American Scandal - Chappaquiddick | Circling the Wagon | 3
Episode Date: May 12, 2026Police on Chappaquiddick Island recover the body of a young woman from Ted Kennedy’s Oldsmobile and begin to question the Senator’s story about what happened.See Privacy Policy at https:/.../art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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American scandal uses dramatizations that are based on true events.
Some elements, including dialogue, might be invented, but everything is based on historical research.
It's around 9.30 a.m. on July 19, 1969, on Chappaquitic Island in Massachusetts.
Local police chief Dominic Arena and fire department scuba diver John Ferrar stumble up the sandy shore carrying a stretcher.
On it lies the body of a young woman.
Just over an hour ago, a pair of fishermen reported that they found a car upside down in the water near the beach.
When Chief Arena ran the automobile's license plate, he was shocked to learn it was registered to Senator Ted Kennedy.
But an even more disturbing discovery awaited inside the car.
The dead woman on the stretcher was in her 20s, dressed in a sod and white blouse and navy blue slacks.
Her body shows almost no signs of visible injury, which is unusual for someone who,
who's just been in a car accident.
But Chief Arena is still in the dark about the woman's identity,
and he doesn't know if Senator Kennedy is even aware of the crash.
Arena nods toward his deputy's police cruiser.
So let's put her in the backseat for now.
We don't need people standing around gawking.
Arena signals another officer to open the cruiser's rear door.
Then he and Ferrar slide the stretcher onto the backseat.
All right, now we just need to figure out who this poor girl is.
Well, I'll see if there's anything left in the car.
there's an ID floating around somewhere.
That'd be good. Thanks, John.
Farrar walks back toward the water and wades in.
Arena turns to his fellow officer with some orders.
Would you call the medical examiner?
The undertaker, too.
Then we need to get a tow truck out here to pull the car from the water.
The officer nods and hops in the front seat to use the radio.
And while he's making these calls,
Arena turns to a local man who's wandered over to watch.
Hey, sir, could you do me a favor?
I'm a little short-handed here,
and I need someone to head down to the ferry landing to meet with the medical examiner.
His name's Dr. Mills. He's an older guy with horn-rimmed glasses. You really can't miss him.
The helpful local quickly agrees. And with wheels in motion, Arina returns to his attention to the body in the back seat.
She looks like a lovely young woman who's just laying down for a nap.
Ah, what a waste. What were you doing in that car, kid?
Got something, Chief.
Arena turns to see Ferrar standing in the shallows.
He's holding a floral patterned hard-shell bag.
Arena hurries down the slope to take it.
Water gushes out as arena opens the bag.
Rooting around inside, he pulls out a driver's license.
Rosemary Keogh.
All right.
And this is what looks to be a pass for the U.S. Senate.
Also for Ms. Keog.
Okay, well, must be heard, right?
Maybe she worked for Senator Kennedy.
You think he let her borrow the car for the weekend or something?
That's possible, but we won't know for sure until we talk to her.
There are two keys for a hotel over in Egertown here, too.
So for now, why don't you head back in the water, make absolutely sure Keo was the only person in the car?
There could be another body in the water we haven't found yet, so focus your search downstream.
That current's pretty strong.
As Chief Arena watches the scuba diver once again disappear into the water, he hears a tow truck driver pull up and park just beside him.
Arena walks over to the truck and begins chatting with the driver about how to pull the car safely from the water.
In passing, Arena mentions that the Oldsmobile belongs to Senator Ted Kennedy,
and to the chief surprise, the driver explains that he just saw Kennedy over by the ferry landing.
At once, Arena hurries over to his cruiser and gets on the radio.
He needs an officer at that ferry landing right away because he has some bad news for Senator Kennedy.
From audible originals, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is American Scan.
In July 1969, Senator Ted Kennedy attended a party at a party.
a small cottage on Chappaquittic Island in Massachusetts.
Sometime after 11 p.m., he left the cottage in his car with 28-year-old Mary Joe Capechnie.
Later, he drove the car off a nearby bridge and landed upside down in a stretch of water close
to the beach. Kennedy apparently escaped the wreck with minimal injuries, but Capechnie was killed.
Ted Kennedy should have reported the crash immediately, but instead he tried to open his cousin Joe Gargan
and their associate Paul Markham
into coordinating a false story that would absolve the senator of any responsibility.
Gargan and Markham refused to go along, though,
and the following morning they finally convinced Kennedy to go to the police.
But the crash was discovered before Kennedy could report it,
and now his political and legal problems are threatening to go from bad to worse.
This is episode three, circling the wagons.
When police chief Dominic Arena calls the station to report that Ted Kennedy
was just seen in the area. He's shocked to learn that he's already in the office.
Arena asks to speak with him, and in a brief phone conversation, Kennedy explains that he's
aware his car was involved in an accident, but volunteers little other information.
Arena tells Kennedy to stay put and speeds off to speak with him in person. Not wanting to
lose any time, Arena doesn't even change out of his bathing suit. He's still dripping wet when he
arrives at the Egertown Police Station. Outside, he spots two local reporters,
hovering near. That's unusual for a Saturday morning, so word about the crash must be spreading.
Chief Arena hurries inside, and when he reaches his office, he finds Kennedy and another man
taking the liberty of using his office phone.
Good morning, Senator Kennedy. I'm Chief of Police Dominic Arena.
Kennedy quickly ends his conversation.
Oops, sorry, got to go. I'll call you back.
Kennedy hangs up the phone and rises from the chair.
Chief, it's a pleasure. This is my friend Paul Markham.
He nods to the man beside him.
Arena recognizes Markham instantly.
Paul and I, we've crossed past before.
He was the U.S. attorney in Boston, and I was just a state trooper.
Oh, good.
Then we're all friends here then, right?
So, Senator, I understand you're aware there was an accident involving your vehicle?
Yeah, I am.
I was driving the car when it crashed.
Arena wasn't expecting this.
Oh, I see, I didn't know that.
Well, first things first, I'm.
I'm afraid we've recovered a body from the wreckage.
A young woman, we believe, to be Rosemary Keio, will need to inform her family.
Oh, no, that's not Rosemary.
The woman is Mary Jo Capechnie, and I've already spoken with her mother.
Capechnie, how do you spell that?
I'm not actually sure.
I'll have someone check on it for you, but do you have a strategy for dealing with the press?
The press.
Rina is frazzled.
Here's Kennedy, well-dressed and in control, while Arena is stuttering through his words,
in a wet bathing suit. Kennedy puts a calming hand on his shoulder. Yeah, I mean, look, once reporters
hear about this accident, they're going to descend on this place like locusts. I imagine I'm a little
more used to that kind of thing than you are, so it helps to think things through beforehand.
Well, I saw two reporters outside already. Did you talk to them? No. Well, good man,
best not to say anything just yet. You'll need a statement for me, I guess? Yeah, of course.
Can we do that now? Well, if it's okay with you, I'd like to write it out. And boy,
missing any details. That'll work? Sure, absolutely. I'll just need somewhere to write it.
I assume you want your office back. Well, yeah, thanks. But there's an empty accounting office down
the hall. No one's going to bother you there, so just take your time. All right, splendid. And don't
feel obligated to weigh around. I'm sure you have plenty to do. For police chief Dominic Arena,
what started out as a routine traffic investigation has suddenly become something else entirely.
The type of case it's impossible to prepare for. His mind reeling,
He heads back to Chappaquittick.
And while Arena is en route,
medical examiner Donald Mills arrives at the crash site.
Mills looks over Kepekney's body,
which is still laid out on a stretcher in the back of a police cruiser.
At first blush, all the evidence is consistent with death by drowning.
With his initial examination complete,
he has to decide whether or not to request an autopsy,
but this is a tricky question.
Usually in the case of a car accident, there would be no need,
But as this crash involves a U.S. senator, they're sure to be more scrutiny.
He can imagine being criticized no matter what choice he makes,
so he decides not to make the call himself.
He'll leave it to the district attorney's office to make the decision.
And while Mills is with the body, Chief Arena arise back on the scene.
By now, volunteer deputy Huck Look has shown up.
He's turning any traffic away from the bridge and keeping the public at a safe distance.
And when he sees Arena, he tells him what he saw the night before.
Luke explains that around 1245 a.m.m., he saw an Oldsmobile just down the road from the crash site.
It was a man driving with a woman in the passenger seat.
They seemed to be lost, but when Look approached, the driver suddenly sped off.
In the darkness, though, Luke was able to catch a glimpse of the license plate.
It began with L7, which are the first two digits of the car and the water behind them.
Chief Arena nods his thanks.
That'll be useful for establishing a timeline.
Then he walks onto the bridge.
Scuba diver John Ferrar is still in the water looking for other bodies.
When he surfaces, Arena calls out that he can stop.
He already knows who was in the car and no one else is missing.
Ferrar wades back to the shore.
When the tide is at its lowest, the Oldsmobile is then hauled out of the water.
Its windshield is shattered,
and panels on the top and passenger side are crumpled from the impact with the water.
Arena and Farrar look inside, and they soon come to a disturbing conclusion.
When Ferrar found Capecne's body, her head had been pressed against the floorboard of the upside-down vehicle.
That would have been precisely the area that filled with water last.
This suggests that Capecne survived the initial crash and was conscious long enough to find an air pocket.
As an experienced rescue diver, Ferrar knows that these air pockets can sometimes last for hours before the oxygen in them runs out.
So it's possible that Capekney suffocated rather than drowned, and if emergency surrogates,
services have been called to the scene immediately after the accident, there's a good chance she
could have been saved. To Chief Arena, it looks like Ted Kennedy has some explaining to do.
He should be finished with his statement by now, so Arena decides to head back to Eggertown
to see what he has to say. Arena arrives at the police station just after 11 a.m. On the way
into the building, he passes a crowd of locals, tourists, and journalists. But again, he ignores
them and heads straight inside. Poking his head into the unused account.
office, Arena sees Kennedy pacing the room as Markham sits at the desk, writing out the
statement by hand. A moment later, Markham tears off the page from the yellow legal pad and hands it over
to Chief Arena. Arena looks it over. The writing is a bit sloppy, with some words crossed out and
replaced. It's still mostly legible, but Arena suggests he type it out for the official record.
Markham agrees, so the three men head down the hall to Arena's office. Arena takes a seat at his
desk and Markham watches over his shoulder as he types. It doesn't take long to copy. The entire
statement is only three paragraphs long. But Arena is mostly focused on getting the words right,
rather than scrutinizing the statement's actual content. But he can already see there's no real
explanation of why Kennedy took so long to contact the police. When he's done typing,
he gives a carbon copy to Kennedy and Markham to look over. Kennedy nods his approval. It's been
transcribed correctly. But he does have one request.
Before he signs the statement, and makes it all official, he'd like his family lawyer,
Burke Marshall, to look it over.
Chief Arena doesn't object, as long as the statement is still delivered to him promptly,
it won't be a problem.
With that, Kennedy gets up to go.
But before Arena can let him leave, he has a request of his own.
He needs to see Kennedy's driver's license.
Kennedy glances at Markham and then explains he doesn't have his wallet with him and isn't
even sure where it is.
Chief Arena frowns.
Technically, it's a crime not to present a driver's license when reporting an accident.
Combined with the fact that Kennedy left the scene and took so long to come forward,
Arena could arrest Kennedy on the spot.
But he quickly pushes this idea from his mind.
It's already been a long morning.
So instead, Chief Arena tells Kennedy he can drop off the license later.
Then he leads Kennedy and Markham toward the rear of the building,
helping them avoid the growing crowd out front.
And as he says goodbye, Arena has no idea that the unsigned sense
statement in his hand will be the only information he gets from Kennedy for days to come,
or that the brief document is riddled with omissions and errors. In the statement, Kennedy puts
the time of the crash at 11.15 p.m. But Deputy Sheriff Huck Look saw the Oldsmobile on the road
nearby around 1245. That's an unexplained 90-minute discrepancy. The statement also doesn't
mention anything about the boozy cottage party leading up to the accident, and Joe Gargan and Paul
Markham's rescue attempts are admitted his last.
well. Arena just thought Markham was a friend, helping Kennedy out, not that he was also
involved in the case. But now it's too late to question either man any further. Soon after
leaving the police station, Markham and Kennedy fly to Hyannis Port and the safety of the Kennedy
family compound there. They aren't the only witnesses taking the opportunity to slip away. Joe
Gargan has arranged for the five remaining boiler room girls to leave Chappaquitic altogether. He then
quickly settles up their bills with the hotels in Egerton before departing the area himself.
And when the growing throng or media at the police station learn that Kennedy has slipped out of town,
they're furious, and Chief Arena only fuels their outrage when he refuses to share Kennedy's
statement without the senator's permission. To the press, it begins to look like this small-town
police chief is being played. It's an assessment the county prosecutor Walter Steele agrees with.
He lives nearby, and when he shows up to the police station later in the
morning, he quickly determines that Chief Arena could use some help. Inside the station, Steele tracks
down Arena and asks to see Kennedy's statement. Looking it over, the prosecutor immediately
sees red flags. Kennedy claims that he was attempting to drive himself in Cape Cepney to the
car ferry on the west side of the island, but took a wrong turn east toward the beach where the
accident occurred. But Steele points out that Kennedy was familiar enough with the island to know
which way the landing was. It's just not credible that he'd drive in entirely the
opposite direction along a bumpy dirt track and not realize he'd gone wrong.
And Kennedy's story about what happened after the crash is just as suspicious. In his statement,
he claims he was in a state of shock and exhaustion, and that's why he didn't report the accident
sooner. Steele quizzes Arena about Kennedy's physical and emotional state when they spoke earlier,
and Arena has to admit that Kennedy seemed fine. He showed no obvious emotional distress,
and Arena could see no physical sign he'd been in a car crash at all.
something doesn't add up. In Steele's eyes, Kennedy should be looking at a charge of leaving the
scene of an accident at the very least, but Chief Arena just lets out a sigh. He clearly isn't
thrilled at the idea, but there's no getting away from the facts, so he walks away to call the
District Attorney's office. Steel doesn't envy Chief Arena's predicament, but he's confident he's
just saved Arena an even bigger headache down the line, because if Senator Kennedy is lying
to them about what happened, the last thing they want to do is look like they're
joining the cover-up.
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Audible app. As county prosecutor Walter Steele digs further into the accident on Chapiquitic,
it comes to the conclusion that an autopsy on Mary Jo Capechnie should be performed.
It's still unknown exactly how long she survived inside the submerged car, and it's better
to be thorough to avoid any hint that Ted Kennedy is receiving special treatment.
Steele passes this recommendation along to the District Attorney's Office.
But the issue devolves into a game of hot potato.
The DA decides to let Egertown Police Chief Dominic Arena make the call.
Arena then defers to the local medical examiner,
but he punts the decision back to the DA.
None of them seems to want the responsibility for ordering an autopsy
in such a politically sensitive case.
It means that in the end, no autopsy is performed.
Instead, Mary Jo Capechnie's body is released to her family
and flown to Pennsylvania for the funeral.
By then, Ted Kennedy is back at his family's compound in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts.
More than a dozen legal and political advisors have joined him there.
They include Ted Sorenson, the renowned speechwriter and top lawyer in the John F. Kennedy administration,
and Robert McNamara, the former U.S. Secretary of Defense.
This legal team works downstairs in the main house while the political team huddles upstairs with Kennedy himself.
But as the day goes on, the lawyers become frustrated.
They suspect Kennedy isn't sharing the full truth of what happened on Chapiquitic,
and they're dismayed that he seems more focused on the potential political fallout than any legal consequences.
But while the aides and lawyers jostle for Kennedy's attention,
also lingering around the compound are Paul Markham and Joe Gargan.
They are the confidants who were with Ted Kennedy on Chapicitic in the hours just before and after the accident,
but they've been excluded from the team meetings in the main house.
Gargan feels especially hurt, and it's not just because he's been shut out of the inner circle.
Based on the side-eyed looks he's been getting, Kennedy's other advisors somehow hold him
responsible for the accident and the failure to report it. As the sun begins to set,
Gargan makes his way down the dock, hoping that the sea air will help clear his head.
A moment later, Paul Markham joins him. They both light cigarettes. Gargan takes an opportunity to vent.
Gargan begins by recounting a disturbing conversation he had earlier in the day with one of Kennedy's lawyers.
He told Gargan that Kennedy is planning to invoke attorney-client privilege with both Gargan and Markham.
Markham has taken aback by this.
While he is technically a lawyer, he doesn't represent Kennedy and never thought he did.
Stripping naked and trying to rescue a woman from an upturned car isn't something attorneys typically do.
And even when he went to the police station with Kennedy to finally report the accident,
Kennedy never asked for his legal advice.
So Markham doesn't understand.
But Gargan can see exactly how this might play out.
Soon, the public will learn that Ted Kennedy waited more than nine hours to report the accident
and that he spent much of that time with Gargan and Markham.
Kennedy, of course, will claim that he was in shock, and that's why he didn't go to the police.
At that point, people will either have to believe Kennedy's story
and question why Gargan and Markham didn't call in the accident themselves, or they'll think
Kennedy is lying and assume Gargan and Markham are working with him to orchestrate a cover-up.
Either way, Joe Gargan and Paul Markham will be blamed. And if they're bound by lawyer-client
privilege, they won't be able to speak publicly about what really happened. They won't be able
to defend themselves. They won't be able to say that they risked their lives to save Mary
Joe Kepechnie, or that they were begging Kennedy to report the accident before he abruptly
ditched them and swam back to the hotel alone. It's clear to Gargan that,
Kennedy is willing to sacrifice the reputations of his friends if it helps him save himself.
Feels like a slap in the face.
Gargan isn't just another aid to be used and discarded.
He's family, and he's been Kennedy's loyal protector since he was ten years old.
A grieved, Gargan explains that he'll be getting his own outside lawyer to advise him in the case,
and he suggests Markham do the same.
While Gargan and Markham take steps to protect themselves,
the following 24 hours are marked by indecision and inertia within the case.
Kennedy camp. Kennedy himself remains hidden away inside the compound, while his legal and political
advisors debate and strategize how to handle the growing crisis. All media requests for comment are rebuffed,
even inquiries from the police are stonewalled. But that silence soon backfires. When Egertown
police chief Dominic Arena fails to hear back from Kennedy or his lawyers as promised, he decides
to share Kennedy's unsigned statement with the press. And for the reporters, this short
document also raises more questions than it answers. They immediately focus on the long gap between
the accident and Kennedy reporting it. The delay seems inexplicable. And with his story now leading
news bulletins across the country, the pressure for Kennedy to make a statement grows even further.
But still, there's silence from Hyannis Port. Before Kennedy says anything publicly, the people around him
are desperate to know what, if any, charges may be coming. So they start calling every contact they have,
to get an inside track. Luckily, this is Massachusetts, and the Kennedys have loyal and influential
friends all across the state. Jimmy Smith is one of those. He has both a former campaign aide
for Robert Kennedy and a current assistant district attorney in Massachusetts. And at the request of the
team in Hyannis Port, on Sunday, July 20th, Smith dials up his boss, District Attorney Edmund
Denise. Like Smith and Kennedy, Denise is also a loyal member of the Democratic Party. Though he's
Only 45 years old, Denise has already served terms in both the Massachusetts House and State Senate,
and he's been a public supporter of the Kennedys ever since he backed JFK's presidential campaign back in 1960.
So there's a reason for Smith to believe Denise will take it easy on Ted Kennedy, but still he can't be sure.
A cornerstone of Denise's record as a prosecutor has been his aggressive approach to drunk driving.
And in cases where a fatality has occurred, Denise has been known to personally lead the prosecution himself.
Kennedy had certainly been drinking before the crash.
And if investigators go looking, it won't take them long to figure that out.
So as Smith waits for Denise to answer his call, he can only hope that DA's political loyalties come first,
that he won't prime to the case too closely.
Hello, this is Edmund Denise.
Hey, boss, it's Jimmy, and sorry to bother you on a Sunday, but you got a moment to talk?
You can probably imagine why I'm calling.
This business with the senator?
I'll give you my two cents if you don't mind.
All right, go ahead.
Well, the media is getting all worked up about the delay in reporting the accident.
But here's the thing.
Before the crash, before any of this, Teddy had a bad back, right?
He nearly died in that plane crash a few years ago.
Yeah, I remember.
Well, he couldn't even get out of bed on election night.
Then he gets banged up pretty badly again during this car accident,
so if he says he was feeling too loopy to call it in right away,
I'd be inclined to believe him.
Mm-hmm.
And I guess I just wanted to gauge where your head's at.
It seems to me that it was a miracle that he was even able to save himself.
Well, Jimmy, I've had a few calls about this already, as you can imagine, but I don't think I need to get involved.
So you're not planning on bringing charges?
Rose Kennedy has already lost three sons, Jimmy. Her husband's had a stroke.
I don't want to be the guy who puts her only living boy in jail.
Now, this is a local matter, simple traffic charge. We'll let Egertown handle it.
They'll have to deal with Teddy leaving the scene, of course, but that's hardly the crime of the century.
Most likely he'll have his license suspended for six months, and then he can get on with his life.
Well, I'm sure that will be a relief for the entire family yet.
Well, I hope so. And since you know the senator, perhaps you can do me a favor, pass along a message from me.
Oh, yeah, of course.
Tell him if he wants me to get involved to make it look like there's no special treatment, then I will.
Otherwise, I'm staying out of it. It's his call, though. As far as I'm concerned, his family's been through enough.
Jimmy Smith is relieved to hear that he and Edmund Denise are on the same page.
And after Smith hangs up, he immediately begins dialing around to people in Kennedy's inner circle.
He's got good news straight from the DA, and it looks like Senator Kennedy is going to get off with a slap on the wrist.
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By the evening of Sunday, July 20, 1969,
it's been just under 48 hours since Senator Ted Kennedy crashed his automobile on Chapic
Island.
But the media takes a break from that developing story to focus on an even bigger one
as the world gathers around their televisions to watch Neil Armstrong
become the first person to walk on the moon.
It's a bittersweet moment for the Kennedy clan.
It was the late John F. Kennedy, who launched the Apollo program eight years ago,
promising to deliver this very moment.
But right now, the Kennedy's attention is divided
between JFK's crowning achievement and getting his youngest brother out of trouble yet again.
On Monday morning, July 21st, Police Chief Dominic Arena enters the Egertown Courthouse
to begin the process of charging Kennedy with a crime.
Arena requests authorization to issue a complaint against the senator for leaving the scene of an accident.
In the documents he submits to the court, Arena lists the time of the crash as somewhere between midnight and 1 a.m.
In Kennedy's statement at the police station, he said the accident happened around 1115,
but Deputy Sheriff Huck Look claims he saw Kennedy's car driving on the island at 1245 90 minutes later,
and it's clear that is what Arena believes.
The court sets a hearing for a week's time, but while the legal process gets underway,
the parents of Mary Jo Capekney prepared to bury their only child.
The funeral is held in Plymouth, Pennsylvania on July 22nd.
That morning, Gwen Capechnie rides to the church with her husband, Joseph.
As soon as their car pulls up, Gwen realizes this isn't going to be an ordinary funeral, though.
Townspeople she's never met before lined the block, along with TV crews and photographers.
As Gwen exits the car with her husband, cameras flash and reporters start shouting questions.
They want to know what Mary Jo was doing on Chapiquitic.
Why was she driving with Ted Kennedy?
What sort of relationship did she have with him?
Gwen grips her husband's hand as they walk silently toward the rectory.
But even as the voices of the media fade behind her, their questions linger in her head.
She's seen all types of stories in the papers about her daughter in the past four days.
They've referred to Mary Jo as a pretty blonde and implied that she was just another girl Kennedy snuck off with for an extramarital trist.
But Gwen knows better. Mary Jo was bright, a dedicated young woman who had played a leadership role on Bobby Kennedy's presidential campaign.
That's how she should be remembered. In the rectory, the Capechnies meet with a pair of priests as they wait for the funeral to begin.
But a minute or two later, there's a commotion outside. Gwen peaks between the drapes and sees that Ted Kennedy.
has arrived. A crowd of supporters mob him, and suddenly it looks more like a political rally than a
funeral. Kennedy is wearing a large white neck brace. When Kennedy called her the morning after the
crash, he didn't mention any injuries, so Gwen can't help wondering whether he's looking for sympathy,
but she keeps those thoughts to herself as Kennedy comes into the rectory. The priests excuse themselves,
leaving Kennedy and Gwen alone. Kennedy then takes Gwen's hand. He begins offering his condolences
but he's babbling, looking down at the floor, jumping between trains of thought so fast it's
hard for Gwen to make out exactly what he's saying. And while Gwen appreciates the gesture,
what she really wants to hear is the truth about what happened. All she knows is what she read
in Kennedy's flimsy statement to the police. She wants to hear how much he had been drinking
and how fast he was driving. Most of all, she needs to know what Kennedy was doing alone with
Mary Jo late at night. But as Kennedy stammer's on, Gwen thinks better.
of it. She doubts she'll get a good answer from Kennedy in this state, and besides, this isn't the
time or the place. Today is about remembering the life of Mary Jo. So she simply thanks Kennedy for
coming, then takes her husband's hand again and makes her way inside the sanctuary. There will be time
enough to have her questions answered later. After the funeral, Ted Kennedy heads back to Hyannis
port to strategize for the court hearing, which is now just five days away. Ultimately, his lawyers
decide to waive Kennedy's right to a hearing and go straight to an arraignment. Now Kennedy
faces a much tougher decision, how to plead. Admitting his guilt on the charge of leaving the
scene of the accident would get the ordeal over with faster. But Kennedy has a long history
of reckless driving, so a guilty plea could expose him to a serious punishment, maybe even
prison. But if Kennedy pleads not guilty, then he will have to go to trial. That will drag
things out and invite testimony from other partygoers that may prove damaging. In an effort to put
this behind them as quickly as possible, Kennedy's legal team ultimately decides to plead guilty,
request a suspended sentence, and hope that the judge James Boyle takes it easy on him.
The arraignment takes place on July 25th, one week after the accident. Kennedy pleads guilty
at the outset. Then police chief Dominic Arena reads his brief summary of the case. There's one tense
moment when Judge Boyle asks if Kennedy ever tried to conceal that he was the driver.
But Kennedy's lawyer interrupts, and instead of answering the question, definitely changes the subject.
Boyle doesn't press the issue any further and never forces Kennedy to answer or plead the fifth.
Finally, Judge Boyle asked the probation officer if Kennedy has any previous record.
The officer says no.
That's not true, but because Kennedy's other serious traffic offenses occurred in Virginia,
this Massachusetts court has no record of them.
So with that, Judge Boyle explains that since Kennedy has no previous offenses, and there's no evidence he tried to conceal he was the driver, he's giving Kennedy a suspended sentence of two months and one year of probation.
After less than 10 minutes in court, Ted Kennedy is free to go.
But that only settles the legal side of things. Now Kennedy has to try and salvage his political career.
And as he leaves the courthouse, he is hounded by reporters. He declines to answer their questions, instead informing them that he has to try and salvage his political career. And as he leaves the courthouse, he is hounded by reporters.
He declines to answer their questions, instead informing them that he'll be making a televised statement that evening.
It's finally time to tell his story about what happened on Chapic-Quick.
A few hours later, Kennedy is back in his family's compound in Hyannis Port, seated behind a desk in the library.
The room is buzzing with TV crew, political and legal advisors, as well as Kennedy's wife, mother, and sisters.
In Kennedy's hands is a speech he's prepared with Ted Sorensen.
He gives it one last look and closes his seat.
eyes and tries to soothe his nerves. Kennedy's moment of calm is interrupted by the producer.
We're about to go live, Senator. All right. Hey, everyone, let's clear the room. I need to concentrate here.
Kennedy watches as his family and advisors shuffle out the door, leaving just him and the crew.
Then the producer backs away and counts down to airtime. Okay, sir, three, two, Kennedy looks into the
camera and then begins to speak. My fellow citizens, I've required.
requested this opportunity to talk about the tragedy which happened last Friday evening.
This morning, I entered a plea of guilty to the charge of leaving the scene of an accident.
Before, it would have been improper to comment on these matters.
But tonight, I am free to tell you what happened and to say what it means to me.
Kennedy begins by recounting the basic details of why he was on the island that weekend,
and then he turns to Cape Cepney.
Mary Jo was one of the most devoted members of the staff of my brother Bobby before his passing.
She was such a gentle, kind, and idealistic person.
All of us tried to help her feel that she had a home with the family.
There is no truth, no truth, whatever,
to the suspicions of immoral conduct that have been leveled at my behavior and hers regarding that evening.
There's never been a private relationship between us of any kind,
nor was I driving under the influence of liquor.
Kennedy then explains the crash,
claiming he first tried to save Cape Cepekne himself
and then later made another attempt with Joe Gargan and Paul Markham.
But now comes the hard part, justifying not reporting the accident for over nine hours.
Although my doctors informed me that I suffered a concussion as well as shock, I do not seek to escape responsibility for my actions.
I regard as indefensible the fact that I did not report the accident to the police immediately.
All kinds of scrambled thoughts went through my mind during this period.
I questioned whether the girl might still be alive somewhere,
whether some awful curse did actually hang over all the Kennedys,
or whether somehow the terrible weight of this incident might in some way pass from my shoulders.
I was overcome by a jumble of grief, fear, doubt, exhaustion, panic, confusion, and shock.
But then in the morning, with my mind somewhat more lucid,
I belatedly reported the accident to the police.
Kennedy continues his account of the incident,
before finally wrapping the speech by addressing whether he will continue on as Senator.
It has been seven years since my first election to the Senate.
You and I share many memories.
Some of them have been glorious.
Some have been very sad.
The opportunity to work with you and serve Massachusetts has made my life worthwhile.
And so I ask you tonight to think this through with me.
In facing this decision, I seek your advice and opinion.
In making it, I seek your prayers.
When the camera blinks off, Ted Kennedy hopes he's done enough to save his political career.
But beyond the walls of his safe haven and high.
Parenthood, critics are still circling, rumors are still spreading, questions are still being asked
about what really happened on Chappiquitic Island, and if anything, Kennedy's speech has only
made things worse. From Ottawa Originals and Airship, this is episode three of Chappaquittick
for American Scandal. In our next episode, the political and legal dangers for Ted Kennedy
escalate as he's pulled back into court to answer questions on their oath.
Follow American Scandal on the Audible app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to all episodes of American Scandal, ad-free, by joining Audible.
And to find out more about me and my other projects, including my live stage show coming to a theater near you, go to not-that-lindsaygram.com.
That's not-that-lindsaygram.com.
If you'd like to learn more about Chappiquic, we recommend the books Chappiquittic, Power, and the Ted Kennedy cover-up by Leo D'Amour.
and Ted Kennedy, A. Farrill.
This episode contains reenactments and dramatized details.
And while in most cases, we can't know exactly what was said,
all our dramatizations are based on historical research.
American Scandal is hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham for Airship.
This episode is written and research by Corey Metcalfe,
senior producer Andy Beckerman, managing producer Emily Burr,
fact-checking by Alyssa Jung Perry,
Audio editing by Mohamed Shazim. Music by Thrum.
Sound designed by Gabriel Gould.
Executive producer for Airship is William Simpson.
Executive producer for Audible is Jenny Lauer Beckman.
Head of Creative Development and Audible, Kate Navin.
Head of Audible Originals, North America, Marshall Louis.
Chief Content Officer Rachel Giazza.
Copyright, 2026 by Audible Originals LLC.
Sound recording copyright 2026 by Audible Originals LLC.
