Nicole duFresne
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Nicole duFresne (b. 1977- d. January 27, 2005) was a Minnesota-born playwright and actress. She was murdered on a sidewalk on Manhattan's Lower East Side when seven youths accosted and mugged a group consisting of duFresne, her fiancé Jeffrey Sparks, her close friend Mary Jane Gibson, and Gibson's boyfriend Scott Nath sometime after 3 a.m on January 27, 2005.
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[edit] Actress and playwright
A graduate of Emerson College in Boston, Massachusetts, duFresne wrote or collaborated on five plays, including the two-woman show Burning Cage. She and Gibson collaborated on both the writing as well as the performances. A show about two women in a Boston asylum who are targeted for clandestine brainwashing experiments with LSD and shock treatments, it won major accolades on its US and Canadian tour and was performed at the Seattle Fringe Festival 2002.
Moving to Brooklyn in 2003, duFresne was a founding member of the Present Tense Theater Project and performed with LAByrinth Theater, Algonquin Productions and Woman Alone Theater Company.
[edit] Her murder
In the early morning hours of January 27th, 2005, duFresne, Sparks, Gibson and Nath were returning home from a night of celebratory drinking. DuFresne had just gotten a new interim job as a bartender at the Rockwood Music Hall. As the group was walking down bistro-lined Clinton St. on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, a group of five young men and two girls approached them. Fleming demanded money. Sparks pushed his way past, at which point Fleming swung with both hands, striking him across his left temple with a Taurus .357 magnum, which he had been holding pointed downward at the sidewalk. According to Sparks neither he nor anyone else in the group had realized that Fleming had a gun. Another robber, Servisio Simmons, reportedly said, "It doesn't have to be like this. My friend's buggin'. We just want the money." Fleming took Gibson's purse and cell phone and gave them to the girls, Ashley Evans and Tatiana McDonald. duFresne turned to Sparks who was dazed and bleeding profusely from his left eye, asking if he was OK. He indicated that he was and said "Let's just go". Nath took Sparks by the arm and began leading him north on Clinton toward Rivington. Gibson turned to follow. One witness testified that duFresne confronted Fleming, pushing him. Another witness testified that it was Fleming, rather, who shoved duFresne, and that she never touched him. There was a consensus among witnesses that duFresne shouted "What are you still doing here? You got what you wanted. What are you going to do now, shoot us?" Fleming fired once at point blank range, the bullet striking duFresne in the chest and exiting through her back. From further up the block Sparks and Nath ran back, only to find duFresne on her back in the street. She died a few minutes later in Sparks's arms, as Gibson and Nath knelt beside them.
[edit] Trial and sentence
On October 12, 2006, Rudy Fleming was found guilty of first degree murder, two counts of robbery, four counts of attempted robbery, and one count of criminal possession of a weapon. Fleming was on parole for pointing a gun at a truancy officer at the time of duFresne's murder. Fleming is said to be planning to appeal the guilty verdict on the basis of mental instability as well as other legal issues raised during the trial. [1]
On December 11, 2006 Fleming was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole, plus an additional 15 years for a robbery committed earlier that night and 15 years for unlawful possession of a weapon. His alleged accomplices have been charged separately and are awaiting trial. [2]
[edit] Media references
The May 8, 2005 episode of Law & Order: Criminal Intent contained a murder scene similar to duFresne's death.