48 Hours - The Ghosts Of Greenwich

Episode Date: January 11, 2026

The night before Halloween in 1975, fifteen-year-old Martha Moxley was beaten to death. The murder weapon? A golf club. Decades later Michael Skakel, the well-connected cousin of Bobby Kennedy Junior,... was found guilty, but did he actually commit the crime? “48 Hours" Correspondents Troy Roberts and Lesley Stahl report. This classic "48 Hours" episode last aired on 10/26/2013. Watch all-new episodes of “48 Hours” on Saturdays, and stream on demand on Paramount+. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 After four days of deliberation and 27 years after the crime... Michael... Mr. Skakel, do you have anything to say? Mr. Skakel, do you have anything to say? Anything to say, Mr. Skakel? Kennedy cousin Michael Skakel convicted in the murder of Martha Moxley. That's him. Michael, did you kill her?
Starting point is 00:00:32 I know Michael Skakel, and I know he didn't commit the crime. Martha was an extremely popular, attractive girl. attractive girl. She liked everybody and everyone liked her. Typical teenager in probably the best sense of the term. Martha was found dead under a pine tree adjacent to their home. You know, we knew Michael had done this absolutely no doubt. The instrument used in the striking of the Moxley Girl was a golf club.
Starting point is 00:01:10 We know that. My name is Steven Skakel. And I am the brother of Michael Skakel. Michael Skakel puts himself at the crime scene. Michael Skakel makes admissions that only a murderer would make. At the time this murder was committed, my brother was in the other side of town. The evidence is much stronger in suggesting
Starting point is 00:01:30 that other people may have committed the crime. One of the key pieces of information was that of Tony Bryant. One weekend, we decided to go up to Greenwich and hang out. who says in no uncertain terms that his two friends committed this crime. They picked up these clubs and they said that they were going to go out and get a girl caveman style. Why should you believe me? I was there.
Starting point is 00:02:00 And it was astounding to me that nobody looked and said, well, wait a second. There's some other suspects here. Our brother Michael's been stolen from us. It's an overzealous, unethical prosecution. in my estimation, is politically motivated. Somebody decided that a Skakel was going to go to jail. We appealed to the Connecticut Supreme Court, the US Supreme Court, Stanford Superior Court. You've got our brother sitting in jail, and we're not going to quit until he's out.
Starting point is 00:02:35 This case has never been connected to any other individual, at least credibly, except for Michael Skagel. Well, I just think he has to pay for what he did. Are you anything guilty, Michael? He doesn't deserve to be spending 20 years of his life in jail for a crime that he didn't commit. I'm Troy Roberts. There were dramatic developments in this case that could free Michael Skakel.
Starting point is 00:03:02 I'm joined by 60 Minutes correspondent Leslie Stahl as we unravel this incredible story that spans nearly four decades. Mr. Skakel, do you have anything to say? Mr. Skakel, do you have anything to say? Anything to say, Mr. Skakel? Mr. Skagel. We go to the show off of 2002. And a trial that Dorothy Moxley had been waiting and praying for for nearly 30 years. Dear Lord, again today, like I've been doing for 27 years, I'm praying that I can find justice for Martha.
Starting point is 00:03:41 And those prayers were finally answered, justice in the murder of her daughter Martha. After four days of deliberation and 27 years after the crime, Kennedy cousin Michael Skakel convicted in the murder of Martha Moxley. For the Moxley's, it was the end of a long ordeal. We knew Michael had done this. You don't think there's any doubt. Now, absolutely no doubt. But for the Skakles, it was the lowest moment yet in their long ordeal.
Starting point is 00:04:12 For our family, grieving has coincided with accusations. Michael is innocent. There is no way on earth he could have done this. And I will fight until the last breath in me to get him free. My heart almost stopped. Stephen Skakel will never forget the moment. The jury returned its verdict against his older brother, Michael. I looked down at the floor and my whole world had been shattered.
Starting point is 00:04:44 I know Michael Skakel, and I know Michael Skakel, and I know he didn't commit the crime. Michael's cousin, Bobby Kennedy, Jr., has long been speaking out in defense of Michael. You know, people are going to dismiss that and say, well, of course, he's defending his cousin. But the facts themselves speak for themselves. Kennedy, a former prosecutor, and now a professor of law at Pace University, closely examined the details of his cousin's conviction. His findings were first published in the Atlantic Monthly. That's why I took the time to put together this piece, is that I, I am utterly convinced that he did not do the crime.
Starting point is 00:05:20 I know he didn't do the crime. After the article was published, Kennedy said he received hundreds of letters about the case. I treated all of these things with a lot of skepticism. But when he got a letter from a former classmate of Michael Skakel named Crawford Mills, Kennedy was intrigued. Crawford Mills told me that Tony had information about the murder of Martha Moxley. Tony is Tony Bryant,
Starting point is 00:05:54 cousin of basketball star Kobe Bryant. In 1974, Tony was a classmate of Michael Skakel. He claims two of his childhood friends boasted about committing the murder. They went up to Greenwich on several occasions with Tony, that one of them became obsessed with Martha Moxley. Armed with this new information, Michael's defense attorneys were sure they had found the evidence they needed for a new trial. Members of the Skakel family, Stephen, John, and David say their brother Michael could never have committed murder. This is Michael in an earlier, happier time.
Starting point is 00:06:38 The father of a young son, a talented athlete. This is Mount Hood, Oregon. This is in Norway. who was a one-time member of the U.S. National Speed Skiing Squad. Getting medals at both races. And a man, they say, is dedicated to helping others. I wouldn't be sitting here if it weren't for Michael. Our brother Michael's been stolen from us. He's innocent.
Starting point is 00:07:01 I know that. We are going to fight until he is freed and reunited with his son. For the Skakles, it's almost ironic that a Kennedy has come to their brother's defense. They believe it was the Kennedy connection that put them in the spotlight to begin with. They were our neighbors. They were rich, and they were Kennedys. This TV miniseries was won in a long line of books, articles, and TV dramatizations about Martha Moxley's murder. This thing has happened.
Starting point is 00:07:35 We can't undo it. A parade led by the late writer Dominic Dunn and disgraced policeman-turned-turned-writer Mark Furman. I think you have a lot of problem with a lot of power and money and politics. The Skakel brothers are the nephews of Ethel Skakel Kennedy, who married Robert Kennedy in 1950. The Skakel family were as powerful and as rich as the Kennedys. Dominic Dunn calls us all a bunch of rich snobs. He was the only one that I saw coming to court every day in a limousine.
Starting point is 00:08:04 Are you all independently wealthy? Well, we're having trouble paying our lawyers now, so I guess the answer is no. They live modest lives, they say. Stephen has focused on charity work. I work for a humanitarian aid group for 11 years. His brother David works as a county recycling manager, and his brother John sells insurance. I mean, these are not highfalutin jobs.
Starting point is 00:08:30 But once upon a time, the Skakles were millionaires, living a life of wealth and privilege. That was a different time, a whole different life back then. Their father, Rushton Skakel, had inherited a fortune from the family mining company. 40 years ago, the family was growing up in this house in the exclusive Bell Haven section of Greenwich, Connecticut. Was everybody rich? I mean, it was a fairly well-to-do area. It was a very friendly, open neighborhood. There were lots of children.
Starting point is 00:09:07 It was a wonderful place to grow up. Michael's the one that's on my mother's knee. In 1973, a cloud cast a shadow over those happy times for this family of six boys and one girl when they lost their mother to cancer. I remember my father said, your mother has died. If you want to go to your room and cry, that's fine. And it was never discussed again. Unable to cope with raising seven children by himself, Rushden Skakel High School. a nanny, and then in October 1975, a live-in tutor named Ken Littleton.
Starting point is 00:09:46 I mean, he was the football coach, but he was pretty much a loner. On the day after Ken Littleton took up residence in the Skakel home, Martha Moxley, the Skakle's pretty next-door neighbor, would be found murdered. Martha was an extremely popular, attractive girl. Typical teenager in probably the best sense of the term. Martha Moxley was murdered at the age of 15. Moxley murder is still unsolved.
Starting point is 00:10:32 Len Levitt, a writer for the Huffington Post, has spent nearly twice as many years investigating her murder. I became an old man doing this case. Levitt's reporting of the case began following Martha's death on October 30, 1975. It was the night before Halloween. Martha does not return home, and her mother, obviously, is concerned that she starts making calls about one o'clock at night.
Starting point is 00:11:01 The police starts searching in the neighborhood early the next morning, and at one o'clock, a passing schoolgirl finds Martha under a tree at the edge of her property, beaten to death with a golf club, so severely that the golf club shatters into four parts. The instrument used in the striking of the Moxley girl was a golf club. We know that. It was the first clue Greenwich-Bronich. police had to go on. The day the body was found, the police found a golf club that matched the murder weapon inside the Skakel home.
Starting point is 00:11:37 But at the time, it wasn't enough to arouse their suspicions. First hypothesis, nobody from Greenwich could have done this. This is too brutal a crime. Today, Bell Haven became even more private, sealed off to everyone but residents and police. Some hitchhiker, perhaps, off the through way. The investigation began by establishing the likely time of the police. Martha's death. Greenwich Police consulted forensic expert Dr. Michael Baden.
Starting point is 00:12:04 It was our opinion that the time of death, based only on the stomach contest, was about 9.30, 10 o'clock. The police then established who had been with Martha that night. Martha turns up at the Skakel house, perhaps around 9 o'clock that night with some friends. Martha got into the Skakel's Lincoln, similar to this one, which was parked in the driveway. She sat between Michael and
Starting point is 00:12:29 his older brother Tommy. A short time later, the Skakel say, Martha got out of the car with Tommy, while Michael and a few others drove off. Somewhere about 9.15, Michael goes with his older brother's Rush Jr. and John and his cousin Jimmy Terrian back to Jimmy Terrian's house. Around the time of Martha's murder, John Skakel says they were at the Terrian's house watching the U.S. premiere of Monty Python's Flying Circus. At 10 o'clock, Michael was eight miles away with myself and my brother Rush and my cousin, Jim Terry. Meanwhile, back at the Skakel home. Martha's with Tommy.
Starting point is 00:13:12 What goes on between Martha and Tommy then is sort of playful, pushing back and forth with sexual overtones. Friends are so embarrassed that they leave. Tommy tells the police he last sees Martha at 9.30 that night when she leaves and goes home. Martha never gets home. Tommy is seen again shortly after 10 o'clock with Ken Littleton. Littleton was the family's new tutor
Starting point is 00:13:38 who had just moved into the house that day. Littleton is unpacking. He's watching the French connection on TV. Everyone Greenwich Police interviewed who saw Martha that night had an alibi. Michael Skakel's alibi was so strong he was not considered a suspect.
Starting point is 00:13:58 Several weeks would pass. before investigators turn their attention to the person they believed was the last to see Martha Moxley alive, Tommy Skakel. Tommy's story is that he last sees her at 9.30 when she leaves him, and he goes inside home to write a paper on Abraham Lincoln. The police later find out no teacher at Tommy School
Starting point is 00:14:18 ever assigned this paper. By the late fall, they are focusing on Tommy, and they're focusing on him with a vengeance. What was it like when you all realized that your older brother was a suspect? It was just shock and disbelief. What did Tommy say? He said he didn't do it, and I know that he didn't do it.
Starting point is 00:14:41 Tommy Skakel lived under a cloud of suspicion for years. Now married with children, he was the only Skakel family member who refused to talk with 48 hours. In the end, police never charged him, partly because of his alibi that night. The problem with Tommy is, a murder suspect is that if this happened to 10 o'clock, Tommy's alibi is Ken Littleton. With no new leads, the investigation went cold, but Dorothy Moxley never gave up hope.
Starting point is 00:15:13 We knew it had to be one of the boys, either Tommy or Michael, right from the beginning. Well, you know, the murder weapon came from that house, and that was the last place she was seen. In 1991, 16 years after Martha Moxley's murder, the case was revived, when a new investigator started taking another look at the Skakels. With the focus back on his family, rushed and Skakel did something extraordinary. Trying to clear the family name, he hired his own team of investigators to look into Martha's death. Their results became known as the Sutton Report.
Starting point is 00:15:48 The key findings focused on Ken Littleton and Tommy and Michael Skakel. But the effort backfired, because the report for the first time pointed a finger at Michael. Michael. Michael lied to the police. Michael's story was, he'd gone to the Terrians, then he comes home at 1130, and he goes right to bed. But he told the Sutton investigators that's not all he did that night. He's feeling horny.
Starting point is 00:16:14 Around midnight, he's drunk. He wants to see Martha, and he goes out, and he climbs a tree outside Martha's window. He throws stones at the window, and he masturbates in the tree. He climbs down, right around where the crime scene is. He hears voices, and he runs home, and he goes. to bed. I ran home and I remember thinking, oh my God, I hope nobody saw me jerking off. In fact, Michael even made a tape recording of that story in a 1997 book proposal for a tell
Starting point is 00:16:43 all biography. I remember thinking, oh my God, if I tell anybody that I was out that night, they're going to say I did it. Michael Skakel puts himself at the crime scene. Michael Skakel makes admissions that only a murderer would make. When former L.A. Detective Mark Furman, who gained notoriety during the O.J. Simpson case was leaked a copy of the Sutton report. He wrote the bestseller Murder in Greenwich,
Starting point is 00:17:07 naming Michael as Martha's killer. Just one month later in June of 1998, prosecutor Jonathan Benedict called for a special grand jury to hear evidence about the case. The grand jury heard some explosive testimony. All right, break it out, break it out. Much of it from Michael's former classmates at the Alon Reform School,
Starting point is 00:17:29 where Skakel had been sent at after a drunk driving incident. Several of them dropped a bombshell that he had confessed to killing Martha. The first words he ever said to me was, I'm gonna get away with murder, I'm a Kennedy. This is former Elan student Greg Coleman telling a reporter what Michael told him
Starting point is 00:17:50 about the night Martha died. He had made advances towards her and she rejected his advances and quote unquote that he drove her skull in with a golf club. In January of 2000, That's him, that's him. After hearing testimony from several Elan students and others,
Starting point is 00:18:09 Michael, did you kill her? The grand jury indicted Michael Skakel for the murder of Martha Moxley. When Michael Skakel went to trial, the rest of his family was convinced he would be found not guilty. After all, Michael had an airtight alibi, and there wasn't a single shred of physical or forensic evidence that linked him to the crime. His brother David Skakel thought that finally the family name would be cleared once and for all.
Starting point is 00:18:36 Mr. Skakel, do you have anything to say? We were worried that... Let's give him a little space here. Without a trial, he could never fully get closure in clearing of his reputation. So you saw this as a way to absolve him? We all did. Please come to the mic. So when the jury returned their guilty verdict, the Skakel family was left shocked and devastated.
Starting point is 00:19:00 It's disheartening. I love my brother, and I believe in him 100%. Following Michael's conviction, Bobby Kennedy Jr. began his own investigation and made a stunning discovery. On the night of the murder, they picked up a golf club or some golf clubs from the Skakleyard.
Starting point is 00:19:29 And they said that they were going to go out and get a girl caveman style. It's 8.30 on Saturday morning and going up to visit Michael. For the first few years of Michael Skakel's incarceration, this is the last thing I ever thought I would be doing. This is how his brother Steven spent every Saturday morning. There are some mornings where I would like to sleep in.
Starting point is 00:20:12 Making the long drive from his home in Connecticut to visit his older brother in prison. Just let him know we're still here. and still fighting for him. Now 46, Stephen is the youngest of the Skakel children. He was just nine when Martha Moxley was murdered. There's only so much people can take, and we've taken it for 30 years.
Starting point is 00:20:35 Since the conviction... I've gone through all of the transcripts, all the police reports. He has taken the lead in the fight to clear Michael and the Skakel family name. Did you ever look Michael in the eye and ask him directly, He killed Martha?
Starting point is 00:20:51 No. I know Michael, and I know in my heart that he did not. He doesn't deserve to be spending 20 years of his life in jail for a crime that he didn't commit. Even more outspoken is Skakel's cousin, Bobby Kennedy Jr. For me to come out publicly to defend somebody that basically everybody in the country feels is guilty of murder is from a personal strategy, not a good choice for me, but I know he's innocent. Although they were not close as kids, as adults, Bobby Kennedy and Michael Skakele shared a similar history, problems with addiction. I became close to Michael Skakel in 1983 when I first got sober.
Starting point is 00:21:33 And Michael had been sober for a year or two years at that time. Kennedy spent six months investigating the case for the Atlantic Monthly article. What do you hope this article you wrote is going to accomplish? I really wrote that article for Michael's son, for Georgie. Because he's going to grow up with most people in this country thinking that his father murdered a girl, and he didn't do it. Kennedy knew he had hit paydirt when the letter from Skakle's classmate, Crawford Mills arrived, revealing that another classmate, Tony Bryant,
Starting point is 00:22:12 said he knew who had killed Martha Moxley. Tony Bryant is one of the first African-American students at Brunswick. I don't know. I see. Bobby Kennedy located Bryant in Florida. Tony's story has a lot of credibility. Bryant told Kennedy that on the night Martha died, he was in Greenwich with two friends from the Bronx.
Starting point is 00:22:39 One of them was black and one of them was white, and that they were, these two people were best friends. They went up to Greenwich on several occasions with Tony. That one of them became obsessed with Martha Moxley. Tony told Kennedy his friends had a plan. They picked up golf clubs from the Skagel's Yard. They picked up these clubs, and they said that they were going to go out
Starting point is 00:23:04 and get a girl caveman style, and that Tony understood the girl to mean Martha Moxley. Now what is caveman style? What is that? What he says is that it meant, that they were going to hit her over the head and drag her into the bushes. Bryant wanted no part of their plan
Starting point is 00:23:22 and claims he left. When he read what happened to Martha Moxley, he feared the worst. He's saying that they confessed to him a couple of days later that they had killed Martha Moxley? Well, they never actually said that they had killed Martha Moxley, but that they were in some ways boastful about it and were kind of egging him on to inquire to them about the details.
Starting point is 00:23:55 They would say things to him that were suggestive, like we accomplished our mission and we did it. Why would he wait 28 years? His mother urged him not to talk about it publicly. Because- That was prompted by her fear that as a young black man. man in Greenwich that he would be a target for prosecution. When Bobby Kennedy spoke with the two men, he says neither of them acted as though they had anything to hide.
Starting point is 00:24:29 I asked them to confirm some of the basic information that I'd heard, that they were friends of Tony's. They did confirm that? Yes. Yes. that they had been to Greenwich with him on several occasions. They confirmed that? Yeah. Bobby Kennedy, however, did not ask them if they had anything to do with Martha Moxley's murder.
Starting point is 00:24:56 I didn't tell them that Tony had accused them of committing the crime at that point. Both men have denied any involvement in the death of Martha Moxley. And despite attempts to challenge Tony Bryant's credibility, the man who went to prep school with Michael Skakel, stands by his story. Somebody decided that Askakle was going to go to jail and that all of the other evidence, the abundant evidence against other people
Starting point is 00:25:25 were going to be ignored. Kennedy says these new developments support his arguments that the prosecution simply had the wrong man. Michael, Michael, Michael. The strongest piece of evidence is that Michael has an alibi. Monty Python's Flying Circus.
Starting point is 00:25:41 Michael's alibi that he was a across town watching Monty Python when the murder occurred has always been supported by several relatives, including his brother John. I took a lie detector test in which I was asked who was in the car that went to my cousins and Terrians who live about eight miles away and Michael was in fact in the car and that was my response. John's 1975 polygraph results, however, were inadmissible in court. What did make it into the trial though was the testimony.
Starting point is 00:26:13 of two former Elan students. The two most damaging witnesses against Michael were Greg Coleman and John Higgins. The prosecution contended that when 17-year-old Michael was at the Elan School, he talked openly about the murder. Greg Coleman testified that he had heard Michael confess to having murdered Martha Moxley five or six times. When he came up in front of the preliminary hearing,
Starting point is 00:26:40 Greg Coleman testified that Michael had only confessed to him actually once or twice. When Michael's defense attorney, Mickey Sherman, asked Greg Coleman why he had changed his story, Coleman admitted that prior to facing the grand jury, he had taken 25 bags of heroin. Greg Coleman died of a drug overdose just before the trial, but a tape of his previous testimony was played for the jury.
Starting point is 00:27:07 Higgins was in a land bully who tortured Michael when he was at land. John Higgins did testify at the trial and said Michael had also confessed to him. Higgins refused our requests for an interview. Why couldn't Michael's attorneys have destroyed their credibility? I think Michael could have gotten better representation. I would ask Mickey, why aren't you bringing this or that up? Everything's fine. We're going to have a good day. But the worst day of all for the Skakles and Mickey Sherman was June 3rd, the day of closing arguments.
Starting point is 00:27:41 Prosecutors in the case used a very, very sophisticated multimedia technique. We needed to connect the dots, and that's what I did. Prosecutor Jonathan Benedict transcribed and played Michael's own words from that book proposal over gory photographs from the crime scene that we have blocked out. Then I woke up to Mrs. Moxley saying, Michael, have you seen Martha? I was like, oh my God, did they see me last night? John Skakel, who was in the courtroom, feels it distorted Michael's own words into a confession. We all felt sick.
Starting point is 00:28:17 And I remember just having a feeling of panic. Like, oh, shit. Like my worry of what I went to bed with. The problem, says Bobby Kennedy, was that Michael was talking about being seen masturbating, not committing murder. His tape recorded words were used out of context by the prosecutor to imply that he was confessing to the, to the crime. crime. That multimedia display really convicted Michael in the end. But is the end about to be rewritten? What the Skakels now have is hope. Tony Bryant was eventually persuaded to do a 90-minute interview on videotape confirming what he had told Bobby Kennedy. Would this be Michael Skakel's
Starting point is 00:29:03 ticket out of jail? Do you have a dark curiosity? Heart starts pounding, horrors, hauntings, and Mysteries is a weekly podcast hosted by me, Kaelan Moore. Each week, I'll take you on a dark journey through terrifying true urban legends, bizarre true crime cases, chilling tales of backwoods horror and more. So if you're looking to join a passionate community of The Darkly Curious, check out Heart Starts pounding on the free Odyssey app or wherever you get your podcasts. And remember, stay curious. Talking about a crime that was 27 years old, everybody's memories are hazy. To Bobby Kennedy, Jr., the conviction of Michael Skakel was a miscarriage. This was the easiest case in the world to win.
Starting point is 00:30:04 Reasonable doubt was all over the place. Turns out that Tony Bryant's story was known even before the trial began. Remember Crawford Mills? He says he first took the information to the prosecutor's office and Michael Skakel's attorney just before the trial. The prosecutor told him to get lost. They weren't interested in pursuing this evidence, this lead. In fact, the defense didn't pursue it either. While prosecutor Jonathan Benedict declined to talk to us about Tony Bryant's story,
Starting point is 00:30:37 he was clear that he thought the trial was fair and appropriate. Is there any part of your brain that has any doubt that Michael did it? Absolutely not. What in the article, Bobby Kennedy's article, did you feel was simply not true? Almost all of it. Literally paragraph by paragraph. Can you give us one or two highlights that you think of the most egregious? Probably his attack on Ken Littleton. The Skakel family originally thought that Ken Littleton, the family tutor,
Starting point is 00:31:12 should have been looked at more closely. At the time of the murder, Littleton said he was watching a movie with Tommy Skakel. But there were some inconsistencies in his story. He's been diagnosed having a bipolar disorder and... Severe. He's been in and out of hospitals. It's not a secret. He's had a number of hospitalizations. Gene Riccio was Ken Littleton's attorney.
Starting point is 00:31:36 Is it possible that the illness can be attributed to the murder of Martha Moxley? I don't think so at all. I think arguments made that Mr. Littleton is responsible to this homicide are ridiculous. In fact, the Skakles agree and now no longer consider Ken Littleton their primary side. suspect. Prosecutor Benedict says there was no miscarriage of justice. His case was built point by point, beginning with discrediting Michael's airtight alibi of taking a ride to his cousin's house at the time of the murder. He put Skakel family friend Andrea Shakespeare on the stand. Andrea Shakespeare is one of the witnesses from the neighborhood on the night of the murder,
Starting point is 00:32:20 who was certain that Mr. Skakel never took that alibi ride. In her testimony, when asked if Michael had gone to his cousins that night, she replied, he did not. Benedict continued to attack the alibi, using Michael's own brother, John. One of the other Skakel brothers, John, had taken a polygraph. Yeah, he passed. He was, therefore, in 1975, 1976, considered to be the most credible alibi witness for Michael Skakel. But a funny thing happened over the years.
Starting point is 00:32:57 When John came before the grand jury, he changed his story to this. He really didn't have any recall of who went to Terrian's house and who didn't. Benedict may have succeeded in discrediting the alibi, but ultimately he says, Michael did himself in. The truth of the matter is that Michael Skagel couldn't keep his mouth shut for a quarter of a century. Benedict is referring to those Elan students and others that Michael supposedly. confessed to over the years. Bobby Kennedy spends some time in the article really shredding their truthfulness and their motivation for coming forward.
Starting point is 00:33:35 Mickey Sherman did that at trial. And they say he wasn't that successful or effective. He didn't push hard enough. Mickey pushed as hard as he possibly could. He didn't miss a single issue. What the defense failed to anticipate was the impact of Jonathan Benedict's close argument. I don't know that Skaeckel family realized how many persuasive dots I had to connect.
Starting point is 00:34:02 Up until that point, both sides thought Michael might be acquitted. There were many days, I thought, you know, this is just never going to happen. This is just looking very bleak. Were you thinking it was going to go the other way? Well, yeah, we had no doubt about it until we saw this multimedia closing. Benedict played a critical passage from Michael's own book proposal to sum up his case. But the passage he used was edited in such a way that what the jury heard appeared to be a confession to murder. Then I woke up to Mrs. Moxley saying, Michael, have he seen Martha?
Starting point is 00:34:42 I was like, oh my God, did they see me last night? And I remember just having a feeling of panic. Oh, shit. But here is what Benedict intentionally left out. And I remember thinking, oh my God, I hope God nobody saw me jerking off. But I woke up to Mrs. Moxley saying, Michael, have you seen Martha? I was like, oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:35:05 Did they see me last night? In hearing this myself, without the preamble about masturbating, is that Mrs. Moxley wakes him up, and he says, oh my God, did they see me last night? And over in the corner is a picture of the battered body of Martha. Oh my God, did they see me last night? I had a feeling of panic.
Starting point is 00:35:29 And they're looking at the picture of her and the suggestion to anybody is that he's actually talking about murdering her. And isn't that really taking him out of context? No, I don't think so. If I did this on 48 hours, I'd be fired. I think it's a fair suggestion based upon the evidence of the case. It took the jury four days to come back with a guilty verdict.
Starting point is 00:35:58 The sentence, 20 years to life. End of story, not yet. 38 years after the crime, 11 years after the conviction, Troy Roberts reports that the question of who did kill Martha Moxley is heading back to court. Michael Skakel versus the state of Connecticut case CV-ZER. Martha was one of these children that was just so easy. She just was so easy to raise, to do things with.
Starting point is 00:36:46 Dorothy Moxley's only daughter Martha would have turned 53 this year. She just was really a very, very special little girl. And while Bobby Kennedy says he understands her laws, or laws, he has been steadfast in his belief. I know he's innocent. I know he's innocent. He walked himself through the crime scene. A skillful prosecutor can often put people in jail who are not guilty of a crime. For the past 11 years, Stephen Skakel has been leading his family's efforts to free his
Starting point is 00:37:19 brother. You have to remain helpful. I mean, you can't ever give up up. There have been appeals on the state and federal levels. And in 2007, Michael Skakel stood. in front of a judge once again. Your Honor, the petition for new trial that we've filed on behalf of Michael Skakel claims newly discovered evidence in count one, which involves the allegations concerning Tony Bryant.
Starting point is 00:37:44 Skakel's team had hoped a video statement from Tony Bryan could help set Michael Frey. We decided to go up to Greenwich and hang out and... Bryant described what his friends had told him about the night Martha Moxley was murdered. I got my caveman club, right? And I'm going to go grab somebody and pull them by hair and do what caveman is there? So do you believe that they killed her? Either the two of them or possibly? I think they were definitely involved.
Starting point is 00:38:14 Okay. There's no doubt in my mind that they were involved. The Skakels were sure they had made their case. Michael Skakel versus the state of Connecticut case has been concluded. But in the end, the judge did not agree. Michael Skakel's petition for a new trial was denied. It was a subjective determination by the judge that the Tony Bryan information would not be enough to sway a jury.
Starting point is 00:38:42 But the Skakels were far from done. They filed fresh appeals with a renewed focus on the performance of Michael's first lawyer, Mickey Sherman. I think Michael could have gotten better representation. It's dumbfounded us as to the amount of information that Mickey did not follow up on. And as a result, we're stuck in the situation that we're in. And my brother's sending in a jail cell.
Starting point is 00:39:07 This past April, one more court date, one more shot. Michael Skakel was back in court and took the stand, testifying against his former ally. Mickey had me believing he was the real deal. Skakel blasted Sherman for botching the case and being more interested in raising his own profile. He was hanging out with the press. He said he was a media whore.
Starting point is 00:39:33 Said what? A media whore. Mickey Sherman, defense attorney, now had to defend himself. Skakel's new lawyer, Hubert Santos, was on the attack. You spent most of your time talking to the media, right? Is that a question? Yeah. No.
Starting point is 00:39:51 Matter of fact, your billing records are replete with conversations with reporters that you billed to Skakles for. Right? It's one of the reasons they hired me, because I was... My right, sir? It's one of the reasons they hired me. And it's not the first time he's been in the hot seat. In 2011, he was sent to prison for failing to pay hundreds of thousands in federal taxes.
Starting point is 00:40:15 Facing the latest challenge, Sherman was grilled as to why he dismissed the information concerning two other possible suspects. You dismissed this as another crack-bought case, not case? Frankly, yes. Yes. Skakel's lawyer also questioned Sherman as to why he didn't raise suspicion about Michael's own brother, Tommy, who had exhibited questionable behavior. Did you know prior or during the trial that he would put his fists through doors? Not, I don't recall.
Starting point is 00:40:45 Did you know that prior to the trial or during the trial that he ripped the telephone off the wall? No. Did you know prior to or during the trial that he strangled the fellow classmate right in front of his teacher? I don't recall that. As Santos finished with Sherman, one last point. Would it surprise you to learn that you'd not once use the term in your summation,
Starting point is 00:41:10 proof beyond a reasonable doubt? It's possible? In a dramatic reversal of fortune, Judge Thomas Bishop granted Skakel a new trial, and in the 136-page decision, skewered Sherman for failing to adequately represent his client, including the failure to point the finger at others. Most notably, Michael's older brother, Tommy. As Michael Skagel awaits the next chapter in his Odyssey, his one constant has been his son.
Starting point is 00:41:40 The one thing that keeps him going throughout this whole thing is his son. That's what keeps him steady during the roller coaster of the different, you know, decisions that have come down thus far. But there's another parent, Martha Moxley's mother, Dorothy, who has to relive, happened to her daughter all over again. I'm always going to have Michael Skakel with me. It really doesn't end.
Starting point is 00:42:06 Once you're a victim, being a victim is just part of you forever. For the Skakels, the past 11 years that Michael has been in prison had been a test of patience and determination, one they say they will continue to face together as a family. We all want to get our brother freed and clear his name and our our family's name is a whole. Because I know if I was in my brother Michael's position, he would never stop. None of us would.
Starting point is 00:42:48 In 2013, Michael Skakel was released from prison after a judge ruled that his lawyer had not provided effective representation. In 2020, 45 years after Martha Moxley was killed, prosecutors announced that they would not retry Skakel. Martha Moxley's killing remains unsolved.

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