Public response Immediately following Crane's exoneration, her father told reporters of the
Los Angeles Times that he planned to fight Turner for full
custody of his daughter. Reporter
Jack Jones wrote: "Although Jerry Giesler, Lana's attorney, reported that the actress herself will battle for custody of the couple's daughter... there seemed to be no ill feeling between Crane and his glamorous ex-wife." Though Turner and her daughter were cleared of any wrongdoing, public opinion on the trial was varied, and the day after Crane's exoneration, the
Times published a scathing article stating that Turner possessed a "lack of almost any reference to moral sensitivity in the presence of a child," concluding that "Cheryl isn't the juvenile delinquent. Lana is." The scandal coincided with the release of
Another Time, Another Place, which was met with poor box-office receipts and a lackluster critical response.
Wrongful death lawsuit Stompanato's brother Carmine, who attended the inquest, alleged afterward that he felt Turner "failed to tell the whole truth" and that law enforcement had "made up their mind right from the start that Johnny deserved to die." Stompanato's ex-wife, Sarah Ibrahaim, filed a
wrongful death suit of $750,000 () in
damages against Turner, Crane and Stephen on behalf of herself and then-7-year-old John Jr., her son with Stompanato. In the suit, it was implied that Turner was responsible for stabbing Stompanato and that her daughter had taken the blame. The suit alleged that Stephen arrived at Turner's residence prior to Stompanato's death and failed to summon proper medical assistance.
Depositions in the wrongful death suit began in June 1958. William Jerome Pollack, the attorney overseeing the case, presented evidence suggesting that Stompanato had been stabbed while lying down, which conflicted with the accepted version of events. An amended complaint alleged that the plaintiff was uncertain "whether it was Defendant Cheryl Crane or Defendant Lana Turner who did the actual stabbing, or whether the one assisted the other therein. Because of said doubt, plaintiff allege[d] that both of said defendants did inflict the said stab wound in the body of John Stompanato." Representing Turner, Crane and Stephen in the wrongful death lawsuit was attorney Lowell Dryden. On June 23, 1958, the three, accompanied by Dryden, visited Pollack's law offices in Los Angeles for a meeting. Pollack subsequently reported: "Cheryl told [me] yesterday that she cannot recall actually stabbing Stompanato in the pink-carpeted bedroom of Lana's rented Beverly Hills mansion." Pollack further stated that Crane could not recall providing the written statement read on her behalf during the April 11 inquest. The suit was submitted to the court of Walter Allen, and was eventually settled out of court for a reported $20,000 in May 1962.
Legacy and conspiracy theories Stompanato's homicide has had an enduring presence in
true crime popular culture and mythology, and was named one of the "
crimes of the century" by
Time in 2007. Film historian Sam Staggs noted that it "belongs in the same pantheon of foul deeds as the
Fatty Arbuckle rape trial in 1921, the ambiguous
death of Marilyn Monroe in 1962, and the
murder trial of O. J. Simpson of 1995." In the intervening years, Stompanato's homicide has been subject to an oft-repeated
conspiracy theory that Turner in fact killed him, and that Crane had taken culpability for her mother, claiming
self-defense. This theory was exacerbated when Eric Root, a hairdresser of Turner's, claimed in a 1996 memoir that Turner confessed to him that she had stabbed Stompanato during their domestic struggle. According to Root, Turner made the confession to him years later at the
Plaza Hotel, after the two saw a television program referencing the case; Root claims that Turner allegedly blurted out: "I killed the son of a bitch, and I would do it again." He also stated that Turner urged to him to reveal this to the public should she die before him, in order to clear her daughter's name. Crane, however, denied this claim, responding in 1999: "This idea that Root had in his book is so far-fetched... You know, everybody has something they want to sell. I guess it was the only way he could get his book published." Additionally,
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer stylist
Sydney Guilaroff noted in his 1996 memoir that, on the morning of Stompanato's murder, he had run into Turner leaving the Pioneer Hardware store in Beverly Hills; during a brief exchange, Guilaroff alleged that when he asked Turner what she was doing at the hardware store, she responded: "We needed a new knife." Guilaroff further claimed that he visited Turner the following day, and that she collapsed in his arms, sobbing, and said, "Did you ever dream this could happen? And with the very knife I bought yesterday." In her own autobiography, Turner conceded that she and Stompanato had gone shopping for kitchen utensils for Turner's new home the week he died, and that he had in fact been stabbed with one of the carving knives he had purchased. In 2012,
48 Hours presented a special profiling the case, which featured conversation between several historians, Cheryl Crane, and John Ibrahim, Stompanato's son. Ibrahim contested that Turner's testimony was "all lies" and that she "could have got an Academy Award," to which Crane responded: ==Cultural depictions==