’ offers a rich portrait of what the city was like that summer 40 years ago. It isn’t pretty. The city was grubby, crime-ridden and scared, in the midst of a hot and sticky stretch that included a blackout-induced night of lawlessnes­s.

“1977 was an awful, awful year

in New York City,’’ said Rivera, who appears as a studly ABC News reporter in the documentar­y, painted into a pair of jeans. “It was a year of the blackout, it was a year the city seemed totally dysfunctio­nal, coming apart at the seams.’’

Fanned by news reports, and Berkowitz’s own oddball letters sent to newspaper columnist Jimmy Breslin, the “Sam’’ saga whipped up fear among young people at a usually carefree stage in their lives. Many turned down dates or parties to stay home. Since the killer appeared to favour women with long, dark hair, women across the city cut or died their hair.

Berkowitz, he said, was the

Joker in Gotham City.

The New York City Police Department formed a 200-person task force to solve the crime. It was deeply personal for police, said Bill Clark, a former city homicide detective who was on the task force. Detective work was difficult because the crimes seemed random, with few building blocks of commonalit­y. Many undercover officers worked all night on the streets, hoping to catch the shooter in the act.

“The city became a victim and the police became a victim,’’ Clark said. “We’d go home and our wives and neighbours would say, ‘you’re detectives, why didn’t you catch the

guy?’ How do you tie people together to a crime when there’s no tie?’’

Eventually, mundane police work cracked the case. When a witness reported a strange man on the street near the final shooting, police checked traffic tickets that had been issued in the area and traced them to Berkowitz’s car and Yonkers, N.Y., home.

Berkowitz remains in an upstate New York prison, reportedly a born-again Christian.

Producer Jennings said the story crafted through the news reports takes viewers back into time better than any of the other documentar­ies he’s done.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this August 1977 file photo, serial killer David Berkowitz, known as Son of Sam, arrives at Brooklyn Courthouse in New York. A new documentar­y on the Smithsonia­n Channel paints a portrait of the fearful, dysfunctio­nal New York City before Berkowitz...
AP PHOTO In this August 1977 file photo, serial killer David Berkowitz, known as Son of Sam, arrives at Brooklyn Courthouse in New York. A new documentar­y on the Smithsonia­n Channel paints a portrait of the fearful, dysfunctio­nal New York City before Berkowitz...

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