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'Fatal Attraction' killer released from New York prison

Prosecutors said Carolyn Warmus was having an affair with the victim's husband, Paul Solomon, when she shot Betty Jeanne Solomon to death in the victim's home in Greenburgh, New York, in 1989.
Carolyn Warmus, a teacher who is accused of the murder of Be
Carolyn Warmus during her trial for the murder of Betty Jean Solomon, the wife of her lover and fellow school teacher Paul Solomon, in 1991.John Pedin / NY Daily News via Getty Images

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. — A former New York schoolteacher who was convicted of killing her lover's wife in a case dubbed the Fatal Attraction murder has been released from prison.

Carolyn Warmus was released from Bedford Hills prison on Monday after her parole was granted last month. Her release was first reported in the Daily News.

The now 55-year-old Warmus was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison in 1992 for the murder of Betty Jeanne Solomon.

Prosecutors said Warmus was having an affair with the victim's husband, Paul Solomon, when she shot Betty Jeanne Solomon to death in the victim's home in Greenburgh, New York on Jan. 15, 1989. Warmus has always maintained her innocence.

The case drew comparisons to the movie "Fatal Attraction" starring Glenn Close and Michael Douglas.