I’m the Weatherman, I Take That Cocoa Leaf and Make That Snow, Sit Back, Watch It Turn to Dough
Preppie Killer Robert Chambers and his longtime girlfriend were busted Monday night on charges of selling enough cocaine from their swank East Side apartment “to levitate Central Park,” police sources said.
One of the slags that was dancing around in the Robert Chambers video (the one where he rips the Barbie doll's head off) waited 15 years for him. They were arrested 5 years later for running a cocaine operation out of their Sutton Place apartment. He's back in nick for 19 years. Which is longer than he got for killing Jennifer Levin. GlobalTubeTruth needs your support. Creating, editing, and uploading new videos takes a lot of time and effort. Please show your support by contributing to o.
Cops said Chambers, 41, struggled with officers who tried to handcuff him on the felony charges. One detective suffered a broken thumb in the fracas.
Chambers, who was freed from prison in February 2003 after serving 15 years for the August 1986 murder of Jennifer Levin in the infamous “rough sex” case, could spend the rest of his life behind bars if convicted of the new charges.
Investigators had seen heavy drug traffic at the apartment in recent months, and undercover cops bought a quarter kilo of coke – a little more than a half pound – with a street value, of $20,000, they said.
The couple is accused of making a total of eight sales to cops posing as small-time drug dealers. One sale of at least 68 grams of coke is an A-1 felony, carrying a sentence of up 30 years. (…)
![Robert Robert](/uploads/1/3/4/5/134502952/450643321.jpg)
The sensational and divisive Levin case seemed to expose the dark side of young people, many of them privileged, on the upper East Side in the 1980s.
Chambers, who was a troubled student at a number of prep schools, killed Levin, an 18-year-old graduate of the exclusive Baldwin School, in Central Park on Aug. 26, 1986.
Levin’s strangled, semiclad corpse, which had bruises, bite marks and cuts, was found by a bicyclist beneath an elm tree on a grassy knoll near Fifth Ave. and 83rd St. behind the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The 6-foot-5 Chambers claimed Levin “raped” him, asked for “rough sex,” tied his hands with her panties and hurt his genitals as she painfully masturbated him. He said she was accidentally killed when he freed his hands and pushed her off him.
After the trial but before he was sentenced, a tabloid TV show broadcast a home video showing Chambers cavorting at a party, amid four lingerie-clad young women, choking himself with his hands while making loud, gagging noises.
Twisting a Barbie doll’s head off, Chambers is heard saying in falsetto: “My name is… Oops! I think I killed it.”
Aftermath
In April 1988, the tabloid television program A Current Affair obtained and broadcast a home video showing Chambers at a party when he was free on bail. He was shown in the video playing with four lingerie-clad girls, choking himself with his hands while making loud gagging noises, and twisting a Barbie doll's head off, saying in falsetto: 'My name is…Oops! I think I killed it.'
Chambers served most of his 15-year sentence at Auburn State Prison, but was later moved to Clinton Correctional Facility due to his infractions, which cost him all his time off for good behavior. He assaulted a correctional officer and was cited repeatedly for weapons and drug infractions, some of which resulted in additional criminal charges. Ellen Levin, mother of Jennifer Levin, also pleaded before the New York parole board to deny him parole. Nearly five years of his term were served in solitary confinement.
In 1997, Chambers sent an untitled essay he wrote to prison anthologist Jeff Evans. The piece, subsequently titled 'Christmas: Present,' appeared in the book, Undoing Time: American Prisoners in Their Own Words. Written while Chambers was incarcerated at Green Haven Correctional Facility in Stormville, New York, the essay is an entry from one of his journals, which he calls 'a record of the meaningless hope and frightening losses of a person I don’t even know.'
Chambers was released from Auburn Prison on February 14, 2003, after having served the entirety of his prison term due to his numerous infractions. His release was a media circus, with news media staking out prime sections of sidewalk opposite the prison as early as 13 hours before his 7:30 a.m. release time. The same day, a documentary was aired on Dateline, interviewing Chambers. Chambers, continued to claim that he strangled his victim Jennifer Levin accidentally in a desperate attempt to stop her from hurting him during rough sex in New York's Central Park. He also denied that he had been in disciplinary trouble in prison. However, he had numerous infractions, including assaulting a member of the staff and was caught with heroin in his cell.
The owner of Dorrian's Red Hand came to a private settlement with Levin's parents on their claim that the bar had served alcohol to Chambers in excess. A wrongful death lawsuit, to which Chambers pled no contest, provides that he must pay all lump sums he receives, including any income from book or movie deals, plus 10 percent of his future income (up to $25 million), to the Levin family. The family has said all the money it gets from Chambers will go to victims' rights organizations. Ellen Levin became an activist for victims' rights, helping to secure the passage of 13 pieces of legislation.
Robert Chambers Barbie Doll Video
After leaving prison, Chambers settled in Dalton, Georgia with his girlfriend, Shawn Kovell, who had appeared in the infamous Barbie doll video made before his sentencing. The two lived there for eight to nine months. He found a job at the Pentafab dye factory. Chambers and Kovell moved to an East 57th Street Sutton Place, Manhattan apartment in New York, when the death of Kovell's mother in the autumn of 2003 left it vacant. Chambers found a job at a limousine company in Queens, and later in a New Jersey sports trophy manufacturer's engraving plant.