James Benning made a film in 1989 of the Bembenek case, “Used
Innocence,” distributed by First Run features.
Ira Robbins, a private detective, worked tirelessly on the case
for over seven years. He assisted the Canadian officials to evaluate whether
Bembenek had gotten a fair trial when she filed for refugee status.
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Ira Robbins (Greg Gent)
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Bembenek was paroled Dec. 9, 1992 and credited with time already
served. Then she graduated with honors from the University of Wisconsin-Parkside,
the first female “lifer” admitted to an extension program. She took a degree
in the Humanities.
A movie about her life, “Woman on the Run,” was developed
into a two-part miniseries starring Tatum O’Neal, from Bembenek’s book, Woman
on Trial. She rode around in a limo, bought a Jaguar, went on a book tour,
gave speeches, showed her paintings, and appeared on Oprah.
Eventually she tired of all the attention and legally changed
her name to Laurie. Then she got involved with a drug-dealer who gave her some
marijuana and cocaine, which violated the terms of her parole. She spent two
weeks in jail and then had to live with an electronic monitor.
When she contracted Hepatitis C, she moved to Washington State,
nearly penniless and wishing that the public, who had called her “Bambi”
would forget about her.
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