At about 9:30 p.m. on June 18, 1984, Berg returned to his Adams Street townhouse after a dinner date with Judith, with whom he was attempting reconciliation. Berg stepped out of his black
Volkswagen Beetle and gunfire erupted with Berg being shot twelve times, including five shots that entered and exited his head. Berg was officially pronounced dead at the scene at 9:45 p.m. The murder weapon, a semi-automatic
Ingram MAC-10, which had been illegally converted to an
automatic weapon, was later traced to the home of one of The Order's members by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation's
Hostage Rescue Team. A former producer of Berg's believed that he was on a "death list" both because he was Jewish and because he had challenged on air the beliefs of the
Christian Identity movement that Jews are descended from Satan. At the conspiracy trial of members of
The Order, the white supremacist organization responsible for organizing the assassination, a founding member of the group, Denver Daw Parmenter, was asked why Berg was targeted. Parmenter responded that Berg, "was mainly thought to be anti-white and he was Jewish." Berg's remains were buried at the Waldheim Jewish Cemetery in
Forest Park, Illinois. Four members of The Order, Jean Craig,
David Lane, Bruce Pierce, and Richard Scutari, were
indicted on federal charges for killing Berg. However, only Lane and Pierce were convicted. They were found guilty of
racketeering,
conspiracy, and violating Berg's
civil rights. Lane was sentenced to 190 years and Pierce was sentenced to 252 years. Although Jean Craig and Richard Scutari were acquitted of killing Berg, they continued to serve 40-year and 60-year sentences, respectively, on separate federal racketeering convictions. Craig died in prison on April 18, 2001, while Scutari was released in January, 2025. According to the
Southern Poverty Law Center, Scutari is revered as a martyr and a "prisoner of war" by the far-right, and continued to write articles for white supremacist publications and websites from prison. Lane was a former
Klansman who later joined the neo-Nazi
Christian Identity group
Aryan Nation. He steadfastly denied any involvement in Berg's murder, but neither did he regret that Berg was dead. In an interview presented as part of the
History Channel documentary
Nazi America: A Secret History, Lane admitted to calling the show and goading Berg into an exchange and stated: "The only thing I have to say about Alan Berg is, regardless of who did it, he has not mouthed his hate-whitey
propaganda from his 50,000-watt
zionist pulpit for quite a few years". Lane, incarcerated at the
Federal Correctional Complex in
Terre Haute, Indiana, died of an
epileptic seizure at age 68 on May 28, 2007. Bruce Pierce, who was incarcerated at the
Federal Correctional Complex in
Union County, Pennsylvania, died of natural causes at age 56 on August 16, 2010.
In popular culture Steven Dietz's 1988 play ''God's Country
and the 1988 film Betrayed were based on the incident, as was the 1999 film Brotherhood of Murder''. Director
Oliver Stone's
1988 film adaptation of
Eric Bogosian's play
Talk Radio also drew inspiration from Berg's death. His life and death were chronicled in the book,
Talked to Death: The Life and Murder of Alan Berg by Stephen Singular.
Marc Maron portrays Berg in the 2024 film
The Order. ==See also==