On May 11, 1999, Amy Fisher walked out of an upstate New York prison and boarded a chartered plane for the trip home. Dubbed the "Long Island Lolita" by New York tabloids, she had dominated headlines in 1992 as the obsessed, gun-toting teen caught in a love triangle with a mechanic and his unassuming wife.
Seven years after pleading guilty to a reckless-assault charge in the brazen shooting of her lover's wife, Fisher, 24 years old, was being released from prison early on May 10, 1999. And she had one person in particular to thank for it: the woman she nearly killed, Mary Jo Buttafuoco.
Buttafuoco was 37 when Fisher fired a bullet from a .25-caliber gun into her head near the front door of the Massapequa, New York home she shared with husband Joey, the burly owner of a local auto-body repair shop.
Fisher's second chance stemmed from the victim’s testimony at an April 1999 resentencing hearing, slated after a court found that Fisher had not been fairly represented by her first lawyer at her 1992 trial.
Buttafuoco, an Irish Catholic mother of two, asked a criminal court judge to show mercy to the teen: "She has shown true remorse and sorrow for what she did to me," she told State Supreme Court judge Ira Wexner.
Speaking to Fisher directly, Buttafuoco said: "You are being given a second chance in life, and I pray you will take it and make something positive out of all this tragedy." Fisher, in turn, said: "What happened to you…it wasn't your husband's fault… It was my fault, and I'm sorry."
The two women clasped hands in a courtroom that had fallen still.
Wexner vacated Fisher's 1992 guilty plea to reckless assault, which had carried a 5-to-15-year sentence.
In public statements, Mary Jo explained her position: "She needed to be punished—she tried to kill me—but Amy Fisher is not a 'Lolita.' This is a sick girl. This is not a seductress." The victim had begun corresponding with Fisher's mother, Roseann, two years earlier—another factor that contributed to the merciful twist in the case.