Little Free Library find. I've read a few Kennedy adjacent books recently. I thought I was done but then saw this and thought I'd at least flip through it. It turned out to be better than I thought it would be.
Fifteen-year-old Martha Moxley was murdered in Greenwich, CT on mischief night - Halloween Eve - in 1975. Greenwich was - and is - an extremely wealthy community. There was a lot of drinking, drug use, and dysfunctional rich families. Murder was very rare but wealthy people engaged in other bad behavior with few consequences. Martha didn't come home after an evening hanging out at the Skakel house nearby. The Skakel dad, Rushton, was the brother of Ethel Kennedy. His wife had died of cancer a couple of years earlier. He developed a drinking problem, as did his poorly supervised kids. Also present at the house was their newly hired live-in tutor, Ken Littleton.
When Martha's body was discovered by her friend Sheila the next day, everyone was in shock. The local police didn't handle things very well. They investigated an oddball neighbor, who was later proven innocent. Then they moved on to the tutor, then to Michael and/or Tommy Skakel, among others. Perhaps due to their inexperience with this type of case, they were unable to charge anyone or even to get a good idea of who did it.
The author grew up in Greenwich and was roughly the same age as Martha. He even recalls attending the funeral of the Skakel kids' uncle George Skakel Jr as a young boy in 1966 and being impressed by the various Kennedys in attendance. In addition to writing about the crime and the efforts to solve it, he delves into the history of the town and of the Skakel and Moxley families. Although he knew many of the people involved, he manages to write fairly dispassionately.
The edition of the book I read was published in 1998. In writing about the town and the Skakel family, Dumas mentions their sort of tortured history. The book has its own tortured history as events have twice overtaken it. In the late 1980s, there was renewed interest in the unsolved case. Another Kennedy cousin, William Kennedy Smith, had been accused of rape. False rumors that he had been present in Greenwich at the time of Martha's murder led to books by Mark Fuhrman (of OJ Simpson fame) and Dominick Dunne as well as this one.
After this edition was published, Michael Skakel was charged with the murder. He was convicted in 2002. In 2013, the author published a revised edition of the book, including Michael Skakel's trial and conviction and updating the entire book with information that had been discovered since 1998. I found that edition in the Audible Plus catalogue and listened to it as well.
Meanwhile, Skakel cousin Robert Kennedy Jr wrote an article and later a book pleading Michael's case and pointing the finger at both Littleton and at a couple of kids from elsewhere who might have been in the area to sell or buy drugs and party on mischief night. After many appeals, Michael was granted a new trial in 2013. In 2016, his conviction was reinstated before being vacated in 2018. In 2020, the state announced they would not retry him.
Personally, I don't think we'll ever know for sure who did it - because many of the players were using alcohol and drugs and probably don't really remember what happened that night and because of mistakes in the investigation. Nonetheless, I enjoyed both editions of the book. Some would disagree, but I found the extra background about the town and the characters to be interesting, especially the extended Skakel family.