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October 16, 2019

Ted Kennedy: Reputation Drowns With Victim

Winner of the Fall 2019 StMU History Media Award for

Best Article in the Category of “United States History”

Many people associate the powerful Kennedy name with a famous presidency and an influential senatorial reign; however, not many people know that there is speculation of murder attached to their family history. Senator Edward (Ted) Kennedy, the brother of John F. Kennedy (JFK) and Robert Kennedy (RFK), was on the path to success, following in his brothers’ footsteps as he gained support to run for president in the early 1970s, but one mysterious night changed everything.1 On July 18, 1969, Ted Kennedy’s actions resulted in the death of Mary Jo Kopechne.2

Photo of Robert Kennedy (left), Ted Kennedy (middle), and John F. Kennedy (right) taken by Cecil Stoughton December 1963 | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Earlier that day, Ted Kennedy attended a private party on Chappaquiddick Island, Mass. It was attended by five men who had worked closely with the Kennedy family, along with six young, single women, commonly referred to as “The Boiler Room Girls.”3 These ladies were quite loyal to Robert Kennedy, especially Miss Mary Jo Kopechne, his talented campaign specialist who helped construct his anti-Vietnam War speech and other important announcements. She was specifically invited to this party by Ted Kennedy to witness the 46th-annual Edgartown Yacht Club Regatta as well as to participate in the festivities of the party.4

Between 11:15 PM and 12:45 AM (times greatly disputed during the subsequent trial), Ted graciously offered to drive Mary Jo to the ferry on Chappaquiddick Island, which was the only method of transportation back to their respective hotels in Edgartown. The timing of their departure is widely disputed, because it would answer important questions that were left unsolved in the case. Conspiracy theorists speculate that Ted Kennedy originally desired to take Mary Jo to an isolated beach to have an undisturbed affair, while others believe Ted’s claim that he left the party at 11:15 PM simply to return Kopechne to her hotel. According to Deputy Sheriff Look, the sheriff on duty that night who witnessed Ted Kennedy’s car turn towards Dike Bridge, the time was 12:45 AM, an hour and a half later than what Ted Kennedy later claimed in court. After he briefly crossed paths with the sheriff, Ted made a sharp, reckless, supposedly accidental turn onto Dike Road and his black Oldsmobile flew off Dike Bridge into Poucha Pond, flipped upside down, and submerged completely underwater.5

Water immediately rushed into the car, and according to Ted, Mary Jo struggled desperately next to him as they both fought to fill their lungs with air. Before losing consciousness, Ted managed to escape the car, “but [he had] no recollection of how [he] got out.”6 Mary Jo was not so lucky. She remained trapped in the submerged car while Ted swam to the water’s surface gasping for breath. Despite the strong water current, he claimed to have “repeatedly dove down to the car in an attempt to see if the passenger was still in [it].”7 Ted insisted his efforts to save Mary Jo only intensified his exhausted state. Kennedy then proceeded to make the fifteen-minute trek back to the cottage where the party was still in progress; none of the women there knew that they would never again see their good friend, Mary Jo Kopechne, alive.

When he arrived at the cottage, Ted quickly found his trusted cousin, Joseph Garghan, and friend, Paul Markham, before he returned to Poucha Pond to find Mary Jo. Garghan and Markham dove into the water looking for Mary Jo’s body, but once again, the strong current was unyielding, and the men couldn’t get close enough to locate her, much less dislodge her from the car. Ted Kennedy later stated that, before they drove Ted to the ferry crossing (that was no longer operating at that time of the night), he instructed them not to mention the incident to Mary Jo’s friends because it would simply alarm them. Without argument, they drove him to the crossing immediately. According to Ted’s testimony, he impulsively jumped into the water when he arrived and swam across the channel to Edgartown.8

Image of the map of Chappaquiddick Island December 26, 2016 | Courtesy of Wikipedia

Rather than call the police to report an accident and the possibility of a drowned victim, Ted Kennedy weakly staggered to his hotel room where he immediately collapsed on the bed. Later on, he woke up, walked outside his room, asked for the time, and went back into the room upon learning that it was 2:30 AM. He was awake and lucid, but he still didn’t call to inform the police. Ted later explained his conduct as being “irrational and indefensible and inexcusable and inexplicable… but it was a mental state of mind.”9 Senator Kennedy and/or his entourage made seventeen different calls that night, but not one of those calls were to the police, the only group of people who could have made an effective effort in saving Mary Jo Kopechne from death. According to the medical experts working on the case, it was likely that Kopechne had been alive in the car for a few hours after having been submerged underwater. Five calls from Chappaquiddick Island were billed to Senator Kennedy’s credit card, and twelve more were charged when he arrived at his hotel, the Shiretown Inn. Many wonder why none of these calls were used to save Mary Jo’s life.

The following morning around 8:00 AM, two young fishermen spotted a submerged car– Ted Kennedy’s car– in the water and immediately went to the closest house and called the authorities for help. Edgartown Police Chief Arena arrived thirty minutes later. The authorities knew of the accident before Senator Ted Kennedy ever reported it.

Dike Bridge, Chappaquiddick Island, Edgartown, Massachusetts June 2008 | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Meanwhile, Senator Kennedy didn’t give any indication that he had deliberately left the scene of an accident without reporting it to the authorities; he requested multiple newspapers from the front desk at the Shiretown Inn while dressed in his casual boating clothes before he ran into an acquaintance, who he had a leisurely fifteen minute chat with regarding their mutual love for boating.10 By this point, roughly eight hours had passed since Ted Kennedy left Mary Jo to drown in the submerged car in Poucha Pond under Dike Bridge.

When Police Chief Arena arrived at the scene, he swam out to the car and attempted to dive down into the water, but the rushing current was so intense his attempts were ultimately unsuccessful. Instead, he instructed his assistant to radio in the car’s license plate to identify the car’s owner.11 Deputy Sheriff Look recognized the car as the same one he had seen at 12:45 AM, the one that drove towards Dike Bridge. Chief Arena called John N. Farrar, an expert diver that worked for the fire department in the local area, who showed up minutes later. He hastily dove into the water despite the strong current and discovered Mary Jo in the back seat of the car; “her hands were still grasping the edge of the back seat– she tried to take advantage of the last bit of air.”12 Farrar believed that she died of suffocation in the car in her own air pocket (although experts claim she simply drowned), but she was alive for at least three or four hours.

Chief Arena contacted the medical examiner, who evaluated Mary Jo’s body. No more than ten minutes passed before he concluded that an autopsy wasn’t necessary for this particular case since there were no signs of foul play. Many people were appalled. An autopsy would have helped accurately determine how and when Mary Jo died. Therefore, the lack of the autopsy left many important questions unanswered.

Ted Kennedy arrived at Chappaquiddick Island around 9:00 AM that morning, completely unaware that the police knew his submerged car trapped a dead woman inside. He eventually went to the police station, but many skeptics believe his decision to report the accident was influenced by the sight of a hearse on the island. While at the station, Ted worked diligently with the police chief and Paul Markham to construct an outline of the previous night’s events. The part of his confession copy that angered many people was the fact that he claimed to have contacted the police upon “fully realiz[ing] what had happened” that morning; however, that would mean the sight of the hearse was what snapped him out of his dazed mental state, and some believe that he selfishly decided to admit his folly only when he realized there was no escaping the reality of his misdeed.13 Soon after he met with the police chief, Kennedy hastily left Chappaquiddick Island and stayed with his family stronghold in Hyannis Port.

After he attended Mary Jo Kopechne’s funeral, Senator Ted Kennedy consequently went to court, where he arrived with a neck brace on, much to the irritation of the citizens that kept with the media. The press documented Ted Kennedy as he flew kites and sailed after the dangerous Chappaquiddick accident. Critics believed that the Senator had a “selectively painful neck” and that he tried to evoke undeserved sympathy from the public.14

Finally, the trial began, and Ted Kennedy was charged with leaving the scene of an accident without notifying the authorities. As it progressed, certain measures were taken to ensure that Kennedy received a “fair” hearing, such as what was utilized as evidence, what information the jury was subjected to, and what the public was told. It is debated whether he and his image received unjustifiable protection because of his status and powerful family name. Kennedy couldn’t be charged with involuntary manslaughter, which the prosecution was advocating for, because all he had done was leave the scene of an accident and failed to report it to the authorities. He hadn’t committed any other crime besides that. Despite the fact that there was alcohol at the party that night, there was no proof that Ted Kennedy was intoxicated at the time of the accident, therefore, he didn’t break any other laws. Judge Bromiski’s opinion stated that true justice was dependent upon the victim’s neglected autopsy; since the medical examiner didn’t conduct the autopsy, it was nearly impossible to undoubtedly confirm what exactly occurred that night.15 

Ultimately, Senator Ted Kennedy pleaded guilty to having left the scene of an accident without notifying the authorities, and he received a two-month suspended jail sentence.16 The most ambiguous factor of this case is Senator Ted Kennedy’s silence and disregard. He refused to notify the authorities that Mary Jo Kopechne was still trapped in his submerged car for eight to ten hours after the accident took place. Many believed Kennedy was so engrossed in how the scandal would taint his family name and negatively affect his future presidential campaign, that he didn’t care about Mary Jo’s death at all. There are some who even believe that he purposefully allowed her to die in order to prevent a scandal after he was suspiciously seen with a young woman (Mary Jo) who wasn’t his wife by the local sheriff on the side of the road.

The clear answer to why Ted Kennedy didn’t notify authorities right after the accident remains inconclusive. The public was enraged that Kopechne was most likely alive and terrified for three to four hours inside the submerged Oldsmobile and her life may have been saved if Kennedy had reported the accident immediately. While he did not receive an official extensive punishment, Senator Ted Kennedy’s previously spotless reputation suffered from this famous trial, and he lost the presidency bid to Jimmy Carter in 1980. No matter what the true reasons were behind Kennedy’s unprecedented actions that night, due to the Chappaquiddick incident, he was never able to follow in his brother’s footsteps and obtain the presidency he so badly wanted.

  1. Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 2019, s.v. “Ted Kennedy.”
  2.  Tim Kroenert, “Ted Kennedy’s Darkest Hour,” Eureka Street 28, no. 10 (2018): 6, 7.
  3. Jerry Oppenheimer, RFK JR. (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2015), 89.
  4. Jerry Oppenheimer, RFK JR. (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2015), 88.
  5. Richard L. Tedrow and Thomas L. Tedrow, Death at Chappaquiddick (Illinois: Caroline House Publishers, Inc., 1976), 14.
  6. Richard L. Tedrow and Thomas L. Tedrow, Death at Chappaquiddick (Illinois: Caroline House Publishers, Inc., 1976), 29.
  7. Richard L. Tedrow and Thomas L. Tedrow, Death at Chappaquiddick (Illinois: Caroline House Publishers, Inc., 1976), 32.
  8.  Richard L. Tedrow and Thomas L. Tedrow, Death at Chappaquiddick (Illinois: Caroline House Publishers, Inc., 1976), 34.
  9. Richard L. Tedrow and Thomas L. Tedrow, Death at Chappaquiddick (Illinois: Caroline House Publishers, Inc., 1976), 45.
  10. Richard L. Tedrow and Thomas L. Tedrow, Death at Chappaquiddick (Illinois: Caroline House Publishers, Inc., 1976), 50.
  11. Jerry Oppenheimer, RFK JR. (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2015), 89.
  12. Richard L. Tedrow and Thomas L. Tedrow, Death at Chappaquiddick (Illinois: Caroline House Publishers, Inc., 1976), 53.
  13. Richard L. Tedrow and Thomas L. Tedrow, Death at Chappaquiddick (Illinois: Caroline House Publishers, Inc., 1976), 56.
  14. Richard L. Tedrow and Thomas L. Tedrow, Death at Chappaquiddick (Illinois: Caroline House Publishers, Inc., 1976), 63.
  15. Richard L. Tedrow and Thomas L. Tedrow, Death at Chappaquiddick (Illinois: Caroline House Publishers, Inc., 1976), 85.
  16.  Tim Kroenert, “Ted Kennedy’s Darkest Hour,” Eureka Street 28, no. 10 (2018): 6, 7.

Tags from the story

Chappaquiddick

Mary Jo Kopechne

Senator Edward Kennedy

Charli Delmonico

My name is Charli Delmonico, and I am studying Business Management at St. Mary’s University. I compete for the university’s tennis team, and I love being part of a community that encourages me to reach my full potential as a scholar and a person. In my free time, I love to read, play ping-pong, and watch movies with my friends and family.

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