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- <text id=91TT0796>
- <title>
- Apr. 15, 1991: The Kennedy Boys' Night Out
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 15, 1991 Saddam's Latest Victims
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 38
- The Kennedy Boys' Night Out
- </hdr><body>
- <p>An evening of carousing, an accusation of rape and talk of a
- botched investigation roil the wealthy's favorite playground
- </p>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson--Reported by Cathy Booth/Palm Beach
- </p>
- <p> For Palm Beach, where the average house costs nearly $1
- million and mutts have been known to snack on biscuits shaped
- like Bentley sedans, this had been a quiet season. The Trumps
- have split but are now too poor by local standards to make much
- of a splash. There had been no divorce to equal that of Peter
- and Roxanne Pulitzer, which featured cocaine, a trumpet and a
- sexual threesome.
- </p>
- <p> Then the Kennedy clan arrived for what Senator Teddy
- called a "traditional Easter weekend" at the white stucco
- oceanfront mansion his father bought from Rodman Wanamaker in
- 1933. This year the weekend included a Good Friday night outing
- for the Senator, his son Patrick and nephew William Kennedy
- Smith at Au Bar, the club of the moment, where a mixture of old
- money, European quasi-royalty, young model-waitresses and the
- occasional male in a leather miniskirt boogie to loud music. Ted
- Kennedy sipped his usual, Chivas Scotch, until closing time at
- 3:30 a.m., when the three men returned to the Kennedy compound.
- Two women they had met at the bar joined them.
- </p>
- <p> The next thing anyone knows for sure is that one of those
- women, a 29-year-old single mother, went to the police Saturday
- afternoon and said she had been raped in the predawn hours at
- the estate. She was taken to nearby Humana Hospital and treated
- for injuries that may have included a broken rib.
- </p>
- <p> The other thing known for sure is that the complaint
- turned Palm Beach into a media circus. In the greatest
- assemblage of journalists since Operation Desert Storm,
- reporters from as far away as Norway descended on the enclave,
- foraging for the most insignificant detail. One tabloid bid six
- figures for the alleged victim's story, and another handed his
- business card to a hospital employee with a note on the back
- promising "$500 for the name" of the woman who was treated.
- </p>
- <p> The only inside account of the evening came from the other
- woman who went home with the Kennedys that night: Michele
- Cassone, a waitress. In one version, she says she, Patrick and
- the Senator sat and talked on the deck outside for a while.
- Later in the morning when she was alone with Patrick, the
- Senator walked into the room. "He was dressed in just an Oxford
- shirt as far as I could tell," Cassone recalls. "I couldn't see
- if he had shorts or what underneath, and I got nervous and
- decided to leave." Cassone says the investigator hired by the
- Kennedys seemed relieved by her recollection, however
- unflattering, since it distanced Kennedy from the alleged rape.
- </p>
- <p> Cassone's statement comes as no surprise to those who have
- watched Edward Kennedy, a powerful and conscientious Senator,
- become ever more reckless about drinking and chasing women half
- his age. A long magazine profile last year documented several
- such occasions in uncontradicted detail. Rather than set an
- example for the third generation, the head of the family often
- looks to its members for companionship in his escapades.
- </p>
- <p> On Friday the cops finally broke their silence, naming
- William Smith as a suspect. The son of Jean Kennedy and the late
- Stephen Smith, William is described as one of the least spoiled
- and least arrogant of the young Kennedys. Instead of entering
- a profession where family connections make a difference, he
- went to Georgetown University Medical School after graduating
- from Duke. He helped his mother in her arts program for the
- handicapped, and gave a eulogy so moving at his father's funeral
- earlier this year that he outshone Arthur Schlesinger Jr.
- </p>
- <p> But after the story surfaced, Smith virtually disappeared,
- failing to show up for the second half of his medical-board exam
- on Wednesday. However, he did issue a statement through a
- family holding company, declaring, "Any suggestion that I was
- involved in any offense is erroneous." When the Senator was
- stopped by reporters outside a hearing in Boston on Wednesday,
- he said he was "obviously distressed" but to comment further
- would "not be appropriate." Patrick Kennedy claimed he did not
- learn of the woman's accusation until he read about it in the
- Florida papers as he was flying home Monday, but that was a day
- before the first news accounts were published. For days,
- although they pledged cooperation, no Kennedy stepped forward
- to provide the authorities with any information.
- </p>
- <p> So far, police handling of the case brings to mind the
- botched investigation of the death of Mary Jo Kopechne at
- Chappaquiddick, when the Senator did not notify the police until
- 10 hours later that he had driven off the bridge. The first
- reports about the case were inaccurate, yet the police did not
- provide an accurate one. By the end of the week, police still
- had not questioned any of the Kennedys. Nor did they interrogate
- bartenders, parking-lot attendants or other potential witnesses
- until a week after the alleged crime. They delayed naming a
- suspect until Friday because, they said, they could not get a
- picture of Smith to show the victim for a definite
- identification--even though his visage had been splashed
- across newspaper front pages for days.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-