In the television show Deadly Dreams which aired on MSNBC on Sunday, August 30, 2009, at 10:00 pm, Keith Morrison follows the story of Stephen Reitz who was accused of murdering his girlfriend Eva Weinfurtner in October of 2001. After Reitz woke up and found Eva dead, he went to the police on Catalina Island in California and told them that he must have killed her. He claimed to have been sleepwalking and stated that he had blurry images of a conflict with an intruder, but didn't remember killing Eva. Reitz told police that he must have been the killer because he had been a commercial fisherman and the stab wounds in Eva's spinal column which killed her was how he used to kill sharks. Reitz underwent an extensive sleep study at a sleep disorder clinic where doctors caught his sleepwalking and night terrors on tape. It also came to light that Reitz was on medication for Bipolar Disorder. Although the scientific evidence on sleepwalking was presented at the trial 3 years later, the jury found Stephen Reitz guilty of murdering Eva Weinfurtner.This particular case is mentioned in Chapter 4 of the textbook. Although Reitz claimed to have been sleepwalking, he most likely suffered from REM behavior disorder. Sleepwalking is a Stage Four sleep disorder in which people may move around or walk around in their sleep. REM behavior disorder is a rare disorder in which people thrash around and even get up and act out their nightmares. While REM behavior disorder is a very real condition, some jurors are hesitant to acquit on this defense. Prosecuters in Deadly Dreams pointed out that a verdict of "Innocent" may have opened the door for a wave of sleepwalking defenses in future murder trials.


