July 19, 1989
Rebecca
Shaeffer (age 21) is murdered at her Los Angeles home by
Robert John Bardo, a mentally unstable man who had been stalking her.
Schaeffer’s death helped lead to the passage in California of legislation
aimed at preventing stalking.
Schaeffer was born November 6, 1967, in Eugene, Oregon. She worked as a teenage
model and had a short stint on the daytime soap opera One Life to Live,
but was best known for co-starring with Pam Dawber in the television sitcom My
Sister Sam. Bardo, born in 1970, had written Schaeffer letters and
unsuccessfully tried to gain access to the set of My Sister Sam, before
showing up at her apartment on July 19, 1989. The obsessed fan had reportedly
obtained the actress’s home address through a detective agency, which located
it through records at the California Department of Motor Vehicles. On the day
of the murder, Schaeffer reportedly complied with Bardo’s request for an
autograph when he appeared at her home and then asked him to leave. He returned
a short time later and the actress, who reportedly was waiting for someone to
deliver a script, answered the door again. Bardo then shot and killed her.Arrested the next day in Tucson, Arizona, Bardo was later
prosecuted by the Los Angeles County district attorney Marcia Clark, who later
became famous as a prosecutor in the O.J. Simpson trial. In 1991, Bardo was
convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life in prison without the
possibility of parole. In 1994, California passed the Driver’s Privacy
Protection Act, which prevented the Department of Motor Vehicles from releasing
private addresses.
The 2002 film Moonlight Mile, loosely inspired by Schaeffer’s story,
was written and directed by Brad Silberling, who had been dating the young
actress at the time of her death.
July 19, 1989
Rebecca
Shaeffer (age 21) is murdered at her Los Angeles home by
Robert John Bardo, a mentally unstable man who had been stalking her.
Schaeffer’s death helped lead to the passage in California of legislation
aimed at preventing stalking.
The 2002 film Moonlight Mile, loosely inspired by Schaeffer’s story,
was written and directed by Brad Silberling, who had been dating the young
actress at the time of her death.
Stay Tuned
Tony Figueroa
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