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Kennedy cousin tied to Martha Moxley case breaks silence 50 years later as murder remains unsolved

Fifty years after the daughter of a wealthy Connecticut family was found murdered in the yard of their quaint suburban home, questions remain surrounding the involvement of a Kennedy relative who was convicted of her killing – but ultimately walked free after the guilty verdict was overturned.

Michael Skakel, cousin of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., spent 11 years in prison for the 1975 murder of Martha Moxley. However, since his arrest in 2000, Skakel has maintained his innocence – and is speaking out for the first time in a new NBC News podcast titled, “Dead Certain: The Martha Moxley Murder.”

Moxley was just 15 when she was beaten to death with a golf club on Oct. 30, 1975. In the hours leading up to her murder, Moxley was hanging out with friends on Mischief Night, known as the evening before Halloween when teenagers partake in pranks throughout their neighborhood.

According to friends, Moxley was seen flirting with Thomas Skakel, Michael’s older brother, later that night. By 9:30 p.m., the pair were seen “falling together behind the fence” near the Skakel family pool, the Hartford Courant reported.

The next day, Moxley’s battered body was discovered with her pants around her ankles, alongside a broken golf club under a tree on her family’s estate, according to The Associated Press.

An autopsy later revealed Moxley had been beaten and stabbed to death with the golf club, which was ultimately traced to the Skakel family’s home.

Initially, investigators pointed to Thomas as the primary suspect in Moxley’s murder, before turning to the Skakel children’s live-in tutor, Kenneth Littleton. However, neither man was ever charged with a crime.

Their focus eventually shifted to Michael Skakel, and 15 years later, on Jan. 19, 2000, he turned himself in to authorities after police issued a warrant for his arrest.

“This is what I call the cross-finger pointing problem, when only two people in the family are the suspects,” Wendy Murphy, a professor at New England Law Boston, told Fox News Digital. “In the whole world, we only have these two suspects and they’re family, so they stick together like glue. [If] they both take the Fifth and they agree to be each other’s built in reasonable doubt, you’ve got a problem.”

Michael Skakel was ultimately charged with Moxley’s murder and arraigned as a juvenile, since he was 15 when the killing took place. The case was later moved to regular court.

During his arraignment, Skakel, who was 39 at the time, pleaded not guilty and reportedly approached Moxley’s mother before telling her, “You’ve got the wrong guy.”

Two years later, on June 7, 2002, Skakel was convicted of murder by a panel of 12 jurors in Norwalk Superior Court. He was sentenced to 20 years to life in prison.

However, questions remained regarding Skakel’s guilt – and his ability to accurately recount a crime that was committed nearly three decades before.

“When he was convicted, it was 27 years after the murder,” John Clendening, author of “Julia’s Angels,” told Fox News Digital. “So, just imagine you being called as a witness in a trial in 2002. How much do you really remember about a certain night when you were 15, 16, or 17?”

In 2013, following multiple failed attempts to appeal his conviction, Skakel was granted a new trial after a judge ruled his attorney, Michael Sherman, did not adequately defend him in his original case.

Skakel’s murder conviction was ultimately vacated by the Connecticut Supreme Court on May 4, 2018, with prosecutors later deciding to not seek a second trial for Skakel on the murder charge.

Skakel, Sherman and NBC News did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

However, Moxley’s brother, John Moxley, has vocally denounced the court’s decision.

“Just because he’s out on the street doesn’t mean what we know isn’t right,” he said in “Murder and Justice: The Case of Martha Moxley,” a three-part documentary on his sister’s life and death.

“Where we are now is that it’s all about judges and technicalities. It’s not about who killed Martha. At this point, him being out doesn’t change anything for me. And he’ll be in prison for the rest of his life regardless of where he’s walking the streets. He will be in his own prison for the rest of his days.”

Following Skakel’s second chance at freedom, the mystery surrounding Moxley’s death remains – with listeners awaiting the chance to hear Skakel’s story in his own words.

“I think what’s going on here is [Skakel] sees an opportunity to get his side of the story out there, and I can’t blame him for that at a time when the world is revisiting the crime,” Clendening told Fox News Digital. “He’s only going to have so many opportunities to do that. So I think that’s what’s going on. I think he sees an opportunity to tell his side of the story.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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