Andre "Angel" Melendez
(May 1, 1971 – March 17, 1996) was a member of the
Club Kids and purported drug dealer who lived and worked in
New York City. He was killed by
Michael Alig and Robert "Freeze" Riggs on March 17, 1996. His life and death have inspired several pieces of media, including books, films, music, and television.
Life
Melendez and his family arrived in New York from Colombia when Melendez was 8 years old. Melendez purportedly became a drug dealer during the early 1990s after he met
Peter Gatien, owner of
The Limelight and several other nightclubs in New York City, and became a regular dealer in Gatien's clubs. He was frequently seen at Manhattan clubs wearing his signature feathered wings.
Death
On Sunday, March 17, 1996, Melendez was killed by Michael Alig and Robert D. "Freeze" Riggs.
[''Party Monster: The Shockumentary'' (1998)] According to various statements, the confrontation became violent and Melendez got the better of Alig, who cried out for help. Riggs then hit Melendez on the head with a hammer, three times (until Melendez "went down"), after which Alig smothered him (either with a pillow or sweatshirt, depending upon the source), next poured a "cleaner or chemical" into his mouth, and then wrapped duct tape around it.[
The two then stripped Melendez's body and placed it in the bathtub, where it remained for 5–7 days. According to Riggs, he then purchased "2 chef knives and 1 cleaver" at Macy's, with which he said Alig dismembered Melendez's legs, which the roommates wrapped separately in garbage bags, placed into individual duffle bags, and dumped in the Hudson River.][
The following day, they wrapped the upper body in a sheet and plastic garbage bag, placed it in a cardboard box from which Riggs had removed the UPC code, and together took the heavy box down the elevator and through the main lobby, and then placed it in the trunk of a Yellow Cab "that happened to be right outside the door." Riggs confessed: "We took the body to the Westside Highway around 25th Street. The taxi drove off, and we threw the box into the river."][
However, Alig gave some conflicting details. For example, he stated he used liquid Drano (and baking soda) to combat the smell of the malodorous decomposition after the body had sat several days in the bathtub,] and wrote in a May 12, 2014, '' New York Post'' article that the pair had successfully enjoined the cab driver to help them throw the box into the Hudson River, near Tunnel nightclub. At first, Alig claimed the killing was in self-defense, but he later admitted to having committed manslaughter.
In the documentary film ''Glory Daze'' (2015),[ the police recount the discovery by a group of children at the beach at ]Miller Field Miller Field may refer to:
Places
In the United States
* Jessee/Miller Field, Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut
* Zell B. Miller Field, Young Harris, Georgia
* Les Miller Field, a baseball venue in Chicago, Illinois
* Miller Field (basebal ...
, Staten Island, of a box containing the remains of Melendez, in March 1996. (''American Justice'' reports the box was found in April 1996.) A tropical storm had helped propel the floating, cork-lined box to Staten Island
Staten Island ( ) is a borough of New York City, coextensive with Richmond County, in the U.S. state of New York. Located in the city's southwest portion, the borough is separated from New Jersey by the Arthur Kill and the Kill Van Kull an ...
.
Mainstream media began covering Melendez's disappearance when the victim's brother and father turned to the press for help and interest grew in rumors – first publicized to outsiders by Michael Musto as a blind item in his '' Village Voice'' column – that Alig and Riggs had murdered Melendez. The coincidental discovery, on Friday, September 8, 1996, of another dismembered body, fished out of the Harlem River at a pier near 134th Street by a homeless woman, sparked police to begin investigating the case in earnest. A police officer in Staten Island, who caught the Melendez media coverage, initiated an investigation of the John Doe found at Miller Field.[ The Staten Island Police Department used dental records to identify Melendez (whose body the coroner had mis-identified as that of an Asian male); on November 2, 1996, the mutilated corpse was positively identified as Melendez, and details of the rumors about how Melendez was killed were confirmed.
In the face of increasing police scrutiny, Alig fled to Toms River, New Jersey, where he moved into a motel room with his boyfriend, a drug dealer named Brian. On December 5, 1996, the police arrested Alig at the motel and hours later, Riggs in Manhattan. Alig insisted to the police he and Riggs had killed Melendez in self-defense, and disposed of the body in a panic.] (This story contrasts sharply with the account Alig had given the victim's brother, John ("Johnny") Melendez, in an August 1996 conversation secretly taped by the District Attorney's office, implicating "Melendez and club czar Gatien in a drug-dealing venture at Gatien's nightspots", and charging "that Riggs killed Melendez for Gatien because 'Peter is in trouble right now for drugs' and 'Angel knew everything and he was threatening to go to ... his friend at the ''Village Voice'' and tell him all this stuff".) Prosecutors were hesitant to charge Alig with first-degree murder, as they still hoped he would testify against his former boss, Gatien, who had been arrested for allowing drugs to be sold in his nightclubs. They eventually offered both Alig and Riggs a plea deal: a sentence of 10 to 20 years if they accepted the lesser charge of manslaughter
Manslaughter is a common law legal term for homicide considered by law as less culpable than murder. The distinction between murder and manslaughter is sometimes said to have first been made by the ancient Athenian lawmaker Draco in the 7th cen ...
. On October 1, 1997, both pleaded guilty and were sentenced to 10 to 20 years. (''American Justice'' reports they pleaded guilty and were sentenced on September 10, 1997.[) Because of their convictions, Alig and Riggs were not used as prosecution witnesses in Gatien's trial.][
]
Convictions, prison, and aftermath
On October 1, 1997, Alig and Riggs were sentenced to 10 to 20 years in prison for Melendez's killing, after each pleaded guilty to one count of manslaughter
Manslaughter is a common law legal term for homicide considered by law as less culpable than murder. The distinction between murder and manslaughter is sometimes said to have first been made by the ancient Athenian lawmaker Draco in the 7th cen ...
. Riggs was released on parole in 2010, Alig on May 5, 2014.
On December 24, 2020, Alig died of a drug overdose at the age of 54.
In popular culture
;Book
*James St. James
James St. James (born James Clark; August 1, 1966) is a television personality, author, celebutante, frequent collaborator with Mathu Andersen, and former "Club Kid", a member of the New York City club scene in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
St ...
's book, ''Disco Bloodbath
''Disco Bloodbath: A Fabulous but True Tale of Murder in Clubland'' is a 1999 memoir written by James St. James about his life as a Manhattan celebutante and club kid. The book specifically chronicles his friend Michael Alig's rise to fame, and A ...
: A Fabulous but True Tale of Murder in Clubland'' (1999), is about Melendez's murder. It was reprinted with the title ''Party Monster'' after the release of the eponymous 2003 film.
;Films
*There are two films based on Melendez's murder and the events which followed:
**The documentary film '' Party Monster: The Shockumentary'' (1998), based on the events leading up to and surrounding the Melendez's murder.
**The subsequent feature film '' Party Monster'' (2003), which stars Wilson Cruz as Melendez
*
*The documentary film ''Glory Daze''(2015)[ reviews the creation, rise, and dispersion of the Club Kids phenomenon after Melendez's murder.]
;
;Music
*Melendez's friend Screamin' Rachael
Screamin' Rachael, born Rachael Cain, is an American musician and Chicago nativedubbed the “Queen of House Music” by'' Billboard magazine,''. Rachael has been connected to the evolution of the House music genre. She has worked with performers ...
wrote the song "Give Me My Freedom/Murder in Clubland." The lyrics to a backward loop in the song include such lines as "Michael, where's Angel?", and "Did someone just cry wolf, or is he dead?"
;
;Television
Melendez's murder case has also been featured in multiple TV series, such as:
*'' American Justice'': "Dancing, Drugs, and Murder" (2000) on A&E[
*''Deadly Devotion'': "Becoming Angel" (July 16, 2013) on Investigation Discovery
*'']Notorious
Notorious means well known for a negative trait, characteristic, or action. It may also refer to:
Arts, entertainment, and media Films
* ''Notorious'' (1946 film), a thriller directed by Alfred Hitchcock
* ''Notorious'' (1992 film), a TV film re ...
*
The 1990s: The Deadliest Decade
': “Death of an Angel” (Season 1, Episode 3) (Aired: November 19, 2018) on Investigation Discovery
;
;
;Theatre
*''Clubland: The Monster Pop Party'' (2013), a musical adaptation of St. James' book ''Party Monster'' and its 2003 eponymous film adaptation, debuted April 11, 2013 at the American Repertory Theater's Club Oberon, with book, music, and lyrics by Andrew Barret Cox
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Melendez, Andre
1971 births
1996 deaths
American drug traffickers
Club Kids
Colombian drug traffickers
Colombian emigrants to the United States
Colombian people murdered abroad
LGBT Hispanic and Latino American people
LGBT people from Colombia
People murdered in New York City
Male murder victims
20th-century LGBT people