sometime
around 11:00 pm and 12:00 am. "I have a definite
feeling in my mind," he told our investigator, "that
this murder was committed after 10:30 at night." This
is a bold assertion to make, and certainly one which
must come informed by more than just a blind guess.
Littleton was asked, once again, to substantiate his
suspicion. Why do you say that? he was asked.
"Because," he responded cryptically.
When pressed a little farther, Ken revealed some of
his rationale. Oddly, while apparently just
theorizing off the cuff, Littleton came up with a
number of general details which we now have good
reason to believe are factual. Tommy, Littleton
pointed out, appeared perfectly normal while watching
the movie--suggesting he didn't commit a murder by
that point. But after the movie, Tommy went upstairs
around 10:00 to do his "fictitious report." Littleton
says he could just as easily have gone out to meet
with Martha Moxley. Martha either could have been
waiting for him or he could have gone up to her house
and, as Littleton said to our investigator, "thrown a
pebble at her window or something like that."
Right there, whether wittingly or unwittingly,
Littleton touched upon a crucial detail only very few
people involved in this investigation are aware of.
Michael has confessed to going outside to Martha's
window, between 11:40 pm and 12:30 am, and throwing
pebbles from a tree to get her attention. When,
according to Michael, she did not come to her window,
he masturbated himself to orgasm in the tree. We also
have testimony from other, more trustworthy,
sources--much of it as nebulous but determined as
Littleton's--suggesting Michael never went to the
Terrien's (namely, from John Skakel, who was
in the car and at the residence, and Andrea
Shakespeare). We have also, as previously mentioned
in this report, found indication that Martha Moxley
could have gone home for a period of time on the
night of October 30, 1975, before she was
murdered.
How Littleton divined the inspiration for such
educated guesses about what happened to Martha Moxley
is of extreme interest to this investigation. Can his
intuition be merely coincidence?
To our investigator in Boston, the fact that
Littleton mentioned pebbles being thrown at Martha's
window in conjunction with his assertion that the
murder occurred after 10:30 and that Michael was
somehow involved, suggested that perhaps he actually
saw Michael outside of Martha's house between 11:40
pm and 12:30 pm [am]. As disclosed earlier in this
report, Michael has testified, with regards to his
late-night excursion, that after climbing down from
the tree he stopped near a street light on Walsh
Lane. Michael stated that he felt "someone's
presence" in the area where Martha's body was
eventually discovered. He yelled "into the darkness"
and threw something at the trees. Still fearing what
was there, he ran back to his house. Was it Littleton
in the darkness? Is this why he knows Michael was out
there throwing pebbles at Martha's window, but cannot
disclose as much due to self-incrimination?
Careful not [^] come across in an accusatory
or otherwise aggressive manner, our investigator
broached the subject with Littleton again in a
follow-up interview. Taking a provocative questioning
liberty, he bluffed and told Littleton that Michael
claims he actually saw him out
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