Amityville Horror Case
The Lutz family fled their home after 28 days, claiming demonic activity including swarms of flies, green slime, and a pig-like creature. Their story became a bestselling book and multiple films.
The Amityville Horror
On December 18, 1975, the Lutz family moved into 112 Ocean Avenue in Amityville, New York - a house where Ronald DeFeo Jr. had murdered his entire family just 13 months earlier. Twenty-eight days later, the Lutzes fled, claiming they had experienced a terrifying haunting. Their story became one of the most famous - and controversial - paranormal cases in history.
The DeFeo Murders
November 13, 1974:
- Ronald DeFeo Jr.
- Killed six family members
- As they slept
- With rifle
- Claimed demonic voices
The Lutz Family
New owners:
- George Lutz
- Kathy Lutz
- Three children
- Newlyweds
- Knew house history
The House
112 Ocean Avenue:
- Dutch Colonial
- Distinctive windows (“eyes”)
- Bought at discount
- Furnished partially
- Scene of murders
Moving In
December 18, 1975:
- Priest blessed house
- Allegedly experienced trouble
- Told to “GET OUT”
- Family unaware
- Moved in anyway
The Claims
The Lutzes reported:
- Green slime on walls
- Swarms of flies (winter)
- Demonic pig creature
- Temperature extremes
- Foul smells
Personality Changes
George Lutz:
- Became obsessed with fireplace
- Woke at 3:15 AM
- (Time of murders)
- Personality altered
- Aggressive behavior
Kathy’s Experiences
She reportedly:
- Levitated from bed
- Scratched by unseen force
- Saw red eyes outside
- Nightmares constant
- Terrified
The Children
They experienced:
- Imaginary friend “Jodie”
- A pig-like creature
- Behavioral changes
- Nightmares
- Sensed presences
The Departure
January 14, 1976:
- 28 days after moving in
- Family fled
- Left belongings
- Never returned
- Traumatized
The Investigation
Ed and Lorraine Warren:
- Investigated house
- Took “demon photograph”
- Confirmed haunting
- High-profile involvement
- Added credibility (to some)
The Book
“The Amityville Horror”:
- Jay Anson wrote
- 1977 publication
- Bestseller
- “True story”
- Cultural phenomenon
The Films
Multiple adaptations:
- 1979 original
- 2005 remake
- Various sequels
- Franchise created
- Iconic status
Skeptical Investigation
Critics found:
- Timeline inconsistencies
- Weather record contradictions
- Lawyer involvement
- Financial motives
- Possible hoax
William Weber
DeFeo’s lawyer:
- Met with Lutzes
- Discussed book deal
- Later claimed collaboration
- “Made it up over wine”
- Controversial statement
The Lutzes’ Position
Family maintained:
- Events occurred
- Not fabricated
- Traumatized for life
- George died 2006
- Kathy died 2004
Subsequent Owners
Later residents:
- Reported no phenomena
- Lived normally
- Some annoyed by legend
- House still stands
- Address changed
Significance
Amityville is significant for:
- Cultural impact
- Debate over truth
- Case study in claims
- Media phenomenon
- Haunted house archetype
Legacy
Whether true or fabricated, the Amityville Horror has become the definitive American haunted house story. It has influenced countless horror films, sparked endless debate, and remains a touchstone of paranormal pop culture.