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"Teddy Kennedy was the weak kitten in the
litter, never able to measure up to his brothers. |
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- The following information is extracted
from Senatorial Privilege by Leo Damore. Mr
Damore conducted over 200 interviews, many with people close
to the case, including police officers. He had access to the
files on Chappaquiddick locked in the district attorney's
vault in Barnstable, and to personal notes about the case
kept by key investigators of the accident. |
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on the island of Chappaquiddick ~ July 19, 1969 |
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- Jack Crimmins, Ted Kennedy's chauffeur, arrives on Martha's Vineyard driving Ted's 1967 Oldsmobile Delta 88. He spends the night alone at the Lawrence Cottage on Chappaquiddick. |
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- Joseph Gargan and Paul Markham arrive in Edgartown aboard the Victura. They check into the Shiretown Inn, where Gargan had reserved rooms for them. Gargan had also secured rooms at the Inn for Ray LaRosa, Charles Tretter, and Senator Kennedy, who would arrive the following day. - In a rented white Valiant, Gargan goes to Vineyard Haven to pick up the "Boiler Room Girls" who had arrived on the ferry and did not have a car. The young women are taken to their rooms at the Katama Shores Motor Inn. |
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10:00 AM |
- In the morning, the young women shopped the fashionable boutiques of Edgartown, and then went swimming at East Beach on Chappaquiddick. |
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1:00 PM |
- Crimmins picked up Senator Kennedy at the
Martha's Vineyard airport. They crossed over on the ferry to
Chappaquiddick, and drove to the cottage on the island's
only paved road - Chappaquiddick Rd. ( Following the accident, Kennedy would claim that he had made a "wrong turn" onto Dike Road, and that his "unfamiliarity" with the road had led him to drive off the narrow bridge. ) |
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2:30 PM |
- Kennedy, Gargan, and Markham raced in the Regatta
aboard the Victura, while the young women watched
from aboard the charter boat, Bonnie Lisa. Also
entered in the race were: Stan Moore (an automobile
dealer on Cape Cod) aboard the Uncle Benny, and
Ross Richards (a long-time racing rival of Teddy
Kennedy) aboard the Bettawin. |
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4:30 PM |
- Kennedy and Stan Moore joined the victory party
aboard the Bettawin, which was tied up at the dock.
Gargan stayed behind on the Victura to put up the
sails and batten down. Markham returned to his hotel room,
having injured his leg during the race. ( Moore refused to comment on Ted's alcohol consumption when asked by authorities who were investigating the accident. "I was asked that question many, many times," he later said. "Ted had three rum and cokes in about twenty minutes, but I didn't think it was anybody's business.") - By the time Gargan joined the party, the Senator was ready to leave. |
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6:00 PM |
- Kennedy and Gargan arrived at the Shiretown Inn in
Edgartown. Gargan ordered |
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7:00 PM |
- Once the men had finished their beers, Crimmins chauffeured Kennedy to the ferry, and they crossed over to Chappaquiddick. No one was at the cottage when they arrived, so Kennedy soaked in a hot tub while Crimmins made him another rum and coke. |
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8:15 PM |
- LaRosa picked up the girls at their motel, and dropped them off at the Edgartown ferry landing. He parked his car at the Shiretown Inn, then walked back to the dock to join the others for the ferry ride across to Chappaquiddick. Gargan was waiting on the island with the Valiant to pick up the party guests. |
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8:30 PM |
- The party guests arrived at the Lawrence Cottage. The
party was made up of six married men and six single women,
crowded into a small living room. The counter dividing the
living room from the kitchen was stocked with liquor
Crimmins had purchased "for a price" in South Boston. |
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- Gargan, suffering from an upset stomach, was not drinking alcohol. "Some people at the party had had quite a few, no question", he observed. "Frankly, everybody was a little bombed, except for LaRosa, who doesn't drink." |
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9:45 PM |
- Dinner was served to the party guests at 9:45 PM.
Gargan, who was in charge of preparing the food, had trouble
starting the small grill, which had delayed the meal. |
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- Fire Captain Foster Silva lived less than 100 yards
from the Lawrence cottage. He had no trouble remembering the
party held there on Friday night. He had watched television
until 10 PM, when his dogs started barking. He went outside
to quiet the dogs and saw two cars at the Lawrence house.
"There was a lot of singing and laughing coming from the
house. I would say it was just a normal cocktail party. They
were damned loud, though", he said. |
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between: |
- One of the most disputed questions raised by the
accident was what time Senator Kennedy left the party with
Mary Jo Kopechne. - Gargan, who was cleaning up after cooking the meal,
thought it could have been as late as 11:50 PM when the
Senator left the party. Although he wasn't wearing a watch,
he said "I made a mental note - no particular reason - that
he was going to make the ferry. When he left, the assumption
was that he was going to the landing, but I don't know where
he went." - Kennedy didn't announce he was leaving or say good
night to anyone. Neither did Mary Jo. - Those close to Ted Kennedy claimed that his chauffeur (
Jack Crimmins ) "drove the Senator everywhere." Since
Crimmins was present at the party, some thought it was
peculiar that he hadn't driven Kennedy and Miss Kopechne to
the ferry. |
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( July 18, 1969 ~ 4:30 PM - 11:15 PM ) (Alcohol consumption based on statements by witnesses. Actual amounts may be higher) |
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4:30 PM |
( 3 ) - Rum and Cokes aboard the Bettawin - (witness: Stan Moore ) |
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6:00 PM |
( 2 ) - Heineken Beers at the Shiretown Inn - ( witness: Joseph Gargan ) |
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7:00 PM |
( 1 ) - Rum and Coke in hot tub at Lawrence Cottage - ( witness: Jack Crimmins ) |
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8:30 PM |
( 2 )* - Rum and Cokes at the Party
- ( witness: Ted Kennedy
) |
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