Crime History: Norman Mailer’s killer protege captured in oil patch

On this day, Sept. 23, in 1981, convicted murderer-turned-author Jack Henry Abbott was captured in the oil fields of Louisiana.

Less than four months earlier, Pulitzer Prize novelist Norman Mailer helped Abbott win parole on a conviction for killing an inmate.

“Culture is worth a little risk,'” Mailer declared.

Mailer gave Abbott a job as a his assistant. Weeks after his release, Abbott fatally stabbed a waiter outside a Manhattan restaurant and disappeared.

The next day, the New York Times Review of Books, unaware of Abbott’s new crime, published a glowing review of Abbott’s “In the Belly of the Beast,” a collection of letters written to Mailer while in prison.

Police arrested Abbott in Louisiana. He hung himself to death in prison in 2002.

– Scott McCabe

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