Dahmer - Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story

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I broke the story of Jeffrey Dahmer in 1991. Here’s what the new Netflix series got wrong​

Anne E Schwartz was working as a crime reporter when a police source told her about human body parts found in Dahmer’s apartment. Three decades later, she tells Bevan Hurley what viewers should know when watching Netflix’s dramatisation of the case​

Friday 30 September 2022 15:20
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<p>Jeffrey Dahmer</p>

Jeffrey Dahmer
(AFP via Getty Images)
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The new Jeffrey Dahmer series by Netflix sacrificed accuracy for the sake of drama, according to the journalist who first broke the sensational story over three decades ago.

Anne E Schwartz told The Independent that the filmmakers behind Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story took “artistic license” with many key details, saying the series “does not bear a great deal of resemblance to the facts of the case”.


“When people are watching Ryan Murphy’s Netflix series and saying ‘Oh my God this is terrible’. I want to tell them it didn’t necessarily turn out that way,” she said.


Ms Schwartz was working as a crime reporter for the Milwaukee Journal in 1991 when she received a call from a police source to say they had found a human head and body parts inside a city apartment.

Rushing to the scene, Ms Schwartz said she arrived to find just a few police officers there, and entered the Oxford Apartments building for a closer look.

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“I walked up to Dahmer’s apartment, and I kind of stuck my head in, because you’re a journalist, you want to know,” she told The Independent.


“I guess the thing that was strange was that it didn’t look strange.”

She said officers slowly began to understand the magnitude of the crime scene as they discovered polaroids that Dahmer had taken of his victims in various stages of dismemberment.

“They didn’t know what they were finding,” she said.

“I was a crime reporter for five years so I know what it smells like when you walk into a building with a dead body or a decomposing body. This was not that. This was a very chemical smell.”


Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story trailer
Anne E. Schwartz broke the Jeffrey Dahmer story while working as a crime reporter in Milwaukee and has written two bestselling books on the murders
(Courtesy of Anne E. Schwartz)
Ms Schwartz, who went on to work in communications for the Milwaukee Police Department and Wisconsin Department of Justice, said the depiction of city police officers as racist and homophobic was incorrect.

“I’ve spent a lot of time with them, interviewing the people who were at the scene. Again this is a dramatisation, but at a time when it is not exactly easy for law enforcement to get trust and buy in from the community, it’s not a very helpful representation.”

In the Netflix series, Glenda Cleveland, who tried to alert police to Dahmer’s killing spree, is portrayed as living in a neighbouring apartment. In reality, Ms Cleveland, who died in 2011, lived in a separate building.


“In the first five minutes of the first episode you have Glenda Cleveland knocking on his door. None of that ever happened,” says Ms Schwartz.

“I had trouble with buy-in, because I knew that was not accurate. But people are not watching it that way, they’re watching it for entertainment.”

After publishing a bestseller about the case in 1991, The Man Who Could Not Kill Enough, Ms Schwartz said she received a phone call from Dahmer in the newsroom of a TV station she was working to complain.

Several psychiatrists who had interviewed Dahmer told Ms Schwartz that his behaviour could be attributed to his parents.

“He hated that. For someone who didn’t show any emotion or seem to care about anything, he was very protective about his parents, especially his mother,” she told The Independent.

The phone call was “very quick, and very to the point”.

“He had no inflection in his voice. He was so vanilla, he was so flat. There was nothing. He just said no one was responsible for what I did except me.”

Evan Peters portrays Jeffrey Dahmer in theanew Netflix series Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
(SER BAFFO/NETFLIX)
Monster: The True Story of Jeffrey Dahmer’s Murders is an updated version of Anne E. Schwartz’s 1991 bestselling book
(Union Square Publishing)
Ms Schwartz said that Dahmer was very “crafty” in the way he selected his victims. He would speak to them at length in bars and on the street to prey on men who were on the margins of society, and whose disappearance wouldn’t raise any alarm bells.

This, along with his grisly body disposal techniques, helped him get away with murdering 17 boys and men before his crimes were discovered.

Plus, victims of crime in the gay community in Milwaukee in the 1980s and early ‘90s rarely reported offences to police for fear of being outed to family or employers, she said.

After the murders attracted national and international attention, people would regularly turn up at Oxford Apartments looking for souvenirs.

When Dahmer’s apartment building was razed the year some tried to take bricks and pieces of dirt, and the lot remains vacant and surrounded by high fencing to this day.

While the Dahmer series has smashed Netflix’s Week 1 record for most hours viewed, Ms Schwartz says Milwaukee is “absolutely done with hearing about the case”.

“People in Milwaukee think this is a horrible blemish on the city, they don’t want people to think about it.”

Last year, Ms Schwartz wrote an updated version of the 1991 book, and reinterviewed the principal characters to garner their thoughts 30 years on.
Her new book that came out last October, Monster: The True Story of the Jeffrey Dahmer Murders.
* Monster: The True Story of the Jeffrey Dahmer Murders
was released through Union Square Publishing and is available on Amazon.

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Jeffrey DahmerNetflixRyan Murphy
 
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Pemulis

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Enjoyed this until I saw that the next door neighbor was a made up character based on the amalgamation of a few real people. Everything you see of her after the scene with the police and the escaped 14 year old is pure fiction. Then it becomes all eye-rolling from there
 
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Seananigans

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Enjoyed this until I saw that the next door neighbor was a made up character based on the amalgamation of a few real people. Everything you see of her after the scene with the police and the escaped 14 year old is pure fiction. Then it becomes all eye-rolling from there

After episode 6 or so the show became 100% racial narrative propaganda horseshit.

Before that it was only 30% or so.
 
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Locnar

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There are no good straight white men in this show. They're all pieces of garbage. Interesting.
You thought the father was garbage? I thought he tried/cared a hell of a lot more than most parents would with a adult son like that
 

Daidraco

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Yet no one seemed to give a shit that the father was an enabler for his homosexuality. People picking and choosing what goes with their narrative, as usual. Dahmer, from childhood, had some serious fucking issues regardless. If the mothers portrayal is correct in any meaningful measurement, I would say she has a bigger footprint in how fucked he turned out to be.
 

Seananigans

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The one constant with serial killers is the mother. It's always a neurotic, hysterical, vile, cunt-bitch of a woman.

The fact that the father was engaged and around at all was surprising to me, it goes against what I understand about these psychos. It's almost always a single mother situation.
 
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TJT

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It was enjoyable.

The focus on the deaf guy and his deaf experience of life was clearly pandering along with the other wokeness bullshit in it.
 

Daidraco

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It was enjoyable.

The focus on the deaf guy and his deaf experience of life was clearly pandering along with the other wokeness bullshit in it.
I still get a kick out of the fact that Netflix had it tagged with LGBT and they got public outrage for it and took the tag off. lol
 
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Alex

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Watched three episodes of this. Won't continue. I find it a bit boring. Pretty well acted though. Just makes me fucking uncomfortable. Makes me upset that so many signs were there about this psycho and they were largely ignored. Cops returning the kid to him was so fucked.
 

Locnar

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The fact that the father was engaged and around at all was surprising to me, it goes against what I understand about these psychos. It's almost always a single mother situation.

This is what I am getting at. The Father did at least as much as any other Father would. Made him get a job, made him go to college (and paid for it), made him join the army, etc.etc.etc.

The Father TRIED to set his son straight. How was he an enabler??? Because he did not ghost him?
 
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Seananigans

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A lot of that “ignoring” was contrived horseshit for this show, too.
 
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