Episode Transcript
You're familiar with Georgetown, right, that posh neighborhood in Washington.
Speaker 2D C.
Speaker 1With stately homes and cobblestone streets.
Well, just steps away from all of that, there's a dirt road, a towpath where you might find locals jogging.
Over fifty years ago, it was the place where two women's stories collided.
It started with a murder October twelfth, nineteen sixty four.
Speaker 3She had been shot twice in the head and in the back, behind the heart.
Speaker 1Mary Pinchot Meyer was found dead on that very same towpath.
She was an artist, a woman on the verge of coming into her own.
Speaker 4She had everything at her disposal of the elite of the elite, and she rejected it to become an artist in a garage.
Speaker 1And then her life was cut short.
But what happened now, that's why we're here.
Just forty five minutes after Mary's death, her killer had been arrested, or so the police claimed.
But if a black man is in the vicinity of a crime against a white woman, he is considered guilty before you know, even formally charged.
Only one woman, Dovey Johnson Rowntree, would defend him.
Speaker 2I could make things right out thought in some things I have made right.
Speaker 1Dovey was a lawyer during Jim Crow.
She wasn't allowed to drink from the same water fountains as white people, yet in court she was the only thing standing between a man and his execution.
This is murder on the Towpath, and I'm your host, Solidad O'Brien.
We're going to take you back to the nineteen sixties, a time of political and cultural upheaval, when society felt constantly on the brink of war, when segregation was the law of the land.
Speaker 5Some people saw that as a triumph, that this was the best case scenario because there wasn't a lynching, or there wasn't some act of racial violence in terms of retaliation.
Speaker 1This is a story of two women who wanted to reach their fullest potential, even if society had very different plans for them.
Speaker 2There's a strenuous thing with law school.
You a imagine nobody but your law.
Speaker 1We're going to take you back to that courtroom where people found themselves asking did this man really kill Mary Pincho Meyer.
Speaker 3They didn't find the gun, which was troubling.
Speaker 1But what most people didn't know and what could have altered the course of this case was that Mary had had an affair with a very powerful man.
Speaker 4I pledge you that we shall now that commit not provoke aggression.
Speaker 1That man was John F.
Kennedy.
Listen and subscribe to Murder on the Towpath with Soledad O'Brien starting April twenty third, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.