View Full Version : Rebecca Schaeffer - 25th anniversary of her death :-(
MacLeaper 07-14-2014, 02:05 PM On July 19th. it will be 25 years since Rebecca Schaeffer was murdered by an obsessed (and deranged) fan. :(
Sad at this is to remember, at least something positive has come from this in that law enforcement now makes stronger efforts to protect celebrities from such horrible tragedies, as this article (http://tv.msn.com/tv/article.aspx?news=877323&ocid=rr-tv-news) talks about.
Not to take away from the tragedy of Ms. Schaeffer's death, but I thought I'd point out that it's too bad "My Sister Sam" is mainly remembered for this- it seems to be a funny show from what I've heard.
May God comfort her family in this sad anniversary.
Vahan 07-14-2014, 02:19 PM Like Mark David Chapman and John Hinkley before him, Robert John Bardo read The Catcher in the Rye, and made pilgrimages at The Dakota in New York.
What was really sad about Rebecca Shaeffer's death was that she was an only child.
25 Years Gone: Rebecca Schaeffer of My Sister Sam (http://www.jenx67.com/2014/07/25-years-gone-rebecca-schaeffer-sister-sam.html)
MacLeaper 09-25-2014, 02:17 PM Most likely inspired by this event, (and the number of other celebrity stalking incidents that have happened), Quantum Leap once did an episode in response to this that is quite interesting. The episode is called "Moments to Live".
Bonniegirl 09-25-2014, 03:36 PM Very sad! RIP Rebecca!
I just saw a program of her murder on Investigative Discovery TV. It was on the Dead on arrival series. It was really sad seeing her mother being interviewed. She is very heartbroken, you can see the pain in her face and hear it in her voice!
I was pissed when I found out how easy it was for that maniac to get her home address from the DMV as easily as he did! And how more red flags weren't going up when he was showing up at the studio prior to the murder.
Rebecca was a really nice girl. Being nice to her fans, you just never know who is good , normal fan and who is off the chart. What a tragedy, just because she was too kind and trusting.
And how Rebecca and Pam Dawber really hit it off from the start, and really felt like sisters. She even lived at Pam and her husband Mark Harmon's home for a while and than got her own place..Pam was always a little wary , thinking there wasn't enough security in her building. She was right! Wow!
king of comedy 09-25-2014, 04:18 PM So sad she died so young.
Rebecca Shaeffer's murder and the murder of Judith Barsi at the hands of her father one year prior (and incidentally, also in July) are probably the only Hollywood tragedies (both young women had so much more to give and clearly deserved much better) in my lifetime that I legitimately get both extremely depressed, angry, and sickened over whenever I somehow revisited them. I was only about six-seven years old at the time (so I don't obviously, remember the initial media coverage of both tragedies), but both incidents arguably could've been prevented. And both incidents if anything, exposed flaws in our system (whether it be issues regarding stalking and child protection).
Planet Claire 08-02-2015, 12:08 PM This was such a sad day. Rebecca was such a talent and just starting to get noticed. She would have been a fantastic actress.
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Partial clips from Rebecca's ABC 20/20 special. The clips show Pam Dawber's interview with Joan Lunden on Good Morning America, where they discuss the PSA (https://www.reddit.com/r/lostmedia/comments/l3oonp/partially_lost_psa_from_1989/) for the Center to Prevent Handgun Violence (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=brjel-MHQhg) she filmed with the cast of My Sister Sam after Rebecca's passing (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jFnuE6LuGxs). The interview aired August 22, 1989. The PSA would've first aired the week of August 13 - August 19, 1989 and is said to have aired on the MovieTime cable channel (which is now E!) and USA Network.
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A brief clip of the TV show Larry King Live in which Larry King and his guest Vanna White, actress and Wheel of Fortune host, discuss the murder (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=buuIUG5tOHw&pp=ygUbMTk4OSByZWJlY2NhIHNjaGFlZmZlciBuZXdz) of Rebecca Schaeffer (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xCZ3vxrmMc0&pp=ygUbMTk4OSByZWJlY2NhIHNjaGFlZmZlciBuZXdz). This episode aired July 31st, 1989, less than two weeks after Rebecca died.
Dude111 01-22-2026, 12:40 AM Very sad !!:(!!
Like Mark David Chapman and John Hinkley before him, Robert John Bardo read The Catcher in the Rye, and made pilgrimages at The Dakota in New York.
What was really sad about Rebecca Shaeffer's death was that she was an only child.
I recall seeing Rebecca's mother mention that she was an only child on a television documentary about her murder. I don't remember if it was the one on ID channel or the ABC News one. Rebecca's mom mentioned how unlike her friends, she and her husband (Rebecca's father) could never be grandparents due to what happened to their daughter on July 18, 1989. Rebecca's mom (https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/name/danna-wilner-schaeffer-obituary?pid=203706245) passed away (https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=693179615572641&set=a.463027611921177&id=100046418276118) back in 2022 (https://obits.oregonlive.com/us/obituaries/oregon/name/danna-schaeffer-obituary?id=38956740). So, if there's any solace, one should hope that she's finally been reunited with Rebecca (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TEjghfVCes) in the afterlife.
This was such a sad day. Rebecca was such a talent and just starting to get noticed. She would have been a fantastic actress.
I've been looking all over YouTube of the available content from July 18, 1989 (https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=July+18%2C+1989+) and the immediate days (https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=July+19%2C+1989+) that followed (https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=July+20%2C+1989+). And I couldn't find any mentions of Rebecca's murder.
I began to wonder whether or not Rebecca's death was a heavily publicized or talked about news story when it first happened. I know that Rebecca was on (https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/people-magazine-july-31-1989-rebecca-2107161758) the cover of People magazine (https://at.pinterest.com/pin/493003490480623967/) a few weeks after she was murdered (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eQBH7RxJwlo). And here are newspaper reports that I found on Google News Archives (https://www.google.com/search?q=Rebecca+Schaeffer&sca_esv=a3e3df7eb27bf600&udm=36&sxsrf=ANbL-n5VV4cHiYIfXNjTaaWl39lIJW3_4w%3A1769057845168&source=lnt&tbs=bkt%3As%2Ccdr%3A1%2Ccd_min%3AJuly+17_2+1989%2Ccd_max%3AJuly+31_2+1989&tbm=) from around July 1989.
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A doorbell rings.
A young woman opens the door.
And the modern age of celebrity privacy ends forever.
On July 18, 1989, 21-year-old actress Rebecca Schaeffer (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O8EvT5J_pT0) was shot and killed in the doorway of her West Hollywood apartment by an obsessed fan who had legally purchased her home address from the California DMV. What appeared to be an isolated tragedy would instead trigger a seismic shift in American law, celebrity security, and the public’s understanding of stalking.
This documentary reconstructs the full chain of failure that led to Rebecca’s death — from unchecked fan obsession and untreated mental illness, to Hollywood’s culture of access, and a government system that sold personal data to anyone with a checkbook. It examines how parasocial delusion escalated into murder, how law enforcement was powerless to intervene, and how a single letter meant as kindness became a fatal misinterpretation.
But this is not only a crime story.
It is the story of how one death changed everything.
Rebecca Schaeffer’s murder directly led to the first anti-stalking laws in the United States, the creation of specialized police threat-management units, and the passage of the Driver’s Privacy Protection Act, which ended public access to DMV records nationwide. Her death closed the “era of the open door” — a time when celebrities lived without gates, guards, or fear.
Through detailed investigation, courtroom analysis, and cultural context, this film explores how innocence was exploited, how privacy was commodified, and how Rebecca Schaeffer became the unwilling architect of modern personal-safety law.
She wanted to be remembered for her work.
History remembers her for the protections she left behind.
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