Dark Downeast - The Murder of Lucia Kai Roberts (Massachusetts)
Episode Date: March 12, 2026On an August evening in 1982, children playing in Boston’s Franklin Park stumbled onto a scene that would quietly become one of the city’s most troubling unsolved cases. The victim was a 16-yea...r-old girl who had already endured instability, displacement, and independence far beyond her years. Her murder received little attention at the time, but within months, rumors began to swirl: allegations of sexual assault inside a private police club, whispers of a cover-up, and a detective who refused to back down. If you have any information that could help bring answers in Lucia Kai Roberts’ case, please contact the Boston Police Department at (617) 343-4470 or submit a tip through the online form. View source material and photos for this episode at: darkdowneast.com/luciakairoberts Dark Downeast is an Audiochuck and Kylie Media production hosted by Kylie Low. Follow @darkdowneast on Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok To suggest a case visit darkdowneast.com/submit-case Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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On an August evening in 1982, children playing in Boston's Franklin Park stumbled onto a scene
that would quietly become one of the city's most troubling, unsolved cases.
The victim was a 16-year-old girl who had already endured instability, displacement,
and independence far beyond her years.
Her murder received little attention at the time.
But within months, rumors began to swirl.
Allegations of sexual assault inside a private police or,
Club, whispers of a cover-up, and a detective who refused to back down. I'm Kylie Lowe,
and this is the case of Lucia Kai Roberts on Dark Down East. It was a hot Sunday evening in Boston
on August 15, 1982, and around 6.30 p.m. that night, two children were playing in Franklin
Park while their family picnicked nearby. In an overgrown area of the park, those kids, kicking a
soccer ball made a discovery that would shift the mood of the park from late summer ease to something
far darker. It was a badly decomposed body. Early media coverage by Ed Corsetti for the Boston
Herald described to the body as fully clothed and wearing a backpack. However, later accounts reported
in the Staten Island advance by Peter Spencer suggests a more unsettling scene. The victim's shirt
was pulled up over her bra and her pants were pulled down past her thighs. She had a
gold chain in her hand, and her head rested on a red backpack. Around her, a suitcase, clothing,
and several photographs were scattered on the ground. Because of the state of decomposition,
investigators couldn't immediately confirm who the victim was, but those papers found near the
body provided a tentative name, Lucia Roberts. Investigators believed she had been dead for at least
two weeks. The location wasn't remote wilderness. It was directly behind an active hospital
and close to the Boston Police Department's horse stables, an area where families gathered,
mounted officers patrolled on horseback, patients came and wed, and foot traffic was frequent,
and yet for at least two weeks, no one had noticed the body in the brush.
Authorities positively identified the body more than a week later with assistance from the FBI
fingerprint section. She was 16-year-old Lucia Kai, also known as Lucia Roberts.
The Suffolk County Medical Examiner Dr. Leonard Atkins ruled her death a homicide due to strangulation
with a rope. In the exceptionally little media coverage of this devastating discovery,
there's no mention of sexual assault or any other circumstances of her death.
By the time Lucia's name was made public, the story had already begun to fade from the
front pages. But for her family and for a certain Boston police detective who had been investigating
an alleged earlier incident involving his fellow brothers in blue, August 15th was only the beginning.
An 11-year-old Lucia Roberts arrived at John F. Kennedy Airport from Monrovia, Liberia, on July 13,
17, 77. It was the very same day that New York City experienced a massive electrical blackout.
plunging the city into darkness.
Lucia's mother, Louise Roberts, had asked a family friend who was visiting Liberia from the United
States to take Lucia with her, hoping her daughter would have a better life than the one available
in Monrovia where she was born.
It was an act of trust and hope, but according to Lucia's mother, that hope unraveled.
In a 2007 interview with the Staten Island advance, Louise said the woman who took Lucia in did not
treat her like family. Instead, she said Lucia was treated more like a servant in the household.
After several years in that household sometime in 1982, Lucia called her mother with devastating news.
She had been told to leave. There was no clear reason. She was simply no longer welcome.
Lucia shuffled around to whoever and wherever had a couch or a little space for her to stay.
She went to live with a relative in Queens before eventually moving to Massachusetts.
with a cousin who lived in a housing project complex just south of Boston.
Though her early teenage years were rife with instability, Lucia found her footing.
She was a star student at Woodrow Wilson Junior High School in Dorchester.
By April 1982, she had also begun working as a clerk for uniform temporaries to support herself.
Her supervisor described her as attractive, dependable, and honest,
so honest that she once turned in a friend who cheated.
on her time card. She carried that job while earning top grades at school and riding her bike to class
every day. As a young teenager, Lucia was carrying the weight of immigration, displacement, and
independence far earlier than most. And then in the summer of 1982, she was dead.
Little is publicly documented about the investigation that followed, and my records' requests
related to her case have yet to be filled. The record, at least what remains,
accessible in archival media sources today is thin. Despite the brutality of her killing,
the teenage girl found strangled and left partially undressed in a public space, Lucia's murder
received limited sustained coverage. After her identification and the medical examiner's
ruling, her name appeared in print only sporadically. But it would eventually resurface in a major
way, not because her case had been solved, but because of alarming allegations.
suggesting that members of the Boston Police Department may have been connected to her death.
In 1982, Detective Richard Armstead was a Boston police officer assigned to Roxbury District Court as a police prosecutor.
According to Eric Ferenstrom's reporting for the Boston Herald,
Armstead's role placed him inside the courthouse working cases and interacting with defendants, officers, and command staff.
Armstead was no rookie.
he had been on the force for years when he was confronted with a disturbing story about his fellow officers.
According to Armstead, the chain of events that began his pursuit of justice for Lucia Kai
began on July 14, 1982, a month before her body was discovered.
He alleged that two teenage girls approached him at Roxbury District Court
with complaints that white officers who had arrested them made obscene comments.
The teenagers were black. As reported by Steve Morrance for the Boston Globe,
Armstead brought those complaints to Deputy Superintendent William Celester, who at the time
was the Area B commander, which encompassed Roxbury. What Armstead claims he heard next
became the foundation for years of controversy. According to Armstead, as he began to report
alleged misconduct by his fellow officers, Celesteer told him to shut the door.
Armstead says that during that closed-door meeting,
Celester disclosed that an incident had occurred
at the Silver Shield Athletic Association a week earlier.
As of 1982, the Silver Shield was a private social club for police officers
located at 100 Campbell Street in Roxbury.
Registered as a non-profit in 1979, its stated purpose was to organize
and promote social and recreational programs for the youth and elderly people in the area of
Roxbury and surrounding communities. Members said it raised money for charities. However, anonymous
officers told the Boston Globe's Thomas Palmer that it also served as a place where police
could socialize away from public scrutiny, somewhere they, quote, wouldn't be getting into trouble,
end quote. It did not hold a liquor license, though members of
acknowledged alcohol was present and consumed on the premises, sometimes after the Commonwealth's
legal 2 a.m. closing time. If there were any actual violations at the club, enforcement would have
fallen to police, the very patrons who frequented the Silver Shield. According to Armstead's
account of what Celesteor allegedly told him, seven or eight officers had forced a teenage girl
into sex acts inside the Silver Shield Club on July 7, 1982.
Armstead further alleged that Boston police detective Jose Garcia had been asleep in another room
when the sound of screaming woke him up.
Armstead claimed Garcia witnessed the alleged sexual assault of a black teenage girl
surrounded by officers, at least one of them armed and threatening her.
According to Armstead, Garcia intervened and then drove the girl away in his own car.
Armstead said he was told by Celesteor that Garcia asked the girl if she was a sex worker,
and she replied she was just 16 years old before jumping out of the car near Orchard Park Housing Project in Roxbury and running away.
According to Armstead, the alleged sexual assault was reported to Celesteer by Detective Garcia himself.
Armstead would later say that he asked Celesteer why he had not been assigned to investigate the alleged
sexual assault and that Celester responded someone was already handling it. Even still, Armstead was
determined to track the girl down himself. He spent the next few weeks trying to find and identify
the alleged victim, fearing something bad would happen to her if he didn't find her before someone
else did. Then in mid-August, 1982, Armstead heard a radio report.
about a teenage girl's body found near Franklin Park.
Based on her age, description, and the circumstances,
he had a hunch, just this feeling that the girl in the park
might be the same girl from the alleged Silver Shield incident.
Detective Richard Armstead claimed he called Detective Jose Garcia
after seeing Lucia's photograph in the newspaper
and asked whether she was the girl he had rescued.
Armstead said,
Garcia hung up the phone without responding.
Weeks later, on August 21st, 1982, just days after Lucia's body was discovered,
Detective Garcia's car was reportedly firebombed.
Armstead saw this attack as a warning to Garcia to change his story and tell his
superiors he had not witnessed any assault at the club.
The theory formed in Armstead's head.
He believed it was possible that,
Lucia Kai was murdered to keep her quiet about the alleged sexual assault.
Detective Armstead's allegations were incendiary. A Boston cop, a black cop on a predominantly
white police force pointing fingers at his fellow officers for alleged sexual assault and murder
was not taken lightly. The allegations raised by Detective Armstead were first investigated by
the Boston Police Internal Affairs Unit in 1982.
and a police spokesperson stated the investigation found no evidence
connecting any alleged sexual assault at the Silver Shield to the murder of Lucia Kai.
The internal investigation was closed only to be reopened in 1983.
However, the second investigation was also closed without charges.
The Boston Globe reports that Commander William Celester said the incident Armstead talked about
was only a rumor and that he told Armstead it was only a rumor.
and that he told Armstead it was only a rumor.
In a story by David Bowery for Public News Station WGBH,
Armstrongstead insisted that Celesteor never labeled it as a rumor,
quote, he told me straight out that this is what happened, end quote.
Armstead alleged that Commander Celesteer was part of a broader cover-up.
He claimed that after the internal investigation was opened,
Celester changed his story and denied that Garcia had ever reported an assault.
him. Despite the two previous investigations ending without findings of misconduct, each time new
leadership took over at the department, Armstead raised the issue again. The Boston Black Coalition
publicly supported his efforts to reopen the case for a third time, and in August of
1985, under newly appointed Commissioner Francis Roach, the investigation was opened once more.
Detective Garcia was interviewed as part of that reopened investigation.
He reportedly stated that he had no knowledge of any incident at the Silver Shield.
He also said he believed the firebombing of his car was likely connected to a gambling and drug investigation he was conducting at the time,
not to any alleged sexual assault.
Garcia was described as outraged by Armstead's allegations.
In the Boston Herald, he was quoted as saying,
What bothers me about this is that Armstead involved me in an incident or something that he imagined,
and I don't know anything about it, end quote.
Peter Dowd, a lawyer representing members of the Silver Shield, said, quote,
nothing ever occurred at the Silver Shield.
The murder is unrelated to any police officers, and the media is making accusations based not on fact,
but double hearsay, end quote.
Now, Richard Armstead had identified two officers in his reports of the alleged sexual assault,
William Kenefic, and another officer will call by the fake name William Smith.
They did in fact share the same first name.
During the third investigation of these allegations,
Kennefic, Garcia, and Smith all voluntarily submitted to polygraph examinations conducted by a private examiner,
and results were shared with the Boston Police Department.
According to reporting, among the questions the officers answered were,
one, whether they had knowledge of forcible sexual acts at the Silver Shield in July of 1982,
two, whether they participated in any such acts,
and three, whether they had knowledge of any forcible sexual acts at the club at any time in 1982.
Each officer answered no to all three of the three of the police.
those questions, and the results reportedly indicated they were truthful in their responses.
They were said to have passed with flying colors and no gray area. After the third investigation
into the allegations, police commissioner Francis Roach cleared the implicated officers of all
charges, finding no evidence whatsoever that there was ever a sexual assault, murder, or cover-up
in 1982. Roach said in a press conference held in January of 1986,
quote, to this date, there has not been one scintilla of evidence produced or brought forward,
which would indicate that an incident took place at the Silver Shield, end quote.
As far as the Boston Police Commissioner was concerned, there wasn't a single witness,
or a victim, and all those implicated voluntarily took a lie detector test and passed,
and so the case was closed once again.
The police commissioner made clear during the same press conference that the real
tragedy in all of this was the murder of a teenage girl and that the investigation into
Lucia's death would continue. Perhaps in an attempt to mute the speculation and rumor that came
from Detective Armstead's allegations, Commissioner Roach shared new information related to Lucia's
case. There was a suspect, but no probable cause to arrest that suspect. The suspect was
reportedly male, lived out of state, is a civilian, and had been under investigation since
day one of the case in 1982. He didn't elaborate any further. The Suffolk District Attorney's
Office also investigated the allegations along the way and also found no evidence to support
the claims made by Detective Armstead. So despite three internal reviews, involvement by the
district attorney, public pressure, and years of accusations and denials, no charges were ever filed
in connection with the alleged assault at the Silver Shield. But the probe wasn't over yet.
The Boston Black Coalition, through spokesperson Siddiqui Cambone, pressured the U.S. Attorney's
Office to intervene if Boston police failed to make progress. And according to reporting by
William F. Doherty for the Boston Globe, by late 1986, a federal
grand jury was investigating the matter following new information from Richard Armstead.
According to reporting by David Bowery for the public television station WGBH, anonymous sources said
they heard about the alleged incident at the Silver Shield from Officer Jose Garcia himself.
They claimed Garcia had allegedly told at least three fellow officers that he witnessed the
sexual assault of a black teenage girl at the club in July.
of 1982. One source spoke on camera with WGBH, though their identity and voice were disguised.
That source claimed Garcia told him and several others about the alleged assault on the
very night it supposedly occurred. That reporting and the claims by the anonymous source
stood in stark contrast to Garcia's prior statements during three separate internal investigations
in which he denied witnessing or discussing any such incident.
By 1986, a federal grand jury was reportedly investigating the Silver Shield case.
FBI agents served subpoenas on personnel assigned to Boston Police Department Area B.
Officers William Kennefic and William Smith were called to testify.
Detective Jose Garcia was expected to testify,
and Richard Armstrongstead himself testified before the grand jury.
One witness did refuse to testify before the federal grand jury, a Roxbury convenience store owner named Jesse James Waters.
Waters claimed that over the years he had paid off at least 50 Boston police officers so he could sell pot and illegal alcohol at his store.
He further alleged that an individual under scrutiny in the Silver Shield case had approached him seeking money for reasons somehow related to the case.
At the time, Waters was serving an 8-10-year sentence for shooting a Boston detective in 1983.
Detective Armstead and his supporters were hopeful that this effort would finally shed light on the case.
But in March of 1987, U.S. Attorney Robert S. Mueller III announced that the federal investigation was closed with no charges filed,
stating there was insufficient evidence to warrant any indictments.
If you're keeping count, by 1987, the Silver Shield allegations had been examined five separate times
through internal affairs, renewed internal review, district attorney involvement, a third departmental
investigation, and a federal grand jury. Each of those inquiries concluded there was insufficient
evidence to pursue charges. So where did that leave Lucia Kai Roberts? As of today, any connection
between the rumored sexual assault at the Silver Shield in July of 1982
and Lucia's murder that same summer has never been proven.
What remains are allegations, denials, investigations,
and a 16-year-old girl whose homicide is still unsolved.
Allegations of sexual assault and other criminal activity at the Silver Shield
and adjacent to other exclusive police clubs around the city of Boston
and state of Massachusetts were not unheard of.
The issue of these organizations operating beyond public scrutiny
had already drawn attention before Lucia's name ever entered the conversation.
In fact, Michael K. Frisbee reports for the Boston Globe
that former police commissioner Joseph Jordan had attempted during his tenure
to shut down clubs like the Silver Shield,
in part because of allegations of sexual assaults at such establishments.
In January 1984, a 31-year-old Boston police officer,
was charged with rape for an alleged incident at a police club.
In that incident, two officers responded to a call for an unruly woman at a Boston hotel.
When they arrived, hotel staff removed handcuffs they had placed on the woman, and the officers
handcuffed her themselves.
Instead of transporting her to the police station, the officers allegedly drove the woman in
their custody to the Midtown Social and Athletic Club, another private.
police club on Waltham Street in the South End. There, one of the officers allegedly sexually assaulted
the woman before driving her home. Both officers were immediately suspended for five days for refusing
orders to file reports about the incident, but only one faced criminal charges. However, he was
later cleared and the case didn't go anywhere. Even with unproven allegations, the case became
one of the examples cited during Commissioner Jordan's push to shut down, or at least
gain the authority to shut down, private police clubs operating within the city.
Misconduct at private police social clubs was not a theory invented in hindsight.
It was a subject of real controversy and real public debate during that era.
Against that backdrop, Detective Richard Armstead's allegations landed in a city already grappling
with questions about accountability and culture and power inside.
its police department.
The police social clubs remained under scrutiny for years.
A decade after Lucia Kai Roberts was killed,
the very organization tied to so much rumor in her case
found itself in the headlines once again.
On October 9, 1992,
Boston Police's organized crime unit
raided the Marconi Club on Shetland Street in Roxbury
as part of an investigation into an alleged,
quote, House of Prostitution.
According to reporting by Elizabeth Dynan for the Portsmouth Herald,
the Marconi Club was a massage parlor
that just happened to operate directly above
the Silver Shield Athletic Association's new location.
Interesting side note,
the Shetland Street building that housed both the Silver Shield
and the Marconi Club
was reportedly owned by the son-in-law of reputed mobster
Stephen the Rifleman Flemmy.
Flemmy himself was said to visit the building frequently.
Now, during the raid, officer seized condoms,
spermicide, pornographic material, business records,
and what were described as sheets of paper
instructing female employees on what to do and what not to do.
According to an affidavit obtained by Patricia Neelan
for the Boston Globe prepared by Boston Police Detective Mary Kylene,
quote,
The Marconi Club was a cover for prostitution, end quote.
The affidavit stated that,
between 12 and 18 women worked there,
charging money for massages and sex.
The proximity of the alleged sex operation
to the Silver Shield did not prove officers were participating,
but it did raise eyebrows.
Despite scrutiny, Commissioner Francis Roach said
there would be no investigation
into how the alleged prostitution ring operated
so close to a police social club.
The club's owner, Constantine Malona,
and another individual,
M. Mayo, were each charged with maintaining a house of prostitution and conspiracy and pleaded not guilty.
A 21-year-old woman and a 17-year-old girl were also charged with offering to engage in sexual conduct for a fee.
Both pleaded not guilty.
It's important to note that at the time, Massachusetts law allowed minors to be charged with prostitution.
Today, however, a 17-year-old in that situation would be recognized as a victim of sexual exploitation rather than a sex worker.
In 1995, Malona and Mayo pleaded guilty to conspiracy.
Matthew Breliss reports for the Boston Globe that the prostitution charges were dismissed
because they were filed 13 months after the raid beyond the 12-month statute of limitations.
A third man, Michael Halloran, also pleaded guilty to conspiracy.
All three received two-year suspended sentences and fines.
No Boston police officers were arrested or charged in connection with the investigation.
I've been unable to determine the disposition of the cases involving the woman and the 17-year-old.
Now, none of this establishes a direct connection to Lucia Kai Roberts' murder,
but it reinforces a broader context that the Silver Shield and its surroundings were not insulated from
controversy, criminal allegations, or even organized crime associations. For some, that context
deepens suspicion. For others, it is coincidence, layered onto rumor. As far as I can tell,
the Silver Shield Athletic Association operated until COVID-era complications brought the shuddering
of that decades-old institution. William Celester, the Area B commander, whom Richard Armstrongstead
accused of participating in a cover-up that was never proven, remained at his post. In 1987,
he was accused of sexual assault by an officer within that department. But if the case ever went
anywhere, I was unable to track down any record of it. His career appeared to suffer no losses
either way as he went on to become director of police in Newark, New Jersey. During his tenure there,
Celesteor was arrested and ultimately pleaded guilty to fraud
after diverting $30,000 into his personal bank accounts.
He served two and a half years in federal prison.
He died in February of 2022.
Over the course of Jose Garcia's career,
he was promoted from detective to lieutenant,
while also being the subject of at least six lawsuits
for alleged misconduct and civil rights violations
and multiple internal police investigations and complaints.
According to Deep Dive reporting by Dick Lair, Mitchell Zuckoff, and Gerard O'Neill for the Boston Globe,
one such incident on his record occurred in 1991 when he raided a laundromat as part of a suspected
gambling ring investigation. Officer Garcia seized $330 in cash from the owner, along with betting slips.
According to police records, the cash he seized was never deposited into department accounts as it
was supposed to be, and the owner said he never got the money back, despite a Boston police
department order for Officer Garcia to return it. When a Boston Globe reporter called Officer
Garcia to ask about the discrepancy, he said that the money was, quote, none of your concern.
The department has dealt with it. He continued, never call here again, you fucking punk,
end quote. Lieutenant Garcia retired in 2003. I've been unable to trace him.
or locate him for comment on this case.
As for Richard Armstead, his path looked different.
He was increasingly isolated within the department after making his allegations public,
but he did not walk them back.
He continued to insist that Lucia's murder had been overshadowed and potentially obstructed
by those who should have been responsible for protecting her.
But others developed their own theories regarding Armstead's dedication to the case.
Peter Dowd, the attorney for members of the Silver Shield,
he suggested that Armstead's allegations were rooted in personal guilt
over something that happened earlier in Armstead's career.
In February of 1972, Detective Armstead encountered a van
driving the wrong way down a one-way street.
He was driving his own car and wearing civilian clothes when he approached the vehicle
and asked for the driver's license and registration.
The driver, a young black man reportedly refused, so Armstead asked a second time.
The driver refused again and then started up the van, driving it towards Armstead.
Armstead ordered the driver to stop and when he failed to do so,
Armstead drew his service revolver and shot the driver in the left side.
19-year-old Cornell Thomas died at the hospital the next day as a result of a gunshot wound to the chest.
That shooting was later ruled justified use of dead.
force. However, the attorney for the Silver Shield murders pointed to the tragic incident
involving Armstead and suggested his pursuit of allegations in the Silver Shield case was a,
quote, transference of guilt."
Armstrongstead never let go of the Silver Shield allegations, even after his retirement.
It raises an uncomfortable question. Why would a veteran officer risk his career, reputation,
and potentially personal safety by a
accusing fellow officers and supervisors of sexual assault and murder and cover-ups.
We won't get any new answers from Richard Armstrongstead himself.
He died in 2015.
We're left to consider a few possibilities.
Either he had proof to bolster his belief that something terrible had happened
and that it was being covered up,
or he was profoundly mistaken,
or someone along the chain, be it Celesteor or Garcia or someone else,
was intentionally misrepresenting events.
All involved offered sharply different versions of what occurred.
Armstrongstead said Celesteor told him about an assault.
Celeste her allegedly later denied that Garcia ever reported such an incident
and called it only a rumor,
while Garcia publicly denied witnessing any assault
and expressed outrage that being linked to one.
Five separate investigations between internal affairs reviews,
renewed departmental probes,
review by the district attorney,
a federal grand jury concluded there was insufficient evidence to ring charges. But that doesn't
automatically mean nothing happened. It does mean that, at least from an evidentiary standpoint,
investigators could not establish proof. So was Armstead overstating his claims? Misinterpreting
secondhand information, acting on instinct rather than corroboration? Did the truth sit somewhere
in the gray space between rumor and provable fact? Or was the Silver Shield controversy a big
Greed Herring. The debates about
Armstead's credibility, Celeste's
integrity, Garcia's, statements, and
departmental politics may matter historically,
they may even matter legally, but they
orbit a much simpler and more painful truth.
Lucia's case is still unsolved.
Lucia Kai Roberts was a 16-year-old girl strangled with a
rope and left in a public area near Franklin Park.
The core details of the homicide investigation, such as
the physical evidence, the timeline of her last known movements, her relationships, and her
living situation have always been thin in public reporting. If the Silver Shield connection was unfounded,
then years of oxygen may have been pulled away from pursuing other leads. And if it was credible,
then perhaps those years were spent fighting institutional resistance instead of focusing squarely
on the homicide. Either way, Lucia herself often felt secondary in the coverage. There are a few
things about the scarce details we do have that raise a lot of questions for me. Her body was found
in Franklin Park near the Boston Police Department's horse stables. Could that be a meaningful
connection or mere coincidence? Some reports state that Lucia's head was resting on a red backpack
when her body was found. Nearby, there was reportedly a suitcase containing clothing and
photographs. Why did she have those items with her? At the time of her death, Lucia was said
to be staying with a family member in a housing project just south of Boston. If she was settled there,
why was she carrying a suitcase packed with personal belongings? One possibility is that she was in
transition again, moving from one place to another. Her life in the United States had already been
marked by instability. So was she preparing to relocate once more? Was she meeting someone who had
promised her a place to stay? Was she leaving abruptly? Or was the suit?
case something else entirely, an item brought to that location for reasons unrelated to travel.
The fact that clothing and photographs were scattered around her body suggests some kind of
disturbance, maybe a struggle. Whether that disturbance occurred before or after her death is not
clear in public reporting, there is also the matter of the gold chain reportedly found in her
hand. Was she clutching it intentionally? Was it torn during a struggle? Was it hers? The publicly
available record does not provide those answers. For all the focus on rumors, police clubs,
and internal investigations, there was also at least one suspect examined in the early days of the
case. The police commissioner said so himself in 1986. A male civilian living out of state
who had been under investigation since the beginning of the case, but for whom there was no probable
cause to arrest. A 15-year-old male described as Lucia's neighbor and friend,
was investigated during the initial phase of the homicide inquiry.
Some of Lucia's belongings, including her bike and pieces of jewelry,
were allegedly found in his possession.
He was given a polygraph examination and reportedly failed.
Police sought to question him a second time,
but the teenager's family retained an attorney.
After that, investigators did not have any further access to him.
Years later, any 2007 interview with the Boston Globe,
that teenager, now an adult, said he remained upset about how police treated him during the investigation,
particularly he said while he was grieving the loss of his friend.
He was never charged with any crimes relating to Lucia's death.
Meanwhile, within Lucia's own family, beliefs about what happened veer off into different directions.
Lucia's mother has said she believes the allegations surrounding the Silver Shield are true,
but she told Maria Kramer of the Boston Globe
that she also acknowledged that some relatives hold different suspicions,
including the possibility that a family member may have been responsible for Lucia's death.
Decades later, the case remained suspended between competing theories,
but while officers debated reputations and investigations came and went,
Lucia's mother carried something far heavier.
Louise was living in Liberia at the time of her.
of her daughter's death, in 1983, a year after Lucia's murder, she moved to the United States
herself and settled in Staten Island. Louise later said that sending her daughter to the United
States with a family friend became the greatest regret of her life. The loss of Lucia and the
unanswered questions surrounding her death left her with a burden of guilt she said she could
never fully escape. She said in 2007, quote, I am her mother.
I was supposed to protect her."
End quote.
If you have any information that could help bring answers in Lucia Kai Roberts' case,
please contact the Boston Police Department at 617-343-4470.
Or submit a tip through their online form linked in the description of this episode.
Investigators are interested in your information, not your identity.
tips can be provided 100% anonymously.
Thank you for listening to Dark Downeast.
You can find all source material for this case at darkdowneast.com.
Be sure to follow the show on Instagram at Darkdowneast.
This platform is for the families and friends who have lost their loved ones
and for those who are still searching for answers.
I'm not about to let those names or their stories get lost with time.
I'm Kylie Lowe.
And this is Darkdowneast.
Dark Down East is a production of Kylie Media and Audio Check.
I think Chuck would approve.
