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“The Honeymoon
Killers”(1970) Poster for the cult film about Raymond
Fernandez and Martha Beck directed by Leonard Kastle. (Mark Gado) |
“I’m no average killer!” Raymond Martinez Fernandez told
Michigan cops on the day he was arrested. The slim, smartly dressed,
balding man sat in the wooden chair between two detectives as he
told a tawdry story of sex, lies and murder. He wiped his sweating
forehead every few minutes with a white handkerchief supplied by his
co-conspirator and obese sex slave, who looked on with wide-eyed
admiration and love. For several hours he described their journey
through a maze of deception and betrayal that ended with the deaths
of as many as 17 women. “I have a way with women, a power over
them,” he said. That power, he claimed, was achieved by the
practice of voodoo.
Raymond Martinez Fernandez, 34, was born in Hawaii of Spanish
parents. His rotund girlfriend, Martha Jule Beck, 29, who weighed
well over 200 pounds, lovingly brushed his thinning hair back on his
head as he told police how they killed their last victims in the
town of Byron Center, Michigan on the night of February 28, 1949.
Later, when the victim’s two-year-old daughter refused to stop
crying over the loss of her mother, Martha drowned her in a tub of
dirty water while Raymond looked on. After the murders, they decided
to go to the movies where they munched on popcorn and drank a gallon
of soda.
The day-by-day revelations about this bizarre couple had New York
City’s press working overtime to keep up with the story that
seemed too sleazy even by tabloid standards. Martha’s
enormous size was the subject of never-ending speculation by the
press who estimated her weight to be anywhere from 200 to over 300
pounds. This constant ridicule caused Martha to write a series of
tearful, angry letters from prison to the media complaining of the
unfair treatment she received from columnists like Walter Winchell
and newspapers like The Daily News and the New York Mirror.
“I’m still a human, feeling every blow inside, even though I
have the ability to hide my feelings and laugh,” she said, “But
that doesn’t say my heart isn’t breaking from the insults and
humiliation of being talked about as I am. O yes, I wear a cloak of
laughter.”
Fernandez and Beck came to be known as the “lonely hearts
killers” in the nation’s press. Their murder trial took place
during the scorching hot summer of 1949 in Bronx Criminal Court
where the salacious testimony of “abnormal sexual practices”
caused a near riot among spectators. The Latino Lothario and the
plump, love-sick girlfriend who killed lonely, sex-starved women was
a story weirder and more intriguing than anything out of the
trashiest pulp magazines of the 1940s.
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