Alaina Kelley
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Somebody stumbled upon it.
No one the police interviewed said that they saw Tommy with the golf club.
And I'm just, just from like a purely like, sure, perspective, you know what I mean?
Like, sure, somebody, is it likely?
You know, like it's just, but you have to think of these things.
I know, but I don't know.
Maybe somebody was wearing gloves.
Now, in fact, even with all the circumstantial evidence pointing towards the Skakel house, investigators still had the wrong person as their prime suspect in the case.
Of course, the only people who knew that were contractually bound to secrecy.
Because remember, they were going after Tommy.
But Furman may have had the one piece of evidence that would break the case wide open and finally shed light on the identity of Martha's killer.
In the spring of 1998, Furman's book, Murder in Greenwich, Who Killed Martha Moxley, was published.
much to the consternation and very much to the ire of the investigators at the Greenwich Police Department and in the state's attorney's office.
In the book, Furman laid out the facts as they were known, paying particular attention to the myriad of mistakes made by investigators, and asserts the widely accepted theory that a wealthy and powerful family had stymied the investigation from the start.
I like that word, stymied.