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Contents
Fisher met Joey Buttafuoco, a 35-year-old mechanic with whom she had an affair in 1990, when she was 16 years old. Amy Fischer became known in the media as “the Long Island Lolita” in 1992, when she shot and severely injured Mary Jo Buttafuoco, Joey Buttafuoco’s wife, at the age of 17. Amy Fisher, who was envious of Buottafuoco’s wife, obtained a 25-calibre handgun with the help of auto supply salesman Peter Guagenti. She went to Buottafuoco’s wife and, after a conversation, shot her twice in the head. The doctors were successful in saving Mary Jo Buttafuoco’s life.
Amy Fisher, 17, went to the home of Joey and Mary Jo Buttafuoco in Massapequa, New York, on May 19, 1992, with a loaded.25 calibre semi-automatic pistol. The adolescent approached the front porch and rang the doorbell. Fisher shot Mary Jo in the face when she answered the door. Although Mary Jo survived the vicious attack, the shooting drew national attention due to the sheer brutality of the crime and the circumstances surrounding it.
According to Rolling Stone, Fisher met Joey Buttafuoco, the owner of an auto body shop, while he was working on her father’s car. Despite the fact that Fisher was only 16 at the time and Buttafuoco was 35, the teen developed feelings for the older man. Fisher began taking her own vehicle to Buttafuoco for repairs after receiving a car for her 16th birthday.
The repairs were sometimes superficial, implying that the teen took her car to the shop as a ruse to spend more time getting to know Buttafuoco. According to Rolling Stone, the friendship eventually turned into a romantic relationship that lasted 18 months. Fisher reportedly asked Buttafuoco to divorce his wife at the time so they could have a more traditional relationship. Buttafuoco, on the other hand, refused to abandon Mary Jo and his children. Fisher decided to take matters into her own hands as she grew increasingly frustrated with the situation.
Amy Fisher walked out of an upstate New York prison on May 11, 1999, and boarded a chartered plane for the trip home. She had dominated headlines in 1992 as the obsessed, gun-toting teen caught in a love triangle with a mechanic and his unassuming wife, dubbed the “Long Island Lolita” by New York tabloids. Fisher, 24, was released from prison early on May 10, 1999, seven years after pleading guilty to reckless assault in the brazen shooting of her lover’s wife. And she had one person to thank for it: Mary Jo Buttafuoco, the woman she almost killed. Amy became a columnist for the Long Island Press after her release from prison. If I Knew Then, her 2004 book, became a New York Times Best Seller. Reports claim that Amy works as a webcam model, creating content from her Long Island home. “This is what I have to do to make money,” she allegedly said.
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