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Jury selection looms in Skakel trial

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Posted 8:59AM on Tuesday 2nd April 2002 ( 23 years ago )
NORWALK, CONNECTICUTT - For decades, authors, attorneys, investigators and residents have speculated over who killed Martha Moxley in 1975. <br> <br> Now the only group that matters will try to resolve the intrigue. <br> <br> Attorneys were to begin questioning prospective jurors Tuesday at the start of the trial of Kennedy cousin Michael Skakel, who is accused of beating Moxley to death with a golf club in their wealthy Greenwich neighborhood. Both were 15 at the time. <br> <br> ``Our sights are higher than merely creating reasonable doubt,&#39;&#39; said defense attorney Michael Sherman. ``I would like the jury to go away feeling that Michael Skakel is truly innocent.&#39;&#39; <br> <br> Moxley&#39;s body was found on Halloween under a tree in her yard. She had been out the night before with other teens, including Skakel and his older brother, Thomas. <br> <br> Skakel, a nephew of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, was arrested in January 2000 after a one-judge grand jury investigated the murder. <br> <br> He was arraigned as a juvenile because of his age when the crime was committed, but the case was later transferred to adult court. <br> <br> If convicted, Skakel could face life in prison. Selecting a jury is expected to take a month or more, while the rest of the trial may take up to two months. <br> <br> Authorities say Skakel, now 41, confessed to the crime in the late 1970s while attending Elan School, a substance abuse facility in Poland Spring, Maine. <br> <br> Attention focused on Skakel in the 1990s after he changed his alibi when interviewed by a private investigative firm hired by his family. <br> <br> A day before jury selection was due to start in Norwalk Superior Court, Sherman appeared on several morning television shows. <br> <br> Prosecutors kept a lower profile. <br> <br> ``We&#39;re not going to discuss the case in the media. We&#39;re going to try the case in court,&#39;&#39; said Frank Garr, the state&#39;s lead investigator. <br> <br> Garr, who has investigated the case for years, said he&#39;s happy the trial has finally arrived. ``We&#39;re ready to go,&#39;&#39; Garr said. <br> <br> Sherman said his defense would involve more than poking holes in the prosecutor&#39;s case. <br> <br> ``We don&#39;t plan to sit there and be reactive,&#39;&#39; he said. <br> <br> Sherman would not provide any details of his strategy, including whether Skakel will take the stand. <br> <br> ``He&#39;s anxious but looking forward to being exonerated,&#39;&#39; Sherman said. <br> <br> John Moxley, Martha&#39;s brother, said Sherman should put Skakel on the stand if he wants to prove his innocence. <br> <br> He said his family is glad to finally have their day in court. <br> <br> ``I think it&#39;s kind of like Easter,&#39;&#39; Moxley said. ``It&#39;s a whole new beginning.&#39;&#39;

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