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Conviction: Solving the Moxley Murder: A Reporter and Detective's Twenty-Year Search for Justice
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Conviction: Solving the Moxley Murder: A Reporter and Detective's Twenty-Year Search for Justice
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Conviction: Solving the Moxley Murder: A Reporter and Detective's Twenty-Year Search for Justice
Ebook401 pages6 hours

Conviction: Solving the Moxley Murder: A Reporter and Detective's Twenty-Year Search for Justice

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On October 30, 1975, fifteen-year-old Martha Moxley headed home from Halloween Eve antics with her Greenwich, Connecticut, neighbors Tommy and Michael Skakel. She never made it. Her brutal murder with a golf club in her own backyard made national headlines. But for years no one was arrested, despite troubling clues pointing to the Skakels, a rich and powerful family related to the Kennedys. After the police department's first unsuccessful attempts to catch the killer, the case lay dormant, and the culprit remained free.

Enter Leonard Levitt. In 1982, the Stamford Advocate and Greenwich Time newspapers asked investigative reporter Levitt to look into the murder and the undying rumors of a cover-up. Levitt soon uncovered groundbreaking information about how the police had bungled the investigation, and he learned that Tommy and Michael had lied about their activities on the night of the murder. But Levitt's articles about his findings -- and the haunting questions they raised -- almost never saw the light of day. For years, Levitt's superiors mysteriously refused to publish the stories. Convinced that the Moxley family deserved the peace and closure they had so long been denied, Levitt fought desperately to keep his discoveries alive. Finally, after Levitt's first article appeared, the case was reopened.

Enter Frank Garr. As the newly appointed investigator on the Moxley case, the seasoned Greenwich detective doggedly pursued unexplored leads and became increasingly convinced that for over a decade, his colleagues had been pursuing the wrong suspects. At first mistrustful of one another, as reporters and detectives often are, Levitt and Garr became friends, encouraging each other in their quest for the truth as the obstacles against them piled up.

In 2002, more than twenty-five years after Moxley's death, a shocked world watched as Michael Skakel was convicted of the murder, thanks largely to the evidence Garr alone had marshaled against him. Now, for the first time, Leonard Levitt tells the amazing true story of Garr's fight to solve the case and of how their friendship with each other, and with Martha Moxley's mother, Dorthy, sustained them over the years. A riveting, suspenseful drama that unfolds like a mystery novel, this incredible memoir also reveals how a police officer and a reporter refused to give up, and how they helped justice to prevail, against all odds.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateFeb 26, 2013
ISBN9780062039002
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Conviction: Solving the Moxley Murder: A Reporter and Detective's Twenty-Year Search for Justice
Author

Leonard Levitt

Leonard Levitt wrote the column, One Police Plaza for Newsday about the New York City police department from 1995 to 2005. He has also worked as a reporter for the Associated Press and The Detroit News, as a correspondent for Time magazine, and as the investigations editor of the New York Post. His work has appeared in Harper's magazine, Esquire, and the New York Times Magazine. He received an Edgar Award for his nonfiction work Conviction. A graduate of Dartmouth College and the Columbia School of Journalism, Levitt served two years in the Peace Corps in Tanzania, East Africa and has been the recipient of a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation for the Humanities. He lives in Stamford, Connecticut.

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  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    After reading RFK jr.'s latest book, this reading this book is illuminating. Here is the other side of what a bad investigation looks like. What tunnel vision looks like when you are in the tunnel. Ignoring exculpatory information, misunderstanding events, and pressuring people to believe and testify to things that fit a narrative while convincing ones self it is all in the interest of "justice".
    Remarkably little introspection from an old journo at Newsweek though I must say. If it is the journalist's job to hold the powers that be's feet to the fire, levett failed gloriously. Instead he became a tool for police and prosecutors believing everything they shoveled his way without skepticism.