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Jennifer Reali, Fatal Attraction Killer Turned Singer: No Parole Despite Cancer Diagnosis

Back in August, we reported that Jennifer Reali, who'd gained a lot more notoriety as the so-called Fatal Attraction killer of her lover's wife than she has for the gospel singing on self-released albums that she recorded while doing time at the Denver Women's Correctional Facility, was living in a...
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Back in August, we reported that Jennifer Reali, who'd gained a lot more notoriety as the so-called Fatal Attraction killer of her lover's wife than she has for the gospel singing on self-released albums that she recorded while doing time at the Denver Women's Correctional Facility, was living in a Lakewood halfway house — a situation questioned by at least one of her victim's friends.

Nonetheless, Reali will remain at the facility for at least the near future, after being turned down for parole despite a cancer diagnosis. Continue for details.

See also: Jennifer Reali Sings! Fatal Attraction Killer Now on Fire for Jesus

As we've reported, Reali burst into the public consciousness in 1990, after she ambushed and murdered Diane Hood, who was just leaving an El Paso County support group for those afflicted with lupus. Reali had disguised herself, ninja-style.

The motivation for the killing is said to have come from Brian Hood, with whom Reali'd been having a passionate affair: "Their first sexual encounter, she later confessed, took place on top of the washing machine in her laundry room," our Alan Prendergast wrote in a 2012 post. She claimed that Hood manipulated her into doing the deed, with him allegedly quoting Bible verses in a bid to convince her that the killing was part of "God's plan."

In the end, Hood was sentenced to 37 years in stir, while Reali received life. She wasn't supposed to have a shot at parole for forty years, but Governor Bill Ritter, persuaded by reports that she'd been a model prisoner, tweaked her sentence as he was leaving office. Although her conviction remained, she was given a shot at parole earlier than previously allowed.

Her 2011 visit to the parole board didn't result in her immediate release. Her application was rejected, after which Reali responded in unlikely fashion: via song. She released two albums, including Prisoner of Hope....

...and Love Me In: The latter remains available on Amazon at this writing. Song titles include "Captured," "Beauty in the Ashes" and "Pool of Repentence."

The liner notes on the discs were penned by Reali and feature this acknowledgment: "I was not a songwriter. I was not a singer nor a guitarist. However, God chose me to sing, write and play" tunes such as "Promise Child," which sports the lines "My flesh fought against your plans for me/Now my heart's poured out in praise.../There's no more running from your will's embrace."

Arguably Reali's most personal composition is Love Me In's title track. The lyrics read in part:

Would you find me acceptable if you knew where I'd been? Would you cringe in horror at the stories I could tell? Would you judge and condemn me? Sentence me to hell? Oh-oh, straight to hell....

If you knew my dark side Would you sense the hands of Christ?

I broke every commandment I've hidden special sins.... Are you willing to hold me When I'm poison through and through? Can you see past my number To see a child of God?

Presumably, such sentiments factored into the decision by prison officials to grant her request to transfer to the halfway house. A spokesperson told the Colorado Springs Gazette that she met the requirements for the move for reasons of "time served and behavior."

Nonetheless, Darla Blue, a friend of Diane Hood's, was unhappy with this development, good behavior or no, as she told KRDO-TV in August.

Two months later, in October, KRDO reports that Reali got another chance to plead her case for freedom before the parole board. When members denied her release again, she asked for what the station terms a "special needs hearing" owing to her diagnosis of pancreatic cancer earlier this month.

This development didn't help Reali's cause. KRDO notes that the six-person parole board unanimously nixed her request after deliberating for just thirty minutes. That means she'll stay at the Lakewood halfway house at least until October 2015, when she'll next be able to go before the board.

Look below to see a recent Reali booking photo.


Send your story tips to the author, Michael Roberts.


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