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{{Short description|1969 death of Mary Jo Kopechne caused by Ted Kennedy crashing car}}
The term '''"Chappaquiddick incident"''' refers to the circumstances surrounding the death of [[Mary Jo Kopechne]], a former campaign worker for the assassinated [[U.S. Senator]] [[Robert F. Kennedy]] of [[New York]].
{{Use American English|date=October 2019}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2017}}
{{More citations needed|date=July 2023}}
{{Infobox historical event
| image = File:Chappaquiddick4.png
| date = July 18–19, 1969
| location = [[Chappaquiddick Island]], [[Massachusetts]], U.S.
| coordinates = {{Coord|41|22|24.0|N|70|27|13.3|W|region:US-MA_type:event|display=title,inline}}
| type = Automobile crash
| cause = Negligent operation by [[Ted Kennedy]]
| first_reporter =
| outcome = Ted Kennedy's driver's license suspended for 16 months
| casualties1 =
| reported deaths = [[Mary Jo Kopechne]]
| convicted = Ted Kennedy
| burial = July 22, 1969, [[Plymouth, Pennsylvania|Plymouth]], [[Pennsylvania]], U.S.
| inquiries = {{unbulleted list
|July 25, 1969, Superior Court
|April 6, 1970, [[Dukes County]] grand jury
|May 18, 1970, [[Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles]]
}}
| inquest = January 1970, [[Edgartown, Massachusetts|Edgartown]]
| charges = *[[Crime scene getaway|Leaving the scene of an accident]] causing [[bodily injury]]<ref name="echoes">{{cite magazine |url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1994/07/25/chappaquiddicks-echoes |title=Chappaquiddick's Echoes |magazine=The New Yorker |date=July 17, 1994|access-date=May 31, 2018}}</ref><ref name="disqualifies">{{cite magazine|url=http://www.nybooks.com/articles/1976/04/29/the-real-reason-chappaquiddick-disqualifies-kenned/|title=The Real Reason Chappaquiddick Disqualifies Kennedy|first=Garry|last=Wills|date=April 29, 1976|access-date=May 31, 2018|magazine=[[The New York Review of Books]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.gq.com/story/kennedy-ted-senator-profile|title=Ted Kennedy on the Rocks|first=Michael|last=Kelly|date=April 15, 2016|website=GQ|access-date=May 31, 2018}}</ref>
*[[Reckless driving|Operation of a motor vehicle too fast for existing conditions]]
*Failure to exhibit a driving permit{{efn|The latter two charges were dropped in a [[plea deal]].}}
| convictions = Leaving the scene of an accident causing bodily injury
| verdict = [[Pleaded guilty]]
| sentence = Two months jail plus one year [[probation]]; [[suspended sentence|suspended]]<ref name="damore_193"/>
}}

The '''Chappaquiddick incident''' occurred on [[Chappaquiddick Island]], [[Massachusetts]], United States, sometime around midnight, between July 18 and 19, 1969,<ref name=tecpaperg>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=eDNWAAAAIBAJ&pg=5310%2C3573743 |work=Eugene Register-Guard |location=Eugene, Oregon |agency=Associated Press|title=Ted escapes car plunge; woman dies |date=July 19, 1969 |page=1A}}</ref><ref name=rekivif>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=LJAjAAAAIBAJ&pg=6473%2C2003148 |work=Reading Eagle |location=Reading, Pennsylvania |agency=UPI |title=Kennedy involved in fatality |date=July 20, 1969 |page=1}}</ref> when [[Mary Jo Kopechne]] died inside the car driven by [[United States Senator]] [[Ted Kennedy]] after he accidentally drove off a narrow bridge, causing it to overturn in Poucha Pond.<ref name=chtbferg>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=eTNWAAAAIBAJ&pg=4031%2C3668966|work=Eugene Register-Guard |location=Eugene, Oregon |agency=Associated Press|title=Charge to Be Filed Against Kennedy|date=July 20, 1969 |page=1A}}</ref><ref name=mptzap276p1>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=s4gsAAAAIBAJ&pg=7143%2C5292039 |newspaper=Lakeland Ledger |location=Lakeland, Florida |last1=Putzel |first1=Michael |last2=Pyle |first2=Richard |agency=Associated Press |title=Chappaquiddick (part 1)|date=February 22, 1976 |page=1B }}</ref><ref name=mptzap276p2>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=uYgsAAAAIBAJ&pg=6983%2C7000861|newspaper=Lakeland Ledger |location=(Florida) |last1=Putzel |first1=Michael |last2=Pyle |first2=Richard |agency=Associated Press |title=Chappaquiddick (part 2) |date=February 29, 1976 |page=1B }}</ref><ref name=unjj>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ZYYjAAAAIBAJ&pg=2065%2C5207562 |newspaper=The Day |location=New London, Connecticut |last=Jacoby |first=Jeff |agency=The Boston Globe |title=Unlike Kopechne, the questions have never died |date=July 24, 1994 |page=C9 }}</ref>

Kennedy left a party on Chappaquiddick Island, off the eastern end of [[Martha's Vineyard]], at 11:15{{nbsp}}p.m. on July 18. He stated that his intent was to immediately take Kopechne to a ferry landing and return to a hotel in [[Edgartown]], but that he made a wrong turn onto a dirt road leading to a one-lane bridge. After his car skidded off the bridge into the pond, Kennedy swam free and maintained that he tried to rescue Kopechne from the submerged car, but he could not. Kopechne's death could have happened any time between about 11:30{{nbsp}}p.m. Friday and 1{{nbsp}}a.m. Saturday, as an off-duty deputy sheriff stated he saw a car matching Kennedy's license plate at 12:40{{nbsp}}a.m. Kennedy departed from the crash site and failed to report the incident to the police until after 10 a.m. on Saturday. In the meantime, a diver retrieved Kopechne's body from Kennedy's car shortly before 9 a.m. that same day.


At a court hearing on July 25, Kennedy pleaded guilty to a charge of leaving the scene of an accident and received a two-month [[suspended sentence|suspended jail sentence]]. In a televised statement, that same evening, Kennedy said that his conduct immediately after the crash had "made no sense to me at all" and that he regarded his failure to report the crash, immediately, as "indefensible.” A January 5, 1970, [[inquest|judicial inquest]] concluded that Kennedy and Kopechne had not intended to take the ferry and that Kennedy had intentionally turned toward the bridge, operating his vehicle negligently, if not recklessly, and at too high a speed for the hazard which the bridge posed in the dark. The judge stopped short of recommending charges, and a [[grand jury]] convened on April 6, returning no [[indictment]]s. On May 27, a [[Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles|Registry of Motor Vehicles]] hearing resulted in Kennedy's driver's license being suspended for sixteen months, after the crash.
In July 1969, Kopechne's body was discovered inside an overturned car belonging to Senator [[Ted Kennedy|Edward "Ted" Kennedy]] of [[Massachusetts]] under water in a tidal channel on [[Chappaquiddick Island]], Massachusetts.


The Chappaquiddick incident became a national news item and influenced Kennedy's decision not to run for [[President of the United States|president]] in [[1972 United States presidential election|1972]] and [[1976 United States presidential election|1976]].<ref name=mptzap276p1/><ref name=mptzap276p2/><ref name=unjj/> Later, it was said to have undermined his chances of ever becoming president.<ref>[http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/kennedy-legacy-chappaquiddick-ted-kennedy-beginning-article-1.398917 "Kennedy's Legacy: Chappaquiddick was the end of one Ted Kennedy and the beginning of another"]. ''Daily News''. New York.</ref> Kennedy ultimately decided to enter the [[1980 Democratic Party presidential primaries|1980 Democratic presidential primaries]] but earned only 37.6% of the vote, losing the nomination to incumbent [[President of the United States|U.S. President]] [[Jimmy Carter]].
After the body was found, Kennedy gave a statement to police saying that on the previous night he had taken a wrong turn and accidentally driven his car off a bridge into the water. He pleaded guilty to a charge of leaving the scene of an accident after causing injury, and received a suspended sentence.


The incident became a national [[political scandal|scandal]], and may have affected the Senator's decision not to run for [[United States presidential election, 1972|President in 1972]].
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==Background==
==Background==
[[File:Edward Kennedy (2).jpg|thumb|upright|Ted Kennedy in 1968]]
On July 18, 1969, Ted Kennedy attended a party on Chappaquiddick, a small island connected via ferry to the town of [[Edgartown, Massachusetts|Edgartown]] on the adjoining larger island of [[Martha's Vineyard]]. The party was a reunion for a group of six women, including Kopechne, known as the "[[Boiler Room Girls|boiler-room girls]]",<ref name="Bly">Bly, p. 202&ndash;206.</ref> who had served in his brother [[Robert F. Kennedy|Robert's]] 1968 presidential campaign. Also present were [[Joseph Gargan]] (Ted Kennedy's cousin), [[Paul Markham]] (a school friend of Gargan's who would become United States Attorney for Massachusetts under the patronage of the [[Kennedy family|Kennedys]])<ref name="Wills">Wills, p. 117&ndash;120.</ref>, Charles Tretter (an attorney), Raymond La Rosa and John Crimmins (Ted Kennedy's part-time driver). Kennedy was also competing in the [[Edgartown Yacht Club]] Regatta, a sailing competition which was taking place over several days.<ref name="Bly"/>
[[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]] [[Ted Kennedy|Edward M. "Ted" Kennedy]], aged 37, and his cousin, [[Joseph Gargan]], aged 39,{{refn|group=Notes|name=JG|Gargan's mother was the sister of Kennedy's mother. Gargan's mother died when he was six, and he was raised after that by Ted's parents [[Joseph P. Kennedy Sr.|Joseph P.]] and [[Rose Kennedy]].<ref name=EMKinst>{{cite web |url= https://www.emkinstitute.org/resources/ann-gargan |title= Interview with Ann Gargan |website= Edward M. Kennedy Institute|access-date= 2 April 2018}}</ref>}} planned to race Kennedy's [[sailboat]], ''Victura'', in the 1969 [[Edgartown Yacht Club]] [[Regatta]] on Friday and Saturday, July 18 and 19, 1969, after having forgone the previous year's Regatta, because of the assassination of Kennedy's brother, [[Robert F. Kennedy|Robert]], that June.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p.&nbsp;69.</ref> Gargan rented the secluded Lawrence Cottage for the weekend on [[Chappaquiddick Island]], [[Massachusetts]],<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], pp.&nbsp;69–70.</ref> a tiny island accessible by ferry from [[Edgartown, Massachusetts|Edgartown]] on [[Martha's Vineyard]]. Kennedy and Gargan hosted a [[Barbecue|cookout]] party at the cottage at 8:30{{nbsp}}p.m that evening,<ref>[[#Kessler|Kessler]], p.&nbsp;418.</ref> as a reunion for the "[[Boiler Room Girls]],” women who had served on Robert's [[Robert F. Kennedy 1968 presidential campaign|1968 presidential campaign]]. Six of these attended the party: [[Mary Jo Kopechne]], Rosemary Keough, [[Esther Newberg]], sisters Nance Lyons and Mary Ellen Lyons, and Susan Tannenbaum. All were in their twenties and single.{{cn|date=June 2023}}


The men at the party included the crew of Kennedy's sailboat: Gargan; [[Paul F. Markham|Paul Markham]], a school friend of Gargan who had previously served as the [[United States Attorney]] for Massachusetts;<ref name="Wills">[[#Wills|Wills]], pp.&nbsp;117–120.</ref> and John B. Crimmins, aged 63,<ref name=mptzap276p1/><!--{{CN|date=November 2017}}--> a long-time political associate of Kennedy who served as his [[chauffeur]] for the weekend.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/05/31/archives/john-b-crimmins-long-an-associate-of-edward-kennedy.html|title=John B. Crimmins, Long an Associate Of Edward Kennedy|date=May 31, 1977|access-date=May 31, 2018|work=[[The New York Times]]}}</ref> Others in attendance were attorney Charles Tretter, a Kennedy advisor; and Raymond LaRosa, who had worked on Kennedy's [[United States Senate|Senate]] campaigns. All the men were married, except Crimmins;<ref name=mptzap276p1/><!--{{CN|date=November 2017}}--> wives were not invited to the Chappaquiddick weekend.<ref name="Bly">[[#Bly|Bly]], pp.&nbsp;202–206.</ref> Other friends and campaign workers, male and female, had been invited, but they did not attend, for various reasons. Markham and Crimmins intended to spend the night at the cottage, while the others were booked at hotels on Martha's Vineyard—the men at the Shiretown Inn, one block from the Edgartown [[ferry slip]], and the women at the Katama Shores [[motor inn]], about {{convert|2|mi|km}} south of the ferry slip.<ref name="Boyle, p. 124">[[#Boyle|Boyle]], p. 124</ref>
==Events of the night of July 18, 1969==
According to his own testimony at the inquest into Kopechne's death, Kennedy left the party at "approximately 11:15 p.m." When he announced that he was about to leave, Kopechne indicated "that she was desirous of leaving, if I would be kind enough to drop her back at her hotel". Kennedy then requested the keys to his car from his chauffeur, Crimmins. Asked why he did not have his chauffeur drive them both, Kennedy explained that Crimmins along with some other partygoers "were concluding their meal, enjoying the fellowship and it didn't appear to me necessary to require him to bring me back to Edgartown".<ref>Boyle (1970), pp. 26&ndash;27, reported at Damore (1989), p. 357</ref> Kopechne told no one that she was leaving with Kennedy, and left her purse and hotel key at the party.<ref name="bg-series-3">{{cite news | url=http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2009/02/17/chapter_3_chappaquiddick/ | title=Chapter 3: Chappaquiddick: Conflicted ambitions, then, Chappaquiddick | author=Russell, Jenna | publisher=''[[The Boston Globe]]'' | date=2009-02-17 | accessdate=2009-02-24}}</ref>


==Sequence of events==
Christopher "Huck" Look was a deputy sheriff working as a special police officer at the Edgartown regatta dance that night. At 12:30 am he left the dance, crossed over to Chappaquiddick in the yacht club's [[Launch (boat)|launch]], got into his parked car and drove home. He testified that between 12:30 and 12:45 am he had seen a dark car containing a man driving and a woman in the front seat approaching the intersection with Dike Road. The car had gone first onto the private Cemetery Road and stopped there. Thinking that the occupants of the car might be lost, Look had gotten out of his car and walked towards it. When he was 25 to 30 feet away, the car started backing up towards him. When Look called out to offer his help, the car took off down Dike Road in a cloud of dust.<ref>Exhumation hearing, p. 59, reported at Damore (1989), p. 103</ref> Look recalled that the car's license plate began with an "L" and contained the number "7" twice, both details true of Kennedy's 1967 [[Oldsmobile 88#1965&ndash;68|Oldsmobile Delmont 88]].<!--NOT Delta 88-->
===The crash===
[[File:Chappaquiddick bridge.jpg|thumb|The Dike Bridge is accessible only by a dirt road, and leads to dead-end sand dunes past Poucha Pond. The [[guardrail]] was not present in 1969.]]
According to Kennedy, Kopechne asked him to give her a ride back to her hotel in Katama. Kennedy requested the keys to his car (which he did not usually drive) from his chauffeur, Crimmins.<ref name="ReferenceA">[[#Boyle|Boyle]], pp.&nbsp;26–27, reported at [[#Damore|Damore]], p.&nbsp;357.</ref> Kennedy put this time at "approximately 11:15{{nbsp}}p.m.,” although he was not wearing a watch;<ref name=mptzap276p1/> the time came from Crimmins' watch.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p.&nbsp;357.</ref> Returning to Edgartown and Katama required making the last ferry, which left the island at midnight, or else calling to arrange a later ferry. Kopechne told no one else that she was leaving for the night with Kennedy, and, in fact, she left her purse and hotel key at the party.<ref name="bg-series-3">{{cite news | url=http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2009/02/17/chapter_3_chappaquiddick/ | title=Chapter 3: Chappaquiddick: Conflicted Ambitions, then, Chappaquiddick |last= Russell |first= Jenna |work= [[The Boston Globe]] | date=February 17, 2009 | access-date=February 24, 2009}}</ref>


The exact time the crash occurred is unknown, due to a conflict between the testimony of Kennedy and a deputy sheriff who claimed to have seen his car at a later time. Kennedy claimed that, as soon as he left the party, he immediately drove {{convert|1/2|mi|km|spell=in|sigfig=1}} north on Chappaquiddick Road headed for the ferry landing and mistakenly made a wrong turn, right, onto the unpaved Dike Road, instead of bearing left, to stay on the paved Chappaquiddick Road, for another {{convert|2+1/2|mi|km|spell=in}}. There is also a northbound unpaved Cemetery Road at this intersection.{{citation needed|date=November 2020}}
[[Image:Chappaquiddick bridge.jpg|right|250px|thumb|The Dike Bridge, pictured here in 2008 with guardrail.]]According to his inquest testimony, Kennedy made a wrong turn onto Dike Road, an unlit dirt road that led to Dike Bridge (also spelled Dyke Bridge). Dike Road was unpaved, but Kennedy, driving at "approximately twenty miles an hour", took "no particular notice" of this fact, and did not realize that he was no longer headed towards the ferry landing.<ref>Boyle (1970) p. 35, reported at Damore (1989), p. 358</ref> Dike Bridge was a wooden bridge angled obliquely to the road with no guardrail. A fraction of a second before he reached the bridge, Kennedy applied his brakes; he then drove over the side of the bridge. The car plunged into tide-swept Poucha Pond (at that location a channel) and came to rest upside-down underwater. Kennedy later recalled that he was able to swim free of the vehicle, but Kopechne was not. Kennedy claimed at the inquest that he called Kopechne's name several times from the shore, then tried to swim down to reach her seven or eight times, then rested on the bank for around fifteen minutes before returning on foot to Lawrence Cottage, where the party attended by Kopechne and other "Boiler Room Girls" had occurred. Kennedy denied seeing any house with a light on during his journey back to Lawrence Cottage.<ref>Boyle (1970), pp. 56&ndash;60, reported at Damore (1989), p. 360</ref>


Part-time Deputy Sheriff Christopher "Huck" Look left work by 12:30{{nbsp}}a.m. on Saturday, as a gate guard in uniform for the regatta dance, returned to Chappaquiddick Island in the yacht club's private boat, and drove east and south on Chappaquiddick Road toward his home. At around 12:40{{nbsp}}a.m., after he passed the intersection with Dike Road, he saw a dark four-door [[Sedan (automobile)|sedan]] driven by a man, with a woman in the front seat, approaching and passing slowly in front of him. The car drove off the pavement, onto Cemetery Road, and stopped. Thinking the occupants might be lost, Look stopped and walked towards the other vehicle. When he was {{convert|25|to|30|ft}} away, the car reversed and started backing up towards him. As he called out to offer help, the car moved forward and veered, quickly, eastward onto Dike Road, speeding away and leaving a cloud of dust.<ref>Exhumation hearing, p.&nbsp;59, reported at [[#Damore|Damore]], p.&nbsp;103.</ref> Look recalled that the car's license plate began with an L and contained two 7s, consistent with Kennedy's license plate (L78–207) on his [[Oldsmobile 88#Sixth generation (1965–1970)|Oldsmobile Delmont 88]]<!--NOT Delta 88-->.<ref name=mptzap276p1/> He returned to his car and continued on his way south. Look's version, if true, leaves over an hour of Kennedy's time with Kopechne unaccounted, before the crash.{{citation needed|date=November 2020}}
[[Image:Chappaquiddick house.jpg|right|250px|thumb|"Dike House" along Dike Road.]]In addition to the working telephone at the Lawrence Cottage, according to one commentator, his route back to the cottage would have taken him past four houses from which he could have telephoned and summoned help; however, he did not do so.<ref name="anderson_140">Anderson, p. 138&ndash;140.</ref> The first of those houses, referred to as "Dike House", was only 150 yards away from the bridge, and was occupied by Sylvia Malm and her family at the time of the incident. Malm later stated that she had left a light on at the residence when she retired for that evening.<ref>[[Jack Anderson|Anderson, Jack]]. (1969, September 1). "[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=cP0NAAAAIBAJ&sjid=zXsDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4079,182936 Diver Hints Mary Jo Might Have Been Saved]", ''[[St. Petersburg Times]]'', Page 19-A</ref>


About a minute later, Look saw Kennedy's party guests Nance and Mary Ellen Lyons, and Ray LaRosa, dancing in a [[conga line]] down the middle of Chappaquiddick Road, a short distance south of Dike Road bridge. He stopped to ask if they needed a ride, which they declined. LaRosa and the Lyons sisters corroborated Look's testimony about meeting him in the road and the verbal exchange, but they were unsure of the time. They also said they saw a vehicle driving north on Chappaquiddick Road, which they could not describe in any detail.{{citation needed|date=November 2020}}
According to Kennedy's testimony, Gargan and party co-host Paul Markham then returned to the pond with Kennedy to try to rescue Kopechne. Both of the other men also tried to dive into the water and rescue Kopechne multiple times.<ref name="Bly"/> When their efforts to rescue Kopechne failed, Kennedy testified, Gargan and Markham drove with Kennedy to the ferry landing, both insisting multiple times that the accident had to be reported to the authorities.<ref name="damore_362">Boyle (1970), p. 63, reported at Damore (1989), p. 362</ref> According to Markham's testimony Kennedy was sobbing and on the verge of breaking down.<ref>Boyle (1970), p. 322, reported at Damore (1989), p. 375</ref> Kennedy went on to testify that "[I] had full intention of reporting it. And I mentioned to Gargan and Markham something like, 'You take care of the other girls; I will take care of the accident!' &ndash; that is what I said and I dove into the water".<ref name="damore_362"/> Kennedy had already told Gargan and Markham not to tell the other women anything about the incident "[b]ecause I felt strongly that if these girls were notified that an accident had taken place and Mary Jo had, in fact, drowned, that it would only be a matter of seconds before all of those girls, who were long and dear friends of Mary Jo's, would go to the scene of the accident and enter the water with, I felt, a good chance that some serious mishap might have occurred to any one of them".<ref name="damore_363">Boyle (1970), p. 80, reported at Damore (1989), p. 363</ref> Gargan and Markam would testify that they assumed that Kennedy was going to inform the authorities once he got back to Edgartown, and thus did not do so themselves.<ref name="Wills"/>


Dike Road leads {{convert|7/10|mi|km|spell=in|adj=pre|of a}} to Dike Bridge,<ref>[[#Boyle|Boyle]], p. 123</ref> a wooden structure angled obliquely to the road, crossing the channel connecting Cape Pogue Pond to the north and Poucha Pond to the south,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://vineyardgazette.com/ponds/cape-pogue-poucha-pond|title=Cape Pogue and Poucha Pond|work=Vineyard Gazette|access-date=May 31, 2018}}</ref> leading eastward to a [[barrier beach]] known as Tom's Neck Point.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7ZAlAQAAMAAJ&q=tom's-neck&pg=PA215|title=The History of Martha's Vineyard, Dukes County, Massachusetts: Town annals|first=Charles Edward|last=Banks|date=May 31, 2018|publisher=G.H. Dean|access-date=May 31, 2018|via=Google Books}}</ref> At the time, the bridge was not fitted with [[guardrail]]s.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.gettyimages.com/photos/chappaquiddick-island|title=Chappaquiddick Island Stock Photos and Pictures - Getty Images|website=gettyimages.com|access-date=May 31, 2018}}</ref> A fraction of a second before Kennedy reached the bridge, he applied his brakes and lost control of the car, which launched over the southern end of the bridge, plunged nose-first into the channel,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/tow-truck-pulls-senator-edward-kennedys-car-out-of-poucha-news-photo/514886068|title=Tow Truck Pulling Kennedy Car from Pond|website=gettyimages.com|date=March 10, 2016 |access-date=May 31, 2018}}</ref> and flipped over, resting on its roof in six to eight feet of water.<ref name="mptzap276p1" />
According to his own testimony, Kennedy swam across the 500-foot channel, back to [[Edgartown, Massachusetts|Edgartown]] and returned to his hotel room, where he removed his clothes and collapsed on his bed.<ref name="damore_363"/> Hearing noises, he later put on dry clothes and asked someone what the time was: it was something like 2:30 a.m., the senator recalled. He testified that, as the night went on, "I almost tossed and turned and walked around that room ... I had not given up hope all night long that, by some miracle, Mary Jo would have escaped from the car."<ref name="damore_364">Boyle (1970), p. 70, reported at Damore (1989), p. 364</ref>


===Rescue attempts===
Back at his hotel, Kennedy complained at 2:55 am to the hotel owner that he had been awoken by a noisy party.<ref name="Wills"/> By 7:30 am the next morning he was talking "casually" to the winner of the previous day's sailing race, with no indication that anything was amiss.<ref name="Wills"/> At 8 a.m., Gargan and Markham joined Kennedy at his hotel where they had a "heated conversation." According to Kennedy's testimony, the two men asked why he hadn't reported the accident. Kennedy responded by telling them "about my own thoughts and feelings as I swam across that channel ... that somehow when they arrived in the morning that they were going to say that Mary Jo was still alive".<ref name="damore_364"/> The three men subsequently crossed back to Chappaquiddick Island on the ferry, where Kennedy made a series of phone calls from a payphone by the crossing to his friends for advice; he again did not report the accident to authorities.<ref name="Wills"/>
[[File:Chappaquiddick house.jpg|right|thumb|Dike House, along Dike Road, is 150 yards from the bridge.]]
Kennedy was able to swim free of the vehicle, but Kopechne was not. Kennedy said that he called her name several times from the shore, and tried to swim down to reach her seven or eight times. He then rested on the bank for around fifteen minutes before he returned on foot to Lawrence Cottage. He denied seeing any house with a light on during his fifteen-minute walk back.<ref>Boyle, p. 56–60, reported at [[#Damore|Damore]], p. 360.</ref> His route took him past four houses from which he could have telephoned to summon help before he reached the cottage, but he did not attempt to contact the local residents.<ref name="anderson_140">Anderson & Gibson, p 138–140.</ref> The first of the houses was Dike House, {{convert|150|yd}} from the bridge and occupied by Sylvia Malm and her family. Malm stated later that she was home, she had a phone and she had left a light on at the residence when she retired that evening.<ref>{{cite news |author-link= Jack Anderson (columnist) |last= Anderson |first= Jack |date=September 1, 1969 |url= https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=cP0NAAAAIBAJ&pg=4079,182936 |title= Diver Hints Kopechne Might Have Been Saved |work= [[St. Petersburg Times]] |page= 19A}}</ref>


Kennedy returned to the cottage, where the party was still in progress, but rather than alerting all of the guests to the crash, he quietly summoned Gargan and Markham, and collapsed in the back seat of a rented [[Plymouth Valiant]] parked in the driveway. Gargan drove the three to the site of the crash to try to rescue Kopechne from the car. Gargan and Markham jumped into the pond and tried repeatedly to rescue her but were not able to, due to the strong tidal current.<ref name="Bly"/> After they recovered, Gargan drove Kennedy and Markham to the ferry landing. The three were all lawyers and they discussed what they should do while standing next to a [[payphone|public phone booth]] at the landing. Gargan and Markham insisted multiple times that the crash had to be reported to the authorities.<ref name="damore_362">[[#Boyle|Boyle]], p.&nbsp;63, reported at [[#Damore|Damore]], p.&nbsp;362.</ref>
==Discovery of the body==
Earlier that morning, two amateur fishermen had seen the overturned car in the water and notified the inhabitants of the nearest cottage to the pond, who called the authorities at around 8:20 am.<ref>Damore, p. 1</ref> A diver was sent down and discovered Kopechne's body at around 8:45 am.<ref>Damore, p. 5</ref> The diver, John Farrar, later testified at the inquest that Kopechne's body was pressed up in the car in the spot where an air bubble would have formed. He interpreted this to mean that Kopechne had survived for a while after the initial accident in the air bubble, and concluded that {{cquote|Had I received a call within five to ten minutes of the accident occurring, and was able, as I was the following morning, to be at the victim's side within twenty-five minutes of receiving the call, in such event there is a strong possibility that she would have been alive on removal from the submerged car.<ref name="anderson_140"/>}}


==Subsequent events==
===Kennedy's reaction===
At the ferry landing, Kennedy dove into the water and swam {{convert|500|ft|-1}} across the channel to Edgartown. He then walked to his hotel room, removed his clothes and collapsed on his bed.<ref name="damore_363"/> He later put on dry clothes, left his room and asked someone what the time was; it was somewhere around 2:30&nbsp;a.m., he recalled. Gargan and Markham had driven the rented Plymouth back to the cottage; they entered the cottage at approximately 2&nbsp;a.m. but told no one what had happened. When questioned by the guests, they said that Kennedy had swum back to Edgartown and Kopechne was probably at her hotel. Gargan then told everyone to get some sleep. By 7:30&nbsp;a.m., Kennedy was talking casually to the winner of the previous day's sailing race and gave no indication that anything was amiss.<ref name="Wills"/> At 8&nbsp;a.m., Gargan and Markham had crossed back to Edgartown on the ferry and met Kennedy.{{citation needed|date=November 2020}}
Police checked the car's license plate and saw that it was registered to Kennedy.<ref name="Bly"/> When Kennedy, still at the pay phone by the ferry crossing, saw that the body had been discovered, he crossed back to Edgartown and went to the police station; Gargan simultaneously went to the hotel where the Boiler Room Girls were staying to inform them about the incident.<ref name="Wills"/>


==Recovery of the body==
===Kennedy's initial statement===
A short time after 8 a.m., a man and a fifteen-year-old boy, who went fishing off Tom's Neck Point, saw Kennedy's submerged car in Poucha Pond and notified the residents of the cottage nearest the scene, who, in turn, called the authorities at about 8:20&nbsp;a.m.<ref name="damore_1">[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 1.</ref> Edgartown Police Chief Dominick James Arena arrived at the scene about ten or fifteen minutes later.<ref name="Cutler, pp. 10, 42">Cutler, p. 10, 42.</ref> He attempted to examine the interior of the submerged vehicle,<ref name="Cutler, pp. 10, 42"/><ref>Lange & DeWitt, p. 40–41.</ref> then summoned a trained [[scuba diving|scuba diver]] and equipment capable of towing or winching the vehicle out of the water. John Farrar, captain of the Edgartown Fire Rescue unit, arrived at 8:45&nbsp;a.m., equipped with scuba gear, and discovered Kopechne's body in the back seat; he extricated it from the vehicle within ten minutes.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 6.</ref><ref>Cutler, p. 10.</ref> Police checked the car's license plate and saw that it was registered to Kennedy.<ref name="Bly"/> Rosemary Keough's purse was found in the front passenger compartment of the car, causing Arena to misidentify Kopechne.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 8.</ref>{{refn|group=Notes|The purse was left in the car when Tretter drove her back to Edgartown earlier in the evening to borrow a radio.<ref name="Boyle, p. 124" />}}
At 10 am Kennedy entered the police station in Edgartown, made a couple of phone calls, then dictated a statement to his aide Paul Markham, which was then given to the police. The statement ran as follows:
{{cquote|On July 18, 1969, at approximately 11:15 p.m. in Chappaquiddick, Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, I was driving my car on Main Street on my way to get the ferry back to Edgartown. I was unfamiliar with the road and turned right onto Dike Road, instead of bearing hard left on Main Street. After proceeding for approximately one-half mile on Dike Road I descended a hill and came upon a narrow bridge. The car went off the side of the bridge. There was one passenger with me, one Miss Mary [Kopechne],<ref>The original statement left Kopechne's surname blank because Kennedy was unsure of its spelling, see Damore, p. 22</ref> a former secretary of my brother Sen. Robert Kennedy. The car turned over and sank into the water and landed with the roof resting on the bottom. I attempted to open the door and the window of the car but have no recollection of how I got out of the car. I came to the surface and then repeatedly dove down to the car in an attempt to see if the passenger was still in the car. I was unsuccessful in the attempt. I was exhausted and in a state of shock. I recall walking back to where my friends were eating. There was a car parked in front of the cottage and I climbed into the backseat. I then asked for someone to bring me back to Edgartown. I remember walking around for a period and then going back to my hotel room. When I fully realized what had happened this morning, I immediately contacted the police.<ref>a photographic reproduction of the original typescript, which was Exhibit number 2 at the inquest, is available at Damore, p. 448.</ref>}}


Meanwhile, Kennedy, Gargan and Markham crossed back to Chappaquiddick Island on the ferry, where Kennedy made a series of telephone calls from a payphone near the ferry crossing—the same phone that the three men had stood by approximately six hours earlier discussing Kennedy's options. Kennedy called friends and lawyers for advice, however, instead of notifying the authorities that he was the operator of the vehicle, which was still upside down in the pond. He called his brother-in-law [[Stephen Edward Smith]],{{refn|group=Notes|Kennedy first called Helga Wagner, a Kennedy family friend, to get a phone number for Smith, who was vacationing in Europe.}}<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1980/03/13/the-mysterious-helga-wagner/3f34b14f-ed77-4631-9253-03f112bf848d/|title=The Mysterious Helga Wagner|first=Maxine|last=Cheshire|date=March 13, 1980|access-date=May 31, 2018|via=www.washingtonpost.com}}</ref> [[United States Congressman|Congressman]] [[John V. Tunney]]<ref name="millercenter.org">{{cite web|url=https://millercenter.org/the-presidency/presidential-oral-histories/john-tunney-oral-history-2007-senator-california|title=John Tunney Oral History (2007), Senator, California - Miller Center|date=October 27, 2016|website=millercenter.org|access-date=May 31, 2018}}</ref> and others that morning, but he still did not report the accident to authorities.<ref name="Wills"/>
===Court proceedings===
On July 25, seven days after the incident, Kennedy entered a plea of guilty to a charge of leaving the scene of an accident after causing injury. Kennedy's attorneys suggested that any jail sentence should be [[suspended sentence|suspended]], and the prosecutors agreed to this, citing Kennedy's age, character and prior reputation.<ref>Damore, pp. 192&ndash;193</ref> Judge James Boyle sentenced Kennedy to two months' incarceration, the statutory minimum for the offense, which he suspended. In announcing the sentence, Boyle referred to Kennedy's "unblemished record" and said that he "has already been, and will continue to be punished far beyond anything this court can impose".<ref name="damore_193">Damore, p. 193</ref>


Kennedy was still at the payphone when he heard that his car and Kopechne's body had been discovered;<ref name=jachst>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=SYpjAAAAIBAJ&pg=4274%2C3312064 |newspaper=Nashua Telegraph |location=New Hampshire |agency=(Bell-McClure)|last=Anderson |first=Jack |author-link=Jack Anderson (columnist) |title=Chappaquiddick story |date=September 25, 1969 |page=4 }}</ref> he then crossed back to Edgartown to go to the police station with Markham. Meanwhile, Gargan went to the Katama Shores to inform the Boiler Room Girls of the incident.<ref name="Wills"/> Kennedy entered the police station at approximately 9:50{{nbsp}}a.m. He asked to make some telephone calls, and was told he could use Arena's office. When Arena returned to the station at 10:00{{nbsp}}a.m., he was "stunned" to learn Kennedy already knew of the accident and the true identity of the victim, and admitted he was the driver.<ref>Arena's personal notes, p. 1, cited in [[#Damore|Damore]], p. 16.</ref> Arena led Kennedy to another empty office where he could privately dictate his statement to Markham, who wrote it out in long hand. Arena then typed out the statement:<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], pp.21–22.</ref>{{refn|group=Notes|A photographic reproduction of Arena's typing was Exhibit number 2 at the inquest, and is available at [[#Damore|Damore]], p. 448.}}
===Kennedy's televised statement===
At 7:30 pm that evening Kennedy made a lengthy prepared statement about the incident which was broadcast live by the television networks. Among other things, he said that:<ref>the entire speech was inquest exhibit #3 and can be found at Damore, pp. 203&ndash;206</ref>
*"only reasons of health" had prevented his wife from accompanying him to the regatta.
*there was "no truth whatever to the widely circulated suspicions of immoral conduct" regarding Kennedy's and Kopechne's behavior that evening.
*he "was not driving under the influence of liquor".
*his conduct for the hours immediately following the accident "made no sense to [him] at all".
*his doctors had informed him that he had suffered [[head injury|cerebral concussion]] and [[Shock (circulatory)|shock]], but he did not seek to use his medical condition to escape responsibility for his actions.
*he "regard[ed] as indefensible that fact that [he] did not report the accident to the police immediately."
*instead of notifying the authorities immediately, Kennedy "requested the help of two friends, Joe Gargan and Paul Markham, and directed them to return immediately to the scene with [him] (it then being sometime after midnight) in order to undertake a new effort to dive down and locate Miss Kopechne".
*"[a]ll kinds of scrambled thoughts" went through his mind after the accident, including "whether the girl might still be alive somewhere out of that immediate area," "whether some [[Kennedy Curse|awful curse]] actually did hang over all the Kennedys", "whether there was some justifiable reason for [him] to doubt what had happened and to delay [his] report", and "whether somehow the awful weight of this incredible incident might in some way pass from [his] shoulders".
*he was overcome "by a jumble of emotions &ndash; grief, fear, doubt, exhaustion, panic, confusion and shock".
*having instructed Gargan and Markham "not to alarm Mary Jo's friends that night", Kennedy returned to the ferry with the two men, and then "suddenly jumped into the water and impulsively swam across, nearly drowning once again in the effort, returning to [his] hotel around 2 a.m. and collapsed in [his] room".


{{blockquote|On July 18, 1969, at approximately 11:15 p.m. in Chappaquiddick, Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, I was driving my car on Main Street on my way to get the ferry back to Edgartown. I was unfamiliar with the road and turned right onto Dyke {{sic}} Road,{{refn|group=Notes|Arena for some reason typed "Dyke", though Markham used the correct spelling "Dike". See [[#Damore|Damore]], picture insert.}} instead of bearing hard left on Main Street. After proceeding for approximately one-half mile on Dyke {{sic}} Road, I descended a hill and came upon a narrow bridge.{{refn|group=Notes| At this point, Arena adds "(arrow on map)". Markham, at this same point, uses a [[caret]] to insert a line of text that is illegibly crossed out; see picture in [[#Damore|Damore]], p.448.}} The car went off the side of the bridge. There was one passenger with me, one Miss Mary ___,{{refn|group=Notes|The statement left Kopechne's surname blank because Kennedy was unsure of its spelling; see [[#Damore|Damore]], p. 22.}} a former secretary of my brother, Sen. Robert Kennedy. The car turned over and sank into the water, and landed with the roof resting on the bottom. I attempted to open the door and the window of the car, but have no re-collection of how I got out of the car. I came to the surface, and then repeatedly dove down to the car, in an attempt to see if the passenger was still in the car. I was unsuccessful in the attempt. I was exhausted and in a state of shock. I recall walking back to where my friends were eating. There was a car parked in front of the cottage, and I climbed into the backseat. I then asked for someone to bring me back to Edgartown. I remember walking around for a period and then going back to my hotel room. When I fully realized what had happened this morning, I immediately contacted the police.}}
Kennedy went on to ask the people of Massachusetts to decide whether he should resign:


Kennedy said the statement was correct as Arena typed it, but did not sign it.<ref>[[#Boyle|Boyle]], p. 125.</ref>
“If at any time, the citizens of Massachusetts should lack confidence in their Senator’s character or his ability, with or without justification, he could not in my opinion adequately perform his duties, and should not continue in office. The opportunity to work with you and serve Massachusetts has made my life worthwhile. So I ask you tonight, the people of Massachusetts, to think this through with me. In facing this decision, I seek your advice and opinion. In making it I seek your prayers. For this is a decision that I will have finally to make on my own.”<ref>http://www.upi.com/Audio/Year_in_Review/Events-of-1969/Chappaquiddick/12303189849225-7/ "Chappaquiddick: 1969 Year in Review, UPI.com"</ref>


As the local [[medical examiner]], Robert Nevin, had the day off, Associate Medical Examiner Donald Mills was called to the crash site to examine Kopechne's body. He was satisfied that the cause of death was accidental [[drowning]] but asked the [[district attorney]]'s office for direction on whether an [[autopsy]] was necessary, and was told it was not as long as there were no signs of [[crime|foul play]]; Mills was satisfied it was a drowning. He signed Kopechne's [[death certificate]] to that effect, released the body for [[embalming]], and directed that a blood sample be collected and sent to the [[Massachusetts State Police]] for analysis of alcohol content.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 31</ref> The result was 0.09%, which Mills mistakenly thought represented only a "moderate" level, but, in fact, indicated in a person of Kopechne's weight, up to five drinks of liquor within an hour prior to death.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 178</ref> Kopechne's body was released to her family, and the funeral was held on Tuesday July 22 in [[Plymouth, Pennsylvania|Plymouth]], [[Pennsylvania]].<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p.&nbsp;v.</ref><ref name=ergflnt>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ezNWAAAAIBAJ&pg=3622%2C4255589 |work=Eugene Register-Guard |location=Oregon |agency=Associated Press |title=Ted Kennedy joins hundreds at rites for accident victim |date=July 22, 1969 |page=1A}}</ref><ref name=bbupifnl>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=tQFYAAAAIBAJ&pg=4936%2C4396320 |work=The Bulletin |location=Bend, Oregon |agency=UPI |title=Kennedy family flies to Pennsylvania for funeral of woman accident victim|date=July 22, 1969 |page=1}}</ref>
He concluded by quoting a passage from his brother John F. Kennedy's book ''[[Profiles in Courage]]''.<ref>Damore, pp. 206, 208</ref>


Nevin strongly disagreed with Mills's decision to forgo an autopsy,<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], pp. 174–175.</ref> believing that ruling out foul play would work to Kennedy's advantage by laying prurient public speculation to rest.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 270.</ref>
===Autopsy===
The medical examiner, Dr Donald Mills, was satisfied that the cause of death was accidental drowning. He signed a death certificate to that effect and released Kopechne's body to her family without ordering an autopsy.<ref>Damore, p. 49</ref> Later, on September 18, District Attorney Dinis attempted to secure an [[exhumation]] of Kopechne's body in order to perform a belated autopsy,<ref name="damore_vi">Damore, p. vi</ref> citing blood found on Kopechne's skirt and in her mouth and nose "which may or may not be consistent with death by drowning".<ref>Damore, p. 307</ref> The reported discovery of the blood was made when her clothes were turned over to authorities by the funeral director.<ref>*"Dinis Says Blood On Mary Jo's Body", ''Boston Herald Traveler'', September 16, 1969.</ref>


After [[President of the United States|U.S. President]] [[Richard Nixon]]'s security operative [[Jack Caulfield]] learned of the incident, he dispatched [[Anthony Ulasewicz]] to Dike Bridge in disguise as a newspaper reporter to collect information, since he believed Kennedy would be his rival in the [[1972 United States presidential election|1972 presidential election]]. Although Ulasewicz was able to interview several witnesses before law enforcement authorities, he found no useful information.<ref>Graff, Garrett M. (2022). ''Watergate: A New History'' (1 ed.). New York: Avid Reader Press. p. 42. {{ISBN|978-1-9821-3916-2}}. {{OCLC|1260107112}}.</ref>
A Pennsylvania court under Judge Bernard Brominski held a hearing on the request on October 20&ndash;21.<ref name="damore_vi"/> The request was opposed by Kopechne's parents.<ref name="damore_vi"/> Eventually Judge Brominski ruled against the exhumation on December 10, saying that there was "no evidence" that "anything other than drowning had caused the death of Mary Jo Kopechne".<ref>Damore, p. 343</ref>


===Inquest===
===Disputed cause of death===
Farrar, who recovered Kopechne's body from the submerged car,<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20060220185251/http://www.fatboy.cc/live_from_chappaquiddick.htm John Farrar interview] on the ''Howie Carr Show''</ref> believed that she died from [[suffocation]], rather than from drowning or from the impact of the overturned vehicle, based upon the posture in which he found the body in the well of the back seat of the car, where an air pocket would have formed. [[Rigor mortis]] was apparent, her hands were clasping the back seat and her face was turned upward.<ref>[[#Klein|Klein]], p. 93.</ref> Bob Molla, an inspector for the [[Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles]] who investigated the crash at the time, said that parts of the roof and the trunk appeared to be dry.<ref>{{Cite magazine|title='The Kennedy Machine Buried What Really Happened': Revisiting Chappaquiddick, 50 Years Later|url=https://www.vanityfair.com/style/2019/07/chappaquiddick-anniversary-kennedy-kopechne|last=Sanburn|first=Josh|date=2019-07-17|magazine=Vanity Fair|language=en|access-date=2020-05-29}}</ref> Farrar publicly asserted that Kopechne likely would have survived if a more timely rescue attempt had been conducted.<ref name=kbthdbts>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=wFctAAAAIBAJ&pg=965%2C3504891 |newspaper=Beaver County Times |location=Pennsylvania |last=Lofton |first=John D. Jr. |author-link=John Lofton |agency=(United Feature Syndicate) |title=Kopechnes begin to have doubts about Chappaquiddick affair |date=June 17, 1975 |page=A7 }}</ref><ref name=dvslmtddy>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=4rgfAAAAIBAJ&pg=1235%2C2915660 |last=Tiede |first=Tom |agency=NEA |newspaper=Southeast Missourian |location=Cape Girardeau |title=Chappaquiddick diver slams Teddy |date=January 28, 1980 |page=4}}</ref><ref>[[#Kappel|Kappel]].{{page needed|date=July 2013}}</ref>
The inquest into Kopechne's death took place in Edgartown in January 1970. At the request of Kennedy's lawyers, the [[Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court]] ordered that it be conducted in secret.<ref>Trotta, p. 184.</ref><ref name="bly_213">Bly, p. 213.</ref> The 763-page transcript of the inquest was released four months later.<ref name="bly_213"/> Judge James A. Boyle presided at the inquest. Among Judge Boyle's conclusions in his inquest report were the following:<ref>Dinis, pp. 391&ndash;392</ref>
*the accident occurred "between 11:30 p.m. on July 18 and 1:00 a.m. on July 19".
*"Kopechne and Kennedy did ''not'' intend to drive to the ferry slip and his turn onto Dike Road had been intentional".
*"A speed of twenty miles per hour as Kennedy testified to operating the car as large as his Oldsmobile would be at least negligent and possibly reckless."
*"For some reason not apparent from [Kennedy]'s testimony, he failed to exercise due care as he approached the bridge."
*"There is probable cause to believe that Edward M. Kennedy operated his motor vehicle negligently ... and that such operation appears to have contributed to the death of Mary Jo Kopechne."


==Defense strategy==
Under Massachusetts law Boyle, having found "probable cause" that Kennedy had committed a crime, could have issued a warrant for his arrest, but he did not do so.<ref>Dinis, p. 392</ref> District Attorney Dinis chose not to pursue Kennedy for [[manslaughter]], despite Judge Boyle's conclusions.
[[File:Chappaquiddick3.png|thumb|upright|Edgartown and Chappaquiddick Island in relation to the Kennedy compound in [[Hyannis Port]], south of Cape Cod]]
Kennedy returned to [[Kennedy compound|his family's compound]] in [[Hyannis Port]]. Stephen Smith, [[Robert McNamara]], [[Ted Sorensen]], [[Richard N. Goodwin]], [[Lem Billings]], [[Milton Gwirtzman]], [[David W. Burke]], [[John Culver]], Tunney,<ref name="millercenter.org"/> Gargan,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.rd.com/culture/chappaquiddick-ted-kennedy/|title=Chappaquiddick: The Unanswered Questions About Ted Kennedy's Fatal Crash |website=Reader's Digest|date=April 6, 2018|access-date=May 31, 2018}}</ref> Markham and others arrived to advise him.<ref name="vanityfair.com">{{cite magazine|title=The End of Camelot|url=https://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2015/12/end-of-camelot|date=1993-09-01|magazine=Vanity Fair|access-date=May 31, 2018}}</ref> Smith, the Kennedy family's business manager and "master [[fixer (person)|fixer]]",<ref name="vanityfair.com"/> decided the political damage was catastrophic and eliminated Kennedy's chance to run for president in 1972, recommending focusing efforts on protecting Kennedy from a charge of [[manslaughter]].<ref name="vanityfair.com"/>


==Arraignment==
The Kopechne family did not bring any legal action against Senator Kennedy, but they did receive a payment of $90,904 from the Senator personally and $50,000 from his insurance company.<ref name="bly_216">Bly, p. 216.</ref> The Kopechnes later explained their decision to not take legal action by saying that "We figured that people would think we were looking for blood money."<ref name="bly_216"/>
Kennedy's court hearing was held before [[Massachusetts District Court]] Judge James Boyle on July 25, seven days after the incident. Kennedy pleaded guilty to a charge of leaving the scene of an accident causing bodily injury. His attorneys argued that any jail sentence should be [[suspended sentence|suspended]], and the prosecutors agreed by citing his age (37), character and prior reputation.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], pp.&nbsp;192–193.</ref> "Considering the unblemished record of the defendant, and insofar as the Commonwealth represents this is not a case where he was really trying to conceal his identity...", Boyle sentenced him to the statutory minimum two months in prison, which he suspended, saying that he "has already been, and will continue to be punished far beyond anything this court can impose."<ref name="damore_193">[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 193.</ref>


Despite an [[Associated Press]] story published that morning, Boyle was unaware that Kennedy's driving record was, in fact, far from "unblemished".<ref name="damore_193"/> While attending [[University of Virginia School of Law]] from 1956 to 1959, he had compiled a record of [[reckless driving]] and [[driving without a license]].<ref>{{cite news | url=http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2009/02/15/chapter_1_teddy/ | title=Chapter 1: Teddy: A childhood of privilege, promise, and pain | author=English, Bella | newspaper=[[The Boston Globe]] | date=February 15, 2009 | access-date=February 24, 2009}}</ref> In one particular incident on March 14, 1958, Kennedy ran a red light, then cut his tail lights and raced to avoid a highway patrol officer. When Kennedy was caught, he was cited for reckless driving, racing to avoid pursuit and driving without a license.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], pp.&nbsp;169–170.</ref>
===Grand jury===
On April 6, 1970, [[Dukes County, Massachusetts|Dukes County]] [[grand jury]] assembled in special session to consider Kopechne's death. Judge Wilfred Paquet instructed the members of the grand jury that they could consider only those matters brought to their attention by the superior court, the district attorney or their own personal knowledge.<ref name="time">
{{cite news
|title=End of the Affair
|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,944017,00.html?iid=chix-sphere
|accessdate=2008-08-03
|date=1970-04-20
|work=Time magazine
}}
</ref> Citing the orders of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, Paquet told the grand jury that it could not see the evidence or Judge Boyle's report from the inquest (which at that time were still impounded).<ref name="time"/> District Attorney Dinis, who had attended the inquest and seen Judge Boyle's report, told the grand jury that there was not enough evidence to indict Senator Kennedy on potential charges of [[manslaughter]], [[perjury]] or driving to endanger.<ref name="time"/> The grand jury called four witnesses who had not testified at the inquest: they testified for a total of 20 minutes, but no indictments were issued.<ref name="time"/>


Kennedy's wife [[Joan Bennett Kennedy|Joan]] was pregnant at the time of the Chappaquiddick incident. She was confined to bed because of two previous [[miscarriage]]s, but she attended Kopechne's funeral and stood beside her husband in court.<ref>Taraborrelli, p. 395–96, 399.</ref> Soon after, she suffered a third miscarriage,<ref>Taraborrelli, p. 192.</ref> which she blamed on the Chappaquiddick incident.<ref>{{cite news |url= https://abcnews.go.com/print?id=8212665 |title= Chappaquiddick: No Profile in Kennedy Courage |first= Susan Donaldson |last= James |work= ABC News |date= August 26, 2009 |access-date= August 26, 2009}}
===Fatal accident hearing===
</ref>
On July 23, 1969, the Registrar of the [[Defunct_Massachusetts_Police_Agencies#Registry_of_Motor_Vehicles_Division_of_Law_Enforcement|Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles]] informed Senator Kennedy that his license would be suspended until a statutory hearing could be held on the accident.<ref>Press release of Registrar McLaughlin, July 23 1969, reported at Damore, p. 165</ref> This suspension was required by Massachusetts law in any fatal motor accident where there were no witnesses. The ''[[in camera]]'' hearing was held on May 18, 1970. It found that "operation was too fast for existing conditions" in the accident. On May 27 the Registrar informed Sen. Kennedy in a letter that "I am unable to find that the fatal accident in which a motor vehicle operated by you was involved, was without serious fault on your part", and that as a result, his driver's license was suspended for a further six months.<ref>facsimiles of the hearing report and the letter are at Damore, pp. 449&ndash;450</ref>


==Kennedy's televised statement==
==Significance and legacy==
At 7:30&nbsp;p.m. on July 25, Kennedy delivered a lengthy statement about the incident, prepared by Sorensen<ref name="vanityfair.com"/><ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], pp. 173, 200</ref> and broadcast live by the three television networks.<ref name=kmqui>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=cA8hAAAAIBAJ&pg=2631%2C4043899 |work=The Day |location=(New London, Connecticut) |agency=Associated Press |title=Kennedy may quit, nation told on TV |date=July 26, 1969 |page=1}}</ref><ref name=kppfoln>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=fzNWAAAAIBAJ&pg=6329%2C5158974 |work=Eugene Register-Guard |location=(Oregon) |agency=Associated Press |title=Kennedy puts political future on line |date=July 26, 1969 |page=1A}}</ref> He began by reading the speech off a prepared manuscript.<ref>The entire speech was inquest exhibit #3, and can be found at Damore, pp. 203–206.</ref>
[[Image:TeddyVWad.jpg|right|thumb|180px|[[National Lampoon magazine|''National Lampoon'''s]] fake [[Volkswagen Beetle|VW Beetle]] ad mocking the incident.]]


Kennedy explained that his wife did not accompany him to the regatta due to "reasons of health". He denied engaging in any "immoral conduct" with Kopechne or [[driving under the influence]] of alcohol that evening. He said that his conduct during the hours immediately after the accident "made no sense to me at all" and said that his doctors had informed him he had suffered "cerebral [[concussion]] and shock". He said he regarded his failure to report the accident to the police immediately as "indefensible". To the horror of Gargan's attorney, his statement revealed his enlistment of the help of Gargan and Markham to try to rescue Kopechne (despite assurances he had made to the effect that he would not involve them).{{citation needed|date=July 2020}}
The case resulted in much [[satire]] of Kennedy, including a ''[[National Lampoon magazine|National Lampoon]]'' page showing a floating [[Volkswagen Beetle]] with the remark that Kennedy would have been elected president had he been driving a Beetle that night; this satire resulted in legal action by [[Volkswagen]], claiming unauthorized use of its trademark.<ref>[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,944670,00.html "Lampoon's Surrender"], ''TIME Magazine'', November 12, 1973, retrieved September 10, 2006.</ref>


Kennedy said "all kinds of scrambled thoughts" went through his mind after the accident, including "whether the girl might still be alive somewhere out of that immediate area", whether "some [[Kennedy Curse|awful curse]] actually did hang over all the Kennedys", whether there was "some justifiable reason for me to doubt what had happened and to delay my report", and whether, "somehow, the awful weight of this incredible incident might in some way pass from my shoulders".{{citation needed|date=July 2020}} He said he was overcome "by a jumble of emotions — grief, fear, doubt, exhaustion, panic, confusion, and shock". He said he instructed Gargan and Markham "not to alarm Mary Jo's friends that night", then returned to the ferry with the two men and "suddenly jumped into the water and impulsively swam across, nearly drowning once again in the effort, returning to my hotel around 2 a.m. and collapsed in my room".{{citation needed|date=July 2020}}
After Kennedy's July 25, 1969, televised speech on the incident, phone calls and telegrams to newspapers and to the Kennedy family were heavily in favor of his remaining in office,<ref name="bg-series-3"/> and he [[United States Senate election in Massachusetts, 1970|won reelection the next year]] with 62% of the vote. Nonetheless, the incident severely damaged his national reputation.<ref name="bg-series-3"/> Before Chappaquiddick, public polls showed that a large majority expected Kennedy to run for the presidency in 1972.<ref name="bg-series-3"/> After the incident he pledged not to run in 1972, and turned down the chance to serve as [[George McGovern]]'s running mate that year. In 1974 he again pledged to not run in 1976, in part due to renewed media interest in Chappaquiddick.<ref name="bg-series-3"/>


Kennedy then put down his manuscript (though he continued reading from [[cue cards]]) and asked the people of Massachusetts to decide whether he should resign:{{citation needed|date=November 2020}}
Kennedy finally announced his candidacy in late 1979, challenging incumbent President [[Jimmy Carter]] for the [[Democratic Party (United States) presidential primaries, 1980|Democratic nomination for the 1980 election]]. On November 4, 1979, CBS aired a one-hour television special entitled [[Roger_Mudd#Ted_Kennedy_interview|''Teddy'']] presented by [[Roger Mudd]]. The program consisted of an interview with Kennedy, interspersed with visuals. Much of the show was devoted to the Chappaquiddick incident.<ref name="barry_182">Barry, p. 182</ref> During the interview Mudd repeatedly questioned Kennedy about the incident, and at one point directly accused him of lying.<ref name="barry_182"/> During the interview, Kennedy also hurt himself by giving an "incoherent and repetitive" answer to the question "Why do you want to be President?",<ref name="bg-series-4">{{cite news | url=http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2009/02/18/chapter_4_sailing_into_the_wind/ | title=Chapter 4: Sailing Into the Wind: Losing a quest for the top, finding a new freedom | author=Allis, Sam | publisher=''[[The Boston Globe]]'' | date=2009-02-18 | accessdate=2009-03-10}}</ref> and by calling the US-supported [[Mohammad Reza Pahlavi|Shah of Iran]] "one of the most violent regimes in the history of mankind".<ref name="boller"/> ''Teddy'' is credited by several sources with inflicting serious political damage on Kennedy.<ref name="boller">{{cite book
|title= Presidential Campaigns: From George Washington to George W. Bush
|first=Paul F
|last=Boller
|publisher=Oxford University Press
|year=2004
|isbn=0195167163
|page=355
}}</ref><ref>Barry, p. 188</ref><ref>{{cite book
|title=The Republic of Mass Culture: Journalism, Filmmaking, and Broadcasting in America since 1941
|isbn=0801883156
|first=James L
|last=Baughman
|publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press
|location=Baltimore
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=3PGJ5-ETB2IC
|page=169
}}</ref><ref name="jamieson_379">Jamieson, p. 379&ndash;381.</ref><ref name="bg-series-4"/> Time Magazine reported that Carter hinted to the Chappaquiddick incident twice in a space of five days, at one point declaring that he never "panicked in a crisis."<ref>http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,916869,00.html</ref> The Senator went on to lose the nomination to Carter, but remained in the Senate until his tragic death on August 25, 2009.


{{blockquote|"If, at any time, the citizens of Massachusetts should lack confidence in their Senator's character or his ability, with or without justification, he could not, in my opinion, adequately perform his duties, and should not continue in office. The opportunity to work with you and serve Massachusetts has made my life worthwhile. So, I ask you tonight, the people of Massachusetts, to think this through with me. In facing this decision, I seek your advice and opinion. In making it, I seek your prayers. For this is a decision that I will have finally to make on my own."|}}
==References==
{{reflist|3}}


The speech concluded with a passage quoted from [[John F. Kennedy]]'s book ''[[Profiles in Courage]]'' ([[ghostwriter|ghostwritten]] by Sorensen): "A man does what he must — in spite of personal consequences".<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], pp. 206, 208.</ref>
==Bibliography==

* {{cite book
Critical reaction to the speech was immediate and negative. [[NBC]] newsman [[John Chancellor]] compared it to [[Richard Nixon]]'s 1952 [[Checkers speech]]. Kennedy admirer [[David Halberstam]] wrote in [[Harper's Magazine|''Harper's'' magazine]] that it was "of such cheapness and bathos as to be a rejection of everything the Kennedys had stood for in candor and style. It was as if these men had forgotten everything which made the Kennedys distinctive in American politics, and simply told the youngest brother that he could get away with whatever he wanted because he was a Kennedy in Massachusetts."<ref name="vanityfair.com"/>
|title=Peace, War, and Politics: An Eyewitness Account

|isbn=0312874979
==Inquest==
|year=1999
Although Kennedy received many messages from voters opposed to his resignation from the Senate, reaction in much of the news media, and of District Attorney [[Edmund Dinis]], was that Kennedy's televised speech left many questions unanswered about how the accident happened, and his delay in reporting it. On July 31, the same day Kennedy returned to his Senate seat,<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 240.</ref> Dinis wrote to the Chief Justice of the [[Massachusetts Superior Court]], [[G. Joseph Tauro|Joseph Tauro]], asking for a [[inquest|judicial inquest]] into Kopechne's death.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], pp. 239–240.</ref> He received a response the next day that such inquests are under jurisdiction of the [[Massachusetts District Court|District Court]]. Dinis then sent his request to Kenneth Nash, the Chief Justice of the lower court.<ref name="damore_vi">Damore, p. vi.</ref> Nash advised Dinis that a [[grand jury]] investigation had more "teeth" than an inquest, as it had the power to [[indictment|indict]] defendants, whereas an inquest was only authorized to determine if a crime has been committed.
|first=Jack

|last=Anderson
Dinis met with Edgartown District Court Judge James Boyle on August 8 to explain his reasons for requesting the inquest. Boyle did not [[recusal|recuse]] himself, even though he had presided over the hearing at which Kennedy pled guilty.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 266.</ref> Boyle announced the inquest was scheduled to start on September 3 and would be open to the press.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 267.</ref> On September 2, Kennedy's lawyers petitioned the Massachusetts Supreme Court for a temporary [[injunction]] against the inquest,<ref name="damore_vi"/> which was granted.
|coauthors=Daryl Gibson

|location=New York
===Exhumation battle===
|publisher=Forge
Dinis petitioned for an [[exhumation]] and autopsy of Kopechne's body,<ref name="damore_vi"/> and on September 18, 1969, he publicly disclosed that blood had been found on her long-sleeved blouse and in her mouth and nose, "which may or may not be consistent with death by drowning",<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 307.</ref> when her clothes were given to authorities by the funeral director.<ref>{{cite news |title= Dinis Says Blood On Mary Jo's Body |work= Boston Herald Traveler |date= September 16, 1969}}</ref>
}}

* {{cite book
Judge Bernard Brominski of the Court of Common Pleas in [[Luzerne County, Pennsylvania]], held a hearing on the request on October 20–21.<ref name="damore_vi"/> The request was opposed by Kopechne's parents, Joseph and Gwen Kopechne.<ref name="damore_vi"/> Forensic pathologist [[Werner Spitz]] testified on behalf of the parents that the autopsy was unnecessary and the available evidence was sufficient to conclude that Kopechne died from drowning.<ref>{{cite book|last=Tedrow|first=Richard L., and Thomas L.|title=Death at Chappaquiddick|year=1980|publisher=Pelican Publishing|isbn=1-4556-0340-6|pages=98–99}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Examiner testifies against kopechne autopsy|url=http://dks.library.kent.edu/cgi-bin/kentstate?a=d&d=dks19691022-01.2.4|newspaper=Daily Kent Stater|date=October 22, 1969}}</ref> Judge Brominski ruled against the exhumation on December 1, saying that there was "no evidence" that "anything other than drowning had caused the death of Mary Jo Kopechne."<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p.&nbsp;343.</ref>
|title= Visual Intelligence: Perception, Image, and Manipulation in Visual Communication

|isbn=0791434354
The inquest<ref>[https://cache.boston.com/bonzai-fba/Original_PDF/2009/02/16/chappaquiddickInquest__1234813989_2031.pdf Chappaquiddick Inquest] - Boston.com</ref><ref name="vanityfair.com"/> convened in Edgartown in January 1970. At the request of Kennedy's lawyers, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ordered it to be performed secretly<ref>Trotta, p. 184.</ref><ref name="bly_213">Bly, p. 213.</ref> with Judge Boyle presiding, and the 763-page transcript was released four months later.<ref name="bly_213"/>
|first=Ann Marie

|last=Barry
===Kennedy's testimony===
|publisher=State University of New York Press
Kennedy testified that Kopechne told him, when he was about to leave the party, "that she was desirous of leaving" and asked "if I would be kind enough to drop her back at her hotel." Crimmins and some other guests "were concluding their meal, enjoying the fellowship and it didn't appear to be necessary to require him to bring me back to Edgartown."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> Witnesses at the party variously placed the time of Kennedy and Kopechne's departure between 11:00 and 11:45{{nbsp}}p.m..
|location=Albany, NY

|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ZiTpRxkTMwUC
Kennedy also testified that he never stopped on Cemetery Road, never backed up, never saw Deputy Sheriff Look and never saw another car or person after he left the cottage with Kopechne. He further claimed that after he turned onto Dike Road, he was driving and did not realize that he was no longer headed west toward the ferry landing but was instead heading east toward the barrier beach. Kennedy estimated his speed at the time of the accident to be "approximately {{convert|20|mph|kph|disp=sqbr}}".<ref>[[#Boyle|Boyle]], p. 35, reported at [[#Damore|Damore]], p. 358.</ref>
}}

* {{cite book
Kennedy testified that he had "full intention of reporting it. And I mentioned to Gargan and Markham something like, 'You take care of the other girls; I will take care of the accident!'—that is what I said and I dove into the water."<ref name="damore_362"/> Kennedy had told Gargan and Markham not to tell the other women anything about the incident "because I felt strongly that if these girls were notified that an accident had taken place and Mary Jo had, in fact, drowned, that it would only be a matter of seconds before all of those girls, who were long and dear friends of Mary Jo's, would go to the scene of the accident and enter the water with, I felt, a good chance that some serious mishap might have occurred to any one of them."<ref name="damore_363">Boyle, p. 80, reported at Damore, p. 363.</ref>
|title=The Kennedy Men: Three Generations of Sex, Scandal, and Secrets

|isbn=1575661063
Kennedy testified that he was back at the hotel and "almost tossed and turned and walked around that room.... I had not given up hope all night long that, by some miracle, Mary Jo would have escaped from the car."<ref name="Boyle, p p. 364">Boyle, p. 70, reported at Damore, p. 364.</ref> He complained to the hotel owner at 2:55&nbsp;a.m. that he had been awakened by a noisy party.<ref name="Wills"/><ref>Boyle, p.&nbsp;70, reported at Damore, p.&nbsp;364.</ref> At 8&nbsp;a.m., Gargan and Markham found Kennedy at his hotel where they had a "heated conversation" in his room. According to Kennedy's testimony, the two men asked why he had not reported the accident, and he responded by telling them "about my own thoughts and feelings as I swam across that channel... that somehow when they arrived in the morning that they were going to say that Mary Jo was still alive."<ref name="Boyle, p p. 364"/>
|first=Nellie

|last=Bly
===Gargan and Markham's testimony===
|location=New York
Markham testified that after their rescue attempt, Kennedy was sobbing and on the verge of becoming crazed.<ref>Boyle, p. 322, reported at [[#Damore|Damore]], p. 375.</ref> He and Gargan testified that they assumed that Kennedy was going to inform the authorities about the accident once he got back to Edgartown, and thus did not do the reporting themselves.<ref name="Wills"/> In an October 15, 1994, interview for [[Ronald Kessler]]'s book ''The Sins of the Father: Joseph P. Kennedy and the Dynasty He Founded'', Gargan said that he and Markham returned to the scene of the accident with Kennedy, and they both urged Kennedy to report the accident to police. "The conversation was brief about having to report", Gargan told Kessler, a former ''[[The Washington Post|Washington Post]]'' reporter. "I was insistent on it. Paul Markham was backing me up on it. Ted said, 'Okay, okay, Joey, okay. I've got the point, I've got the point.' Then he took a few steps and dove into the water, leaving Markham and I expecting that he would carry out the conversation."<ref>[[#Kessler|Kessler]], p. 419.</ref>
|publisher=Kensington Books

|year=1996
===Farrar's testimony===
}}
Farrar testified:
* {{cite book

|title=Inquest into the death of Mary Jo Kopechne
{{blockquote|It looked as if she were holding herself up to get a last breath of air. It was a consciously assumed position…. She didn't drown. She died of suffocation in her own air void. It took her at least three or four hours to die. I could have had her out of that car twenty-five minutes after I got the call. But he didn't call.| diver John Farrar| ''Inquest into the Death of Mary Jo Kopechne'', Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Edgartown District Court. New York: EVR Productions, 1970.}}
|first=James A

|last=Boyle
Farrar testified that Kopechne's body was pressed up in the car in the spot where an air bubble would have formed. He interpreted that to mean that she had survived in the air bubble after the car submerged, and he concluded that:
|location=Edgartown, MA

|publisher=Edgartown District Court
{{blockquote|text=Had I received a call within five to ten minutes of the accident occurring, and was able, as I was the following morning, to be at the victim's side within twenty-five minutes of receiving the call, in such event there is a strong possibility that she would have been alive on removal from the submerged car.<ref name="anderson_140"/>}}
|year=1970

|oclc=180774589
Farrar believed that Kopechne "lived for at least two hours down there."<ref name="GrandJurors">{{Cite news |last=Kunen |first=James S. |last2=Mathison |first2=Dirk |last3=Brown |first3=S. Avery |last4=Nugent |first4=Tom |date=July 24, 1989 |title=Frustrated Grand Jurors Say It Was No Accident Ted Kennedy Got Off Easy |url=http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0%2C%2C20120819%2C00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110110145327/http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0%2C%2C20120819%2C00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=2011-01-10 |work=People |volume=32 |issue=4}}</ref>
}}

* {{ cite book
===Findings===
|title=Senatorial Privilege: The Chappaquiddick Cover-up
Judge Boyle released the following findings in his report:<ref>Dinis, p. 391–392.</ref>
|first=Leo
* "Death probably occurred between 11:30{{nbsp}}''p.m.'' on July 18 and 1:00{{nbsp}}''a.m.'' on July 19, 1969."
|last=Damore
* "Kennedy and Kopechne did ''not'' intend to return to Edgartown at that time; ... Kennedy did ''not'' intend to drive to the ferry slip and his turn onto Dyke {{sic}} Road had been intentional."
|location=New York
* "A speed of twenty miles per hour as Kennedy testified to, operating the car as large as his Oldsmobile, would at least be negligent and, possibly, reckless. If Kennedy knew of this hazard, his operation of the vehicle constituted criminal conduct."
|publisher=Dell Publishing
* "Earlier on July 18, he had been driven over Chappaquiddick Road three times, and over Dyke Road and Dyke Bridge twice. Kopechne had been driven over Chappaquiddick road five times and over Dyke Road and Dyke Bridge twice."
|year=1989
* "I believe it probable that Kennedy knew of the hazard that lay ahead of him on Dyke Road, but that, for some reason not apparent from the testimony, he failed to exercise due care as he approached the bridge."
|isbn=044020416X
* "I, therefor {{sic}}, find there is probable cause to believe that Edward M. Kennedy operated his motor vehicle negligently{{nbsp}}... and that such operation appears to have contributed to the death of Mary Jo Kopechne."
}}

* {{cite book
Having found [[probable cause]] of a crime, under [[Law of Massachusetts|Massachusetts law]] Boyle could have issued a warrant for Kennedy's arrest, but he did not do so.<ref>Dinis, p. 392.</ref> Despite Boyle's findings, Dinis chose not to [[prosecution|prosecute]] Kennedy for manslaughter. The Kopechne family did not bring any legal action against Kennedy but did receive a payment of $90,904 from him personally and $50,000 from his insurance company.<ref name=mptzap276p2/><ref name="bly_216">Bly, p. 216.</ref> The Kopechnes later explained their decision not to take legal action by saying, "We figured that people would think we were looking for blood money."<ref name="bly_216"/>
|title=Packaging The Presidency: A History and Criticism of Presidential Campaign Advertising

|isbn=0195089421
==Grand jury investigation==
|first=Kathleen Hall
On April 6, 1970, a [[Dukes County, Massachusetts|Dukes County]] grand jury assembled in special session to investigate Kopechne's death. Judge Wilfred Paquet instructed the members of the grand jury that they could consider only matters brought to their attention by the superior court, the district attorney or their personal knowledge.<ref name="time">{{cite magazine |title= End of the Affair |url= http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,944017,00.html |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20101030151429/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,944017,00.html |url-status= dead |archive-date= October 30, 2010 |access-date= August 3, 2008 |date= April 20, 1970 |magazine= Time }}</ref> He cited the orders of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court and told the grand jury that it could not see the evidence or Boyle's report from the inquest, which were still impounded.<ref name="time"/> Dinis had attended the inquest and seen Boyle's report, and he told the grand jury that there was not enough evidence to indict Kennedy on potential charges of manslaughter, perjury, or driving to endanger.<ref name="time"/> The grand jury called four witnesses who had not testified at the inquest; they testified for a total of twenty minutes, but no indictments were issued.<ref name="time"/>
|last=Jamieson

|year=1996
==Motor Vehicles investigation==
|edition=3rd edition
On July 23, 1969, the registrar of the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles informed Kennedy that his license would be suspended until there was a statutory hearing concerning the accident.<ref>Press release of Registrar McLaughlin, July 23, 1969, reported at [[#Damore|Damore]], p. 165.</ref> The suspension was required by Massachusetts law for any fatal motor vehicle accident if there were no witnesses. The ''[[in camera]]'' hearing was held May 18, 1970, and found that "operation was too fast for existing conditions." On May 27, the registrar informed Kennedy in a letter that "I am unable to find that the fatal accident in which a motor vehicle operated by you was involved, was without serious fault on your part" and so his driver's license was suspended for a further six months.<ref>Facsimiles of the hearing report and the letter are at [[#Damore|Damore]], pp. 449–50.</ref>
|location=New York

|publisher=Oxford University Press
==Fringe theories==
}}
Journalist [[Jack Olsen]] wrote the first investigative book on the case, ''The Bridge at Chappaquiddick'', in 1970, attempting to solve the unanswered questions of the incident. Lieutenant Bernie Flynn, a state police detective assigned to the [[Cape Cod]] district attorney's office, was a Kennedy admirer who came up with a theory which he couldn't prove: that Kennedy got out of the car and Kopechne drove herself off the bridge. "Ted Kennedy didn't want to admit being drunk with a broad in a car late at night. When he saw 'Huck' Look, he got scared. He thought a cop was coming after him." Flynn claimed to have told this theory to Olsen, who didn't seem to be very impressed.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 309</ref> Although Olsen denied having ever talked to Flynn, he related this theory in his book.<ref>[[#Damore|Damore]], p. 350</ref> Kopechne was {{height|ft=5|in=2}}, a foot shorter than Kennedy, and Olsen argued that she might possibly not have seen the bridge as she drove Kennedy's car over unfamiliar roads at night, with no external lighting, and after she had consumed several alcoholic drinks. He wrote that Kopechne normally drove a [[Volkswagen Beetle]], which was much smaller, lighter and easier to handle than Kennedy's larger Oldsmobile.<ref name="olsen-1970">[[#Olsen|Olsen]].{{page needed|date= July 2013}}</ref>
* {{cite book

|title=Fighting for Air: In the Trenches With Television News
A [[BBC]] ''Inside Story'' episode titled "Chappaquiddick", broadcast on July 20, 1994 (the 25th anniversary of the incident), repeated Flynn's theory. The episode argued that the explanation would account for Kennedy's lack of concern the next morning, as he was unaware of the accident, and for the forensic evidence of the injuries to Kopechne being inconsistent with her sitting in the passenger seat.<ref name="BBC Inside Story">{{cite news |first= Peter |last= Barnard |title= One Giant Leap Backwards |work= The Times |location= London |date= July 22, 1994}}{{page needed |date= July 2013}}</ref>
|isbn=0826209521

|year=1994
Fourth-generation Chappaquiddick resident Bill Pinney, in his 2017 book ''Chappaquiddick Speaks'', presents a theory that Kopechne was seriously injured in an earlier crash, and then the bridge accident was faked.<ref name="Pinney">Pinney, Bill. ''Chappaquiddick Speaks'', Stormy Weather Press, 2017. {{ISBN|978-0-692-94376-2}}. p. vii-viii.</ref> The book laments how the incident robbed Chappaquiddick of its traditional peace and privacy, attracting large tourist groups wanting to view the sites connected with the tragedy.
|first=Liz

|last=Trotta
==Aftermath==
|location=Columbia, MO
[[File:TeddyVWad.jpg|right|thumb|upright|''[[National Lampoon (magazine)|National Lampoon]]'' fake [[Volkswagen Beetle|VW Beetle]] ad mocking the incident.]]
|publisher=University of Missouri Press
The case evoked much satire of Kennedy. For example, [[Time (magazine)|''Time'' magazine]] reported immediately after the incident that "one sick joke already visualizes a [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democrat]] asking about Nixon during the [[United States presidential election, 1968|1968 presidential campaign]]: 'Would you let this man sell you a used car?' Answer: 'Yes, but I sure wouldn't let Teddy drive it.{{'"}}{{r|time19680801}} A mock advertisement in [[National Lampoon (magazine)|''National Lampoon'' magazine]] showed a floating Volkswagen Beetle, itself a parody of a [[Volkswagen]] advertisement, showing that the vehicle's underside was so well sealed that it would float on water, but with the caption, "If Ted Kennedy drove a Volkswagen, he'd be President today." The satire resulted in legal action by Volkswagen, claiming unauthorized use of its trademark; the matter was later [[legal settlement|settled]] out of court.<ref name=suitspuf>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=p-9HAAAAIBAJ&pg=6891%2C3067773 |newspaper=Victoria Advocate |location=Texas |title=Suit settled on Kennedy spoof |agency=''Los Angeles Times''/''The Washington Post'' News Service |last=Lofton |first=John D. Jr. |author-link=John Lofton |date=November 19, 1973 |page=4A }}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |url= http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,944670,00.html |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20070311055901/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,944670,00.html |url-status= dead |archive-date= March 11, 2007 |title= Lampoon's Surrender |magazine= Time |date= November 12, 1973 |access-date= September 10, 2006}}</ref>
}}

* {{cite book
Following Kennedy's televised speech regarding the incident,<ref name=kppfoln/> supporters responded with telephone calls and [[telegram]]s to newspapers and to the Kennedy family.<ref name=kmqui/> They were heavily in favor of his remaining in office, and he was [[1970 United States Senate election in Massachusetts|re-elected]] in 1970 with 62% of the vote, a margin of nearly a half million votes, but it was down from 74% in the [[1964 United States Senate election in Massachusetts|previous election]] in 1964.
|title=The Kennedy Imprisonment: A Meditation on Power

|isbn=0618134433
The incident severely damaged Kennedy's national reputation and reputation for judgement. One analyst asked: "Can we really trust him if the Russians [[polar route|come over the ice cap]]? Can he make the kind of split-second decisions [[Apollo 11|the astronauts had to make in their landing on the moon]]?"<ref name="time19680801">{{Cite magazine |date=August 1, 1969 |title=The Mysteries of Chappaquiddick |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,901159-1,00.html |magazine=Time |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090831015242/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0%2C9171%2C901159-1%2C00.html |archive-date=August 31, 2009 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> Before Chappaquiddick, public polls showed that a large majority expected Kennedy to run for the [[1972 United States presidential election|presidency in 1972]], but he pledged not to either run himself or serve as [[George McGovern]]'s running mate that year. In 1974, he pledged not to [[1976 United States presidential election|run in 1976]],<ref name=upiergfn74>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=fzRWAAAAIBAJ&pg=6019%2C5766008 |work=Eugene Register-Guard |location=Oregon |agency=UPI |last=Gaines |first=Richard |title=Kennedy "won't run", says decision final |date=September 23, 1974 |page=1A}}</ref><ref name=krfj74>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Vwg0AAAAIBAJ&pg=4668%2C2660159 |work=Spokane Daily Chronicle |location=Washington |agency=Associated Press |title=Kennedy rejects race |date=September 23, 1974 |page=1}}</ref> in part because of the renewed media interest in Chappaquiddick.<ref name="bg-series-3"/> In 1977 ''[[The New York Times]]'' described Chappaquiddick as Kennedy's [[Watergate scandal]].<ref name=weinraub19770305>{{cite news |newspaper=The New York Times |date= March 5, 1977 |page=1 | author=Weinraub, Bernard |title=Kennedy, Out of the Limelight, Is Content in Senate |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/03/05/archives/kennedy-out-of-the-limelight-is-content-in-senate-kennedy-out-of.html | format=fee required}}</ref>
|year=2002

|first=Gary
In late 1979, Kennedy prepared to announce [[Ted Kennedy 1980 presidential campaign|his candidacy for the presidency]], challenging President [[Jimmy Carter]] for the [[1980 Democratic Party presidential primaries|Democratic nomination]] for the [[1980 United States presidential election|1980 election]]. Kennedy had never done a television interview discussing Chappaquiddick, but surveys supported his and advisors' belief that the incident would not prevent his victory.<ref name=wcphauntpb>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=hJAxAAAAIBAJ&pg=6798%2C6510107 |newspaper=Ocala Star-Banner |location=Florida |last=Buchanan |first=Pat |author-link=Pat Buchanan |title=Why Chappaquiddick haunts Kennedy |date=July 23, 1979 |page=4A }}</ref><ref name="bg-series-4"/> On November 4, 1979, just before the announcement, [[CBS]] broadcast a one-hour television special presented by [[Roger Mudd]], titled [[Roger Mudd#Ted Kennedy interview|''Teddy'']]. The program consisted of an interview with Kennedy; the interview was interspersed with visual materials. Much of the show was devoted to the Chappaquiddick incident. During the interview, Mudd questioned Kennedy repeatedly about the incident, and at one point directly accused him of lying.<ref name="barry_182">Barry, p. 182.</ref> Kennedy also gave what one author described as an "incoherent and repetitive" answer to the question, "Why do you want to be President?"<ref name="bg-series-4">{{cite news |url= http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2009/02/18/chapter_4_sailing_into_the_wind/ |title= Chapter 4: Sailing into the Wind: Losing a Quest for the Top, Finding a new Freedom |last= Allis |first= Sam |work= The Boston Globe |date= February 18, 2009 |access-date= March 10, 2009}}</ref> The program inflicted serious political damage on Kennedy.<ref name="bg-series-4"/><ref name="boller">Boller, p. 355.</ref><ref>Barry, p. 188.</ref><ref>Baughman, p. 169.</ref><ref name="jamieson_379">Jamieson, p. 379–81.</ref> Carter alluded to the Chappaquiddick incident twice in five days, once declaring that he had not "panicked in the crisis".<ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,916869,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090830055718/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,916869,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=August 30, 2009 |title= Nation: Once Again, Chappaquiddick |magazine= Time |date=October 8, 1979 |access-date=August 26, 2009}}</ref> Kennedy lost the Democratic nomination to Carter, who, in turn, lost the general election to [[Ronald Reagan]] by a landslide. After the incident, Kennedy won seven re-elections to the U.S. Senate, and remained a senator until his death in 2009.
|last=Wills

|location=Boston, MA
Dinis said that the case had caused him to not be re-elected as district attorney, because Kennedy supporters thought that he had been too aggressive and Kennedy opponents thought the opposite. Arena believed that the publicity helped him get a job in a different city. Farrar received calls and letters, including death threats, from people who thought that the diver wanted to hurt Kennedy. Others such as Look and Markham refused to discuss the incident. The Dike Bridge became an unwanted tourist attraction, with thousands visiting the island annually to look at the bridge,<ref name=thgronch74>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=WKErAAAAIBAJ&pg=5209%2C1914092 |newspaper=Nashua Telegraph |location=New Hampshire |agency=(AP photo) |title=The bridge on Chappaquiddick |date=July 12, 1974 |page=13 }}</ref><ref name=dnobatch81>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=AnMdAAAAIBAJ&pg=7154%2C2137293 |newspaper=Pittsburgh Press |agency=UPI |title=Decision near on bridge at Chappaquiddick |date=June 21, 1981 |page=A-4}}</ref><ref name=ssay83br>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=QAsiAAAAIBAJ&pg=1235%2C5650411 |newspaper=The Day |location=New London, Connecticut |agency=Associated Press |title=Some say Chappaquiddick bridge is nuisance |date=August 29, 1983 |page=5}}</ref><ref name=bmarbr>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=JlxWAAAAIBAJ&pg=5242%2C1732219 |newspaper=Spokesman-Review |location=Spokane, Washington |agency=Associated Press |last=Trott |first=Robert W. |title=Bitter memories and a rotting bridge |date=July 17, 1989 |page=A5 }}</ref><ref name=bfabbtslv>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=RihJAAAAIBAJ&pg=3778%2C2222429 |newspaper=The Hour |location=Norwalk, Connecticut |agency=Associated Press |title=Chappaquiddick: bridge abandoned, but story lives |date=July 18, 1994 |page=24 }}</ref> and the object of souvenir hunters.<ref name=abttps>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=kugbAAAAIBAJ&pg=6456%2C3445078 |newspaper=Milwaukee Journal |agency=wire services |title=A bridge to the past |date=July 18, 1994|page=A3}}</ref>
|publisher=Houghton Mifflin

|edition=1st Mariner Books edition
After Kennedy's death, ''[[The New York Times Magazine|New York Times Magazine]]'' editor [[Ed Klein]] stated that Kennedy asked people, "Have you heard any new jokes about Chappaquiddick?" "It's not that he didn't feel remorse about the death of Mary Jo Kopechne", Klein argued, "But that he still always saw the other side of everything, and the ridiculous side of things, too."<ref>{{cite episode |last= Rehm |first= Diane |author-link= Diane Rehm |date= August 26, 2009 |url= http://wamu.org/audio/dr/09/08/r1090826-28464.asx |title= Reflections on Sen. Kennedy |series= [[The Diane Rehm Show]] |publisher= [[WAMU]]-FM |location= Washington, D. C. |access-date= August 28, 2009 |time= 29:45 |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110930082819/http://wamu.org/audio/dr/09/08/r1090826-28464.asx |archive-date= September 30, 2011 |df= mdy-all }}</ref>

== Media ==
The incident is fictionalized in [[Joyce Carol Oates]]'s novella ''[[Black Water (novella)|Black Water]]'' (1992). It is the central subject of [[John Curran (director)|John Curran]]'s film [[Chappaquiddick (film)|''Chappaquiddick'']] (2017). In 2019, the incident was featured in a season of [[Fox Nation]]'s ''Scandalous''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.baltimoresun.com/opinion/columnists/zurawik/bs-fe-zontv-fox-nation-20190115-story.html|title = Fox Nation: A place even more partisan, right-wing, pro-Trump than Fox News| date=January 17, 2019 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/tv/la-et-st-fox-nation-review-streaming-service-20181129-story.html|title=Review: Watching Fox Nation, conservatives' Netflix: Will MAGA viewers pay for the rage they get for free?|website=[[Los Angeles Times]] |date=November 29, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.foxnews.com/media/fox-nation-chappaquiddick-anniversary-50-year|title=Powerful Fox Nation documentary marks 50-year anniversary of Chappaquiddick|website=[[Fox News]] |date=July 19, 2019}}</ref>

The 2019 series ''[[For All Mankind (TV series)|For All Mankind]]'' depicts an [[alternate history|alternate timeline]] where Kennedy cancels his Chappaquiddick party after Soviets land on the Moon before the U.S., thus avoiding Kopechne's death; Kennedy eventually wins the 1972 Presidential election and is later accused of having an extramarital affair with Kopechne, who is working as a White House aide.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.syfy.com/syfy-wire/for-all-mankind-appletv-panel-nycc-2019 |title=Producers and cast of For All Mankind tease a new course for the space race at NYCC |author=Sands, Rich |work=SyFy |date=October 1, 2019 |access-date=June 21, 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.vulture.com/2019/11/for-all-mankind-recap-season-1-episode-7-hi-bob.html |title=For All Mankind Recap: Tightly Wound |author=Miller, Liz Shannon |work=Vulture |date=November 28, 2019 |access-date=June 21, 2022}}</ref>

Season 1 episode 10 of ''[[Succession (TV series)|Succession]]'' seemingly alludes to the event. In the episode titled “Nobody Is Ever Missing”, main character Kendall Roy leaves a party, crashes his car in a pond, and his passenger drowns to death. Much like Kennedy, Roy attempts to rescue the passenger, but fails and leaves the scene.

== See also ==
* {{Portal-inline|1960s}}

== Notes ==
{{notelist}}
{{reflist|group=Notes}}

== Citations ==
{{reflist}}

== General sources ==
{{refbegin|35em}}
* {{cite book |ref= Anderson |title= Peace, War, and Politics: An Eyewitness Account |url= https://archive.org/details/peacewarpolitics00ande |url-access= registration |isbn=0-312-87497-9
|year=1999 |first1= Jack |last1= Anderson |first2= Daryl |last2= Gibson |location= New York |publisher= Forge |name-list-style= amp}}
* {{cite book |title= Visual Intelligence: Perception, Image, and Manipulation in Visual Communication |isbn=0-7914-3435-4 |first= Ann Marie |last= Barry |date= January 1997 |publisher= State University of New York Press |location=Albany, NY|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ZiTpRxkTMwUC}}
* {{cite book |ref= Baughman |title= The Republic of Mass Culture: Journalism, Filmmaking, and Broadcasting in America since 1941 |isbn=0-8018-8315-6 |first= James L. |last= Baughman |year= 2006 | author-link= James L. Baughman |publisher= Johns Hopkins University Press |location= Baltimore }}
* {{cite book |ref= Bly |title= The Kennedy Men: Three Generations of Sex, Scandal, and Secrets |isbn=1-57566-106-3 |first= Nellie |last= Bly |location= New York |publisher= Kensington Books |year= 1996
}}
}}
* {{cite book |ref= Boller |title= Presidential Campaigns: From George Washington to George W. Bush |first= Paul F. |last= Boller |publisher= Oxford University Press |year= 2004 |isbn=0-19-516716-3 }}
* {{cite book |ref= Boyle |title= Inquest into the death of Mary Jo Kopechne |first= James A. |last=Boyle |location= Edgartown, MA |publisher= Edgartown District Court |year= 1970 | url=https://cache.boston.com/bonzai-fba/Original_PDF/2009/02/16/chappaquiddickInquest__1234813989_2031.pdf |oclc= 180774589}}
* {{cite book |ref= Cutler |last= Cutler |first= R. B. |title= You, the Jury ... In Re: Chappaquiddick. |location= Danvers, MA |publisher= Bett's & Mirror Press |year= 1980 |oclc= 5790437}}
* {{cite book |ref= Damore |title= Senatorial Privilege: The Chappaquiddick Cover-up |first= Leo |last= Damore |location= New York |publisher= Dell Publishing |year= 1988 |isbn=0-440-20416-X |url= https://archive.org/details/senatorialpriv00damo }}
* {{cite book |ref= Jamieson |title= Packaging The Presidency: A History and Criticism of Presidential Campaign Advertising |isbn=0-19-508942-1 |first= Kathleen Hall |last= Jamieson |year= 1996 |edition= 3rd |location= New York |publisher=Oxford University Press}}
* {{cite book |ref= Kappel |first= Kenneth R. |last= Kappel |year= 1989 |title= Chappaquiddick Revealed: What Really Happened |location= New York |publisher= Shapolsky Publishers |isbn=978-0-944007-64-8 |url= https://archive.org/details/chappaquiddickre00kenn_0 }}
* {{cite book |ref= Kessler |title= The Sins of the Father: Joseph p.&nbsp;Kennedy and the Dynasty He Founded |isbn=0-446-60384-8 |year= 1996 |first= Ronald |last= Kessler |publisher= Hachette Book Group USA (Warner Books) |url= https://archive.org/details/sinsoffather00rona }}
* {{cite book |ref= Klein |last= Klein |first= Edward |year= 2009 |title= Ted Kennedy: The Dream That Never Died |publisher= Crown Publishers |location= New York |isbn=978-0-307-45103-3 |url= https://archive.org/details/tedkennedydreamt00klei_0 }}
* {{cite book |ref= Lange |last1= Lange |first1= James E. T. |last2= DeWitt |first2= K. Jr. |title= Chappaquiddick: The Real Story |publisher= St. Martin's Press |year= 1992 |isbn=0-312-08749-7 |name-list-style= amp |url= https://archive.org/details/chappaquiddickre00lang }}
* {{cite book |ref= Olsen |title= The Bridge at Chappaquiddick |first= Jack |last= Olsen |author-link= Jack Olsen |location= Boston |publisher= Little, Brown |year= 1970 |oclc= 55947}}
* {{cite book |ref= Taraborrelli |last= Taraborrelli |first= J. Randy |title= Jackie, Ethel, Joan: Women of Camelot |publisher= Warner Books |year= 2000 |isbn=0-446-52426-3 |url= https://archive.org/details/jackieetheljoanw00tararich }}
* {{cite book |ref= Tedrow |title= Death at Chappquiddick |last1= Tedrow |first1= Thomas L. |last2= Tedrow |first2= Richard L. |year= 1980 |publisher= Pelican Publishing |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=lRaO_JTo_14C |page=36 |isbn=0-88289-249-5 |name-list-style= amp}}
* {{cite book |ref= Trotta |title= Fighting for Air: In the Trenches With Television News |isbn=0-8262-0952-1 |year= 1994 |first= Liz |last= Trotta |location= Columbia, MO |publisher=University of Missouri Press}}
* {{cite book |ref= Wills |title= The Kennedy Imprisonment: A Meditation on Power |isbn=0-618-13443-3 |year= 2002 |first= Gary |last= Wills |location= Boston |publisher= Houghton Mifflin |edition=1st Mariner Books}}
{{refend}}


===Further reading===
==Further reading==
{{refbegin|35em}}
*1969 ''The Ted Kennedy Episode'' by H. Don Hastings
* {{cite book |year= 1976 |author-link= James MacGregor Burns |last= Burns |first= James M. |title= Edward Kennedy and the Camelot Legacy |url= https://archive.org/details/edwardkennedyca00burn |url-access= registration |location= New York |publisher= W. W. Norton & Company |isbn=0-393-07501-X}}
*{{cite book | author=[[Jack Olsen|Olsen, Jack]] | title=The Bridge at Chappaquiddick| publisher=Little, Brown and Co| year=1970 | isbn=9780441079582}}
* {{cite book |year= 2006 |title= The Gemstone File: A Memoir |first= Stephanie |last= Caruana |location= Victoria, BC |publisher= Trafford |isbn=1-4120-6137-7}}
*1971 ''Teddy Bare, the Last of the Kennedy Clan.'' by Zad Rust
* {{cite book |year= 1969 |title= The Ted Kennedy Episode |first= H. Don |last= Hastings |location= Dallas |publisher= Reliable Press |oclc= 16841243}}
*1973 ''You, the Jury &ndash; in re: Chappaquiddick'' by R. B. Cutler
* {{cite book |year= 1979 |last= Jones |first= Richard E. |title= The Chappaquiddick Inquest: The Complete Transcript of the Inquest into the Death of Mary Jo Kopechne |location= Pittsford, NY |publisher= Lynn Publications |oclc= 11807998}}
*1975 ''The Inspector's Opinion: The Chappaquiddick Incident'' by Malcolm Reybold
* {{cite book |editor-last= Knight |editor-first= Peter |year= 2003 |title= Conspiracy Theories in American History: An Encyclopedia |location= Santa Barbara, CA |publisher= ABC Clio |isbn=1-57607-812-4}}
*1976 ''The Last Kennedy'' by Robert Sherrill
* {{cite book |year= 1992 |last= Oates |first= Joyce C. |title= [[Black Water (novella)|Black Water]] |location= New York |publisher= E. P.&nbsp;Dutton |isbn=0-525-93455-3}} (fictional treatment).
*1976 Burns, James M. ''Edward Kennedy and the Camelot Legacy''. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-07501-X
* {{cite book |year= 1975 |title= The Inspector's Opinion: The Chappaquiddick Incident |first= Malcolm |last= Reybold |location= New York |publisher= Saturday Review Press |isbn=978-0-8415-0399-1 }}
* Jones, Richard E. "The Chappaquiddick Inquest: The Complete Transcript of the Inquest into the Death of Mary Jo Kopechne" (1979)
* {{cite book |ref= Rust |last= Rust |first= Zad |year=1971 |title= Teddy Bare: The Last of the Kennedy Clan |url= https://archive.org/details/teddybarelastofk00rust |url-access= registration |location= Boston |publisher= Western Islands |quote= This book follows the circumstances of the Chappaquiddick tragedy, from its mysterious beginning to its squalid conclusion ... before a terrorized grand jury ..." – Prologue to the book, p.&nbsp;vii |oclc= 147764}}
* 1979 ''Kennedy's Chappaquiddick Revisited: What Really Happened'' by John Haggard
* {{cite book |year= 1976 |title= The Last Kennedy |first= Robert |last= Sherrill |author-link= Robert Sherrill |location= New York |publisher= Dial Press |isbn=978-0-8037-4419-6 |url= https://archive.org/details/lastkennedy00sher }}
* 1979 Tedrow, Thomas L. ''Death at Chappaquiddick''. New Orleans: Pelican Company. ISBN 0-88289-249-5
* {{cite book |year= 2006 |chapter= Investigation of Bodies in Water |first= Daniel J. |last= Spitz |editor1-last= Spitz |editor1-first= Werner U. |editor2-last= Spitz |editor2-first= Daniel J. |editor3-last= Fisher |editor3-first= Russell S. |title= Spitz and Fisher's Medicolegal Investigation of Death. Guideline for the Application of Pathology to Crime Investigations |edition= 4th |publisher= Charles C. Thomas |pages= 846–881 |location= Springfield, IL |isbn=978-0-398-07544-6 |name-list-style= amp}}
* 1980 ''Chappaquiddick Decision'' by Larryann C Willis
* {{cite book |year= 1979 |last= Tedrow |first= Thomas L. |title= Death at Chappaquiddick |location= New Orleans |publisher= Pelican |isbn=0-88289-249-5}}
* 1989 ''Chappaquiddick Revealed What Really Happened'' by Kenneth Kappel
* {{cite book |year= 1980 |title= Chappaquiddick Decision |first= Larryann C. |last= Willis |location= Portland, OR |publisher= Better Books Publisher |oclc= 6666517}}
* 1992 Oates, Joyce C. ''[[Black Water (novella)|Black Water]]''. New York: E. P. Dutton. ISBN 0-525-93455-3 (fictional treatment)
{{refend}}
* 1993 ''Chappaquiddick: The Real Story'' by James E. T. Lange, Katherine, Jr. Dewitt
* Miceli, Barbara. 'How to Turn a Forgotten Figure of American History into a National and Gender Emblem: Joyce Carol Oates's Treatment of Mary Jo Kopechne in Black Water', in ''Echinox Journal'', 33/2017, pp.&nbsp;240–254.
* 2006 ''The Gemstone File: A Memoir'' by Stephanie Caruana. Victoria, B.C., Trafford. ISBN 1-4120-6137-7
* Miceli, Barbara. "Black Water and Mudwoman by Joyce Carol Oates: Two Drownings in Comparison", in Revell, n.3, vol 26, pp.&nbsp;276–291. https://periodicosonline.uems.br/index.php/REV/author/submission/4211
* 2006 ''Investigation of Bodies in Water'' by Daniel J. Spitz. In: Spitz, W.U. & Spitz, D.J. (eds): ''Spitz and Fisher’s Medicolegal Investigation of Death. Guideline for the Application of Pathology to Crime Investigations (Fourth edition)'', Charles C. Thomas, pp.: 846&ndash;881; Springfield, Illinois


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://foia.fbi.gov/foiaindex/chappaquiddick.htm FBI Chappaquiddick investigation files]
* [http://vault.fbi.gov/Mary%20Jo%20Kopechne%20%28Chappaquiddick%29%20/ FBI Chappaquiddick investigation files]
* [https://cache.boston.com/bonzai-fba/Original_PDF/2009/02/16/chappaquiddickInquest__1234813989_2031.pdf Chappaquiddick Inquest]—Boston.com
* [http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/tedkennedychappaquiddick.htm Ted Kennedy's speech following Chappaquiddick incident]
* [https://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/tedkennedychappaquiddick.htm Edward M. Kennedy's Address to the People of Massachusetts on Chappaquiddick, broadcast nationally, from Joseph P. Kennedy's home, on July 25, 1969]
* [http://fatboy.cc/live_from_chappaquiddick.htm Mary Jo photos and rescue diver audio]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20141124064622/http://photos.newhavenregister.com/2014/07/18/photos-on-this-day-july-18-1969-senator-ted-kennedy-killed-mary-jo-kopechne/ Photos of 1969 Chappaquiddick incident]—''New Haven Register''
* [http://fatboy.cc/Audio/John%20Farrar.wma John Farrar interview on the Howie Carr Show]
* [https://www.newspapers.com/topics/crimes-mysteries/chappaquiddick-incident/ Collection of newspaper articles covering the incident]


{{Ted Kennedy}}
{{coord|41|22|24.0|N|70|27|13.3|W|region:US-MA_type:landmark|display=title}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Chappaquiddick Incident}}
[[Category:1969 in the United States]]
[[Category:Political scandals in the United States]]
[[Category:1969 crimes in the United States]]
[[Category:1969 in American politics]]
[[Category:1969 road incidents]]
[[Category:Congressional scandals]]
[[Category:Congressional scandals]]
[[Category:Political controversies in the United States]]
[[Category:Edgartown, Massachusetts]]
[[Category:Road accidents in the United States]]
[[Category:History of Dukes County, Massachusetts]]
[[Category:1969 road accidents]]
[[Category:Political scandals in Massachusetts]]
[[Category:Martha's Vineyard]]
[[Category:Road incidents in the United States]]
[[Category:Ted Kennedy]]

[[Category:1969 in Massachusetts]]
[[he:פרשת צ'פקווידיק]]
[[Category:July 1969 events in the United States]]
[[fi:Chappaquiddickin sillan onnettomuus]]
[[Category:Deaths by drowning in the United States]]
[[Category:Crime in Massachusetts]]
[[Category:Chappaquiddick Island]]

Latest revision as of 22:38, 19 November 2024

Chappaquiddick incident
DateJuly 18–19, 1969
LocationChappaquiddick Island, Massachusetts, U.S.
Coordinates41°22′24.0″N 70°27′13.3″W / 41.373333°N 70.453694°W / 41.373333; -70.453694
TypeAutomobile crash
CauseNegligent operation by Ted Kennedy
OutcomeTed Kennedy's driver's license suspended for 16 months
DeathsMary Jo Kopechne
BurialJuly 22, 1969, Plymouth, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Inquiries
InquestJanuary 1970, Edgartown
ConvictedTed Kennedy
Charges
VerdictPleaded guilty
ConvictionsLeaving the scene of an accident causing bodily injury
SentenceTwo months jail plus one year probation; suspended[4]

The Chappaquiddick incident occurred on Chappaquiddick Island, Massachusetts, United States, sometime around midnight, between July 18 and 19, 1969,[5][6] when Mary Jo Kopechne died inside the car driven by United States Senator Ted Kennedy after he accidentally drove off a narrow bridge, causing it to overturn in Poucha Pond.[7][8][9][10]

Kennedy left a party on Chappaquiddick Island, off the eastern end of Martha's Vineyard, at 11:15 p.m. on July 18. He stated that his intent was to immediately take Kopechne to a ferry landing and return to a hotel in Edgartown, but that he made a wrong turn onto a dirt road leading to a one-lane bridge. After his car skidded off the bridge into the pond, Kennedy swam free and maintained that he tried to rescue Kopechne from the submerged car, but he could not. Kopechne's death could have happened any time between about 11:30 p.m. Friday and 1 a.m. Saturday, as an off-duty deputy sheriff stated he saw a car matching Kennedy's license plate at 12:40 a.m. Kennedy departed from the crash site and failed to report the incident to the police until after 10 a.m. on Saturday. In the meantime, a diver retrieved Kopechne's body from Kennedy's car shortly before 9 a.m. that same day.

At a court hearing on July 25, Kennedy pleaded guilty to a charge of leaving the scene of an accident and received a two-month suspended jail sentence. In a televised statement, that same evening, Kennedy said that his conduct immediately after the crash had "made no sense to me at all" and that he regarded his failure to report the crash, immediately, as "indefensible.” A January 5, 1970, judicial inquest concluded that Kennedy and Kopechne had not intended to take the ferry and that Kennedy had intentionally turned toward the bridge, operating his vehicle negligently, if not recklessly, and at too high a speed for the hazard which the bridge posed in the dark. The judge stopped short of recommending charges, and a grand jury convened on April 6, returning no indictments. On May 27, a Registry of Motor Vehicles hearing resulted in Kennedy's driver's license being suspended for sixteen months, after the crash.

The Chappaquiddick incident became a national news item and influenced Kennedy's decision not to run for president in 1972 and 1976.[8][9][10] Later, it was said to have undermined his chances of ever becoming president.[11] Kennedy ultimately decided to enter the 1980 Democratic presidential primaries but earned only 37.6% of the vote, losing the nomination to incumbent U.S. President Jimmy Carter.

Background

[edit]
Ted Kennedy in 1968

U.S. Senator Edward M. "Ted" Kennedy, aged 37, and his cousin, Joseph Gargan, aged 39,[Notes 1] planned to race Kennedy's sailboat, Victura, in the 1969 Edgartown Yacht Club Regatta on Friday and Saturday, July 18 and 19, 1969, after having forgone the previous year's Regatta, because of the assassination of Kennedy's brother, Robert, that June.[13] Gargan rented the secluded Lawrence Cottage for the weekend on Chappaquiddick Island, Massachusetts,[14] a tiny island accessible by ferry from Edgartown on Martha's Vineyard. Kennedy and Gargan hosted a cookout party at the cottage at 8:30 p.m that evening,[15] as a reunion for the "Boiler Room Girls,” women who had served on Robert's 1968 presidential campaign. Six of these attended the party: Mary Jo Kopechne, Rosemary Keough, Esther Newberg, sisters Nance Lyons and Mary Ellen Lyons, and Susan Tannenbaum. All were in their twenties and single.[citation needed]

The men at the party included the crew of Kennedy's sailboat: Gargan; Paul Markham, a school friend of Gargan who had previously served as the United States Attorney for Massachusetts;[16] and John B. Crimmins, aged 63,[8] a long-time political associate of Kennedy who served as his chauffeur for the weekend.[17] Others in attendance were attorney Charles Tretter, a Kennedy advisor; and Raymond LaRosa, who had worked on Kennedy's Senate campaigns. All the men were married, except Crimmins;[8] wives were not invited to the Chappaquiddick weekend.[18] Other friends and campaign workers, male and female, had been invited, but they did not attend, for various reasons. Markham and Crimmins intended to spend the night at the cottage, while the others were booked at hotels on Martha's Vineyard—the men at the Shiretown Inn, one block from the Edgartown ferry slip, and the women at the Katama Shores motor inn, about 2 miles (3.2 km) south of the ferry slip.[19]

Sequence of events

[edit]

The crash

[edit]
The Dike Bridge is accessible only by a dirt road, and leads to dead-end sand dunes past Poucha Pond. The guardrail was not present in 1969.

According to Kennedy, Kopechne asked him to give her a ride back to her hotel in Katama. Kennedy requested the keys to his car (which he did not usually drive) from his chauffeur, Crimmins.[20] Kennedy put this time at "approximately 11:15 p.m.,” although he was not wearing a watch;[8] the time came from Crimmins' watch.[21] Returning to Edgartown and Katama required making the last ferry, which left the island at midnight, or else calling to arrange a later ferry. Kopechne told no one else that she was leaving for the night with Kennedy, and, in fact, she left her purse and hotel key at the party.[22]

The exact time the crash occurred is unknown, due to a conflict between the testimony of Kennedy and a deputy sheriff who claimed to have seen his car at a later time. Kennedy claimed that, as soon as he left the party, he immediately drove one-half mile (0.8 km) north on Chappaquiddick Road headed for the ferry landing and mistakenly made a wrong turn, right, onto the unpaved Dike Road, instead of bearing left, to stay on the paved Chappaquiddick Road, for another two and a half miles (4.0 km). There is also a northbound unpaved Cemetery Road at this intersection.[citation needed]

Part-time Deputy Sheriff Christopher "Huck" Look left work by 12:30 a.m. on Saturday, as a gate guard in uniform for the regatta dance, returned to Chappaquiddick Island in the yacht club's private boat, and drove east and south on Chappaquiddick Road toward his home. At around 12:40 a.m., after he passed the intersection with Dike Road, he saw a dark four-door sedan driven by a man, with a woman in the front seat, approaching and passing slowly in front of him. The car drove off the pavement, onto Cemetery Road, and stopped. Thinking the occupants might be lost, Look stopped and walked towards the other vehicle. When he was 25 to 30 feet (7.6 to 9.1 m) away, the car reversed and started backing up towards him. As he called out to offer help, the car moved forward and veered, quickly, eastward onto Dike Road, speeding away and leaving a cloud of dust.[23] Look recalled that the car's license plate began with an L and contained two 7s, consistent with Kennedy's license plate (L78–207) on his Oldsmobile Delmont 88.[8] He returned to his car and continued on his way south. Look's version, if true, leaves over an hour of Kennedy's time with Kopechne unaccounted, before the crash.[citation needed]

About a minute later, Look saw Kennedy's party guests Nance and Mary Ellen Lyons, and Ray LaRosa, dancing in a conga line down the middle of Chappaquiddick Road, a short distance south of Dike Road bridge. He stopped to ask if they needed a ride, which they declined. LaRosa and the Lyons sisters corroborated Look's testimony about meeting him in the road and the verbal exchange, but they were unsure of the time. They also said they saw a vehicle driving north on Chappaquiddick Road, which they could not describe in any detail.[citation needed]

Dike Road leads seven-tenths of a mile (1.1 km) to Dike Bridge,[24] a wooden structure angled obliquely to the road, crossing the channel connecting Cape Pogue Pond to the north and Poucha Pond to the south,[25] leading eastward to a barrier beach known as Tom's Neck Point.[26] At the time, the bridge was not fitted with guardrails.[27] A fraction of a second before Kennedy reached the bridge, he applied his brakes and lost control of the car, which launched over the southern end of the bridge, plunged nose-first into the channel,[28] and flipped over, resting on its roof in six to eight feet of water.[8]

Rescue attempts

[edit]
Dike House, along Dike Road, is 150 yards from the bridge.

Kennedy was able to swim free of the vehicle, but Kopechne was not. Kennedy said that he called her name several times from the shore, and tried to swim down to reach her seven or eight times. He then rested on the bank for around fifteen minutes before he returned on foot to Lawrence Cottage. He denied seeing any house with a light on during his fifteen-minute walk back.[29] His route took him past four houses from which he could have telephoned to summon help before he reached the cottage, but he did not attempt to contact the local residents.[30] The first of the houses was Dike House, 150 yards (140 m) from the bridge and occupied by Sylvia Malm and her family. Malm stated later that she was home, she had a phone and she had left a light on at the residence when she retired that evening.[31]

Kennedy returned to the cottage, where the party was still in progress, but rather than alerting all of the guests to the crash, he quietly summoned Gargan and Markham, and collapsed in the back seat of a rented Plymouth Valiant parked in the driveway. Gargan drove the three to the site of the crash to try to rescue Kopechne from the car. Gargan and Markham jumped into the pond and tried repeatedly to rescue her but were not able to, due to the strong tidal current.[18] After they recovered, Gargan drove Kennedy and Markham to the ferry landing. The three were all lawyers and they discussed what they should do while standing next to a public phone booth at the landing. Gargan and Markham insisted multiple times that the crash had to be reported to the authorities.[32]

Kennedy's reaction

[edit]

At the ferry landing, Kennedy dove into the water and swam 500 feet (150 m) across the channel to Edgartown. He then walked to his hotel room, removed his clothes and collapsed on his bed.[33] He later put on dry clothes, left his room and asked someone what the time was; it was somewhere around 2:30 a.m., he recalled. Gargan and Markham had driven the rented Plymouth back to the cottage; they entered the cottage at approximately 2 a.m. but told no one what had happened. When questioned by the guests, they said that Kennedy had swum back to Edgartown and Kopechne was probably at her hotel. Gargan then told everyone to get some sleep. By 7:30 a.m., Kennedy was talking casually to the winner of the previous day's sailing race and gave no indication that anything was amiss.[16] At 8 a.m., Gargan and Markham had crossed back to Edgartown on the ferry and met Kennedy.[citation needed]

Recovery of the body

[edit]

A short time after 8 a.m., a man and a fifteen-year-old boy, who went fishing off Tom's Neck Point, saw Kennedy's submerged car in Poucha Pond and notified the residents of the cottage nearest the scene, who, in turn, called the authorities at about 8:20 a.m.[34] Edgartown Police Chief Dominick James Arena arrived at the scene about ten or fifteen minutes later.[35] He attempted to examine the interior of the submerged vehicle,[35][36] then summoned a trained scuba diver and equipment capable of towing or winching the vehicle out of the water. John Farrar, captain of the Edgartown Fire Rescue unit, arrived at 8:45 a.m., equipped with scuba gear, and discovered Kopechne's body in the back seat; he extricated it from the vehicle within ten minutes.[37][38] Police checked the car's license plate and saw that it was registered to Kennedy.[18] Rosemary Keough's purse was found in the front passenger compartment of the car, causing Arena to misidentify Kopechne.[39][Notes 2]

Meanwhile, Kennedy, Gargan and Markham crossed back to Chappaquiddick Island on the ferry, where Kennedy made a series of telephone calls from a payphone near the ferry crossing—the same phone that the three men had stood by approximately six hours earlier discussing Kennedy's options. Kennedy called friends and lawyers for advice, however, instead of notifying the authorities that he was the operator of the vehicle, which was still upside down in the pond. He called his brother-in-law Stephen Edward Smith,[Notes 3][40] Congressman John V. Tunney[41] and others that morning, but he still did not report the accident to authorities.[16]

Kennedy was still at the payphone when he heard that his car and Kopechne's body had been discovered;[42] he then crossed back to Edgartown to go to the police station with Markham. Meanwhile, Gargan went to the Katama Shores to inform the Boiler Room Girls of the incident.[16] Kennedy entered the police station at approximately 9:50 a.m. He asked to make some telephone calls, and was told he could use Arena's office. When Arena returned to the station at 10:00 a.m., he was "stunned" to learn Kennedy already knew of the accident and the true identity of the victim, and admitted he was the driver.[43] Arena led Kennedy to another empty office where he could privately dictate his statement to Markham, who wrote it out in long hand. Arena then typed out the statement:[44][Notes 4]

On July 18, 1969, at approximately 11:15 p.m. in Chappaquiddick, Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, I was driving my car on Main Street on my way to get the ferry back to Edgartown. I was unfamiliar with the road and turned right onto Dyke [sic] Road,[Notes 5] instead of bearing hard left on Main Street. After proceeding for approximately one-half mile on Dyke [sic] Road, I descended a hill and came upon a narrow bridge.[Notes 6] The car went off the side of the bridge. There was one passenger with me, one Miss Mary ___,[Notes 7] a former secretary of my brother, Sen. Robert Kennedy. The car turned over and sank into the water, and landed with the roof resting on the bottom. I attempted to open the door and the window of the car, but have no re-collection of how I got out of the car. I came to the surface, and then repeatedly dove down to the car, in an attempt to see if the passenger was still in the car. I was unsuccessful in the attempt. I was exhausted and in a state of shock. I recall walking back to where my friends were eating. There was a car parked in front of the cottage, and I climbed into the backseat. I then asked for someone to bring me back to Edgartown. I remember walking around for a period and then going back to my hotel room. When I fully realized what had happened this morning, I immediately contacted the police.

Kennedy said the statement was correct as Arena typed it, but did not sign it.[45]

As the local medical examiner, Robert Nevin, had the day off, Associate Medical Examiner Donald Mills was called to the crash site to examine Kopechne's body. He was satisfied that the cause of death was accidental drowning but asked the district attorney's office for direction on whether an autopsy was necessary, and was told it was not as long as there were no signs of foul play; Mills was satisfied it was a drowning. He signed Kopechne's death certificate to that effect, released the body for embalming, and directed that a blood sample be collected and sent to the Massachusetts State Police for analysis of alcohol content.[46] The result was 0.09%, which Mills mistakenly thought represented only a "moderate" level, but, in fact, indicated in a person of Kopechne's weight, up to five drinks of liquor within an hour prior to death.[47] Kopechne's body was released to her family, and the funeral was held on Tuesday July 22 in Plymouth, Pennsylvania.[48][49][50]

Nevin strongly disagreed with Mills's decision to forgo an autopsy,[51] believing that ruling out foul play would work to Kennedy's advantage by laying prurient public speculation to rest.[52]

After U.S. President Richard Nixon's security operative Jack Caulfield learned of the incident, he dispatched Anthony Ulasewicz to Dike Bridge in disguise as a newspaper reporter to collect information, since he believed Kennedy would be his rival in the 1972 presidential election. Although Ulasewicz was able to interview several witnesses before law enforcement authorities, he found no useful information.[53]

Disputed cause of death

[edit]

Farrar, who recovered Kopechne's body from the submerged car,[54] believed that she died from suffocation, rather than from drowning or from the impact of the overturned vehicle, based upon the posture in which he found the body in the well of the back seat of the car, where an air pocket would have formed. Rigor mortis was apparent, her hands were clasping the back seat and her face was turned upward.[55] Bob Molla, an inspector for the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles who investigated the crash at the time, said that parts of the roof and the trunk appeared to be dry.[56] Farrar publicly asserted that Kopechne likely would have survived if a more timely rescue attempt had been conducted.[57][58][59]

Defense strategy

[edit]
Edgartown and Chappaquiddick Island in relation to the Kennedy compound in Hyannis Port, south of Cape Cod

Kennedy returned to his family's compound in Hyannis Port. Stephen Smith, Robert McNamara, Ted Sorensen, Richard N. Goodwin, Lem Billings, Milton Gwirtzman, David W. Burke, John Culver, Tunney,[41] Gargan,[60] Markham and others arrived to advise him.[61] Smith, the Kennedy family's business manager and "master fixer",[61] decided the political damage was catastrophic and eliminated Kennedy's chance to run for president in 1972, recommending focusing efforts on protecting Kennedy from a charge of manslaughter.[61]

Arraignment

[edit]

Kennedy's court hearing was held before Massachusetts District Court Judge James Boyle on July 25, seven days after the incident. Kennedy pleaded guilty to a charge of leaving the scene of an accident causing bodily injury. His attorneys argued that any jail sentence should be suspended, and the prosecutors agreed by citing his age (37), character and prior reputation.[62] "Considering the unblemished record of the defendant, and insofar as the Commonwealth represents this is not a case where he was really trying to conceal his identity...", Boyle sentenced him to the statutory minimum two months in prison, which he suspended, saying that he "has already been, and will continue to be punished far beyond anything this court can impose."[4]

Despite an Associated Press story published that morning, Boyle was unaware that Kennedy's driving record was, in fact, far from "unblemished".[4] While attending University of Virginia School of Law from 1956 to 1959, he had compiled a record of reckless driving and driving without a license.[63] In one particular incident on March 14, 1958, Kennedy ran a red light, then cut his tail lights and raced to avoid a highway patrol officer. When Kennedy was caught, he was cited for reckless driving, racing to avoid pursuit and driving without a license.[64]

Kennedy's wife Joan was pregnant at the time of the Chappaquiddick incident. She was confined to bed because of two previous miscarriages, but she attended Kopechne's funeral and stood beside her husband in court.[65] Soon after, she suffered a third miscarriage,[66] which she blamed on the Chappaquiddick incident.[67]

Kennedy's televised statement

[edit]

At 7:30 p.m. on July 25, Kennedy delivered a lengthy statement about the incident, prepared by Sorensen[61][68] and broadcast live by the three television networks.[69][70] He began by reading the speech off a prepared manuscript.[71]

Kennedy explained that his wife did not accompany him to the regatta due to "reasons of health". He denied engaging in any "immoral conduct" with Kopechne or driving under the influence of alcohol that evening. He said that his conduct during the hours immediately after the accident "made no sense to me at all" and said that his doctors had informed him he had suffered "cerebral concussion and shock". He said he regarded his failure to report the accident to the police immediately as "indefensible". To the horror of Gargan's attorney, his statement revealed his enlistment of the help of Gargan and Markham to try to rescue Kopechne (despite assurances he had made to the effect that he would not involve them).[citation needed]

Kennedy said "all kinds of scrambled thoughts" went through his mind after the accident, including "whether the girl might still be alive somewhere out of that immediate area", whether "some awful curse actually did hang over all the Kennedys", whether there was "some justifiable reason for me to doubt what had happened and to delay my report", and whether, "somehow, the awful weight of this incredible incident might in some way pass from my shoulders".[citation needed] He said he was overcome "by a jumble of emotions — grief, fear, doubt, exhaustion, panic, confusion, and shock". He said he instructed Gargan and Markham "not to alarm Mary Jo's friends that night", then returned to the ferry with the two men and "suddenly jumped into the water and impulsively swam across, nearly drowning once again in the effort, returning to my hotel around 2 a.m. and collapsed in my room".[citation needed]

Kennedy then put down his manuscript (though he continued reading from cue cards) and asked the people of Massachusetts to decide whether he should resign:[citation needed]

"If, at any time, the citizens of Massachusetts should lack confidence in their Senator's character or his ability, with or without justification, he could not, in my opinion, adequately perform his duties, and should not continue in office. The opportunity to work with you and serve Massachusetts has made my life worthwhile. So, I ask you tonight, the people of Massachusetts, to think this through with me. In facing this decision, I seek your advice and opinion. In making it, I seek your prayers. For this is a decision that I will have finally to make on my own."

The speech concluded with a passage quoted from John F. Kennedy's book Profiles in Courage (ghostwritten by Sorensen): "A man does what he must — in spite of personal consequences".[72]

Critical reaction to the speech was immediate and negative. NBC newsman John Chancellor compared it to Richard Nixon's 1952 Checkers speech. Kennedy admirer David Halberstam wrote in Harper's magazine that it was "of such cheapness and bathos as to be a rejection of everything the Kennedys had stood for in candor and style. It was as if these men had forgotten everything which made the Kennedys distinctive in American politics, and simply told the youngest brother that he could get away with whatever he wanted because he was a Kennedy in Massachusetts."[61]

Inquest

[edit]

Although Kennedy received many messages from voters opposed to his resignation from the Senate, reaction in much of the news media, and of District Attorney Edmund Dinis, was that Kennedy's televised speech left many questions unanswered about how the accident happened, and his delay in reporting it. On July 31, the same day Kennedy returned to his Senate seat,[73] Dinis wrote to the Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court, Joseph Tauro, asking for a judicial inquest into Kopechne's death.[74] He received a response the next day that such inquests are under jurisdiction of the District Court. Dinis then sent his request to Kenneth Nash, the Chief Justice of the lower court.[75] Nash advised Dinis that a grand jury investigation had more "teeth" than an inquest, as it had the power to indict defendants, whereas an inquest was only authorized to determine if a crime has been committed.

Dinis met with Edgartown District Court Judge James Boyle on August 8 to explain his reasons for requesting the inquest. Boyle did not recuse himself, even though he had presided over the hearing at which Kennedy pled guilty.[76] Boyle announced the inquest was scheduled to start on September 3 and would be open to the press.[77] On September 2, Kennedy's lawyers petitioned the Massachusetts Supreme Court for a temporary injunction against the inquest,[75] which was granted.

Exhumation battle

[edit]

Dinis petitioned for an exhumation and autopsy of Kopechne's body,[75] and on September 18, 1969, he publicly disclosed that blood had been found on her long-sleeved blouse and in her mouth and nose, "which may or may not be consistent with death by drowning",[78] when her clothes were given to authorities by the funeral director.[79]

Judge Bernard Brominski of the Court of Common Pleas in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, held a hearing on the request on October 20–21.[75] The request was opposed by Kopechne's parents, Joseph and Gwen Kopechne.[75] Forensic pathologist Werner Spitz testified on behalf of the parents that the autopsy was unnecessary and the available evidence was sufficient to conclude that Kopechne died from drowning.[80][81] Judge Brominski ruled against the exhumation on December 1, saying that there was "no evidence" that "anything other than drowning had caused the death of Mary Jo Kopechne."[82]

The inquest[83][61] convened in Edgartown in January 1970. At the request of Kennedy's lawyers, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ordered it to be performed secretly[84][85] with Judge Boyle presiding, and the 763-page transcript was released four months later.[85]

Kennedy's testimony

[edit]

Kennedy testified that Kopechne told him, when he was about to leave the party, "that she was desirous of leaving" and asked "if I would be kind enough to drop her back at her hotel." Crimmins and some other guests "were concluding their meal, enjoying the fellowship and it didn't appear to be necessary to require him to bring me back to Edgartown."[20] Witnesses at the party variously placed the time of Kennedy and Kopechne's departure between 11:00 and 11:45 p.m..

Kennedy also testified that he never stopped on Cemetery Road, never backed up, never saw Deputy Sheriff Look and never saw another car or person after he left the cottage with Kopechne. He further claimed that after he turned onto Dike Road, he was driving and did not realize that he was no longer headed west toward the ferry landing but was instead heading east toward the barrier beach. Kennedy estimated his speed at the time of the accident to be "approximately 20 miles per hour [32 km/h]".[86]

Kennedy testified that he had "full intention of reporting it. And I mentioned to Gargan and Markham something like, 'You take care of the other girls; I will take care of the accident!'—that is what I said and I dove into the water."[32] Kennedy had told Gargan and Markham not to tell the other women anything about the incident "because I felt strongly that if these girls were notified that an accident had taken place and Mary Jo had, in fact, drowned, that it would only be a matter of seconds before all of those girls, who were long and dear friends of Mary Jo's, would go to the scene of the accident and enter the water with, I felt, a good chance that some serious mishap might have occurred to any one of them."[33]

Kennedy testified that he was back at the hotel and "almost tossed and turned and walked around that room.... I had not given up hope all night long that, by some miracle, Mary Jo would have escaped from the car."[87] He complained to the hotel owner at 2:55 a.m. that he had been awakened by a noisy party.[16][88] At 8 a.m., Gargan and Markham found Kennedy at his hotel where they had a "heated conversation" in his room. According to Kennedy's testimony, the two men asked why he had not reported the accident, and he responded by telling them "about my own thoughts and feelings as I swam across that channel... that somehow when they arrived in the morning that they were going to say that Mary Jo was still alive."[87]

Gargan and Markham's testimony

[edit]

Markham testified that after their rescue attempt, Kennedy was sobbing and on the verge of becoming crazed.[89] He and Gargan testified that they assumed that Kennedy was going to inform the authorities about the accident once he got back to Edgartown, and thus did not do the reporting themselves.[16] In an October 15, 1994, interview for Ronald Kessler's book The Sins of the Father: Joseph P. Kennedy and the Dynasty He Founded, Gargan said that he and Markham returned to the scene of the accident with Kennedy, and they both urged Kennedy to report the accident to police. "The conversation was brief about having to report", Gargan told Kessler, a former Washington Post reporter. "I was insistent on it. Paul Markham was backing me up on it. Ted said, 'Okay, okay, Joey, okay. I've got the point, I've got the point.' Then he took a few steps and dove into the water, leaving Markham and I expecting that he would carry out the conversation."[90]

Farrar's testimony

[edit]

Farrar testified:

It looked as if she were holding herself up to get a last breath of air. It was a consciously assumed position…. She didn't drown. She died of suffocation in her own air void. It took her at least three or four hours to die. I could have had her out of that car twenty-five minutes after I got the call. But he didn't call.

— diver John Farrar, Inquest into the Death of Mary Jo Kopechne, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Edgartown District Court. New York: EVR Productions, 1970.

Farrar testified that Kopechne's body was pressed up in the car in the spot where an air bubble would have formed. He interpreted that to mean that she had survived in the air bubble after the car submerged, and he concluded that:

Had I received a call within five to ten minutes of the accident occurring, and was able, as I was the following morning, to be at the victim's side within twenty-five minutes of receiving the call, in such event there is a strong possibility that she would have been alive on removal from the submerged car.[30]

Farrar believed that Kopechne "lived for at least two hours down there."[91]

Findings

[edit]

Judge Boyle released the following findings in his report:[92]

  • "Death probably occurred between 11:30 p.m. on July 18 and 1:00 a.m. on July 19, 1969."
  • "Kennedy and Kopechne did not intend to return to Edgartown at that time; ... Kennedy did not intend to drive to the ferry slip and his turn onto Dyke [sic] Road had been intentional."
  • "A speed of twenty miles per hour as Kennedy testified to, operating the car as large as his Oldsmobile, would at least be negligent and, possibly, reckless. If Kennedy knew of this hazard, his operation of the vehicle constituted criminal conduct."
  • "Earlier on July 18, he had been driven over Chappaquiddick Road three times, and over Dyke Road and Dyke Bridge twice. Kopechne had been driven over Chappaquiddick road five times and over Dyke Road and Dyke Bridge twice."
  • "I believe it probable that Kennedy knew of the hazard that lay ahead of him on Dyke Road, but that, for some reason not apparent from the testimony, he failed to exercise due care as he approached the bridge."
  • "I, therefor [sic], find there is probable cause to believe that Edward M. Kennedy operated his motor vehicle negligently ... and that such operation appears to have contributed to the death of Mary Jo Kopechne."

Having found probable cause of a crime, under Massachusetts law Boyle could have issued a warrant for Kennedy's arrest, but he did not do so.[93] Despite Boyle's findings, Dinis chose not to prosecute Kennedy for manslaughter. The Kopechne family did not bring any legal action against Kennedy but did receive a payment of $90,904 from him personally and $50,000 from his insurance company.[9][94] The Kopechnes later explained their decision not to take legal action by saying, "We figured that people would think we were looking for blood money."[94]

Grand jury investigation

[edit]

On April 6, 1970, a Dukes County grand jury assembled in special session to investigate Kopechne's death. Judge Wilfred Paquet instructed the members of the grand jury that they could consider only matters brought to their attention by the superior court, the district attorney or their personal knowledge.[95] He cited the orders of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court and told the grand jury that it could not see the evidence or Boyle's report from the inquest, which were still impounded.[95] Dinis had attended the inquest and seen Boyle's report, and he told the grand jury that there was not enough evidence to indict Kennedy on potential charges of manslaughter, perjury, or driving to endanger.[95] The grand jury called four witnesses who had not testified at the inquest; they testified for a total of twenty minutes, but no indictments were issued.[95]

Motor Vehicles investigation

[edit]

On July 23, 1969, the registrar of the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles informed Kennedy that his license would be suspended until there was a statutory hearing concerning the accident.[96] The suspension was required by Massachusetts law for any fatal motor vehicle accident if there were no witnesses. The in camera hearing was held May 18, 1970, and found that "operation was too fast for existing conditions." On May 27, the registrar informed Kennedy in a letter that "I am unable to find that the fatal accident in which a motor vehicle operated by you was involved, was without serious fault on your part" and so his driver's license was suspended for a further six months.[97]

Fringe theories

[edit]

Journalist Jack Olsen wrote the first investigative book on the case, The Bridge at Chappaquiddick, in 1970, attempting to solve the unanswered questions of the incident. Lieutenant Bernie Flynn, a state police detective assigned to the Cape Cod district attorney's office, was a Kennedy admirer who came up with a theory which he couldn't prove: that Kennedy got out of the car and Kopechne drove herself off the bridge. "Ted Kennedy didn't want to admit being drunk with a broad in a car late at night. When he saw 'Huck' Look, he got scared. He thought a cop was coming after him." Flynn claimed to have told this theory to Olsen, who didn't seem to be very impressed.[98] Although Olsen denied having ever talked to Flynn, he related this theory in his book.[99] Kopechne was 5 ft 2 in (1.57 m), a foot shorter than Kennedy, and Olsen argued that she might possibly not have seen the bridge as she drove Kennedy's car over unfamiliar roads at night, with no external lighting, and after she had consumed several alcoholic drinks. He wrote that Kopechne normally drove a Volkswagen Beetle, which was much smaller, lighter and easier to handle than Kennedy's larger Oldsmobile.[100]

A BBC Inside Story episode titled "Chappaquiddick", broadcast on July 20, 1994 (the 25th anniversary of the incident), repeated Flynn's theory. The episode argued that the explanation would account for Kennedy's lack of concern the next morning, as he was unaware of the accident, and for the forensic evidence of the injuries to Kopechne being inconsistent with her sitting in the passenger seat.[101]

Fourth-generation Chappaquiddick resident Bill Pinney, in his 2017 book Chappaquiddick Speaks, presents a theory that Kopechne was seriously injured in an earlier crash, and then the bridge accident was faked.[102] The book laments how the incident robbed Chappaquiddick of its traditional peace and privacy, attracting large tourist groups wanting to view the sites connected with the tragedy.

Aftermath

[edit]
National Lampoon fake VW Beetle ad mocking the incident.

The case evoked much satire of Kennedy. For example, Time magazine reported immediately after the incident that "one sick joke already visualizes a Democrat asking about Nixon during the 1968 presidential campaign: 'Would you let this man sell you a used car?' Answer: 'Yes, but I sure wouldn't let Teddy drive it.'"[103] A mock advertisement in National Lampoon magazine showed a floating Volkswagen Beetle, itself a parody of a Volkswagen advertisement, showing that the vehicle's underside was so well sealed that it would float on water, but with the caption, "If Ted Kennedy drove a Volkswagen, he'd be President today." The satire resulted in legal action by Volkswagen, claiming unauthorized use of its trademark; the matter was later settled out of court.[104][105]

Following Kennedy's televised speech regarding the incident,[70] supporters responded with telephone calls and telegrams to newspapers and to the Kennedy family.[69] They were heavily in favor of his remaining in office, and he was re-elected in 1970 with 62% of the vote, a margin of nearly a half million votes, but it was down from 74% in the previous election in 1964.

The incident severely damaged Kennedy's national reputation and reputation for judgement. One analyst asked: "Can we really trust him if the Russians come over the ice cap? Can he make the kind of split-second decisions the astronauts had to make in their landing on the moon?"[103] Before Chappaquiddick, public polls showed that a large majority expected Kennedy to run for the presidency in 1972, but he pledged not to either run himself or serve as George McGovern's running mate that year. In 1974, he pledged not to run in 1976,[106][107] in part because of the renewed media interest in Chappaquiddick.[22] In 1977 The New York Times described Chappaquiddick as Kennedy's Watergate scandal.[108]

In late 1979, Kennedy prepared to announce his candidacy for the presidency, challenging President Jimmy Carter for the Democratic nomination for the 1980 election. Kennedy had never done a television interview discussing Chappaquiddick, but surveys supported his and advisors' belief that the incident would not prevent his victory.[109][110] On November 4, 1979, just before the announcement, CBS broadcast a one-hour television special presented by Roger Mudd, titled Teddy. The program consisted of an interview with Kennedy; the interview was interspersed with visual materials. Much of the show was devoted to the Chappaquiddick incident. During the interview, Mudd questioned Kennedy repeatedly about the incident, and at one point directly accused him of lying.[111] Kennedy also gave what one author described as an "incoherent and repetitive" answer to the question, "Why do you want to be President?"[110] The program inflicted serious political damage on Kennedy.[110][112][113][114][115] Carter alluded to the Chappaquiddick incident twice in five days, once declaring that he had not "panicked in the crisis".[116] Kennedy lost the Democratic nomination to Carter, who, in turn, lost the general election to Ronald Reagan by a landslide. After the incident, Kennedy won seven re-elections to the U.S. Senate, and remained a senator until his death in 2009.

Dinis said that the case had caused him to not be re-elected as district attorney, because Kennedy supporters thought that he had been too aggressive and Kennedy opponents thought the opposite. Arena believed that the publicity helped him get a job in a different city. Farrar received calls and letters, including death threats, from people who thought that the diver wanted to hurt Kennedy. Others such as Look and Markham refused to discuss the incident. The Dike Bridge became an unwanted tourist attraction, with thousands visiting the island annually to look at the bridge,[117][118][119][120][121] and the object of souvenir hunters.[122]

After Kennedy's death, New York Times Magazine editor Ed Klein stated that Kennedy asked people, "Have you heard any new jokes about Chappaquiddick?" "It's not that he didn't feel remorse about the death of Mary Jo Kopechne", Klein argued, "But that he still always saw the other side of everything, and the ridiculous side of things, too."[123]

Media

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The incident is fictionalized in Joyce Carol Oates's novella Black Water (1992). It is the central subject of John Curran's film Chappaquiddick (2017). In 2019, the incident was featured in a season of Fox Nation's Scandalous.[124][125][126]

The 2019 series For All Mankind depicts an alternate timeline where Kennedy cancels his Chappaquiddick party after Soviets land on the Moon before the U.S., thus avoiding Kopechne's death; Kennedy eventually wins the 1972 Presidential election and is later accused of having an extramarital affair with Kopechne, who is working as a White House aide.[127][128]

Season 1 episode 10 of Succession seemingly alludes to the event. In the episode titled “Nobody Is Ever Missing”, main character Kendall Roy leaves a party, crashes his car in a pond, and his passenger drowns to death. Much like Kennedy, Roy attempts to rescue the passenger, but fails and leaves the scene.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ The latter two charges were dropped in a plea deal.
  1. ^ Gargan's mother was the sister of Kennedy's mother. Gargan's mother died when he was six, and he was raised after that by Ted's parents Joseph P. and Rose Kennedy.[12]
  2. ^ The purse was left in the car when Tretter drove her back to Edgartown earlier in the evening to borrow a radio.[19]
  3. ^ Kennedy first called Helga Wagner, a Kennedy family friend, to get a phone number for Smith, who was vacationing in Europe.
  4. ^ A photographic reproduction of Arena's typing was Exhibit number 2 at the inquest, and is available at Damore, p. 448.
  5. ^ Arena for some reason typed "Dyke", though Markham used the correct spelling "Dike". See Damore, picture insert.
  6. ^ At this point, Arena adds "(arrow on map)". Markham, at this same point, uses a caret to insert a line of text that is illegibly crossed out; see picture in Damore, p.448.
  7. ^ The statement left Kopechne's surname blank because Kennedy was unsure of its spelling; see Damore, p. 22.

Citations

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  1. ^ "Chappaquiddick's Echoes". The New Yorker. July 17, 1994. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  2. ^ Wills, Garry (April 29, 1976). "The Real Reason Chappaquiddick Disqualifies Kennedy". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  3. ^ Kelly, Michael (April 15, 2016). "Ted Kennedy on the Rocks". GQ. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  4. ^ a b c Damore, p. 193.
  5. ^ "Ted escapes car plunge; woman dies". Eugene Register-Guard. Eugene, Oregon. Associated Press. July 19, 1969. p. 1A.
  6. ^ "Kennedy involved in fatality". Reading Eagle. Reading, Pennsylvania. UPI. July 20, 1969. p. 1.
  7. ^ "Charge to Be Filed Against Kennedy". Eugene Register-Guard. Eugene, Oregon. Associated Press. July 20, 1969. p. 1A.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Putzel, Michael; Pyle, Richard (February 22, 1976). "Chappaquiddick (part 1)". Lakeland Ledger. Lakeland, Florida. Associated Press. p. 1B.
  9. ^ a b c Putzel, Michael; Pyle, Richard (February 29, 1976). "Chappaquiddick (part 2)". Lakeland Ledger. (Florida). Associated Press. p. 1B.
  10. ^ a b Jacoby, Jeff (July 24, 1994). "Unlike Kopechne, the questions have never died". The Day. New London, Connecticut. The Boston Globe. p. C9.
  11. ^ "Kennedy's Legacy: Chappaquiddick was the end of one Ted Kennedy and the beginning of another". Daily News. New York.
  12. ^ "Interview with Ann Gargan". Edward M. Kennedy Institute. Retrieved April 2, 2018.
  13. ^ Damore, p. 69.
  14. ^ Damore, pp. 69–70.
  15. ^ Kessler, p. 418.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Wills, pp. 117–120.
  17. ^ "John B. Crimmins, Long an Associate Of Edward Kennedy". The New York Times. May 31, 1977. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  18. ^ a b c Bly, pp. 202–206.
  19. ^ a b Boyle, p. 124
  20. ^ a b Boyle, pp. 26–27, reported at Damore, p. 357.
  21. ^ Damore, p. 357.
  22. ^ a b Russell, Jenna (February 17, 2009). "Chapter 3: Chappaquiddick: Conflicted Ambitions, then, Chappaquiddick". The Boston Globe. Retrieved February 24, 2009.
  23. ^ Exhumation hearing, p. 59, reported at Damore, p. 103.
  24. ^ Boyle, p. 123
  25. ^ "Cape Pogue and Poucha Pond". Vineyard Gazette. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  26. ^ Banks, Charles Edward (May 31, 2018). The History of Martha's Vineyard, Dukes County, Massachusetts: Town annals. G.H. Dean. Retrieved May 31, 2018 – via Google Books.
  27. ^ "Chappaquiddick Island Stock Photos and Pictures - Getty Images". gettyimages.com. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  28. ^ "Tow Truck Pulling Kennedy Car from Pond". gettyimages.com. March 10, 2016. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  29. ^ Boyle, p. 56–60, reported at Damore, p. 360.
  30. ^ a b Anderson & Gibson, p 138–140.
  31. ^ Anderson, Jack (September 1, 1969). "Diver Hints Kopechne Might Have Been Saved". St. Petersburg Times. p. 19A.
  32. ^ a b Boyle, p. 63, reported at Damore, p. 362.
  33. ^ a b Boyle, p. 80, reported at Damore, p. 363.
  34. ^ Damore, p. 1.
  35. ^ a b Cutler, p. 10, 42.
  36. ^ Lange & DeWitt, p. 40–41.
  37. ^ Damore, p. 6.
  38. ^ Cutler, p. 10.
  39. ^ Damore, p. 8.
  40. ^ Cheshire, Maxine (March 13, 1980). "The Mysterious Helga Wagner". Retrieved May 31, 2018 – via www.washingtonpost.com.
  41. ^ a b "John Tunney Oral History (2007), Senator, California - Miller Center". millercenter.org. October 27, 2016. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  42. ^ Anderson, Jack (September 25, 1969). "Chappaquiddick story". Nashua Telegraph. New Hampshire. (Bell-McClure). p. 4.
  43. ^ Arena's personal notes, p. 1, cited in Damore, p. 16.
  44. ^ Damore, pp.21–22.
  45. ^ Boyle, p. 125.
  46. ^ Damore, p. 31
  47. ^ Damore, p. 178
  48. ^ Damore, p. v.
  49. ^ "Ted Kennedy joins hundreds at rites for accident victim". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. Associated Press. July 22, 1969. p. 1A.
  50. ^ "Kennedy family flies to Pennsylvania for funeral of woman accident victim". The Bulletin. Bend, Oregon. UPI. July 22, 1969. p. 1.
  51. ^ Damore, pp. 174–175.
  52. ^ Damore, p. 270.
  53. ^ Graff, Garrett M. (2022). Watergate: A New History (1 ed.). New York: Avid Reader Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-1-9821-3916-2. OCLC 1260107112.
  54. ^ John Farrar interview on the Howie Carr Show
  55. ^ Klein, p. 93.
  56. ^ Sanburn, Josh (July 17, 2019). "'The Kennedy Machine Buried What Really Happened': Revisiting Chappaquiddick, 50 Years Later". Vanity Fair. Retrieved May 29, 2020.
  57. ^ Lofton, John D. Jr. (June 17, 1975). "Kopechnes begin to have doubts about Chappaquiddick affair". Beaver County Times. Pennsylvania. (United Feature Syndicate). p. A7.
  58. ^ Tiede, Tom (January 28, 1980). "Chappaquiddick diver slams Teddy". Southeast Missourian. Cape Girardeau. NEA. p. 4.
  59. ^ Kappel.[page needed]
  60. ^ "Chappaquiddick: The Unanswered Questions About Ted Kennedy's Fatal Crash". Reader's Digest. April 6, 2018. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  61. ^ a b c d e f "The End of Camelot". Vanity Fair. September 1, 1993. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  62. ^ Damore, pp. 192–193.
  63. ^ English, Bella (February 15, 2009). "Chapter 1: Teddy: A childhood of privilege, promise, and pain". The Boston Globe. Retrieved February 24, 2009.
  64. ^ Damore, pp. 169–170.
  65. ^ Taraborrelli, p. 395–96, 399.
  66. ^ Taraborrelli, p. 192.
  67. ^ James, Susan Donaldson (August 26, 2009). "Chappaquiddick: No Profile in Kennedy Courage". ABC News. Retrieved August 26, 2009.
  68. ^ Damore, pp. 173, 200
  69. ^ a b "Kennedy may quit, nation told on TV". The Day. (New London, Connecticut). Associated Press. July 26, 1969. p. 1.
  70. ^ a b "Kennedy puts political future on line". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. July 26, 1969. p. 1A.
  71. ^ The entire speech was inquest exhibit #3, and can be found at Damore, pp. 203–206.
  72. ^ Damore, pp. 206, 208.
  73. ^ Damore, p. 240.
  74. ^ Damore, pp. 239–240.
  75. ^ a b c d e Damore, p. vi.
  76. ^ Damore, p. 266.
  77. ^ Damore, p. 267.
  78. ^ Damore, p. 307.
  79. ^ "Dinis Says Blood On Mary Jo's Body". Boston Herald Traveler. September 16, 1969.
  80. ^ Tedrow, Richard L., and Thomas L. (1980). Death at Chappaquiddick. Pelican Publishing. pp. 98–99. ISBN 1-4556-0340-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  81. ^ "Examiner testifies against kopechne autopsy". Daily Kent Stater. October 22, 1969.
  82. ^ Damore, p. 343.
  83. ^ Chappaquiddick Inquest - Boston.com
  84. ^ Trotta, p. 184.
  85. ^ a b Bly, p. 213.
  86. ^ Boyle, p. 35, reported at Damore, p. 358.
  87. ^ a b Boyle, p. 70, reported at Damore, p. 364.
  88. ^ Boyle, p. 70, reported at Damore, p. 364.
  89. ^ Boyle, p. 322, reported at Damore, p. 375.
  90. ^ Kessler, p. 419.
  91. ^ Kunen, James S.; Mathison, Dirk; Brown, S. Avery; Nugent, Tom (July 24, 1989). "Frustrated Grand Jurors Say It Was No Accident Ted Kennedy Got Off Easy". People. Vol. 32, no. 4. Archived from the original on January 10, 2011.
  92. ^ Dinis, p. 391–392.
  93. ^ Dinis, p. 392.
  94. ^ a b Bly, p. 216.
  95. ^ a b c d "End of the Affair". Time. April 20, 1970. Archived from the original on October 30, 2010. Retrieved August 3, 2008.
  96. ^ Press release of Registrar McLaughlin, July 23, 1969, reported at Damore, p. 165.
  97. ^ Facsimiles of the hearing report and the letter are at Damore, pp. 449–50.
  98. ^ Damore, p. 309
  99. ^ Damore, p. 350
  100. ^ Olsen.[page needed]
  101. ^ Barnard, Peter (July 22, 1994). "One Giant Leap Backwards". The Times. London.[page needed]
  102. ^ Pinney, Bill. Chappaquiddick Speaks, Stormy Weather Press, 2017. ISBN 978-0-692-94376-2. p. vii-viii.
  103. ^ a b "The Mysteries of Chappaquiddick". Time. August 1, 1969. Archived from the original on August 31, 2009.
  104. ^ Lofton, John D. Jr. (November 19, 1973). "Suit settled on Kennedy spoof". Victoria Advocate. Texas. Los Angeles Times/The Washington Post News Service. p. 4A.
  105. ^ "Lampoon's Surrender". Time. November 12, 1973. Archived from the original on March 11, 2007. Retrieved September 10, 2006.
  106. ^ Gaines, Richard (September 23, 1974). "Kennedy "won't run", says decision final". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. UPI. p. 1A.
  107. ^ "Kennedy rejects race". Spokane Daily Chronicle. Washington. Associated Press. September 23, 1974. p. 1.
  108. ^ Weinraub, Bernard (March 5, 1977). "Kennedy, Out of the Limelight, Is Content in Senate" (fee required). The New York Times. p. 1.
  109. ^ Buchanan, Pat (July 23, 1979). "Why Chappaquiddick haunts Kennedy". Ocala Star-Banner. Florida. p. 4A.
  110. ^ a b c Allis, Sam (February 18, 2009). "Chapter 4: Sailing into the Wind: Losing a Quest for the Top, Finding a new Freedom". The Boston Globe. Retrieved March 10, 2009.
  111. ^ Barry, p. 182.
  112. ^ Boller, p. 355.
  113. ^ Barry, p. 188.
  114. ^ Baughman, p. 169.
  115. ^ Jamieson, p. 379–81.
  116. ^ "Nation: Once Again, Chappaquiddick". Time. October 8, 1979. Archived from the original on August 30, 2009. Retrieved August 26, 2009.
  117. ^ "The bridge on Chappaquiddick". Nashua Telegraph. New Hampshire. (AP photo). July 12, 1974. p. 13.
  118. ^ "Decision near on bridge at Chappaquiddick". Pittsburgh Press. UPI. June 21, 1981. p. A-4.
  119. ^ "Some say Chappaquiddick bridge is nuisance". The Day. New London, Connecticut. Associated Press. August 29, 1983. p. 5.
  120. ^ Trott, Robert W. (July 17, 1989). "Bitter memories and a rotting bridge". Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. Associated Press. p. A5.
  121. ^ "Chappaquiddick: bridge abandoned, but story lives". The Hour. Norwalk, Connecticut. Associated Press. July 18, 1994. p. 24.
  122. ^ "A bridge to the past". Milwaukee Journal. wire services. July 18, 1994. p. A3.
  123. ^ Rehm, Diane (August 26, 2009). "Reflections on Sen. Kennedy". The Diane Rehm Show. Washington, D. C.: WAMU-FM. Event occurs at 29:45. Archived from the original on September 30, 2011. Retrieved August 28, 2009.
  124. ^ "Fox Nation: A place even more partisan, right-wing, pro-Trump than Fox News". January 17, 2019.
  125. ^ "Review: Watching Fox Nation, conservatives' Netflix: Will MAGA viewers pay for the rage they get for free?". Los Angeles Times. November 29, 2018.
  126. ^ "Powerful Fox Nation documentary marks 50-year anniversary of Chappaquiddick". Fox News. July 19, 2019.
  127. ^ Sands, Rich (October 1, 2019). "Producers and cast of For All Mankind tease a new course for the space race at NYCC". SyFy. Retrieved June 21, 2022.
  128. ^ Miller, Liz Shannon (November 28, 2019). "For All Mankind Recap: Tightly Wound". Vulture. Retrieved June 21, 2022.

General sources

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Further reading

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  • Burns, James M. (1976). Edward Kennedy and the Camelot Legacy. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-07501-X.
  • Caruana, Stephanie (2006). The Gemstone File: A Memoir. Victoria, BC: Trafford. ISBN 1-4120-6137-7.
  • Hastings, H. Don (1969). The Ted Kennedy Episode. Dallas: Reliable Press. OCLC 16841243.
  • Jones, Richard E. (1979). The Chappaquiddick Inquest: The Complete Transcript of the Inquest into the Death of Mary Jo Kopechne. Pittsford, NY: Lynn Publications. OCLC 11807998.
  • Knight, Peter, ed. (2003). Conspiracy Theories in American History: An Encyclopedia. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC Clio. ISBN 1-57607-812-4.
  • Oates, Joyce C. (1992). Black Water. New York: E. P. Dutton. ISBN 0-525-93455-3. (fictional treatment).
  • Reybold, Malcolm (1975). The Inspector's Opinion: The Chappaquiddick Incident. New York: Saturday Review Press. ISBN 978-0-8415-0399-1.
  • Rust, Zad (1971). Teddy Bare: The Last of the Kennedy Clan. Boston: Western Islands. OCLC 147764. This book follows the circumstances of the Chappaquiddick tragedy, from its mysterious beginning to its squalid conclusion ... before a terrorized grand jury ..." – Prologue to the book, p. vii
  • Sherrill, Robert (1976). The Last Kennedy. New York: Dial Press. ISBN 978-0-8037-4419-6.
  • Spitz, Daniel J. (2006). "Investigation of Bodies in Water". In Spitz, Werner U.; Spitz, Daniel J. & Fisher, Russell S. (eds.). Spitz and Fisher's Medicolegal Investigation of Death. Guideline for the Application of Pathology to Crime Investigations (4th ed.). Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas. pp. 846–881. ISBN 978-0-398-07544-6.
  • Tedrow, Thomas L. (1979). Death at Chappaquiddick. New Orleans: Pelican. ISBN 0-88289-249-5.
  • Willis, Larryann C. (1980). Chappaquiddick Decision. Portland, OR: Better Books Publisher. OCLC 6666517.
  • Miceli, Barbara. 'How to Turn a Forgotten Figure of American History into a National and Gender Emblem: Joyce Carol Oates's Treatment of Mary Jo Kopechne in Black Water', in Echinox Journal, 33/2017, pp. 240–254.
  • Miceli, Barbara. "Black Water and Mudwoman by Joyce Carol Oates: Two Drownings in Comparison", in Revell, n.3, vol 26, pp. 276–291. https://periodicosonline.uems.br/index.php/REV/author/submission/4211
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