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By
Michael Skakel
With Richard Hoffman
OVERVIEW
"The house itself, if it had
a voice,
would speak out clearly. As for
me,
I speak to those who understand;
If they fail, my memories are nothing."
-- Aeschylus: Agamemnon, 453 B.C.E.
Dead Man Talking: A Kennedy Cousin
Comes Clean is a first-person
account of the inner workings, both
political and familial, of the myth-enshrouded,
Machiavellian and ruthless Kennedy
clan.
For thirty-five years, books about
the Kennedy family have consistently
appeared on the best-seller lists.
Doris Kearns Goodwin's The Fitzgeralds
and the Kennedys, Christopher
Anderson's Jack and Jackie: Portrait
of An American Marriage, Marcia
Chellis's Living with the Kennedy's:
The Joan Kennedy Story, and most
recently, Seymour Hersh's The Dark
Side of Camelot, among many others,
attest to the reading public's unabated
appetite, when it comes to the Kennedys,
for both romance and iconoclasm.
This unwavering fascination extends
to the present generation of Kennedys,
with the sons of RFK on the cover
of the current Esquire, and
recent stories in Vanity Fair,
Life, and Newsweek. This younger
generation of Kennedys has also given
rise to a new crop of best-sellers,
among them Sheila Rauch Kennedy's
Shattered Faith, Collier and
Horwitz's The Kennedys, and
several others, appealing to readers
who cannot seem to get enough of the
House of Kennedy. There are well over
a hundred books about the Kennedy
family currently in print, many in
their third or fourth edition. Dead
Man Talking is the first insider
account, however, of what it means
to cross the Kennedys and incur their
wrath.
At once a memoir and a piece of historical
nonfiction, Dead Man Talking
will combine the best features of
both these genres to bring the reader
into the inner workings of campaigns,
dirty tricks, back rooms, bedrooms,
courtrooms, and lay bare the devious
workings of a propaganda machine that
works night and day to hide the sordid
truth behind a scrim of patriotic
idealism, hero-worship, and religiosity.
Think Angela's Ashes meets
The Dark Side of Camelot. Think
Primary Colors without the
veil of fiction.
I was there. By bringing to bear
all the tools of dramatic writing,
the reader will feel that he has been
there too.
Beginning with the death of my cousin
Michael Kennedy, the story unmasks
the truth about the scandal and controversy
that accompanied his last year, the
subsequent cover-up, and my betrayal
at the hands of the ruthless Kennedy
political machine when I would no
longer lie to hide the truth of my
cousin's behavior.
My attempt to understand what happened,
to connect causes and consequences,
then leads me to a family secret kept
for two generations: that my mother's
father, an attorney, was betrayed,
slandered and vilified, in almost
precisely the same way, by Joseph
P. Kennedy long before I was born.
My maternal grandfather, a monogamous
family man, found that he had unwittingly
become dangerous by declining to take
part in an orgy arranged by the Kennedy
patriarch. Within days he was smeared
in the press, slandered in an instance
of character assassination very much
like the one I suffered at the Kennedy
family's hands, and typical of tactics
I saw employed again and again before
my own fall from favor.
In the aftermath of my expulsion
from the clan, I looked back with
new eyes on the feuding, the mutual
distrust, the competitive disdain
between my father's family, the Skakels,
and the Kennedys. This ill will was
merely arrested, not resolved, by
my father's sister Ethel's marriage
to Robert Kennedy. In trying to understand
the love-hate relationship between
these two parts of my family, whose
histories and tragedies are inextricably
entwined. I have had to confront the
systemic dysfunction, at times surfacing
as extreme pathology, that is common
to both. I have come to see this dysfunction
as the price of wealth and power in
a society that worships romantic myth
at the expense of truth.
My attempt to extricate myself from
this trap of lies, secrets, and silence
takes me back to my patrician boyhood
in the exclusive enclave of Belle
haven, in Greenwich Connecticut, and
to the examination of its corrupted
values and toxic lessons. For all
its wealth, the Skakel family had
all the problems of any family afflicted
by chronic illness, alcoholism, and
a repressive Catholic moral and sexual
outlook. My struggle for identity
and self-respect in the face of extreme
and unrelenting cruelty, chaos and
psycho pathology is really the struggle
of many children of alcoholism, but
in the case the Truth, the much-feared
obvious, was further obscured by all
the denial that money could buy.
A poor student whose undiagnosed
dyslexia (I was at least diagnosed
in my 20s) all but ensured repeated
failure in school, I became my family's
scapegoat, ashamed, wondering if I
was crazy. When I was twelve, my mother
died, and in the aftermath and even
more intense level of chaos came to
rule our household. I became a full-blown
daily-drinking alcoholic by the time
I was thirteen.
On the night before Halloween, 1975,
a neighbor and new friend of mine,
Martha Moxley, was murdered near our
home. My brother Tommy was considered
the chief suspect. I was also questioned.
This murder, the subject of a best-selling
novel by Dominick Dunne, and renewed
press and media attention, has had
consequences for me to the present
day. The recently published book,
Murder in Greenwich by Mark
Fuhrman, alleges that I am the murderer!
I have seen fit, in this book , to
recount that evening's events as honestly
as possible, to refute any and all
suggestion that I had anything to
do with Martha Moxley's death, and
to let the chips fall where they will.
I continued to careen and caroom
through my life without an understanding
of either dyslexia or alcoholism.
After failing out of more than a dozen
schools, and after several brushes
with the law, I was sent to a reform
school in Maine called Elan. It seemed
to operate on the pedagogical principle
that beatings, humiliation, and degradation
are helpful tools in restoring teenagers'
self-esteem. (Later in the book I
recount my efforts, with other former
students, to close the place down.)
The turnaround came for me in my
20s when I found sobriety. Like many
other alcoholics, my reputation by
the time I sobered up was that of
a five-star debaucher so when it was
clear that I was in fact clean and
sober and not merely "on the
wagon" temporarily, I became
an example of sorts to others in my
family. My Kennedy Cousins watched
me carefully. We'd done a good deal
of drinking and carousing together,
including trips "offshore"
where we could drink without worrying
about the press or that in the States
we would have been under-age. Later,
each would tell me that I had represented
hope that there was another way to
live.
David Kennedy's first brush with
death was the first time I found myself
able to help. I threw myself into
helping him not only because I had
committed myself to helping other
alcoholics, as my recovery program
suggests, but because he was cousin
and I was damned lonely being the
only sober one among us.
The same weekend that I shepherded
into treatment, Bobby Jr. was discovered
strung out on heroin, a needle in
his arm, in an airplane bathroom.
Aware that I had been clean and sober
for some time, and that I'd just gotten
David on the path of sobriety, Bobby
entered treatment saying, "if
Skakel can get clean and still enjoy
himself, what the hell, maybe there's
hope for me."
When David died of an overdose, it
was terrible blow to me. I had felt
closer to David than to anyone else
in my family. During the period of
his sobriety we were like brothers.
We needed each other. We relied on
each other. Nobody else saw so clearly
the insanity, the pathology, the thickly
layered alcoholic denial that distorted
and twisted all the best intentions
of the people we loved. When David
relapsed, my aunt Ethel called me
to see if I could get him into treatment.
She insisted that David remain anonymous.
I called every place I knew. None
had any beds available. I felt desperate.
I was sure that if I told them it
was for David Kennedy, they'd relent.
I knew how dire the situation was.
I begged my aunt to let me use the
Kennedy name. "No. Absolutely
not," she said. "I'm not
going to let him drag this family
through the mud again." By the
following evening, David was dead.
Not long after I embarked upon a
life of sobriety, I was diagnosed
with a severe learning disability.
This was a tremendously uplifting
time in my life Ð I had discovered
that I was not crazy but alcoholic,
and that I was not stupid, but dyslexic.
Decades of shame, rage, and self-loathing
seemed to fall away in a very short
period. I enrolled at Curry College,
a school with extensive programs for
learning disabled students, and graduated
four years later. I turned my love
of both skiing and sped (I had already
been to car-racing school) to speed-skiing
and made the U.S. World Cup team.
I spent a great deal of time with
my cousins, Bobby, Chris, and Max
Kennedy. Just as we had once pursued
drinks, drugs, and thrills, now shared
a commitment to sobriety and, I thought,
to building a better world.
I settled down, got married, and
began looking for work.
One day, I got a call from my cousin
Michael asking if he could bring his
family to our house in Windham for
a weekend of skiing. Bobby, Chris,
and Max had been coming to Windham
and staying with us for years by then.
I was happy to have him come, and
I looked forward to getting to know
him and his family a little better.
My friendships with Bobby, Chris,
and Max were close. We often went
to 12-step meetings together. All
three of them were ushers at my wedding.
I was an usher at Bobby's. I hope
to become better acquainted with Michael,
whom I knew to be fun-loving, energe3tic,
witty and a great skier.
He arrived with his children, without
his wife, and with a teenage babysitter,
Marisa Verochi. As the weekend unfolded,
two things became apparent Ð first,
Michael was not in control of his
drinking, and second, there was something
not right about his interactions with
the babysitter. At one point, both
of them having a good deal to drink.
Michael asked her for a backrub and
lay on the sofa while she straddled
him and rubbed lotion on him. My wife
and I retreated to the bedroom, feeling
awkward and somewhat alarmed.
Michael asked me to come and work
on Senator Kennedy's campaign. He
emphasized that it would be a lot
of fun, that we'd be working closely
together, and that after the campaign,
there'd be a good job waiting. I needed
a job. I'd been interviewing for six
months without an offer, and my self-esteem
was sinking to a level I knew all
too well. But I declined. I had my
eye on a career in sports marketing,
and I wasn't yet ready to throw in
the towel.
Over the next several weeks, Michael
was persistent, calling me to nudge
and cajole me to come to Massachusetts
and help with the campaign. Finally,
after a phone call I remember as especially
convincing since I'd just been on
another raft of interviews without
success, I said yes. My wife was losing
faith in me. I was going nowhere fast.
Michael made it sound like a great
adventure. Michael made most things
sound like a great adventure.
The truth, as I would find out later,
was that Michael desperately needed
someone to replace a Kennedy lieutenant,
Jimmy Recidlow, who had been accused
of rape by a young college volunteer
whose father was a wealthy campaign
contributor. In order to assuage the
father's rage, it was agreed that
Recidlow would have nothing further
to do with Senator Kennedy's campaign.
The Kennedys found a quiet spot to
hide Recidlow (whose sister, by the
way, was sleeping with Michael) at
that National Association of Government
Employees. There, at N.A.G.E. he was
in a position to provide them with
inside intelligence on any number
of potentially threatening political
enemies.
Not long after the campaign, I was
hired on at Citizens' Energy Corporation,
where I worked my way up to Director
of International Programs traveling
with Michael to Portugal, Cuba, Angola,
Venezuela, Brazil, and elsewhere.
When Michael's wife, Victoria Gifford
Kennedy, caught him in bed with Marisa
Verochi, I saw this along with his
many other infidelities as the out-of
control behavior of an alcoholic.
I arranged for Michael to enter treatment
for his alcoholism, and drove him
there on the weekend of Rose Kennedy's
funeral.
The following year, in the midst
of growing scandal, I convinced Michael
to seek help for his sex addiction,
and took him to treatment. Upon his
return, he began stalking Marisa Verochi,
frightening her and her family. She
came to me for help. I asked Bobby
and Joe to help and was refused. I
brought Marisa to a therapist. Michael
and I fought, bitterly. He claimed
that I'd threatened him physically.
H even tried to claim that I was the
one who had been stalking Marisa Verochi
in an attempt to smear and blackmail
him. He dropped that strategem only
when confronted with a security-camera
videotape that showed him breaking
and entering the private garage where
Marisa kept her car. He was a desperate
addict caught in a trap of his own
devising. He had used up all his options.
He was dangerous. How dangerous I
was soon to find out.
As Michael's image suffered in the
press, as Joe Kennedy was forced to
drop out of the Massachusetts gubernatorial
race, as John F. Kennedy, Jr. referred
to his cousins as "poster-boys
for bad behavior", the timeless
Kennedy strategy of circling the wagons
and looking for a scapegoat began.
They did not have to look very far.
Soon I was blindsided by a series
of betrayals that were designed to
assassinate my character and sacrifice
me to the media in order to hide the
sordid truth about my cousin's addiction
and its many secret consequences.
I was already reeling from successive
waves of disillusion when the scapegoating
began. I had been taken in . All the
idealistic talk was conceived as a
useful mythology to hide reality,
not only about Michael, but about
his brother Joe, and even my aunt
Ethel, who had been like a mother
to me.
Called before the District Attorney
in 1997, I chose, since I was the
only one subpoenaed who did not have
immunity to tell the truth of what
I knew. In this book, I am expanding
upon that truth, plumbing its dimensions,
coming to understand its lessons,
and offering what I have learned for
the sake of others.
CHAPTER
OUTLINE
Prologue
The necessity for the book and the
intention giving rise to it. More
than an expose, the book seeks to
communicate the human complexity of
the people, both famous and unknown,
whom it portrays, and to show how
unbridled privilege, alcoholism, and
an idealistic mythology combine to
hide the truth, destroy individuals,
and distort public policy.
SAMPLE:
"Never!" my father
would growl, his fingers in my face
and his sour-sweet gin breath in my
nostrils. "Never say the obvious.
Never!"
Much of what is now obvious to
me about the world in which I grew
up, my class and family, including
my cousins the Kennedys, was for most
of my life so incongruent with the
myths we all clung to, defended, and
reinforced that I had hardly any way
to apprehend it, let along speak it.
Even now the memory of my father's
angry words in my reddening ears gives
me pause, but I know too well, by
now, the cost and consequence of lies
and silence.
My own journey to the edge of
despair and back has brought me to
believe deeply in the saying "You're
only as sick as your secrets."
I am a member of a family sick unto
death with generations of secrets.
I have seen wasted lives, tremendous
pain, and needless death, and I have
concluded that there is no escape
from recurrent tragedy that does not
begin with telling the truth. Though
cynics may convince themselves otherwise,
I tell this story, as truly as I possibly
can, in the spirit of love and healing,
for the sake of the future, not the
past; for the living, not the dead.
Chapter 1: 12/31/97
I receive the news that my cousin,
Michael Kennedy, had been killed while
skiing at Aspen, a trip I would have
been on under normal circumstances,
had Michael and I not been fighting
over the consequences of his scandalous
behavior, including the statutory
rape of a young girl who later came
to me for help. My memories of other
Aspen ski trips with the Kennedy family.
Michael's death opening the old grief-wound
of David Kennedy's fatal overdose.
The story of my taking David to a
treatment facility in Minnesota, and
the family's refusal to visit or take
part in "family week" at
the treatment center. Aunt Ethel calling
me for help when David relapsed. How
David's death could have been prevented
and why it wasn't. My relationship
with Michael, with my aunt Ethel,
with my other cousins. Family conflicts
and estrangement in the days leading
up to Michael's funeral.
Chapter 2: The Campaign That Never
Ends
Why I agreed to work with Michael
on Senator Edward Kennedy's campaign.
Inside the Kennedy campaign. My brief
career in commercial real estate:
in retrospect, the first time I was
used as a pawn in a Kennedy power
game. My work as Director of International
Programs for Citizens' Energy. Traveling
with Michael to Cuba, Colombia, Venezuela,
Angola, Portugal, and elsewhere. Trying
to play the "good lieutenant"
and protect him from the press as
rumors began to circulate about his
relationship with Marisa Verrochi,
daughter of a powerful Massachusetts
Democrat, and his children's teenage
babysitter. Interceding with his wife,
Victoria Gifford Kennedy, to save
his marriage after she had discovered
him in bed with the young girl on
the weekend Rose Kennedy died. Getting
Michael into treatment for alcoholism.
SAMPLE:
All the while that Michael was
in treatment, I was trying to save
his marriage. As a recovering alcoholic,
I had seen some very unlikely people
turn themselves around. I was one
of them. I believed that Michael,
Vicki, and their kids all deserved
another chance. I spent every evening
for about three weeks at Michael and
Vicki's home. I brought her books
about alcoholism, videotapes of Father
Martin lectures, tapes of Melody Beattie
talking about codependence and family
systems. Vicki cried and raged. "I
love him!" she'd declare one
moment and the next she'd be planning
to leave him, saying she hated him,
fantasizing about hiring some guys
to teach him a lesson.
"Look, Vicki," I told
her, "Michael has never had his
shot at being sober. He doesn't know
who he is sober. Give this some time.
You look at me and see a friend, dependable,
honest, faithful to his wife. But
you put booze or drugs in my system
and I'm none of those things anymore.
I can't be trusted. I'm not reliable.
And I'm sure as hell not faithful.
So please, give him this chance. If
she doesn't stay sober, then give
him the boot. But give him this chance."
She agreed. And also agreed to
let Michael visit with her and the
children in Vail later that month
on the condition that I supervise
him.
I arranged for her to stay at
the Tivoli Lodge, owned by a friend
of mine from car racing school, Buddy
Lazar. Like me, Buddy, who went on
to become the youngest driver every
to win the Indy 500, is dyslexic.
He was a schoolmate of mine at Curry
College.
I also arranged for Michael and
I to stay at his uncle Steven Smith's
condo a couple of hundred yards away.
By the third night we were there,
Vicki and the kids moved out of the
Tivoli and in with us.
I was shepherding Michael to
12-step meetings every day. The family
was back together. I remember one
night going into my room and hearing
Vicki and Michael and the kids all
laughing together in the living room,
and I felt so good I started crying.
It was just the way I'd hoped and
prayed it would work out.
At least that's what I thought.
Chapter 3: Open Secrets
Returning from Maryland where I've
taken Michael, I attend Rose Kennedy's
wake. Joe Kennedy takes me aside (ironically
in David Kennedy's old bedroom) and
asks where I've taken Michael. Told,
he replies, laughing, "Michael
doesn't have a booze problem! Michael
has a pee-pee problem! What happened?
Did he get caught fucking that babysitter?"
Another woman, a campaign worker,
calls me, claiming to be pregnant
with Michael's child. I convince her
to have an abortion, get money, $2000,
from Michael. Later, she decides to
have the child. Michael demands his
money back.
SAMPLE:
Everyone knew it, but no one
said anything about it. I didn't either.
But even Michael's children were aware
of what was going on.
It was obvious. Once, on a rafting
trip, we were all sitting around the
fire preparing dinner when Michael
and Marisa suddenly emerged from the
woods. Somebody yelled out, "Where
have you two been?"
Marisa turned to Michael, winked,
and said, "Yeah where have you
been?" Everyone laughed. My eyes
met Michael Jr.'s He was not only
not laughing, but the depth of pain
and confusion in his eyes frightened
me. What a burden for a thirteen-year-old
kid to have to carry. What does he
do, I thought, when he gets home and
his mother asks him if he had a good
time with his Dad?
It is a deadly game of silence
and lies and secrets, and it has a
life of its own, drawing in new players
too young to have a choice whether
to play or not.
*
After that rafting weekend, one of
the women on the trip who had seen
what was going on told a friend of
hers, who in turn told June Verocchi,
Marisa's mother. June called Paul,
Marisa's father, in Washington where
he had gone to meet with Vice President
Gore about an ambassadorship to Italy.
He canceled the meeting and come home
to Cohasset. That night they confronted
Marisa. She denied it. Then she called
Michael.
I was out sailing with Max Kennedy
and Michael Mailer, and a Harvard
student named Ethan who'd been hired
to crew. I got a call from Michael
on my cell phone.
"Where the hell are you?
You get your ass back here, Skakel!
Jesus, the shit's about to hit the
fan! This is your fault, damn it!
Your wife has been talking to people
about this, damn it. You get your
ass aback here and straighten out
this mess."
I figured he was just panicked.
I tried to calm him down. "Look,
Michael. You knew you were going to
get caught. Didn't I tell you? So
cut the crap about ÔThis is your fault,
Skakel,' and listen to me. What do
you hear from Paul and June?"
"Nothing. Marisa denied
it. They believe her."
"OK. So think. You just
dodged another bullet, Michael. What
do you have to do?"
"I have to stop."
"Right. I don't care who
you fuck, OK? But this is wrong. This
is a kid. You have to stop."
But of course, he didn't.
Chapter 4: A Boyhood Above the Clouds
The Skakel family returns, in June
1969, in our private plane, from the
first anniversary memorial for RFK
at Arlington. My family's love-hate
relationship with the Kennedys. The
rags-to-riches story of my grandfather,
George Skakel Sr., who founded the
Great Lakes Carbon Company and revolutionized
the world's aluminum industry vs.
the whiskey-running gangsterism of
Joseph Kennedy. The story of Joseph
P. Kennedy's calumny and slander against
my mother's father. Memories of that
day with my aunt Ethel and my cousins.
My terror when my father insists,
over the pilot's objections, that
we fly back from Washington in a thunderstorm.
Airstruck from turbulence, I wonder
what will happen if lightning strikes
the plane. While praying silently,
I hear my mother saying in a frightened
voice that this is how my grandparents
and later my uncle George died. Death
is palpable to my nine year old's
mind. We land in Greenwich. The exclusive
world of Belle Haven. Introduction
of my siblings. The family servants.
Private boats and planes. Our own
private ski area in Windham, New York.
Our own baseball team: The Atlanta
Braves. Meeting Hank Aaron. Genteel
racism. Jean Claude Killy presides
over my sister's birthday party at
Windham. The Florida compound at Longboat
Key. Touring NASA with John Glenn.
First indications of the high price
of unreality. Alcoholism, Violence.
Neglect. Abuse. Repeated injuries.
Hiding in my closet, looking for safety,
needing the darkness and quiet.
Chapter 5:
My early schooling. Reading difficulties.
Severe dyslexia that would not be
accurately diagnosed until I was 26.
Shame. Removal to St. Mary's School.
Failure not an option for a Skakel.
Mother enrolls me in Persons Reading
School. It's obvious: I'm stupid.
Shame. My father's lectures become
spankings become beatings. My brother
Tommy follows suit, bullying and terrorizing
me with my father's tacit consent.
I continue to fail in school. My mother
becomes ill. My father's drinking.
The daily appointment with my father
before the bell for dinner Ð adults
in one dining room, children in another.
My father's relations with her sister
and other members of the Kennedy family.
His devout Catholicism. My friends
and I, age 10, discover a cache of
Playboy magazines. I struggle
to understand sex. A neighbor tries
to rape me, and I get away. Shame.
My father discovers my friends and
me with the magazines, and I learn
my mother is dying. We pray, in vain,
for her recovery. Relics are brought
from all over the world. Just after
my twelfth birthday, she dies, and
to my frightened guilty mind it is
obvious that I killed her.
SAMPLE:
All the way home we'd been rough-housing
on the bus my father bought for us
to go back and forth from Greenwich
to Windham. My brother Rushton Jr.
drove while we threw sneakers at one
another, fought and mooned other cars
out the windows. As we came through
the gate we saw cars parked all along
both sides of the drive. Here and
there people were walking across the
lawn. We were suddenly silent.
We slowed in front of the house,
and before we'd come to a full stop
there was a banging on the door. Rush
pulled the lever, the door hissed
open, and my father stepped up into
the bus and faced us. "Well,"
he said, "you know what happened.
She's dead." Then he turned and
got off the bus. We all just sat there
in the dark.
I knew what had happened. No
one else. It was between me and God.
I had tried not to think the terrible
thoughts that kept intruding as the
rosary droned on and our singsong
prayers wafted up with the incense,
but I couldn't help it. I chased them
away by pinching my beads harder and
concentrating on the words of the
prayers, "Holy Mary, Mother of
God, pray for us sinners, now and
at the hour of our death, amen,"
but they kept coming back. I'm
sick of going to church after dinner
every night. This is stupid. It's
obvious my mom is going to die.
And after a while, the thought, the
wish, the prayer that rose and had
reached God's ears: I want my mother
to die so things will change.
I had killed my mother.
Chapter 6: 10/30/75: Murder Most
Foul
The murder of Greenwich teen Martha
Moxley. The character of Halloween
and "mischief night." Booze
and drugs. The who, what, when, where,
how of that evening's surreal, nightmarish,
and ultimately tragic events. Repudiation
of various press accounts of that
evening, including the account by
Mark Fuhrman in his new book, Murder
in Greenwich, which attempts to
prove I was the murderer. My relationship
with Martha. Why I lied to investigators.
Where I really was and what I really
did. The investigation's continuing
impact on my family. The personal
and psychological consequences of
that evening include the necessity
for ongoing therapy, continuing painful
suspicion by the community, estrangement
from several of my siblings, and a
public vulnerability that has allowed
others, particularly the Kennedy family,
and now Mark Fuhrman to cast me as
the scapegoat whenever it suits their
purposes.
SAMPLE:
Looking back, I'd have to say
that my brothers and I were pretty
wild, especially when it came to Halloween.
Halloween was our favorite holiday
of the year, better than Christmas,
better than New Year's, better than
Fourth of July. In fact, my brothers
and I used to stockpile our Fourth
of July fireworks to use on October
30th Ð mischief night Ð
which was the best part of Halloween.
Mischief night meant setting off fireworks,
soaping windows, greasing doorknobs,
throwing eggs. There was nothing really
malicious about it. It was all pranks
and laughter. It was sheer fun.
My father was away on a hunting
trip that Halloween, in 1975. He'd
gone to Gil Wayman's house in Cambridge,
New York. Gil had a private 600 acre
preserve and my father was among his
frequent guests. He'd left on Thursday
and wasn't coming back until Sunday,
and had left us in the charge of Ken
Littleton who had only that week been
hired as our live-in tutor. Littleton
scared me. He was the football coach
at school, a swaggering tough guy
who could glare a hold right through
you. Humorless and cold, he had a
weird quiet way about him that disturbed
me.
Probably on my father's instructions,
and certainly on my father's tab,
Littleton took us all to the Belle
Haven Club for dinner that night.
When the waiter came around I ordered
a rum and tonic. I tried to look nonchalant
and waited for Littleton's veto. It
never came. About the third drink
I began to think that this live-in
tutoring might work out nicely. Here
I was having just turned 15 years
old, ordering rum and tonics and planter's
punch with the football coach in this
swanky club, and no one batted an
eye! I looked around at my brothers
Rush, Tommy, and David, my sister
Julie and her friend Andrea Shakespeare,
my cousin Jimmy Terrien, and Ken Littleton,
and I began to form an idea. I would
become Littleton's drinking buddy.
I would get in good with him, and
he would make my life a lot easier
by getting the other teachers to lay
off me.
After dinner, we went back to
the house. We were all drinking my
father's booze, hanging around, playing
Backgammon, and feeling like Ð at
least trying to act like Ð grown ups.
This turned out to be pretty boring
though so after a while we began to
chase each other around, whoo0ping
and giving out "noogies"
to each other and knocking things
over. Then my cousin Jimmy suggested
that we go over to his house to watch
a new show, Monty Python's Flying
Circus, that was supposed to be really
funny and was going on the air for
the first time that night. He also
said he had some great pot over at
his place.
We had some more to drink, and
after a while Martha Moxley, Geoffrey
Byrne, Helen Ix, Marjorie Walker,
and Jackie Wettenhall came by to see
what we were all going to do for mischief.
I remember standing in the kitchen
drinking with Littleton and telling
him that I thought Martha was really
pretty. "Yeah, she's hot!"
he said. After a while I saw her through
the window, standing a little aside
from the others, so I went out and
asked her if she wanted to hang out
and smoke a cigarette in my father's
Lincoln.
We called my father's Lincoln
"the lust-mobile." After
my mother died, my father really went
off the deep end trying to impress
women with his money and with what
he thought was his impeccable taste.
He bought the Lincoln and had a sun-roof
put in it. He had a machine-shop remove
the Lincoln ornament from the front
and replace it with a five-thousand
dollar Lalique eagle, and then he
had them mount a little light under
it. We used to joke around, never
within his hearing, that we were going
to buy him some fuzzy dice for the
rear-view mirror.
While we sat in the Lincoln,
I tried to convince Martha to come
to the Terrien's with us. I really
liked her. I wanted to kiss her. I
wanted her to be my girlfriend, but
I was going slow, being careful. The
truth is that with Martha I felt a
little shy. I thought that maybe if
we spent the evening together at my
cousin's something romantic might
develop between us. Maybe we could
hang out there if she wanted. She
seemed to like me. I told her there
was a new English show that was supposed
to be hilarious.
"I can't," she said.
"My Mom gave me a curfew. I have
to be home by nine."
"Come on! Nine o'clock?
That's ridiculous! It's mischief night!
Come on, come with us. We'll have
a blast!"
"I can't," she said.
Then she touched me, on the shoulder.
"Tomorrow night, though. OK?"
Tomorrow night, she'd said. She'd
touched me. It was a promise. I nearly
swooned with joy.
"We'll go nuts and trash
this town," she said and smiled.
"Great!" To try to
get a kiss then would have ruined
everything. Tomorrow night, I thought.
Tomorrow night I'll kiss her.
"Hey! Hey, you guys! It's
time to go!" My brothers Rush,
David, and Johnny and my cousin Jimmy
opened the doors. "It's coming
on in fifteen minutes, man. Let's
go."
Martha got out. I jumped in the
back with David and Johnny. Jimmy
drove, with Rush riding shotgun. I
waved to Martha, my brother Tommy,
Helen, Jackie, Marjorie, and Geoffrey
at the back door of the house as we
pulled away.
We headed over to Terrien's fifteen
or twenty miles away. Jimmy always
liked to race, to time himself from
one place to another. He always had
to beat his best time. He was running
all the lights, driving like maniac.
I wished Martha'd come with us.
At Terrien's you never had to worry
about anything. My cousins' stepfather
was a drunk, and he was always away
in New York, living at the New York
Athletic Club or shacking up with
his latest mistress. My aunt Georgeanna
was also drunk all the time and she
pretty much kept op her own wing of
the house. They had a huge castle-like
place. We could do anything. We were
basically on our own. I always felt
good there. My father couldn't get
at me, and my brother Tommy couldn't
give me a hard time either; it wasn't
his turf. I felt safe there.
It was great. We smoked a lot
of pot and drank some more and laughed
through the whole Python show. Afterward
I wandered off to my older cousin
Johnny's room. He was away somewhere.
His room was a kid's fantasy, so big
it had a balcony, and an oval section
with about twenty windows that looked
out over a meadow and an orchard.
He had a king-size bed with two life-size
statues of palace guards, the Beefeaters,
on either side. There were three big
TV sets stacked on top of one another,
and a movie screen that dropped down.
In one corner was an old upright honky-tonk
piano like the ones I'd seen in Westerns,
but the front had been replaced by
plexiglass so you could see the hammers
hit the strings. God, I wished I could
have brought Martha here, I thought.
I lay on the bed, flanked by
the stalwart Beefeaters, thinking
of her. I loved this room. I was sleepy
with booze and pot. I wanted to fall
asleep. I wanted to stay the night,
but how would I get back the next
day? And the next day would become
tomorrow night and I would see Martha.
I roused myself.
My brother Rush decided to drive
us home. He was really hammered. Johnny,
David, and I all rod in the back seat
since neither of us trusted him to
get us home in one piece. We got out
of the Terrien's driveway and on up
to Cliffdale Road, about a half mile.
Then we turned onto River View Road,
but after about 300 yards, Rush pulled
over, put the car in park, and fell
asleep.
Johnny took the wheel even though
he didn't have a license. He managed
to get us home.
No one was around. All the lights
were out in the house andÉI went upstairs.
My sister Julie's bedroom door was
closed so I figured her friends had
gone home. The TV was on in the master
bedroom, but nobody was there. I went
to the kitchen and got something to
eat, then I headed up to bed.
I couldn't settle down. A part of
me really wanted to go to sleep but
I was keyed up, nervous and horny.
After a little while longer, still
unable to fall asleep, I kicked off
the covers and decided, "Fuck
it. I'm going back out."
Chapter 7: Elan, or "Boldness
of Spirit"
Still failing school Dismissed from
several high schools. The "hippie"
Vershire School: drug central. I lose
my virginity to a 30 year old teacher.
I quit. My shame, despair, and alcoholism.
Drunken car crash in Windham. Forcible
removal to reform school: Elan. "A
concentration camp for kids."
Synanon model. "Aversive therapy."
Brutality, public humiliation, indoctrination,
inhumanity. Interviews with others
who were there. The 4-foot dunce cap.
The sign around my neck: I am an
arrogant rich brat. Confront me on
why I murdered my friend Martha.
My cousin Michael Kennedy my one and
only visitor. My escape. Hiding from
the dogs. The journey home. I am disbelieved.
My father sends me back.
SAMPLE:
I slept till about nine thirty.
When I woke I went into the kitchen
where the bottle of gin and my glass
sat on the counter from the night
before. I filled the glass, looked
in the fridge for some orange juice
to splash in it, stirred it with my
finger. Halfway to the living room,
glass in one hand, bottle in the other,
I raised my glass in a wordless toast
to nobody. The first drink of the
day is the worst one, but the best
one too because once you get it to
stay down, the day is possible. Maybe
the cops were right, I thought. Maybe
I was trying to kill myself. Maybe
I ought to. At least this time I'd
left school by choice without being
thrown out. I sat at the backgammon
table by the big plate glass window
and looked out of the mountain. It
was Monday, everybody was gone, back
to their jobs, their families, their
lives. The other kids were all gone
back to school I realized that almost
the whole season had gone by and I'd
skied maybe half a dozen times. What
the hell was wrong with me?
I sat there for a long time,
smoking and drinking and lining up
the cigarette filters along the windowsill
like toy soldiers or something. I
remember staring at the label, at
the guy in the brocade and muttonchops.
Mutton. Never ate it, I thought. A
sheep. Not me. I'm a Beefeater. Ha!
They guard the palace. I took another
drink from the bottle, held it up.
So here they are, the fucking Beefeaters.
Guarding the palace. Protecting the
king and queen. Two genies in the
bottle. Spirits. Ha! You can't see
them, though. They're secret. They're
disguised. They look like water. Ha!
Another swallow and I felt protected,
safe, as the familiar feeling lifted
me, rocked me gently held me.
I heard footsteps. Somebody was
in the house. My brother Tommy? Shit
My father?
"Michael? Where are you,
Michael?" It was Tom Sheridan,
my father's lawyer. "Michael.
There you are."
"You want a drink?"
Nothing. "Well, fuck it then.
I'll have another one. Have a seat."
He didn't sit down. I refilled my
glass. Your father's made a decision.
You have to go back to school."
"Not to Vershire. To another
place, in Maine."
"Where?"
"It's a great place for
you. They've got skiing. White-water
rafting. Rock climbing. The school
has a great reputation for working
with kids like you."
"Like me?"
"I thought you wanted to
go back to school?"
"Of course, I want to go
back to school. I want to graduate
at least from fucking high school."
"So?"
"It's the middle of the
term. What school is going to take
me in the middle of the final term?
Forget it."
"So you're refusing?"
"No. I'm not refusing."
"Because it's all set up
already. Nothing for you to worry
about. Just pack your stuff."
"Hold on a minute. This
isn't right. I don't know anything
about this place. Why should I just
pack up and go some fucking place
I don't know anything about?"
"So you're refusing?"
"No."
"You are. You're refusing."
"No. I want to know more."
"Your father wants you to
pack and go. Today."
"Go where, God damn it!"
"Fine. You refuse. I don't
have time for this." He walked
backwards, his palms up, holding his
shoulders in a shrug. He turned, went
down the stairs, muttering, and slammed
the door on his way out."
I'd blown it again. What was
I supposed to say? Before I even know
what's going on, I'm wrong. I'm always
fucking wrong. That's a given. I looked
at the Beefeaters. The Guards. Ha!
I poured. No orange juice in the glass
by now. Another swallow. Out the window
a lone skier slalomed down the mountain.
I lit a cigarette, smoked it, lit
another from it, and stood the filter
in the row with the others. Then
I heard the door open, and what sounded
like an army coming up the stairs.
It was Sheridan, and there were
four guys with him. The first guy
up the stairs was wearing a lumberjack shirt.
The guy behind him had a bomber jacket
and sunglasses on. Another guy
had a huge Afro . Bringing
up the rear was a guy about six foot
two; later I'd learn his name was
Joe Carrier. They surrounded me.
"Why don't you use an ashtray,
man?"
"What's going on here? Who
are you guys?"
"These gentlemen,"
Tom Sheridan said, "are here
to talk to you about the Pinehenge
School in Maine."
"You always drink in the
morning?" the lumber jack asked
me.
"You want one? Anybody ?"
I held out the bottle.
"Look, kid, we don't want
trouble," said the bombardier.
"Tom says you have some questions
for us." He took off his Ray-Bans.
His eyes were bloodshot. "Personally,
if I were you, I'd can the questions
and come along."
"Hold on a minute,"
Carrier said. "The kid's got
questions. Wouldn't you?"
"I don't have time for this,"
Tom Sheridan put in.
They all kept glancing back and
forth among themselves and I knew
I had to get out of this.
"Where's he think he's going?"
Afro asked, looking at me. "You
want to stay here getting drunk in
your bathrobe till you shit yourself?
You want to wreck another car, maybe
kill somebody this time? Maybe it's
jail you want. Do you want a taste
of jail? Is that it?"
"Just let me get dressed,"
I said. I went downstairs to my bedroom
and my brother David came in, looking
as scared as me. I locked the door.
"What's going on?"
"Jesus, man, I don't know.
These guys are upstairs and they want
to take me away somewhere." I
was putting on my clothes when the
lumberjack threw himself against the
door and broke in.
"You're coming with me,
you little motherfucker." He
got me in a headlock with my arm up
behind my back. "You come with
me or I'll break your fuckin' arm.
You hear me?"
"I want a different lawyer!"
I screamed. "Sheridan! You're
fired! You hear me? You work for my
family, you bastard. You can't do
this! You're fired! Now! I'm firing
you! Your hear me?" Sheridan
stood on the stairs watching, shaking
his head.
*
Soon we were in a twin engine
plane, the four goons and me. I sat
handcuffed, and looked out the window
at the terrain, trying to figure out
where we were headed. They all had
headphones on and paid no attention
to me. When we landed at the airport
in Poland Springs, Maine, there was
van waiting on the tarmac. "Where
are we going?" I asked.
"Shut up."
"We had enough of you, man."
"Just shut the fuck up."
After a short ride we passed
through a security gate and on up
a dirt road to a building where I
would go through "intake."
The first thing I noticed was
that people were screaming. Everywhere
throughout the building people were
screaming obscenities. The kids my
age had signs around their necks.
I couldn't read them. The good behind
me kept shoving where he wanted me
to go. He shoved me up the stairs
and into a room. A man behind a desk
got up, walked around and leaned against
the front of the desk with his arms
folded. He just stared at me for a
long time. I tried to see in his eyes
if he was somehow benign and trying
to help me, unlike the thugs that
had brought me here. I couldn't read
him. "Why do you think you're
here?" he asked me.
"I don't know. Because I
have a problem with alcohol?"
"He threw his head back
and laughed. Then he jabbed two fingers
into my chest. "Let me tell you
something. There's no such thing as
Ôa problem with alcohol.' You got
that? You, my friend, are here because
you're slime. Because you're an arrogant
little asshole. That's why you're
here. Because you're slime.
"Take him and strip him."
I had landed in hell.
Chapter 8: The Road Back
Continued drinking. Failed attempts
to stop. Accidents and injuries. "Hitting
bottom." A voice inside me. Asking
for help. After three months sobriety
in a recovery program, I know I will
need more help. St. Mary's Treatment
Center in Minnesota. The generosity
of strangers. Car racing school in
California. An accurate diagnosis
of my dyslexia. Entry into Curry College.
Graduation. Speed skiing. Marking
the US World Cup team. I resume my
relationships with my Kennedy cousins,
especially Bobby, Chris and Max, this
time with sobriety as our common bond.
My attempts to have Elan shut down.
The Maine Attorney General's investigation
of Elan. Marriage: Bobby, Chris and
Max Kennedy are ushers. A new beginning.
Chapter 9: Firestorm at Citizens'
Energy
The truth comes to light. Trying
to get Joe and Bobby to intervene.
Running political interference. Michael's
behavior also a betrayal of Marisa's
father who had treated him like a
son since RFK's assassination. Attempting
"damage control" with Marisa's
mother. Taking Michael to sex addiction
treatment in Pennsylvania. After treatment
Michael stalks Marisa. For several
weeks, he denies his behavior, saying
I am framing him. Finally, he is caught
on a security camera videotape, breaking
into the garage where Marisa's car
is parked, and placing an artificial
penis on her windshield. When his
brothers can no longer deny what's
going on, Bobby says to me, "Oh
my God, he's just like Willie!"
Questioned further, he tells me that
William Kennedy Smith was guilty of
rape, that his acquittal was the result
of Kennedy power.
Chapter 10: Something to Hide, Someone
to Ride
Helping Marisa into therapy. The
Kennedys close ranks. "Circling
the wagons to protect the cesspool."
Ethel Kennedy invites me to lunch.
Representative Joseph Kennedy calls
from his congressional office to urge
me to lie. My refusal to slander Marisa
in the press. Michael's rage. My banishment
from Citizens' Energy. I'm called
to appear before the Preliminary Grand
Jury. Just before the date of my testimony,
I am slandered in the press in the
same way as my grandfather had been.
I decide to tell the whole sordid
story.
SAMPLE:
Ethel asked me to meet her for
lunch the week before Christmas at
the Boston Harbor Hotel. "OK,"
she said, taking a quick look around,
"this is dead man talking, Michael.
I know the whole story. All of it.
I invited you here to thank you for
keeping this out of the press. Sometimes
I don't know what this family would
do without you." She reached
across the table and put her hand
on mine.
All I could think was that she
was pitifully mistaken. What she meant,
no doubt, was that she knew that Michael
had first had sex with Marisa when
she was fourteen. I doubted that she
knew of her "other" grandchildren,
or any of the rest of what I knew.
By then I knew enough to doubt that
any of us knew the whole story.
Certainly Joe and Bobby knew
a great deal. Earlier, in October,
at the Annual RFK memorial Golf Tournament
and Fund Raiser, I had tried to enlist
their help. Marisa had been calling
me and pleading with me to keep Michael
away from her. He was obsessed. He
wouldn't leave her alone. She'd become
afraid of him.
Joe was already telling the press
that Michael was going to run his
campaign for governor of Massachusetts.
I told Joe and Bobby that Michael
was about to self-destruct. I suggested
we do an intervention of some kind.
I told Joe that I thought Michael
was dangerous to his campaign that
he was harassing Marisa. They had
known about her for a long time. It
was an open secret as early as Senator
Kennedy's 1992 campaign.
"I don't see how that's
any of your business," Bobby
said.
"My brother can fuck anybody
he wants," said Joe.
I also acted as liaison to the
other Democrats in New England, and
it was becoming more and more difficult
to put off their requests for Michael
to stump for them. I tried to substitute
other speakers. The Kerry campaign
was calling and asking for him. "We
need Michael," they kept saying.
Finally I took aside a guy I know
and told him what was going on and
what a time bomb Michael was.
A few weeks later Marisa came
to me and asked for my help. I took
her to a psychotherapist in Cambridge.
Not long after that she called to
tell me her therapist was urging her
to tell her parents the truth.
"You won't be mad at me,
will you?"
"Why would I be mad at you?
Marisa, you need to do what's right
for you."
"Yes, but this has been
going on a lot longer than you think.
Will you support me?"
"Of course."
*
"Oh, my God," Michael said.
"Oh Jesus, I'm going to jail!
How could you do this to me, Skakel?
Who the fuck do you think you are?
You've gone off the fucking reservation!
What the fuck do you think you're
doing taking Marisa to a therapist?
I had her under control. Now you fucked
everything up. Everything! Wait. What
if I got Vicki pregnant? What do you
think? If we had another kid on the
way, they wouldn't put me in jail,
would they? Would they? And that would
take Vicki's mind off all this for
a while too."
Michael's next move was typical.
There was a guy who had worked in
the Senator's campaign named Jimmy
Recidlow who might be able to help.
Recidlow who had been accused of raping
a young campaign volunteer whose father
was a wealthy Democrat. It was agreed
to keep everything quiet as long as
Recidlow left the campaign. Someone
on the campaign got Recidlow a job
at NAGE, the National Association
of Government Employees. NAGE includes
the FBI, ATF, CIA and all the State
Police Departments, everyone who's
a government agent.
"Get Recidlow on the phone!"
Michael said. "Right now. Tell
him to dig some dirt on Paul Verrochi,
see if there's a file on him. Maybe
he beats his wife or something. Tell
him to get something."
Next think I know, I'm reading
in the papers that "the young
woman's family has declined to pursue
the matter."
*
The morning of the Preliminary Grand
Jury Investigation, I came out of
my house and there were reporters
everywhere, satellite trucks, lights,
cameras. Of the four people testifying
that day, Michael, Vicki, Marisa,
and me, I was the only one who couldn't
plead the Fifth Amendment.
That morning's Boston Herald
convinced me what to do. An article
by jack Sullivan purported to have
the inside scoop on Michael Skakel,
a suspect in an old, unsolved murder
and a chauffeur for the Kennedy family,
who was trying to extort a quarter
million dollars from them by fabricating
a story about Michael and the family
babysitter. Clearly the family was
taking no chances on me.
I should probably have seen it
coming. Earlier, when the truth could
no longer be hidden, Michael had instructed
me to tell the press that Marisa was
promiscuous little slut who had come
on to him, been rebuffed, and was
angry. I refused. Later, Joe called
me from his office in Congress. "What
are your memories of what I said to
you about all this?" he wanted
to know.
I recounted them.
"Oh, my God. I said that?
Look, Michael, I need you to say that
neither of us knew anything about
this. Can I count on you? Can I count
on you to say that you are certain
I never knew anything about? God damn
it, I need to know! Can I count you?"
I told him I would simply reply
to questions with "No comment."
Evidently that wasn't good enough.
A half hour later the phone in my
office was dead, and all my Citizens'
Energy credit cards had been canceled;
a half hour after that and The
Boston Herald was getting the
story that would run the next morning:
Michael Skakel, a chauffeur for the
Kennedys was trying to extort money
from them by making up lies about
Michael Kennedy and an under-age girl.
Whatever one may think of loyalty
such as mine, whether it seems laudable
or immoral, or just plain foolish,
I had been prepared to do time. Though
I did not want to lie, I would have
kept silence and gone to jail if necessary.
For Michael. For the Kennedys. For
the myth. For the memory of a day
in Aspen when I came down with a fever
and my aunt Ethel sat by my bedside,
soothing me with a cool cloth on my
forehead, a hand on my cheek and a
soft maternal concern on her face.
But that morning's paper had finally
slapped me awake.
I told the DA everything I knew.
Epilogue: Longboat Key, 1998
A visit with my father. An encounter
with Ethel. History repeats itself
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