West
Serial killer Richard Ramirez’s bride a ‘superfan’ who put herself ‘top of the line’ for his love: pal
Cynthia Horner, along with the rest of the world, was stunned to hear that Doreen Lioy had developed a relationship with the “Night Stalker.”
The magazine editor for Tiger Beat married Richard Ramirez in 1996 in a visiting room at San Quentin Prison.
The serial killer, who died in 2013 at age 53 while awaiting execution, is the subject of a new true-crime docuseries on Peacock, “Richard Ramirez: The Night Stalker Tapes.”
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A wedding photograph is displayed to the media of the “Night Stalker” Richard Ramirez and his new bride Doreen Lioy, outside the gates of San Quentin Prison, on Oct. 3, 1996, in San Quentin, California. The photograph was taken of the couple during the wedding ceremony inside the prison earlier in the day. (AP Photo/Lacy Atkins)
The special, available for streaming, is based on 25 hours of audio prison recordings of Ramirez from death row, as well as new sit-downs with relatives and loved ones of the victims.
“People always ask me about Richard Ramirez because they’re still fascinated, even 40 years later,” Horner explained to Fox News Digital. “They’re fascinated and horrified at the same time.”
“I think we can all learn some lessons from this story. Just because someone is incarcerated, and they’re willing to write to you, that doesn’t mean that you need to give your life to them.”
Richard Ramirez was coined the “Night Stalker” by the press for his heinous crimes in California. (Getty Images)
Lioy, whose past televised interviews are featured in the docuseries, didn’t participate. The 69-year-old didn’t immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
Horner was working as an editor for Right On! Magazine in the late ‘70s when she met Lioy. Both women worked at the same publishing company.
“Right On! focused heavily on Michael Jackson,” Horner shared. “And of course, Tiger Beat featured all the teen idols that were on different television shows like ‘The Partridge Family.’ We had a photo studio on the company premises where all the stars came to do their shoots. We were all very friendly with each other at the office. Some of us even hung out at night.”
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Doreen Lioy began writing to serial killer Richard Ramirez, to the dismay of her colleagues. (PEACOCK/NBC News Studios)
One day at the office, Horner noticed that many colleagues were visibly upset. She learned that Lioy had become pen pals with Ramirez.
Before Lioy began writing to Ramirez, she believed he was innocent and had publicly defended him, People magazine reported.
According to the outlet, she wrote to Ramirez in February 1988 and met him that year.
“It was not a good look,” said Horner. “We all worked on teen magazines… And so, for her to strike up a relationship with Richard Ramirez of all people was just not a good look for us… She was a superfan.”
Doreen Lioy visited Richard Ramirez frequently at San Quentin. Relatives called Lioy a recluse who lived in a fantasy world. (PEACOCK/NBC News Studios)
“A superfan, in my opinion, is a ride or die chick, somebody who is going to go really hard. She’s someone who will go the extra mile to be the biggest supporter that could exist.
“…Doreen went the extra mile. Not only did she write letters to Richard Ramirez when he was in prison, but she also tried to contact the media because of the fact she felt that he was innocent. She was trying to be like a publicist in a way, trying to change the trajectory of what was going on.”
“The whole world saw him as someone who was committing horrific crimes – murdering people, harming people,” Horner continued. “But that wasn’t the way she saw him. She looked at him as somebody who needed help. She was willing to put her name out there and try to help him whenever she could.”
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Doreen Lioy said she was a virgin when she met Richard Ramirez. (PEACOCK/NBC News Studios)
Ramirez was convicted of 13 murders that terrorized Southern California in 1984 and 1985, as well as charges of rape, sodomy, oral copulation, burglary and attempted murder.
The killing spree reached its peak in the summer of 1985, as the nocturnal killer entered homes through unlocked windows and doors. He murdered men and women with gunshot blasts to the head or knives to the throat, sexually assaulted female victims, and burglarized residences.
There were also signs of devil worship. He drew a pentagram at one crime scene and survivors also described being ordered to “swear to Satan” by the killer.
At his first court appearance, Richard Ramirez raised a hand with a pentagram drawn on it and yelled, “Hail, Satan.” (PEACOCK/NBC News Studios)
He was dubbed the “Night Stalker” by the press, while residents were warned to lock their doors and windows.
Ramirez was finally chased down and beaten in 1985 by residents of a blue-collar East Los Angeles neighborhood as he attempted a carjacking. They recognized him after his picture appeared that day in the news media.
The trial of Ramirez took a year, but the entire case — bogged down in pretrial motions and appeals — lasted four years, making it one of the longest criminal cases in U.S. history. He was sentenced to death.
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Sketch of Richard Ramirez before he was caught. (PEACOCK/NBC News Studios)
Inexplicably, Ramirez had a following of young women admirers. His groupies came to the courtroom regularly and sent him love notes.
Horner said Lioy “knew how to push herself to the top of the line.”
“When you are a magazine editor… you know what’s going to work and what won’t work,” Lioy explained. “She knew what she could write in a letter that might attract his attention… And I think he liked the fact that she worked for a magazine company.
Due to the notoriety, more than 1,600 prospective jurors were called. The trial was almost aborted in its final stages when a woman juror was murdered during deliberations. (PEACOCK/NBC News Studios)
“The magazines we published featured some of the most famous people in the world, and this man had a huge ego. I think he was enthralled by the kind of relationship he developed with her.”
“He probably found it amusing at first,” she reflected. “And then he realized how helpful she could be because she was falling in love with him.”
Relatives called Lioy a recluse who lived in a fantasy world. That didn’t stop her from expressing her devotion to Ramirez. Horner claimed that a jealous Lioy would make sure she arrived early in prison to see Ramirez, knowing there were many other women eager to see him.
Doreen Lioy, center, of San Rafael, California, walks with her head bowed as she and author Phillip Carlo, left, are escorted by prison guards to the media gathered outside the gates of San Quentin Prison, Thursday Oct. 3, 1996, in San Quentin, California, moments after she married serial killer “Night Stalker” Richard Ramirez. “I just want to say I’m ecstatically happy today and very, very proud to have married Richard and be his wife,” said Lioy. (AP Photo/Lacy Atkins)
“I know she was concerned because a lot of these groupies were really gorgeous,” said Horner. “And these were women who would try to visit once or twice a week, sometimes even regularly. So, she made sure that she stayed on his radar.”
A friend of Lioy’s said that Ramirez locked eyes on her because she said she was a virgin, SFGate reported.
According to the Los Angeles Times, Lioy would visit Ramirez four times a week and was often among the first in the visiting line.
Richard Ramirez is seen here being led from the courthouse following his conviction for murdering 13 people. He was sentenced to death in the gas chamber. Ramirez flashed the devil’s horns sign and shouted at reporters. (Getty Images)
“She fell in love with him,” said Horner. “Sometimes when you’re in the working world, you don’t have… relationships because you’re so consumed with your career, especially the kind of career we had… That’s why a lot of people didn’t stay in our industry because, at some point, some people wanted to get married, have kids.”
Ramirez was “a nice, safe boyfriend” for someone like Lioy, said Horner.
“He was somebody she could write to, to confide in,” she said. “He could also confide in her. That’s how it all began.”
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Richard Ramirez’s marathon trial, which ended in 1989, was a horror show in which jurors heard about his crimes in great detail. Courtroom observers wept when survivors of some of the attacks testified. (Getty Images)
Ramirez’s crimes, which were grisly beyond imaging, didn’t stop wide-eyed admirers, including Lioy, from flocking to him.
“I understood how this could happen,” said Horner. “We didn’t have social media… We had televisions, photographs and print media. And when people saw these photos of him, they would go crazy over him because he looked like a rock star. He didn’t seem like somebody who was really in prison. I think a lot of people just honed in on his appearance.
“Now today, some people might not think his look was that great, but that’s how it was back in the ‘80s. If you look at photos of different celebrities from the ‘80s, rock stars and all that, you’ll see that they all had that… bad boy swagger. And people went crazy over that.”
Richard Ramirez was convicted of 13 murders that terrorized Southern California in 1984 and 1985 as well as charges of rape, sodomy, oral copulation, burglary and attempted murder. (PEACOCK/NBC News Studios)
When Ramirez and Lioy said, “I do,” no one from her family attended the event. According to reports, they were not afforded conjugal visits.
Two years after his arrest, San Francisco police said DNA linked Ramirez to the 1984 killing of 9-year-old Mei Leung. She was murdered in the basement of a residential hotel in San Francisco’s Tenderloin neighborhood where she lived with her family.
Ramirez had been staying at nearby hotels.
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This photo shows Richard Ramirez on June 15, 2007, in San Quentin State Prison in Marine County, California. He died in 2013. (AP/California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation)
According to the docuseries, Lioy distanced herself after police made the announcement. Her whereabouts were unknown at the time of Ramirez’s death, and she was not listed as his next of kin.
According to the documentary, Lioy does not want to be recognized.
Horner hasn’t been in touch with Lioy in recent years. But she would like the chance to sit down with her once more.
“Richard Ramirez: The Night Stalker Tapes” is available for streaming. (Peacock)
“It’s been quite a long time,” she said. “But I would like to get in touch because I have some questions… and I’d like to find out what kind of answers I get.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Montana
“It’s Life Alert or rent”: Montana trailer park tenants are on rent strike
Mobile home residents in Bozeman, Montana, say they’re being forced to choose between paying rent and paying medical costs.Courtesy of Jered McCafferty
35-year-old Benjamin Moore has lived in Mountain Meadows Mobile Home Park, outside Bozeman, Montana, since he was 17. This month, for the first time, he’s withholding his rent.
On May 1, Moore received a rent bill for $947, up 11 percent from the month before, and the second hike in nine months—the product of the park’s sale to an undisclosed buyer.
Moore hung a sign on his trailer that says “RENT STRIKE.” He and his neighbors in Mountain Meadows and nearby King Arthur Park, organized with the citywide group Bozeman Tenants United, are collectively withholding over $50,000 a month from their landlord.
Historically, trailer parks have been a relatively affordable housing option—a third of trailer park residents in America live below the poverty line. But on average, their cost of living has risen 45 percent over the past decade. By unionizing, the Bozeman trailer park tenants believe they might be able to fight the most recent rent hike—especially given the state of their housing.
For years, tenants say, the maintenance hasn’t been attended to: tree limbs hang perilously over trailers, and water shutoffs are a regular occurrence. “I cannot recall a time in the past 20 years where we had three straight months of water and power working all day, every day,” Moore said.
Shauna Thompson, another resident, calls the water “atrocious…like a Milky Way, like you’re drinking skim milk. It’s very nasty and turned off all the time, without any notice.” And tenants allege that they’ve experienced retribution for maintenance requests, punitive eviction attempts, and unsafe conditions.
“It’s really hard on people here,” Moore said. Some residents are “already paying their entire Social Security check for rent. It’s a very poor neighborhood. We’ve got old folks. We’ve got young families. We’ve got working-class people who can’t afford anything else.”
For the past four decades, a group called Oakland Properties has owned both trailer parks. When they learned about the sale, tenants were scared that their parks would be bulldozed, or that their rent would be increased even further, forcing them to move.
The tenants attempted to buy the parks themselves, but were decisively outbid. The winning bidder demanded an NDA. The transaction should be finalized next month, park owner Gary Oakland said, but residents still don’t know who’s going to own the land they live on.
This month’s rent hike, Oakland acknowledged, was “part and parcel” of the sale. But for tenants, it’s a catastrophe. On top of the $947 lot rent—more than double the national average—many residents also pay off home loans on their trailers, as well as insurance and utilities costs.
Oakland calls claims of broken utilities “nonsense”: “If it was such a bad place to live, why would the homes be selling for such high dollars?” he said. The rent strike, Oakland points out, is “just a group of people not paying their rent.”
Some people are rationing their medication to make ends meet, Moore said. “There’s one person who canceled Life Alert. It’s either Life Alert or rent, and if you don’t pay rent, they evict you and throw you in the streets.”
Tenant organizers across the nation have found a foothold in recent years organizing against individual landlords, and Bozeman’s tenant union, situated in one of the fastest-growing communities in the state, is no exception. Tenant unions from Los Angeles to Kansas City to New York have organized to win rent freezes, maintenance, and security in their homes.
Mobile home parks—increasingly private-equity-owned and uniquely at-risk in the face of climate disasters—are organizing, too: a group of trailer park residents in Columbia, Missouri, unionized in February. In Montana, as Rebecca Burns recently wrote for In These Times, mobile homes were already once a site of tenant organizing: buoyed by the state’s miners unions, the first Bozeman-area mobile home tenants’ union won an agreement with their landlord in 1978.
Oakland says park residents “have been terrorized by the union,” and plans to evict the strikers. The strikers say they’ve retained a lawyer and will fight to stay in their homes.
“I wish none of this was happening,” Moore said. “Your utilities should work. Your place should be safe. You should be able to get in and out of it. These are the absolute basics, and they just haven’t kept them up. And if you call them on it, they threaten you.”
Nevada
Nevada SPCA brings adoptable pet to spotlight for Furever Home Friday
LAS VEGAS (KSNV) — An adoptable pet is in the spotlight for “Furever Home Friday,” with Amy from the Nevada SPCA featured in a segment highlighting an animal available for adoption today.
The Nevada SPCA encouraged viewers looking to add a pet to their family to consider adopting.
New Mexico
New Mexico AG seeks $3.7B from Meta over alleged ‘public nuisance’ claims
- Who: New Mexico Attorney General Raul Torrez brought a lawsuit against Meta Platforms Inc.
- Why: The state claims Meta misrepresented harms to minors and created a public nuisance through its social media platforms.
- Where: The lawsuit is pending in New Mexico state court.
- How to get help: Has social media impacted the mental health of you or your child? You may qualify to join a social media lawsuit against the platform.
New Mexico’s attorney general is asking a state court to order Meta to pay approximately $3.7 billion to address what the state describes as a “public nuisance” caused by the company’s social media platforms.
The request comes after a jury previously found Meta misrepresented the risks its platforms — including Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp — pose to underage users. The jury also imposed a $375 million penalty in the first phase of the trial.
The case has now moved into a second phase, where the court will determine what additional remedies, if any, Meta must provide.
According to the state, the proposed $3.712 billion abatement plan would fund a 15-year effort to address the alleged harms caused by Meta’s platforms. The plan includes funding for public education, school resources, law enforcement support and mental health services for children affected by issues, such as online bullying and sexual exploitation.
“This request recognizes the scope of the public nuisance that Meta has caused,” counsel for the state argued in court.
The lawsuit alleges Meta concealed or downplayed the extent of harmful activity on its platforms while publicly portraying them as safe for younger users.
Meta disputes liability, challenges proposed abatement plan
Meta denies the allegations and argues there is no legal basis for the sweeping relief requested by the state.
Attorneys for the company contend the proposed abatement plan does not directly address or stop the alleged harmful conduct and instead seeks compensation for downstream effects.
“What no court has ever allowed … is payment for the downstream effects,” Meta’s counsel argued, describing the request as “damages masquerading as something else.”
The court is expected to hear additional testimony during the second phase of the trial before determining whether to approve any form of injunctive relief or financial remedies.
In March, a California jury found Meta and Google liable for mental health harms suffered by plaintiff Kaley G.M., who became addicted to Instagram and YouTube as a child, awarding $6 million in damages, including $3 million in compensatory damages and $3 million in punitive damages.
What do you think about the claims against Meta in this case? Let us know in the comments.
The state is represented by Raul Torrez of the New Mexico Office of the Attorney General and Donald Migliori, Linda Singer, Michael Pendell and David Ackerman of Motley Rice LLC.
The Meta lawsuit is New Mexico v. Meta Platforms Inc., et al., Case No. D-101-CV-2023-02838, in the First Judicial District Court of New Mexico.
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