Amy Fisher Has a Baby Girl

The*Empress

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GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (Feb. 3) - Amy Fisher is a new mom again.

The woman, who as a teenager became known as the Long Island Lolita after shooting the wife of her lover, gave birth to a girl, Ava Rose, on Jan. 26, a spokeswoman said Wednesday.

Fisher, now 30, is married to a retired police officer. She comments on the events of the day in a column for the Long Island Press, a free weekly.

She also wrote an autobiography published last year, "If I Knew Then..." in which she takes responsibility for shooting Mary Jo Buttafuoco outside the victim's Massapequa home in May 1992. Fisher spent seven years in prison after admitting to the shooting during an affair with Buttafuoco's husband, Joey.

In addition to their daughter, Fisher and her husband, Lou, have a 4-year-old son, Brett.

AP
Amy Fisher poses for a photograph during her pregnancy on Oct. 1, 2004.
 

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Yeah, I saw the movies about her.

It's good to know that she is married and start a new life. I'm surprised that her husband accepted her past. He must love her alot.
 
Liebling:-))) said:
Yeah, I saw the movies about her.

It's good to know that she is married and start a new life. I'm surprised that her husband accepted her past. He must love her alot.

Yep, people can change.
 
Yeah, Everyone can change only if they are willing to, and I suppose Amy learn her lesson, she was just a young teenage at that time but still it was no excuess for what she had done to his wife...I hope she teach her daug that dating an older married man is a big no no!

I'm happy to know she had changed her life around, met a man of her dreams and have a daug now, hope she stay in the right path!
 
^Angel^ said:
Yeah, Everyone can change only if they are willing to, and I suppose Amy learn her lesson, she was just a young teenage at that time but still it was no excuess for what she had done to his wife...I hope she teach her daug that dating an older married man is a big no no!

I'm happy to know she had changed her life around, met a man of her dreams and have a daug now, hope she stay in the right path!

I agree ^Angel^. It is my belief that Joey had an integral part in what Amy did. She did her time, and has grown up considerably. Also, it speaks volumes to me that Mary Jo forgave her for the shooting.

I hope Amy goes on to have a productive life, and I also hope that the other participates in this drama can put this all behind.

It would seem that forgiveness can be very freeing.
 
^Angel^ said:
Yeah, Everyone can change only if they are willing to, and I suppose Amy learn her lesson, she was just a young teenage at that time but still it was no excuess for what she had done to his wife...I hope she teach her daug that dating an older married man is a big no no!

I'm happy to know she had changed her life around, met a man of her dreams and have a daug now, hope she stay in the right path!
yea i agree with u... i am surprise that she has girl baby and have a hubby now... wow... i hope that she stay not change anything..
 
Did Mary Jo died? I can't remember if Amy shot her dead. :ugh:


Wow! Nice of her retired pilice husband married her for future, not in past.

I bet having a baby would change her life and she faced the humilating of what she did.
 
CrazyRedHeadWV said:
Did Mary Jo died? I can't remember if Amy shot her dead. :ugh:

No. Mary Jo was shot in the face, but she survived. However, she is permanently disfigured and has other difficulties. She lives with some permanent paralysis that will remain for the rest of her life. Somehow, she has managed to get past what happened to her, and forgive Amy for the shooting.

I think that was an absolutely phenomenal thing to do. I'm not sure I could be so forgiving.
 
Quick Biography Of Amy Fisher - Amy Fisher Biography

Amy Elizabeth Fisher was born August 21st, 1974, at 9:30, in South Nassau Community Hospital, Long Island, New York. She was born to Roseann Vise, a 29-year old Italian Catholic "Long Island girl", and Elliot Fisher a twice-divorced 39-year old Jewish Brooklyn native.

Amy grew up in a good environment on Mandalay Beach Road, in south shore of Long Island. "Stitch-n-Sew" business Fishers owned prospered, and soon both Rose and Elliot decided to open another store. They were a great team. Rose took care of upholstery work and worked cash register, Elliot took care of finances and managed familiy's stock portfolio. A month before her thirteenth birthday, as Amy was about to enter eighth grade, Fisher family moved from Mandalay to Merrick, upper-middle-class neighborhood, in which they had toured a $360,000 roomy home on Berkley Lane. It was also at this point that Amy Fisher was raped by a man who had gone to house to lay tile at her house.

When Amy was fifteen and able to apply for a junior driver's license, she did and excitedly ripped open the envelope containing it after it was mailed by Motor Vehicle Association. Her parents, noticing delight she displayed when practicing her driving on the family station wagon, gave her, for her sixteenth birthday, a beautiful but used white Dodge, Daytona. Eventually, Amy crashed car after a heated argument with her father over phone. Car was taken by Amy's father and herself, to Complete Autobody & Fender Inc., a car repair shop Joey Buttafuoco co-owned.

After an initial meeting that day, Joey began flirting with Amy, when she brought her car to shop for pinstriping or other customizing. Eventually a sexual relationship began on July 2, 1991 when Amy was sixteen. According to "Amy Fisher: My Story", their first sexual encounter occured in Amy's room after Joey drove her to her house because she had to leave her car at a sound system shop, "Audiotronics" where they were installing a new stereo in her Daytona. Soon, into their intense relationship, Joey, according to Amy, coerced her into becoming an "escort" when she totaled her Daytona and wanted a black LeBaron. After she started payments on LeBaron, payments which Joey had offered to give her, Joey told her he could no longer give her money because the business was doing bad. So, Amy, who had a new car, and no way of paying for it, and who had no way of telling her father that car was being paid by Joey because he'd discover their affair, did become and escort.

Amy charged an average of $150 dollars for forty-five minutes. She only worked in service for 6 months, and Amy also claims Joey never told her it was a sex service. Sometime after that, Amy had an ultimatum to give to Joey. It was either her or Mary Jo, and if it wasn't her, Joey would have to forget about her. When Joey refused to decide, Amy says she broke off affair. She also slit her wrists. After they got back together, Joey told Amy to join "Future Physique" a gym Paul Makely, his personal trainer co-owned. Amy promptly became Paul Makely's lover and he, among other things, taped her stripping.

Finally Amy got tired of hiding affair between Joey and herself and decided to shoot Mary Jo Buttafuoco, Joey's wife and the woman Amy believed had it all. A "very good friend" of Amy's, who is refered to as "Jane" found her a guy in Brooklyn, a drop-out college student called Peter Guagenti to drive her to Buttafuoco home in his maroon thunderbird, and get her the gun Amy needed. On May 19, 1992, Amy left school early claiming she was having a heavy period. She went to her home, where she was met by Guagenti. She handed him $800 dollars, and he gave her .25 caliber titan Amy would use. At around 12:00 o'clock in day, Amy was in front of Buttafuoco home. She asked Guagenti to wait for her, gathered a complete auto body t-shirt Joey had given her, jumped out of car, and walked toward house. Inside, in backyard, Mary Jo painted lawn furniture. She heard doorbell, and went to open door. She and Amy had a discussion that lasted for about 15 minutes.

As soon as Mary Jo got dismissive, and according to Amy told her to get the "fuck of (her) property", Amy hit her twice in the head. The second time, the gun went off.

A bullet penetrated and severed Mary Jo's carotid artery. She fell to the floor as Amy ran away. Neighbors who heard a bullet explosion rushed to her house, and called an ambulance. She was rushed to the hospital where doctors battled to save her life. They did, but her face was partially paralyzed, and she was deaf in her right ear. She had a constant ringing in it, and was in pain all day. Police showed up in the hospital and questioned Mary Jo about her assailant. When Mary Jo talked about the Complete Auto Body t-shirt the teenager had shown her as proof of the alleged affair with Joey, there was an immediate reaction from Joe Buttafuoco who said the shooter was "Mr. Fisher's daughter, Amy" (according to Casualties of Love), the Buttafuoco's official story. Joey supplied the policemen with pictures he had of Amy, which apparently had been given to him by her. He also gives them her beeper number, her phone number, and even her home address.

On May 22, after Amy Fisher left her house late at night for "a quick jog", after Joey called her on the phone at Severin's request (the phone conversation was never taped or recorded in any way), the police ran her down. She was removed from her black LeBaron and taken to a small questioning room in headquarters. They kept her there until the next morning. It took a full night of questioning to get Amy to tell her story. Eventually she also signed a written confession. Angered by Mary Jo's dismissiveness, she'd struck her in the head twice. The second time, the gun went off. Amy was then officially arrested for attempted murder.

Bail had been set at $2 million dollars, the highest in the history of Long Island for a non-homicide.

Amy was finally sentenced to reckless assault, with judge claiming she had "stalked Mary Jo Buttafuoco like a wild animal stalks its prey". Amy was wisked off to Bedford Hills Correctional Facility in Connecticut to serve out her five-to-fifteen year prison sentence. Officials there had been outraged by Amy's flip comments in the "Paul Makely tape", and she was then remanded to Albion Correctional Facility in upstate New York. Quickly, problems for Amy started there. A tv news crew went to the prison and filmed other inmated claiming it was only a matter of time before Amy got hurt because she was snotty and received thousands of letters and notoriety every day.

Prison life was anything but peaceful for Amy. A short time after she was put behind bars in 1994, guards began raping Amy Fisher. In the prison's library, in the stairwells, and in deserted areas of her dormitory. Less than a year into her sentence, in 1993, Amy was threatened by an inmate. Jail spokesman tried to portray Amy as a whining baby. After stating she had requested protective custody, he said "she ought to learn to get along with the general prison population. She'll be with us for a long time". He tried, and maybe succeeded in turning Amy "the whistle-blower" into Amy "the trouble maker". Guards gave Amy disciplinary tickets for things she hadn't done.

Threats and rapes were unbearable for Amy Fisher, and as she reported to Geraldo Rivera on Geraldo Rivera Show they put a guard who had raped her back on her unit, and he smirked at her like saying "yeah, I know you know and they don't care" so she had it. She reported it to prison authorities, they did nothing. Heartbroken, at the closing months of 1996, Amy took her claims to court. She had a very damaging piece of evidence: A panty with semen, which matched that of a guard, who had, coincidentally, resigned within days lawsuit was filed. Amy and her mom also presented to judge, 22 phone calls that Sgt. Robert Schwartz had made to her mother while Amy was briefly transferred to another prison. An inmate, convicted drug dealer Lillian "Lucky" Nieves, testified that Amy obtained the semen after having consensual sex with a guard, and that the whole thing was a scheme Amy had cooked up to get a transfer out of Albion. She also said Amy had discussed plan with her and told her Albion was driving her crazy and she feared she wouldn't be paroled if she stayed there. Lillian was transferred a few hours after testifying against Amy, to a detox center she had wanted to be in.

Judge Arcara was weak, and said he didn't believe Amy. He denied and dismissd her request for a transfer and claimed the complaint read more like a "cheap dime store novel" than a pleading in federal court. He also said her testimony was "highly suspect and unsupported by the record", and that her complaint had "severe credibility problems". He seemed to ignore the panties, as well as the tapes. The corrections officials once again turned Amy "the whistle-blower" into Amy "the trouble-maker", by claiming she had brought the lawsuit, simply to be moved to another prison, closer to her Long Island home. Parole board was unfair in denying parole because all they did was describe Amy's crime, committed 5 years ago, and said that her release at this time was "incompatible with the welfare of the community". They also said she had had the opportunity to stop the crime or halt at any time but had chosen to go on.
 
Amy dropped a bombshell in April 1998, by filing a lawsuit which seeked to have her 1992 plea bargain thrown out, so she could stand trial for the shooting. Then, another bombshell followed, when she claimed Eric Naiburg had been inneffective as counsel, because he'd played out sexual fantasies with her and that had clouded his judgement. Naiburg, steadfastly denied allegations, claiming he had treated Amy like one of his daughters and nothing else. However, he did admit to writing her "embarassing" poems and letters which Amy submitted as evidence.

By this time Amy had already signed on Bruce Barket as her new attorney. It was in fact Barket who orchestrated the filing to have the plea bargain thrown out. Mary Jo Buttafuoco forgive Amy Fisher, but she backed a plea deal that could spring her from jail this June, by changing her sentence from 5-15 years to 3-10 years. Bruce Barket had phoned Mary Jo's own attorney, Dominic Barbara, asking or requesting a meeting with Mary Jo with Amy's mother. Mary Jo agreed to meet with her. Two meeting was later described as "very emotional", it only came through after Amy had written Mary Jo many occasions asking for her forgiveness. Mary Jo came to conclusion that Amy had served enough jail in time as punishment for what she did, and found that Amy was a young woman "heartbroken" over events that had changed all their lives.

During an emotionally charged meeting on April 22nd 1999, where Amy was resentenced by Judge Ira Wexner, Mary Jo met Amy Fisher for first time since she had last seen her at Amy's sentencing December 1st 1992. Amy Fisher cried as Mary Jo told Amy she had been given "a second chance" to live and that Amy was being given one as well. She also said: "I almost died on May 19, 1992. I know how precious life is because I almost lost it...I have been given a second chance at life, you are being given a second chance too. I pray that you will take it and make something out of this awful tragedy...I pray for you and your continued recovery. Good luck. "

When it was Amy's turn at the podium, she started crying and tried to touch Mary Jo's hands, with the same hand that had held the gun that almost ended Mary Jo's life 7 years before. They were prevented from touching by a court officer. In her own statement, Amy said: "What happened to you wasn't your husband's fault, it wasn't even Eric Naiburg's fault, it wasn't my father's fault, it was my fault and I'm sorry...Something's wrong with me and I've been trying to understand that for the last seven years." When Fred Klein reminded the court of Joey Buttafuoco's "raping [of] Miss Fisher when she was 16...", Mary Jo flew into a rage. She hit her hand against the table in front of her and screamed "Stop it, Eric", apparently confusing Klein with Amy's former lawyer, Eric Naiburg who she had earlier in the evening called a "disgrace to the legal profession". Then she shouted out "Stop it, Fred". When he didn't she said "You look at me when you say that...you can't even look at me...You son of a bitch!".

At end of hearing, Judge Wexner threw out Amy's plea-bargain on the ground that her lawyer at the time provided ineffective counsel. Amy then re-entered the plea, but was sentenced to 3 to 10 years, rather than the 5 to 15 years. Wexner also said: "You are still a young woman and could be a productive memeber of society if you channel your energies. Based on the information I have received, I believe you can do that."

On May 3, 1999, the parole board was to meet with Amy and they were expected to decide whether they would release her by week of May 10. Even if the board denied release Amy could not have been kept in jail beyond August. About her father, Amy said that "He's very violent, and I grew up with violence, and to me it was normal until I came to a prison setting and got away from all that. People aren't hitting me here and I'm able to grow." About Joey she said that it hadn't been his fault, that he was a violent person and she could say he "influenced" her, "but nobody made me do what I did. I did that...He used to use violence with me. Not beat me or anything, but he would slap me around...". Of prison life Amy claimed that she'd "never had to make a bed in my life. I came here and it's militarylike, and I gained a lot of structure."

She also talked of her relationship with Mary Jo: "I've been corresponding with her for about a year...she wanted to get to know me, so I let her, basically, get to know me, how I am now, and you know, let her see that I'm an okay person and that I changed." As far as publicity and the media's pursual of her story, Amy was very clear: "They hound me. they say things like don't I want to tell society my story, and I really don't. I want to be left alone. I just want to live my life. I don't care what society thinks about me. It would'nt make a difference if everybody in America loved me. I think what I did was a horrible, tragic thing, and it got dramatized. This is a big story...It's not something that I really want to share, it's embarassing to me."

Amy also talked of her future plans in the fashion industry, as her attorney put it. She said that eventually she "might want to go to college. Right now there is a woman who said I can have a job with her... it's fashion liquidation. They liquidate merchandise and sell it."

On May 5, a source said that the parole board had voted 1-2 to release Amy Fisher from Albion Correctional Facility. May 6, the announcement was official, Thomas Grant, the state parole board spokesman said that Amy had been "served with the decision this morning [of May 6] and granted release". On May 7, Amy's attorney Bruce Barket, who orchestrated the entire chain of events, starting with Amy's letter-writing to Mary Jo, and culminating with Mary Jo's forgiveness and Amy's release, announced that Amy would work in the fashion industry. He also said Amy would "really like some privacy" now that she was to be released. Rose said she had "prayed and waited for this moment to arrive.", she added that "Knowing my daughter is coming home is the best Mother's day gift I could wish for."

About a dozen photographers were camping out of Albion prison since May 3rd because Amy could be released anytime that week. On May 10, at about 9:20 A.M. with more than two dozen photographers and reporters waiting for her, some of which had been waiting since sunrise to catch a glimpse of the celebrity ex-convict, Amy Fisher emerged from Albion Correctional Facility without any handcuffs for the first time in 7 years. Wearing a totally fashionable white pullover, calf-length black skirt with a thigh-high slit on the side, and big, dramatic sunglasses, Amy seemed apprehensive towards the 15 photographers who immediately started snapping her picture. Every news outlet, broadcast from CNN to HARD COPY, and print The New York Times, to the New York Post had some sort of representation, or someone waiting for Amy. She looked gorgeous and glamorous. With poise of a superstar. She left the prison without a word to any reporter, flanked by her mom Rose, and her lawyer Bruce Barket.

In front of curious inmates staring from prison windows, some of which shouted "Good luck, Amy", Amy walked to a waiting gray, Ford Expedition, which was carrying her to freedom, drove out of Albion, with a 10-car motorcade in tow as it made it's way 45 miles east to nearby Rochester International airport. There, Amy boarded a private Pape Air charte plane to Republic Airport in Farmingdale, Long Island. She issued a prepared statement to press: "This is the start of a new life for me and my family. Over the last seven years I have had a lot of time to think about what I did. I am sorry. I have learned from my mistakes and I'm excited that I have the opportunity to do something positive with my life. Right now, I am looking forward to spending time with my family, having dinner with my mom and taking the dog for a walk." On the plan ride home, she excitedly pointed out landmarks from the air which she hadn't seen in 7 years. She enjoyed strawberries and fruit punch and asked about other members of her family- as well as what was for dinner.

Rose had moved to a Long Beach, ocean-front apartment, but it's not where Amy would spend her first days. Later in the day, after she had settled into the apartment, Amy met for two hours with her parole official. She arrived at the state Parole Division offices in a white Toyota camry, reportedly owned by her family doctor William Lannik.

Some of rules Amy must abide by, until her parole expires in 2003, are: No moving or traveling out of the area without permission, No switching jobs without telling officials, No driving without permission and a valid license, No leaving home between 8 p.m. and 7 p.m., No drinking or going to bars and No carrying beepers or cell phone.
 
Thank you for interesting post, Miss*Pinchoic. I just printed your story for me to read because I like to collect true movies.....
 
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