44 Years Later, a Washington, D.C. Death Unresolved
Mary Pinchot Meyer's death remains a mystery. But it's her life that holds more interest now
- By Lance Morrow
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2008, Subscribe
On a perfect October day in 1964, Mary Pinchot Meyer—mistress of John Kennedy, friend of Jackie Kennedy and ex-wife of a top CIA man, Cord Meyer—was murdered in the rarefied Washington precinct of Georgetown.
It was half past noon. I was a cub reporter on the Washington Star. In the classically scruffy pressroom at police headquarters, I heard the radio dispatcher direct Cruisers 25 and 26 (which I recognized as homicide squad cars) to the C&O Canal. I alerted the city desk, drove to Georgetown, ran to the wall overlooking the canal and saw a body curled up in a ball on the towpath. Two men who had been changing a tire nearby told me they had heard a shot...a cry for help...a second shot...and had called the police.
There were no cops with the body yet. But in the distance, between the Potomac and the canal, I saw the lines of the police dragnet closing in along the towpath from west and east.
Because I had played there as a boy, I knew there was a tunnel under the canal a few hundred yards west of where the body lay. I knew the killer was still at large and might also have known about it. But the tunnel would be the quickest way for me to get to the other side of the canal, to where the body was. I pushed aside the vines at the tunnel entrance and hurried through, heart pounding, and burst into sunshine on the other side. I approached the body of Mary Pinchot Meyer and stood over it, weirdly and awkwardly alone as the police advanced from either direction.
She lay on her side, as if sleeping. She was dressed in a light blue fluffy angora sweater, pedal pushers and sneakers. She was an artist and had a studio nearby, and she had gone out for her usual lunchtime walk. I saw a neat and almost bloodless bullet hole in her head. She looked entirely peaceful, vaguely patrician. She had an air of Georgetown. I stood there with her until the police came up. I held a reporter's notebook. The cops from the homicide squad knew me. They told me to move away.
The police found a man in the woods down by the river. His name was Ray Crump Jr., and he was black. His clothes were wet. He had cut his hand. He gave the police a couple of stories. He said he had been fishing and had dropped his fishing pole and gone into the river to retrieve it; he said he had been drinking beer and went to sleep and fell in. The two men who had heard the shots told the police they had seen Crump standing over the body. He was booked for homicide. The police found his jacket and cap in the river. His fishing rod was in a closet where he lived, on the other side of the city. The murder weapon was never found. It may still be at the bottom of the river. Crump eventually was acquitted for lack of evidence.
That October day rests in a corner of my mind, a vivid and mysterious curio. I pick it up from time to time and examine it in different lights. I have not figured it out, though I have theories. I thought of Mary Meyer's murder again during the presidential campaign, when the drama of a black man, Barack Obama, and two women, Hillary Clinton and Sarah Palin, in a race for the top places in American government took me back over a distance of time to a city that was then, for black people and for women, a different universe.
When Mary Meyer died, no one knew about her affair with John Kennedy, or about her ex-husband's job managing the CIA's clandestine services. In newspapers, Cord Meyer—wounded World War II hero and young idealist who helped found the United World Federalists—was identified as an author, with a vague government job. The papers noted that Mary, 43, was a Georgetown artist, born to a wealthy Pennsylvania family, daughter of Amos Pinchot, the Progressive lawyer, and niece of Gifford Pinchot, the conservationist and Teddy Roosevelt's chief forester. Her younger sister, Tony, was married to Ben Bradlee, then of Newsweek, later of the Washington Post. It was Bradlee who identified the body at the morgue.
Then other news supervened. There was a presidential election coming, Johnson (who had recently signed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution) versus Goldwater (the warmonger, according to the 1964 narrative). Khrushchev was deposed. China exploded its first nuclear bomb.
But over the years, sensational fragments of the story (JFK, CIA) turned up. Inevitably, conspiracy theories emerged. Who killed Mary—really? Was Ray Crump set up? By whom? Why?
As real evidence went mute, the public imagination worked on two possible narratives.
The first was what might be called the Oliver Stone Solution—that is, to posit a conspiracy elaborate enough and sinister enough to do imaginative and, as it were, cinematic justice to the murder of a woman with such suggestive, powerful connections. The journalist Nina Burleigh sifted through plot possibilities in her excellent book on Meyer, A Very Private Woman (1998), and quoted the critic Morris Dickstein on the temptations of the 1960s' paranoid style—"a sense at once joyful and threatening that things are not what they seem, that reality is mysteriously overorganized and can be decoded if only we attend to the hundred little hints and byways that beckon to us."
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Comments (25)
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Well-written and interesting, but remarkably short on the supposed subject, that of Ms. Meyer's murder. Ending the piece with a story about the author's mother, interesting woman though she was, was especially odd.
Posted by Lucie on November 16,2012 | 02:35 PM
Great piece! Keep going, you opened my eyes to a different world.
Posted by Donna on November 4,2012 | 08:38 AM
I find Mr. Morrow's article interesting, but he does not answer the question as to who killed Mary Meyer. I think his conjecture that the jury was wrong is inaccurate, based on recent scholarship and research about who killed her. Also, he starts off talking about her and turns her death into some sort of gender balancing act in DC, as if she was an example of what could have happened to other women. Really, he has two articles, two topics in one. The fact that Mary Meyer did not survive and his mother did has nothing to do with the fact that they may have had similar lives. It has much more to do with the fact that Mary Meyer was probably kiled by the CIA because of things she knew & had figured out.
Posted by Meby Carr on September 30,2012 | 08:05 PM
So........ where's Part Deux, Charles? "Well, I heard me sumthin' strange today and I'm sure he wuz' a liar I heard that Billy Mitchell's boy done murdered Mary Meyer Mary Meyer, Mary Meyer, tell me what spook they done hired and tell me why they hads ta' fire That missin .38 at Mary Meyer" -----refrain from "The Ballad of Mary Meyer (Cherry in the Snow)" ------
Posted by Mark A. O'Blazney on September 26,2012 | 05:22 AM
Wake up people! The "false flag" operation is a signature of covert activity and subterfuge. Smoke and mirrors is the modus operandi of CIA spymaster James Jesus Angleton, head of CIA counter-intelligence. The players: JFK, Mary Meyer, Cord Meyer, Tony and Ben Bradlee, James Angleton, Washington Metro Police, and Ray Crump, Jr.( the lone nut!) The single thread running through this scenario is CIA complicity through law enforcement. You have doubts. Notice Angleton already "knew" about the diary. Notice how the "diary" was supposed to be given to her best friend and the Bradlees already knew this info? Notice it was NOT given to the best friend, but to the CIA by the Bradlees - which is probably totally opposite of what Mary wanted. How many times need we see the emergence of the "lone nut" character in scenarios involving the CIA before we get a clue? What are the odds that one would fall neatly into a fetal position if running and yelling "someone help me, someone help me?" while the assailant shoots you in the back of the head? Let's NOT get bogged down in minutia of shots and escape routes. Bottom line is that the "establishment" wants readers to believe it was a random act of violence in a metro area and thus, no big deal. Happens all the time in America - accept it. Mary's murder is unsolved, but closed. This is the way the powers that be want us to accept this murder. In every (CIA) case there is skewed motive, vague means and happenstance opportunity - and, the lone nut (Ray Crump, Jr.! Wake up people! Ms. Roundtree (Crump’s lawyer) did not have to prove Crump’s innocence. Our constitution gives the accused this presumption. It is the burden of the state to prove guilt. They did not, nor could they. [Part One]
Posted by Charles on July 6,2012 | 10:21 AM
This is not an unsolved case. Crump killed her. Look at his actions. Standing over the body after shooting her and trying to find something of value. Being found soaking wet after jumping into the river. Telling the police that he fell in while fishing yet there was no fishing rod. He happened to get off because a witness or two could not positively identify him as the black guy standing over the body. They were 300 feet away. Just because a jury delivers a not guilty verdict it does not mean that someone is innocent. There is no doubt that Crump killed this woman. After his acquittal he went on and assaulted other women and robbed others.
Posted by Jack on July 3,2012 | 11:28 AM
WE ALL KNOW WHO MURDERED MARY AND IT WASN'T CRUMP,YOU THUG'S IN D.C.!
Posted by GOV SUX on May 31,2012 | 10:13 PM
Morrow's writing had the most striking effect on me, too. I was excited to read more. It reminded me of how effective writing can absorb the reader to the point that a great measure of control is given over to the author. I agree, he should write his mother's biography, then the bios of all the other characters in the article.
Posted by Roland Daniels on February 19,2012 | 11:55 PM
Her killing may have had more to do with her affair with Bobby or Lyndon than it did with the President.
Posted by Ross H. on February 14,2012 | 11:34 AM
I WAS ONE OF THE FIRST POLICEMAN ON THE SCENE THAT DAY AND PROTECTED THE CRIME SCENE.I BELIEVE THAT GUN IS STILL NEAR BY BURIED IN THE CANAL MUD IN OR CLOSE NEAR BY.
Posted by robert decker,pvt mpdc,retired 7th precinct on January 25,2012 | 03:09 PM
When they catch someone Red handed, they usually get convicted , don't they ?!
Most interest !
Posted by Harold on October 22,2011 | 01:42 AM
I agree with Rusty and Garza that the evidence needs fresh eyes. Maybe Crump pulled the trigger, maybe not, but the husband most likely arranged it and possibly the JFK murder as well. Why is that so hard for people to believe? Back in those days, the CIA employed hired assassins. Fingers have pointed toward Nixon and G.H.W Bush as participants. Much was left out of this article including the many affairs of both Mary and her ex-husband Cord.
The truth won't come out until all the players have died.
Posted by Bancroft on August 2,2011 | 12:06 AM
I came by this by chance after watching THE KENNEDY'S on UK TV yesterday. Mary Meyer's character is played in the penultimate episode. I just googled to see if she was of interest historically and WOW she is. My favourite signed book is one by Ben Bradleee, Mary's brother-in-law.
Extremely interesting.
BW,
IAN PAYNE [WALSALL - ENGLAND]
Posted by IAN PAYNE on July 9,2011 | 02:48 PM
Has anyone ever thought that maybe, the husband, the CIA husband would have been able to do, arrange, conspire, and articulate such a brutal murder. A head wound with little blood and a cry out between shots???, sounds like something that the CIA was capable of doing.
Posted by Rusty on December 29,2010 | 03:26 PM
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