The highly-rated documentary drama series based on the infamous serial killer, necrophilia, and cannibal Jeffrey Dahmer has come under fire since its September debut.
One of its controversies is that the show's creators didn't contact the victims' families before embarking on a project based on actual traumatizing events.
Rita Isbell, the sister to the late Errol Lindsey, a 19-year-old who was murdered by Dahmer, told Insider that she was never informed about the show. “I feel like Netflix should have asked if we mind or how we felt about making it. They didn’t ask me anything. They just did it.” Isbell’s statement at Dahmer’s 1992 sentencing is replicated word-for-word in the drama.
Lindsey’s cousin Eric Perry mentioned on Twitter that though Netflix wasn’t obligated to contact victims’ families because the ordeals are public record, the way the show was portrayed re-traumatized the loved ones of Dahmer’s victims.
Shirley Hughes, the mother of the late Tony Hughes, also voiced her displeasure with how the series handled her son's harrowing story. 'It didn't happen like that. I don't see how they can use our names and put stuff out there like that without permission,' she told The Guardian.
The show's sixth episode, titled 'Silenced', focused on the 31-year-old deaf victim of Dahmer, including his relationship with his loved ones and the disguised white queen, who eventually killed him despite forming a promising connection.