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( excerpts from Senatorial Privilege by Leo Damore ) |
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1:45 AM |
- Joe Gargan, Paul Markham, and Senator Kennedy arrived
at the ferry landing and parked the car facing Edgartown.
During their drive from the bridge, Gargan had been
insistent: "We have got to report this accident
immediately," he had said repeatedly. Markham agreed,
interjecting an occasional, "You're right, Joe." |
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- The Senator was silent during these discussions, but it
was clear to Gargan that he did not want to report the
accident at this time. |
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- Gargan vigorously rejected the idea. "None of us knew
Mary Jo very well," he said,"and we had no idea if she could
drive a car, or even owned a license. And besides," he
reminded Kennedy, "You told me you were
driving!" |
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2:00 AM |
- The discussion eventually reached a stalemate. Gargan
knew that a public phone was available right there at the
ferry house, because he had used it the day before. He did
not want to use it now however, because "I was expecting to
go to the police station with the Senator to report the
accident - once we got the story together." |
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2:25 AM |
- At the Shiretown Inn in Edgartown, a room clerk named
Russell Peachey was patrolling the premises when he observed
Senator Kennedy standing at the bottom of the stairway
leading up to his room on the second floor. |
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- Kennedy's encounter with Peachey at the Shiretown Inn
raises further suspicions regarding the Senator's state of
mind and motives. How could he have been in a state of shock
severe enough to prevent him from reporting the accident,
yet appear to be distressed by merely having his sleep
disturbed? And why was he fully dressed in jacket and slacks
at 2:25 in the morning? |
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- The Regatta weekend had brought many tourists to
Edgartown, and there were many people still in the streets
at 2 AM. |
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2:35 AM |
- It was "after 2:30 AM" when Gargan and Markham got back
to the cottage. The house was dark, only an outside light
had been left on. Gargan observed the party guests "lying
around in various degrees of a comatose state, trying to
sleep." |
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- Markham collapsed on the living room couch, and Gargan lay down on the floor near the front door and tried to get some sleep. The two men slept fitfully, expecting that at any moment the police would arrive to question them about the accident. |
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5:30 AM |
- By dawn, both Gargan and Markham had given up on
sleeping. Gargan was anxious to get back to Edgartown, but
the ferry didn't start running until 7:30. |
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7:00 AM |
- Mrs. Frances Stewart was the desk clerk on duty in the
lobby of the Colonial Inn, located next door to the
Shiretown Inn. She recalled that Senator Kennedy had come in
and asked her to reserve The Boston Globe and The
New York Times for him. "By the way," he said, "could I
borrow a dime? I seem to have left my wallet upstairs." She
produced a dime from the desk's cash drawer. |
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7:15 AM |
- As Kennedy returned to the Shiretown Inn, he encountered Ross Richards and Stan Moore in the alley that separated the two motels. The three men went up to the porch outside Richards' room, where they were joined by Richards' wife Marilyn. She recalled that Ted Kennedy was "all dressed up." The group spent the next 20 minutes engaged in idle conversation. The Senator made no mention of the accident. "We were all just chatting on the porch when Joey Gargan arrived," Mrs. Richards said. |
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7:20 AM |
- Gargan had left the cottage in time to catch the first ferry. Markham and Charles Tretter went with him, as well as Rosemary Keough and Susan Tannenbaum, who wanted to go back to their rooms at the Katama Shores Motor Inn. Gargan considered the girls to be "excess baggage," he said. "I didn't want to talk to them, have them along or anything. I wanted to get away from them." But he couldn't refuse. |
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7:35 AM |
- Gargan parked the car at the landing, and the group
took the ferry to Edgartown. As they hurried toward the
Shiretown Inn, Gargan made a determination "based on
instinct" that the accident had not been reported. |
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7:45 AM |
- Marilyn Richards was surprised by Gargan's appearance.
"Joey looked awful. His clothes were all wrinkled, and his
hair was sticking out." |
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- In 1988, Joe Gargan revealed to author Leo Damore what was discussed that morning in the Senator's room: - Kennedy told Gargan and Markham that after he had swum the channel, he had slipped into the Shiretown Inn unseen, changed clothes and established his presence by asking an employee patrolling the premises the time. He had gone to bed and awakened around 7 o'clock. He had betrayed no sign of having been involved in an automobile accident to a number of witnesses. It wasn't too late for the scenario he had proposed to be put into effect. It wouldn't be difficult to convince people he hadn't known about the accident until the next morning. |
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8:45 AM |
- Gargan said "This thing is worse now than it was
before. We've got to do something. We're reporting the
accident right now!" |
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9:00 AM |
- Before making a final decision to report the accident,
Kennedy first wanted to talk with David Burke, his
Administrative Assistant. The Senator asked where there was
a phone he could use that would allow him to speak without
his conversation being overheard. |
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- As the three men headed for the ferry, they passed Marilyn and Ross Richards who were returning from breakfast at a local coffee shop. "They were obviously in a big rush; and looked very preoccupied," Marilyn Richards observed. "They passed us without a greeting." |
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9:05 AM |
- Steve Ewing, the ferry's 16-year-old deckhand, recalled that the Senator greeted him with a cheerful "Hi!" as he collected 15-cent fares from the three men. Gargan recalled that Kennedy seemed "untroubled" during the short ride to Chappaquiddick. Upon arrival, Kennedy went into the ferry house to call David Burke. From what Markham overheard of the conversation, the Senator clearly "was still reluctant to report the accident." |
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