David Berkowitz “Son of Sam” Signed Letter and Pamphlet
This original multi-page correspondence from David Berkowitz, infamously known as the “Son of Sam,” offers a compelling and historically significant example of his early prison era communications.
This typed letter is two pages long, typed, and hand signed “David B” at the end of page two.
Accompanying the letter is the original mailing envelope, postmarked from Attica, New York, where Berkowitz was incarcerated at the time. It also includes an early version of the “Son of Hope” pamphlet and three printed sheets containing articles about Berkowitz, all which he sent along with this letter.
COA included
David Berkowitz, infamously known as the “Son of Sam,” is an American serial killer who terrorized New York City during the mid-1970s. Between 1976 and 1977, Berkowitz carried out a series of seemingly random shootings that left six people dead and seven others wounded, spreading widespread fear across the city.
He taunted law enforcement and the media with cryptic letters, adopting the “Son of Sam” persona and claiming demonic influences drove his actions. His crimes sparked one of the largest manhunts in New York history before he was ultimately arrested in August 1977.
Berkowitz later pleaded guilty to his crimes and was sentenced to multiple consecutive life terms in prison. His case remains one of the most notorious in American criminal history, symbolizing a period of intense public panic and media frenzy.