Los Angeles Times

Dirty John 3: Filthy

LOS ANGELES - He had lavished her with compliments, and now he savaged her looks. He had entered the marriage broke, and now he demanded half her wealth. He had been gentleness itself, and now he threatened her with "long-lost relatives" in the mob.

"Enough," Debra Newell texted him. "You are evil."

"Divide up the stuff and I never see you again," John Meehan texted back. "Your choice."

In March 2015, as Debra Newell studied the paperwork detailing her husband's long record of women terrorized and laws broken, she learned that he had a nickname. It went back decades, to his brief time in law school at the University of Dayton.

Dirty John, classmates called him. Sometimes it was Filthy John Meehan, or just Filthy. But mostly Dirty John.

___

Ask John Meehan's sisters how he became the man who conned his way into Debra Newell's life - ask them where his story begins - and they point to their father.

Their Brooklyn-raised dad ran the Diamond Wheel Casino in San Jose, and imparted to John a series of illicit skills, like how to pull off bogus lawsuits and insurance scams. "How to lie," said one sister, Donna Meehan Stewart. "How to deceive."

Coupled with that was a cold-eyed ethos of leaving no slight unpunished. "If anybody did anything to John, my dad would tell us, 'You go there with a stick and take care of it,'" said Karen Douvillier, his other sister. "It's the Brooklyn mentality of you fight, you get even. If you want to get back at somebody, you don't get back at them, you get back at their family."

At Prospect High School in Saratoga, Calif., in the mid-1970s, John was a great-looking athlete, charismatic, a magnet for girls, an

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times4 min readCrime & Violence
Robin Abcarian: Criminalizing Homelessness Is Unconscionable, But Is It Unconstitutional?
On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments about whether a small Oregon city can cite and prosecute homeless people for sleeping in public places when they have nowhere else to lay their heads. If the case reveals nothing else about the state
Los Angeles Times8 min read
Bit By A Billionaire's Dog? Or A Case Of Extortion? A Legal Saga From An LA Dog Park
LOS ANGELES -- A dog-bites-woman story usually isn't much of a story at all. But an incident in one of L.A.'s wealthiest enclaves has become something else entirely. What began in a Brentwood park on a summer day in 2022, when a dog owned by billiona
Los Angeles Times5 min read
Kevin Baxter: How Former Galaxy Player Eddie Lewis Became A Soccer Training Tech Innovator
LOS ANGELES — Eddie Lewis played his final soccer game at the age of 36, old for a midfielder but young for just about everybody else. So with more than half a lifetime ahead of him, he had plenty of time to build a new career. Yet like many former p

Related