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- <text id=90TT0179>
- <link 90TT0123>
- <title>
- Jan. 22, 1990: Presumed Innocent
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 22, 1990 A Murder In Boston
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 10
- COVER STORIES
- Presumed Innocent
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Because Charles Stuart was white and affluent, he almost got
- away with murder. Now Boston must ponder why it so readily
- believed his lie
- </p>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson--Reported by Robert Ajemian/Boston
- </p>
- <p> The appalling truth is out, although a tantalizing portion
- of it vanished for ever when Charles Stuart jumped to his death
- into the icy waters of the Mystic River. A stunned city is left
- to wonder which is worse: the ease with which it embraced
- Stuart's lie that a black mugger murdered his wife for a bit
- of jewelry, or the knowledge that evil can wear an expensive
- suit, hold a respectable job, own a house in a pleasant suburb?
- </p>
- <p> By identifying the killer of his seven-months-pregnant wife
- as a raspy-voiced black man dressed in a jogging suit, Stuart
- tapped into assumptions about race and crime so powerful that
- they overwhelmed skepticism about his tale. His fabrication
- raised the curtain on a drama in which the press and police,
- prosecutors, politicians and the public played out their parts
- as though they were following the script for the television
- movie that CBS will make about the case.
- </p>
- <p> Instead of suspicion, Stuart was showered with sympathy. The
- media apotheosized the couple as starry-eyed lovers out of
- Camelot cut down by an urban savage. Some politicians attended
- Carol's funeral; others called for the death penalty. Mayor
- Raymond Flynn ordered all available detectives to work on the
- case. Hundreds of men in Mission Hill whose only connection to
- the case was that they were young and black were stopped and
- frisked.
- </p>
- <p> The massive manhunt in all the wrong places tied up police
- for weeks. No one had time to look for cracks in the smooth
- facade of the husband who tended his rhododendrons, jogged with
- his wife and shoveled snow off an elderly neighbor's steps. Few
- of the leads were followed that might have revealed a
- psychopath who had taken out large amounts of life insurance
- on his wife, possibly to finance the opening of a restaurant,
- a pathetic aspiration that shattered two families and a city's
- racial peace.
- </p>
- <p> Stuart's story was made more believable by the media. First
- came broadcasts of the tape of his frantic call from his car
- phone to the police dispatcher as he fought off unconsciousness
- to summon aid for his dying wife. Then came videotape of the
- crime scene, recorded by a television crew that just happened
- to be traveling with emergency workers on the night of Oct. 23.
- Too gruesome to be broadcast in its entirety, it showed
- 30-year-old Carol Stuart, her head blasted open, her abdomen
- bulging, being pulled from the bloodstained front seat of the
- couple's Toyota.
- </p>
- <p> Stuart's story gained even more credibility because of the
- severity of his wound. Though he apparently meant to shoot
- himself in the foot, he somehow ended up with a bullet in his
- abdomen. It was hard to imagine that anyone would inflict
- injuries so severe that he would need two operations, ten days
- in intensive care and six weeks in the hospital, that he would
- damage his bowels, gall bladder and liver merely to deflect
- suspicion from himself.
- </p>
- <p> Stuart, 30, played the role of tragic victim with the boyish
- charm of a Ted Bundy, the dazed innocence of Dr. Jeffrey
- MacDonald. His farewell letter to his wife, composed in his bed
- at Boston City Hospital and read at the funeral by his best
- friend, was a tour de force of grief. "You have brought joy and
- kindness to every life you've touched. Now you sleep away from
- me. I will never again know the feeling of your hand in mine."
- Many at the crowded funeral at St. James Church in Medford, the
- very church where he had been married four years earlier,
- sobbed out loud. Among those who attended: Governor Michael
- Dukakis and the mayor. Lying in the hospital with tubes running
- in and out of his body, Stuart asked to hold his son
- Christopher one last time. Delivered two months prematurely by
- caesarean section, the baby died after 17 days. Every
- emotionally wrenching moment made the newspapers and nightly
- news.
- </p>
- <p> Stuart was also protected by the enormity of his crime.
- Statistics show that almost a third of all women who are
- murdered are killed by their husbands or boyfriends. Yet the
- mind recoils from the notion, from the all but inhuman
- possibility, that a man would slaughter his pregnant wife and
- unborn child, whose birth he had been preparing for in
- childbirth class only minutes earlier.
- </p>
- <p> Before Stuart was out of the hospital, the police dragnet
- found a suspect: William Bennett, 39, an unemployed black who
- had spent 13 years in prison for crimes that included shooting
- a police officer. According to the police, Bennett bragged to
- his 15-year-old nephew that he had robbed the Stuarts and taken
- their jewelry. In the warrant the police obtained to search
- Bennett's home, they underlined the recollection that Bennett
- said he told Stuart, "Don't look in the rearview mirror." Those
- words were almost identical to the ones that Stuart, in a brief
- interview with the police right after the shooting, claimed the
- killer used. Already in custody on a charge of robbing a
- Brookline video store, Bennett was placed in a lineup as soon
- as Stuart was well enough to come to the station. Stuart picked
- out Bennett as a man who resembled the killer. With that, hope
- vanished that the police might look for flaws in Stuart's
- story.
- </p>
- <p> But what Stuart did not count on in his perfect crime was
- that Matthew Stuart, 23, could break down. Matthew admired his
- brother's quick rise from slinging hash in a Revere restaurant
- at little more than the minimum wage to manager of a
- fashionable fur store on Newbury Street selling expensive coats
- to Back Bay dowagers. Charles may have thought that his younger
- brother would always be as grasping and pitiless as he was.
- Matthew seems to have borne out Charles' faith for two months.
- </p>
- <p> No one yet fully understands the pact between the two
- brothers. According to some reports, they planned various
- schemes for moving faster up the ladder both yearned to climb.
- One source says that Charles had a plan to kill Carol while
- Matthew faked a burglary of their house.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever transpired, by New Year's Day Matthew reportedly
- become distraught and worn down. At Reardon's pub in Revere
- after a concert in Boston, Matthew was so depressed that a
- friend thought he was considering suicide. "I've got to do it,
- got to get it over with. I'm destroying myself," a friend
- recalled him saying. Matthew explained he wasn't talking about
- killing himself. "You don't understand. That's not what I mean.
- When it happens, you'll all know. The whole world will know."
- </p>
- <p> Before the whole world would know, Matthew warned his
- family. It is still not clear what the Stuarts knew or when
- they knew it. According to Richard Clayman, attorney for
- Matthew's brother Michael, within three days of the murder
- Matthew confided to Michael that Charles had been involved. And
- Clayman, who presented four of the Stuart siblings at a press
- conference in his Chelsea office last Thursday, said Charles
- may have approached Michael weeks before Carol Stuart's death
- in an unsuccessful effort to enlist him in the murder plot.
- </p>
- <p> On Tuesday, Jan. 2, Michael telephoned his half sister
- Shelley Yandoli from the Revere fire department. She told him
- that all of Charles' siblings, including Matthew, would meet
- at their parents' house. Like all calls to and from the fire
- station, it was recorded:
- </p>
- <p> Shelley: We're going to tell Mom and Dad.
- </p>
- <p> Michael: What are you going to tell them?
- </p>
- <p> Shelley: We're going to tell them we know that Chuck was
- involved. We're not going to say that he killed her.
- </p>
- <p> Michael: Yeah, right.
- </p>
- <p> Shelley: O.K.
- </p>
- <p> Michael: Wow.
- </p>
- <p> Sometime after that family meeting, Charles learned that
- Matthew planned to go to the police. At around 4 p.m. on Jan.
- 3, a neighbor spotted Charles pulling into the driveway and
- going into his Harvest Road house for a few minutes. A short
- time later, he arrived at the office of his family's lawyer,
- John T. Dawley, where he spent the next three hours.
- </p>
- <p> Dawley had spoken to Matthew earlier. Now he told Charles
- it would be a conflict to represent either of them. Dawley gave
- Charles a list of four defense attorneys and suggested that he
- go to a nearby phone booth and call one. Instead, between 9:30
- and 10 o'clock that night, Stuart checked into Room 231 of the
- Sheraton-Tara in Braintree, a Boston suburb. The clerk
- remembers that he had no luggage, used a credit card and asked
- for a 4:30 a.m. wake-up call.
- </p>
- <p> At 2 a.m. on Jan. 4, Stuart left his room and walked to a
- nearby all-night mini-convenience store attached to a Mobil
- station. The clerks, who pay attention to late-night customers
- out of fear they might be robbed, remember that he was dressed
- in a black pullover sweater with white trim and black slacks
- and purchased soda and a snack. "He was grinning from ear to
- ear," says Stephen Newcomb. "He was very up, very bubbly and
- very friendly, but very weird." As Stuart left the store, he
- turned, still smiling, and asked if the store was open all
- night. The attendants answered yes. "O.K.," Stuart answered. "I
- might see you in a while. I might get hungry again."
- </p>
- <p> Those may have been his last words. He never went back to
- the store. Sometime after his wake-up call, he left the hotel,
- drove ten miles to the Tobin Bridge in his new Nissan Maxima
- and jumped. When police fished him out of the water, he was
- dressed in blue jeans and a parka, suggesting that he may have
- picked up a change of clothes after leaving the convenience
- store. Stuart left a brief note on the passenger seat of his
- car that said, "I love my family...the last four months
- have been real hell...all the allegations have taken all my
- strength." Later, police searching his hotel room found an
- ashtray filled with change, the uncalled list of defense
- attorneys and one of the colostomy bags Stuart was forced to
- wear after his surgery.
- </p>
- <p> Leaping from the bridge was the end for Charles Stuart, but
- it was just the beginning of the soul searching,
- self-recriminations and finger pointing by the police and the
- press. Outraged blacks, many of whom had swallowed Stuart's
- story as readily as had their white counterparts, let loose a
- torrent of protest at police mishandling of the case. They were
- also outraged by the saturation coverage the crime had
- received, which to them seemed to indict the whole black
- community.
- </p>
- <p> Mayor Flynn visited Bennett's mother to apologize for the
- suspicions that had been focused on her son. Flynn devoted half
- of his 22-minute State of the City address last week to what
- he called "a giant fraud on this city." Said he: "It turned out
- that we were all victims of a sinister hoax...especially
- the residents of the good Mission Hill community."
- </p>
- <p> Matthew Stuart may be the only hope of finding out what
- actually happened that night. Even after his meeting with
- police, his exact role is far from clear. He has not been
- arrested, perhaps because of a Massachusetts statute that
- immunizes blood relatives from prosecution as accessories after--though not before--the fact.
- </p>
- <p> Matthew has reportedly told police he expected to receive
- $10,000 for helping his brother in a vague insurance scam.
- After a dry run the night before the murder, Matthew showed up
- at the designated rendezvous point. He took Carol Stuart's
- Gucci bag from Charles. It contained her wallet, makeup and
- engagement ring as well as the gun. Matthew then went to the
- home of his best friend, John McMahon, who traveled with him
- to a railroad bridge in Revere. After removing Carol's
- engagement ring from the purse, Matthew flung the bag into the
- river. Then McMahon, at Matthew's bidding, heaved the pistol 25
- ft. away from the bridge into the muddy Pines River. That part
- of Matthew's story proved true. Police divers recovered the
- bag at the location Matthew, and then McMahon, described. Six
- days later, divers found a nickel-plated, snub-nosed .38
- revolver whose registration number matched that of a pistol
- missing from the safe at Kakas & Sons furriers, where Charles
- worked.
- </p>
- <p> But some of Matthew's story raised a new set of unanswered
- questions. How could Charles, suffering from such a severe
- wound, pass a heavy bag to Matthew? How could Matthew, as he
- claimed, not have seen his sister-in-law's body slumped in the
- front seat of the car? Even his motive for going to the police
- seemed in doubt. Matthew's attorney asserted that he came
- forward out of concern that an innocent man might be prosecuted
- for Carol's murder. But on Friday the Boston Herald reported
- that he broke only after his girlfriend informed her parents
- about his involvement and they in turn took her story to an
- attorney on the day before Christmas.
- </p>
- <p> The Stuart family seemed an unlikely source for a monster
- like Charles to spring from. Charles and his siblings grew up
- in Revere, a blue-collar, predominantly white suburb north of
- Boston. Charles Sr., an easy, gregarious man, tended bar at a
- tavern called the Dublin and often served as toastmaster at
- Knights of Columbus banquets. He had two daughters by his first
- wife. Charles Jr. was the first of four sons of a second
- marriage. Always attractive and popular, Charles was never much
- of a student. He went to Immaculate Conception school, and then
- Northeastern Metropolitan Regional Vocational in nearby
- Wakefield, a school for boys who weren't college material. He
- played basketball and baseball, was a member of the gourmet
- club. A picture in his yearbook shows him standing under a
- white chef's hat. He graduated in 1977 and soon got a job as
- a cook, first at Reardon's, a local pub owned by a cousin, and
- then at the Driftwood restaurant, where he met Carol DiMaiti,
- a dark-haired, lively waitress and the only daughter of Giusto
- DiMaiti, who tended bar there.
- </p>
- <p> While the Driftwood was a rung on Charles' career ladder,
- it was just a summer job for Carol, who had been an outstanding
- student at Medford high school and a member of the National
- Honor Society. An honors graduate of Boston College, she was
- working at the Driftwood to help pay her way through Boston's
- Suffolk Law School.
- </p>
- <p> A difference in aspirations and temperament did not keep
- them from falling in love. Carol was cheerful and outgoing,
- while the always smiling, ever gregarious Charles kept friends
- guessing about what he was really thinking. On Oct. 13, 1985,
- they were married.
- </p>
- <p> By then, Charles had become general manager of Kakas furs.
- He had lied on his application, saying he had won an athletic
- scholarship to Brown University (which awards none), but the
- managers were so impressed by Stuart's composure and charm that
- they would have hired him anyway. Stuart seemed to enjoy his
- job, or at least the things his eventual $100,000-a-year salary
- could buy. The Stuarts purchased a slate-blue clapboard house
- in suburban Reading. In the back was a heated pool that the
- Stuart brothers, a world away in dingy Revere, loved to use.
- Several times Carol invited co-workers from Cahners Publishing,
- where she worked as a lawyer, for weekend pool parties. To
- neighbors, the Stuarts were a devoted couple, jogging together
- around a nearby lake, kissing each other at the door as they
- went off to work each morning. Colleagues recalled that Carol
- always ended her frequent phone calls to her husband by saying
- she loved him. Carol's brother Carl called the marriage the
- "perfect relationship."
- </p>
- <p> Just ten days before the shooting the couple traveled to an
- inn in Connecticut to celebrate their fourth wedding
- anniversary. If there had been any trouble in the marriage,
- says a friend, "she would not have kept it to herself." Adds
- another: "She was the kind of person who would tell you what
- she had for breakfast--and how it tasted." In hundreds of
- interviews with people who knew the Stuarts, only one seemingly
- minor complaint has emerged. Carol once confided to Maureen
- Vadjic, who sometimes jogged with her on Saturday mornings,
- that she objected to Charles' staying out late on Friday nights.
- Says Vadjic: "She'd tell me, `He came home late last night.
- I yelled at him, why do you go out? I'm pregnant. Don't you
- have any concern for me?'"
- </p>
- <p> There is some evidence that Charles did not want to have a
- baby. The Suffolk County grand jury last Friday heard testimony
- from a truck driver from Lowell who was a classmate of Charles'
- at Northeastern Vocational. According to the witness, Charles
- asked him to help do away with his wife. Interviewed earlier
- by a Boston television station, the classmate said that Charles
- considered Carol's pregnancy a hindrance to his plans to open
- a restaurant and wanted her to have an abortion. "He had plans
- to go into business for himself," he said. "He didn't want to
- spend his life busting his ass for somebody else."
- </p>
- <p> The portrait of the marriage is as incomplete as the picture
- that has so far been painted of Charles' siblings. One of
- Charles' brothers was involved in a scheme that led to Carol's
- murder; another, who appears to have known three days after the
- shooting that Charles was the killer, never told the police.
- They all grieved publicly over Carol and the baby. Matthew even
- helped carry Carol's coffin to her grave. The news of Charles'
- suicide initally elicited sorrow from his in-laws, who had been
- expecting him for dinner that very night. They thought he did
- it out of grief. Mrs. DiMaiti had planned to cook chicken
- because it would be easier on Charles' mangled intestines.
- </p>
- <p> A psychopath requires no motive for his horrendous deeds,
- but that has not stopped the search for one. Looking around for
- some love interest, investigators stumbled upon Deborah Allen,
- 23, who worked with Stuart for two summers at the fur shop.
- After Stuart's suicide, police discovered that she had used
- Charles' credit card to telephone him almost daily at the
- hospital. They also learned that several weeks before he killed
- his wife, Stuart and Allen visited her former prep school.
- </p>
- <p> The day before Allen's Jan. 3 birthday, Stuart bought a
- $250, 14-karat gold brooch at a jewelry store in Peabody. He
- made the purchase about the same time his family was meeting
- to discuss how to handle Matthew's confession. Allen says she
- never received the brooch and that the calls were made only
- after a mutual friend said Charles complained that she had
- never contacted him. She used the credit card so the calls
- would not show up on her parents' telephone bill, because they
- had warned her not to get involved. She, in fact, has a steady
- boyfriend who goes to Brown (the school Stuart faked on his
- resume). She was more important to Charles than Charles was to
- her, perhaps because she fit into Stuart's deluded vision of
- himself as a fashionable restaurateur--he the proprietor and
- chef, she the Waspish blond out front.
- </p>
- <p> In hindsight, all the holes in Stuart's story look painfully
- obvious. Why did Stuart, who had been to Brigham and Women's
- Hospital several times before, drive to Mission Hill instead
- of toward his house after the childbirth class? Why did the
- robber not shoot him first rather than his less threatening
- wife? After the assailant jumped out of the car, why didn't
- Charles head back toward the hospital instead of driving around
- aimlessly? During the 13 minutes he was on the phone with the
- dispatcher, he could not identify any street signs or landmarks
- in a city where he had lived and worked all his life. During
- the conversation with the dispatcher, he never tried to comfort
- his wife, never called her name. In the ambulance to the
- hospital, he only asked about the seriousness of his own wound,
- and never about his wife's condition.
- </p>
- <p> Days after Stuart left the hospital, he picked up an
- insurance check for $82,000. He immediately purchased a $22,000
- Nissan Maxima, trading in the bloodied Toyota and paying with
- a $10,000 cashier's check. Besides the brooch, he purchased a
- $1,000 pair of diamond earrings at the Ostalkiewicz Diamond
- Importers. There may have been more insurance money to come,
- from additional policies on her life.
- </p>
- <p> Psychoanalyst Otto Kernberg writes of the psychopath who can
- perfectly mimic a human personality without having one: "They
- obtain very little enjoyment from life other than from the
- tributes they receive from others or from their own grandiose
- fantasies, and they feel restless and bored when external
- glitter wears off and no new sources feed their self-regard."
- Stuart had tired of selling minks and perhaps of his wife, who
- was about to realize her own dreams of a family, dreams he did
- not share. As stupefying as it seems, Stuart apparently carried
- out his monstrous deed only to remake himself into a glamorous
- restaurateur. Against such vanity and deceit, as Carol Stuart--and Boston--found, there is no protection.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-