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Mayor, police commissioner apologize to two men falsely accused of killing Carol Stuart in 1989 - and to Boston's Black community

Wu and Joey Bennett hug

Wu and Bennett's nephew, Joey, hug as other Bennett familiy members and Alan Swanson look on.

Mayor Wu and Police Commissioner Michael Cox today apologized to Willie Bennett and Alan Swanson, who were investigated and even arrested for supposedly killing Carol Stuart when, in fact, it was her husband Charles who shot her after they left a childbirth class at Brigham and Women's Hospital on Oct. 23, 1989.

Stuart was never officially charged with the murder because he threw himself off the Tobin Bridge as investigators, having first upended much of the Black community in Boston, realized he was the likely suspect.

"I am so sorry for what you endured," Wu told the Swanson and Bennett families. "I am so sorry for the pain you have carried for so many years. What was done to you was unjust, unfair, racist and wrong. And this apology is way overdue."

She continued: "To every Black resident, I am sorry not only for the abuse that our city enacted but for the beliefs and bias that brought them to bear in the first place."

Wu detailed the wrongs that were done:

The mayor's office, city officials and the Boston Police Department took actions that directly harmed these families and continue to impact the larger community, re-opening a wound that has gone untended for decades. The mayor's office, city officials and the Boston Police Department took actions that directly harmed these families and continue to impact the larger community, re-opening a wound that has gone untended for decades. In response to the murder of Carol Stuart and her child, and acting on a false, racist claim, framing a Black man for her death, the city launched a systemic campaign, targeting Black men in Mission Hill and across our neighborhoods. Black fathers, Black uncles, Black brothers and Black sons, if you were a partner or a child or a friend, if you knew and loved a Black man in Boston, you feared for his life.

She thanked Swanson, Bennett and their families for "the strength and grace that you bring today and that you have for 34 years - and I thank you for you faith in our capacity to do better."

Police Commissioner Michael Cox also apologized to the two men and to the DiMaiti family. "On behalf of the Boston Police Department, as commissioner, I apologize for the hurt, pain and suffering experienced by everyone affected by the Boston Police Department for their poor investigation, their overzealous behavior and more likely their unconstitutional behavior."

Cox said that when he was being interviewed for the commissioner job he took last year - after his own experience with Boston Police racism - he was asked repeatedly how the department to repair trust with communities of color when "there's been a wrong in the past."

"First and foremost, it has to acknowledge it has to apologize for it and then don't repeat it," he said.

Joey Bennett, Willie Bennett's nephew, accepted Wu's apology, but said more remains to be done. He said family members will be at Roxbury Community College tomorrow afternoon to talk - after 34 years of being kept silent.

Former City Councilor Tito Jackson, broke down in tears as he described 30 years of missed lives for the families. "We can, we must and we should do more for these families," he said.

Leslie Harris, who represented Swanson, recounted how he had to be held in a solitary cell at the old Charles Street Jail so he wouldn't be murdered as a baby killer by other inmates. "I don't know how you survive that," he said, adding that while he is thankful to the Globe's Adrian Walker's recent series, he said it's time for the Globe, the Herald and local TV stations to apologize for what they did to the families as well.

Watch the entire press conference:

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Comments

Yeah that photo is a bit cringy

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Yeah that photo is a bit cringy

Why?

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Nah, can't possibly be something like that.

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If Michelle invites them to the holiday party!!

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“it's time for the Globe, the Herald and local TV stations to apologize for what they did to the families as well.”

I wouldn’t hold my breath. The last part of the Globe’s series on this was on their role in all this. They buried that part deep down in their website.

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"Look, remember when the Herald beat us to the racism?"

There's a lot of blame to go around. At least the Globe is writing about this, even if not as self-flagellating as it could be. The fact that the police knew, that they took the two detectives who suspected Chuck off the case when they got a bit too close to figuring it out, that there were dozens of people in Revere who all knew and no one said anything? And that the whole plan to say the black guy stole the expensive jewelry that Carol wore to her birthing class at MGH? Yeah, sure, that would have made a lot of sense if anyone had thought about it for more than a second (although once Chuck was too injured, that sort of melted away). All of that.

I'm old enough to have vague memories of when this happened and of the slang "pulling a Chuck" for offing yourself (you know, back before we had warnings for things like suicidal ideation). I used that phrasing recently with someone who has only lived here for 20 years and got a blank stare. So I had to give the cliff notes of the whole Chuck Stuart saga and then caught up on it with the Globe piece. I knew there was a lot there, but didn't realize quite how much.

Partway through I realized "oh, this is clearly spousal violence" and while they mentioned that for a couple of paragraphs they certainly didn't delve into it as much as they could/should have. Here's a guy working as a fur salesman, pretending to be upper class but really just working retail, meanwhile his wife put herself through college and law school and works for an accounting firm and is probably the breadwinner. This is still a problem with guys who can't handle being with successful women; this takes it to an extreme but apparently it causes stress for a lot of men (because, mostly, our society is fucked up). Great news since going forward men seem to continue to have lower educational attainment than women and evidently can't deal with their shit.

They pretty well glossed over Chuck schtupping a young coworker on the side (uh, allegedly) and then having his brother kill his wife and blame it on a black guy, only the brother nearly killed him too and threw everyone off the scent. Or maybe he actually tried to kill Chuck (sounds like they didn't exactly care for each other). They did a good job throwing everyone off the scent by putting Chuck in the ICU for a week. And the Christian Right didn't show up in town to protest the killing of an innocent child; at 7 months they were old enough for them not to care, I guess.

Lots of systemic racism going on too; fuckups in Revere get second chances, kids dealt a rough hand in Roxbury are instant suspects. Both of these things are still with us! And then the State Police trooper's Although it sounds like the brother wound up dying of an overdose in a homeless clinic, which is probably about the fate he deserved.

It was somewhat heartening to see that the victims family wound up being able to make some good out of the whole episode, while the sleazebag Stuarts tried to weasel out of it.

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I vividly remember the front page with a slumped Carol Stuart and huge headlines and a black neighborhood under siege. Then there was the breathless coverage of the heart tugging words of the psycopathic husband in eulogy for his wife and son - clearly written in advance and designed for maximum sound bite effect.

I don't remember them ever even asking any tough questions until the Feds stepped in. Not about how most women murdered in that year were murdered by an intimate partner. Not about the way the police broke down doors and conducted an armed invasion of the neighborhood. Not about the arrest and detention of a suspect and how he was held for months after the game was up.

Many people never got the full story, even with the murderer throwing himself off the Tobin, and the brother turning himself in, either. They stuck with the initial coverage. (note to Ari - Charles Stuart did all the shooting - the brother disposed of the gun and the items that the "carjacker" allegedly stole).

The Globe didn't cause the problem, but they certainly fanned the flames and fellated the cops.

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On Christmas Day 1989 you weren’t thinking that Chuck killed his wife. That he went to the ICU with gunshot wounds in October threw almost all of us off.

Still, apology was overdue. I don’t see the media doing the same. As for those who knew, that’s on their conscience.

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...I felt that there was something wrong with the story. The attack seemed implausible and stupid.

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Maybe YOU didn't but my older family members definitely suspected this was BS from the jump.

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I was horrified by both the crime and how it was used as an excuse for a pogrom. The whole investigation was a racist shit show from the get go.

I was also suspicious of why the husband wasn't in the list of suspects by default, at least as someone who could have hired a hitman, in the same way I found it dubious that Martha Jokely so quickly ruled out Mathew Eappen's parents as potential abusers based on their social standing.

But I knew even then that when pregnant women are murdered, they are most often murdered by the father of the fetus - just like when children are murdered or abused, parents are also immediate default suspects.

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"heart tugging words of the psycopathic husband in eulogy for his wife and son - clearly written in advance and designed for maximum sound bite effect" Yes! I was watching this, and this was when I knew he had something to do with it.

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It is about frigging time!

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I've added the video to the bottom of the story.

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I remember this story vividly and the events that took place afterword. My mother was doing my hair as the news broke. My mother said, the husband did it. My mother said there is no way a thief murdered a pregnant woman and the husband lived to tell the story. Turns out she was right! What Stuart did was despicable, given his background I wouldn't expect anything different. However, the actions of the media and law enforcement following this incident was absolutely deplorable. I wish I could say I was surprised.

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Thank you, Adam, for posting this and urging people to watch.

Mayor Wu showed what an apology should be - complete, thorough, no excuses, acknowledging how many people were wronged and how overdue this was.

I was especially touched by Bennett's nephew, who was so eloquent. For those of you sniping about the picture at the top of this article, you can see in the video that it's him reaching out to Wu, not her pushing for show. I was also touched by Mr. Swanson's attorney, who really brought home the cruelty and indignities these men suffered.

Thank you to Adrian Walker for his investigative work and persistence bringing this story to light and writing about it in depth.

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The police probably never would have solved the armed robbery he committed and spent 15 years in prison for. So at least the video store clerk who got a pistol stuck into his face by Mr Bennett was able to get some measure of justice from all this hurt, pain and suffering.

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Solving one robbery justifies terrorizing Boston's Black community, the other man wrongfully arrested, leaving a killer on the loose for so long, and denying justice to the DiMaiti family?

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We should arrest you now. Who knows what you did in your past that was illegal that we can later use to justify the time you'll spend in prison!

You seem like a decent fellow...I say we start you at 1 year and we'll see if it goes longer as we spend that year figuring out just how bad you are.

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I remember Mission Hill those days. It was like a police state, stop and frisk everyone black.

The line-up ID by Stuart of Willie Bennett was very suspect. Just a coincidence that Stuart picked out the BPD's suspect out of a line-up of six, right? No suggestion there.

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