True crime news logo
  • Krimidex

Sign up for our newsletter and get the latest stories

Never miss the latest true crime news, reviews and top lists — plus new podcasts, series, films and books.

You can unsubscribe with one click from any email.

True crime news logo

The international true crime destination. Cases, documentaries, podcasts and travel routes.

© 2026 truecrime.news. All rights reserved.

Sagsmappe

The Night Mark David Chapman Killed John Lennon

How a Beatles obsessive murdered one of music's greatest icons outside his Manhattan home

A figure resembling John Lennon walks near the Dakota building entrance, holding a record album, unaware of Mark David Chapman waiting nearby.
BEVIS

Klassifikation:

Murder
Celebrity
Shooting
Psychopathy
New York
USA
Trial
Weapons

Quick Facts

Gerningsmand(e)Mark David Chapman
Offer(e)John Winston Lennon
GerningsstedDakota-bygningen, Upper West Side, New York City, New York, USA
Gerningsdato1980-12-08
ForbrydelsestypeDrab
Fan
Depression
Suicide
mordssag
domstol
justitsmordet
hvidvaskning
mordsager
celebrity-mord
sundhedsbedrageri

Mark David Chapman murdered John Lennon on December 8, 1980, outside The Dakota apartment building on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. The Beatles legend, aged 40, was shot while returning home with his wife Yoko Ono after a recording session at the Record Plant. He was pronounced dead on arrival at Roosevelt Hospital at 11:15 p.m.

Chapman, born May 10, 1955, in Fort Worth, Texas, was a former security guard from Hawaii with an obsessive fixation on John Lennon and the work of author J.D. Salinger, particularly *The Catcher in the Rye*. Earlier that same day, around 5:00 p.m., Chapman had positioned himself as an autograph seeker and approached Lennon as he left The Dakota for his recording session. Lennon signed Chapman's copy of the album *Double Fantasy*—a moment that would take on sinister significance hours later.

When Lennon and Ono returned to The Dakota at approximately 10:50 p.m., the fatal encounter unfolded. Ono exited the limousine first and passed Chapman without incident. Lennon followed, and as he walked past Chapman, he glanced briefly at the man—possibly recognizing him from the earlier encounter. Chapman then fired five hollow-point bullets from a Charter Arms Undercover .38 Special revolver from a distance of roughly 3 to 10 feet. Four bullets struck Lennon in the back and shoulder. One witness account suggests Chapman called out "Mr. Lennon" and assumed a combat stance before firing, though Chapman later stated he did not recall saying anything, and that Lennon never turned around.

Timeline

10 May 1955

Geburt von Mark David Chapman

Mark David Chapman wird in Fort Worth, Texas, geboren.

8 December 1980

Autogramm am Nachmittag

John Lennon gibt Chapman ein Autogramm auf das Album "Double Fantasy" vor dem Dakota Building.

8 December 1980

Attentat auf John Lennon

Chapman erschießt John Lennon gegen 22:50 Uhr vor dem Dakota Building mit fünf Schüssen. Vier Geschosse treffen den Musiker tödlich.

8 December 1980

Tod im Roosevelt Hospital

John Lennon wird ins Roosevelt Hospital gebracht, wo Ärzte nur noch seinen Tod feststellen können.

8 December 1980

Verhaftung am Tatort

Chapman wird unmittelbar am Tatort verhaftet. Er wartet ruhig lesend mit "Der Fänger im Roggen" auf die Polizei.

22 June 1981

Schuldbekenntnis

Mark David Chapman bekennt sich in einem nicht öffentlichen Verfahren des Mordes schuldig.

24 August 1981

Verurteilung zu 20 Jahren bis lebenslang

Chapman wird zu einer Freiheitsstrafe von 20 Jahren bis lebenslänglich verurteilt. Er zitiert vor Gericht aus "Der Fänger im Roggen".

1 October 2000

Erste Bewährungsanhörung

Chapman hat erstmals Anspruch auf eine Bewährungsanhörung. Der Antrag wird abgelehnt.

1 January 2024

Weiterhin in Haft

Chapman sitzt nach mindestens sieben abgelehnten Bewährungsanträgen weiterhin in der Wende Correctional Facility ein.

Unlike most perpetrators of such violence, Chapman made no attempt to flee the scene. He remained at the archway of The Dakota, and when police arrived, they found him calmly reading *The Catcher in the Rye*. The book's cover bore an inscription in Chapman's hand: "Holden Caulfield." He confessed immediately to police, later stating he had used hollow-point ammunition specifically "to ensure Lennon's death."

Chapman was charged with second-degree murder—the most serious non-first-degree charge available under New York law at the time. Against the advice of his legal counsel, Chapman pleaded guilty, citing "the will of God" as his reason for rejecting a trial. He received a sentence of 20 years to life imprisonment. Though he became eligible for parole in 2000, Chapman has been repeatedly denied release in subsequent parole hearings.

Yoko Ono, who was present during the shooting but unharmed, emerged as a widow that night. Chapman's wife, who had been aware of his plans, was never charged in connection with the murder.

The assassination shocked the world and remains one of the most infamous crimes in music history. The loss of Lennon, at the height of his creative renaissance following the release of *Double Fantasy*, robbed music of one of its most influential voices. For decades, Chapman has remained incarcerated, his name forever linked to the man whose life he took.

**Sources**

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_David_Chapman

https://www.ebsco.com/research-starters/history/assassination-john-lennon