Friday, June 15, 2007

An essay

Below is a post from another blog that is public but which I use mostly as a diary, so I don't tell people about it. I got such interesting responses from the original post that I decided to put it here, and see what it generates. I'm especially interested if anyone has ideas about how I should use the information that came to me after I posted this essay.

WHY I BECAME A JOURNALIST

Michael Condetti attended my elementary school, in the second grade when I was in third grade. He went missing in November 1960 and was found dead three days later _ beaten, molested and smothered.

This incident had a profound effect on me, and not just for the obvious reasons. The horrific crime against a schoolmate is only one aspect of how this changed my life. The reaction of adults around me, and the coverage of the crime in The Washington Post, made a me decide to become a journalist.

Recently, The Post and other newspapers have made their archives available online. One can search on Google and hits will list the first sentences of an article. Purchasing an article, usually for just a few dollars, will produce a microfiche copy straight from the printed paper.

These archives are incomplete, and the microfiche copies sometimes are hard to read. But this gave me a chance, after more than 40 years, to compare my memory of the events to the reality, as reported in The Post.

I don't remember how I first became aware that Michael had gone missing; I did not know him. It probably was by reading The Post. I am certain, however, that neither the teachers nor my parents said anything. I didn't have any friends in elementary school, so I didn't hear other children talking about, if, in fact, they did discuss it.

My memory is that what I viewed as a conspiracy of silence was being conducted among the adults so as not to frighten the children. My mother, when I discussed this with her recently, said it was not a conspiracy so much as just how things were done in the early 1960s.

Today, of course, in addition to intense media coverage, teachers would take the opportunity to remind children not to talk to strangers or go anywhere with them. Counselors would be brought in to help the children deal with the fear.

But at a tiny, poor, Catholic elementary school in northeast Washington in November 1960, it was routine to keep secrets. Nothing was said, or so I remembered.

But I knew Michael had gone missing. I was a precocious child, the eldest of two college professors. I could read well before I got to school. I read the paper at the breakfast table every day.

It was in that paper, The Post, that I read about my schoolmate going missing. I saw my school's name in the paper, in the A section.

I was terrified. Some monster was in my neighborhood – Michael lived a half mile from me – snatching children off the street.

Yet, my 8-year-old mind knew that because no adults were talking about it, I couldn't talk to my parents about it, either. My mother, to this day, is at a loss as to why she didn't talk to me about the incident. She, too, must have been terrified, like all the other parents.

So I spent this time more frightened than normal (I was a very fearful child), running the five blocks to school, lest some monster grab me. Actually, at this point, all the mothers started walking their children to school. So I guess adults did change so things, but nobody talked to me about what was going on. And I couldn't talk to anybody, so I was just scared.

I found the unfettered truth one place – in The Washington Post.

Amazingly, my parents, who were quite proud of my reading ability, did not connect my reading The Post with what was going on. They seemed not to realize that I was reading about my school. My mother says it just didn't occur to them, or they didn't connect the dots because they were so worried.

Even after Michael's body was found, the teachers and my parents said nothing about the horrific way he was killed. This remaining preplexing to me, because his killer was at large, and would not be caught for months. Why didn't the teachers and my parents warn us not to go anywhere with strangers?

That's what Michael had done. He had gone on a bus from D.C. to nearby Maryland with a strange man who approached him in a five-and-dime that I had been in a few times with my mother.

I have no memory of finding out that Michael was dead. I have no memory of an announcement being made at school or reading it in The Post. I don't remember what I felt.

But apparently, there was discussion in the school, or at least in Michael's class, of his horrific end, according to The Post:

At Michael's school, Sister Alexadrine, the Superior, said the whole school was shocked by the tragedy and Michael's class ... visited the church in a body yesterday to pray for the family.

I do remember the entire school going to his funeral at the church next to the school. I don't remember the sermon, though, or whether any mention was of how Michael died. The Post reported that the monsignor urged Michael's killer to surrender, but I don't remember that.

I don't remember his parents or siblings or much except his casket sitting in the main aisle. I was terrified that I'd have to walk past it, perhaps even touch it, but communicants walked along the end aisles to receive the Eucharist.

One would think I would have remembered a lot more, because, according to The Post, it was quite a circus:

And, outside of the church was a swarm of detectives, including two who took newsreel photos of the people entering and leaving the church and those who remained outside. Also in the crowd were FBI agents.

I have no memory of the events that followed. It was months before a suspect was arrested, and there was a trial which generated a lot of publicity, judging from The Post clips. Remember, though, this was decades before cable TV and the 24-hour TV news cycle.

Perhaps because the trial was far removed from D.C. -- it was held in the federal courthouse in Baltimore because Michael had been kidnapped in D.C. and killed in Maryland – that I can recall nothing of it. Also, most trials tend to be very boring and filled with legalisms – something I could not have understood nor likely cared about enough to read daily in The Post.

But in reading about the trial now, it's fascinating from a historical perspective. This was decades before DNA science, and years before Miranda v. Arizona. Many of the things that happened inside and outside the courtroom would not be allowed today, and it's horrifying to read what passed for justice more than 40 years ago. I cannot make an informed judgment from the clips whether the man tried indeed committed the crime.

Ultimately, Joseph Alvey was convicted of killing Michael, but, because the jury had to unanimously agree on the death penalty and did not, he escaped execution. I cannot find any stories that detail what happened to Alvey. Did he die in prison? Was he eventually freed? Was there an appeal? Was he real killer?

My mother claims to have little memory of the incident from beginning to end, and the few things she remembers are wrong. She has a memory of being told that a stranger went to St. Anthony and said he was a friend of Michael's parents and was allowed to take the boy from school. The kidnapping occurred after school, at a nearby five-and-dime. My mother also claims that Michael was in my brother's class, but in 1960, my 5-year-old brother was in kindergarten at a neighborhood public school.

I'm perplexed by my lack of remembering any discussion of Michael's death and reinforced warnings not to have anything to do with strangers. I recall being made aware of his death, but not of the details. My memory is just, well, he died, and that's all the students were told.

I'm not saying parents and teachers should have given us gruesome details. The fact that I read them and was so terrified that I ran to school every day confirms that. But why, when this incident clearly had such a profound effect on my, do I have a strong, gut, lifelong belief that adults in my life told me next to nothing about what had happened?

In my child's mind's eye, adults around me, while motivated by nothing but a desire to protect me, kept critical information from me – information that I still managed to obtain from The Washington Post.

I had hoped that getting the clips would clear things up for me. There was so little discussion over the years about this horrific event that I sometimes wondered if it had happened at all. I believed for years in a conspiracy among the adults, when it appears that in the early 1960s, things simply were done differently.

Granted, my parents were big on keeping secrets. They always claimed that they would answer any question I asked, and that was true. But children don't always know what questions to ask. And in this case, I had an overwhelming sense that no adults were willing or able to talk to children about this, so I never asked.

The Post, however, gave me the information the adults in my life did not. Even in my 8-year-old brain, I knew that this was something powerful. I wanted, from then, to become a journalist.

Followup to the original post:

A few months after I posted this, I received e-mails from two former neighbors of the Condettis. They had been talking about the crime and how it changed Brookland from (what they perceived as) a safe neighborhood to a dangerous place. One did a Google search on Michael's name and my blog was one of the hits. We exchanged a few e-mails, with them asking where I lived in Brookland.

About two weeks after that, I received an e-mail from Chris Condetti, Michael's brother. He had heard (I don't know how) about my blog and wanted to read what I wrote about Michael's murder. I forwarded him the essay.

Chris wrote back that Joseph Alvey, who was convicted of kidnapping and killing little Michael, died in prison. Chris also wrote, "
I prefer talking more about (Michael's) life rather than his death."

So what is my next step? I feel that after all these years of wondering about this incident, I've been given a chance to clarify so much. But what? I want to write more, but about what?

10 comments:

BasilN said...

vividly remember the Michael Condetti case. I was living in Landover Hills, Md., and attending a Catholic school there. Until that point, I had no idea that kids could be abducted and murdered...anything I read/heard about kidnapping happened in literature only. For me, this case marked the loss of my childhood innocence, leaving me stunned and scared. And no one...parents or teachers...really spoke of it. What little was said about it was briefly on the evening news and in the newspaper (The Wash. Daily news back then).

Chris said...

I am always surprised that after almost 50 years people still remember my brothers death.
Thank You for keeping him in your thoughts.
Chris Condetti

laura.lunsford said...

We lived on Saratoga Avenue in the Brentwood Village Apartments on Rhode Island Avenue in Northeast DC when Michael Condetti was kidnapped and murdered. He lived just a couple of blocks from me. I was about 12 years old at the time and my memory is pretty good as to what happened and what we read in the Post. I remember that Michael had gone to the five and dime store in the Brentwood Village Shopping Center to buy a bookbag and never was seen again. We probably went to that shopping center for one thing or another everyday. It had a bowling alley, drug store, cleaners (my older brother Ed used to shine shoes there to make money), a men’s haberdasher, a women’s boutique, and an Acme Grocery Store (where my brother used to carry groceries home for people, again to make money). Michael went to school at St. Anthony’s on 12th Street and they closed the school the day of his funeral. I heard that a huge amount of people from all around town attended the funeral. I think everyone in DC knew about Michael’s murder because it was so horrific and he was just an innocent and trusting child. I remember that the Police found his shoes on the front steps of an apartment building on Franklin Street where Rhode Island Avenue crosses over. The area there is called Woodridge. When Michael went missing, the DC Police and the FBI interviewed every male over the age of ten in our neighborhood twice. There was a boy that I liked and his name was Gussy Mastrillis (sp?). I always thought that he was Michael’s brother. But maybe he just lived in the same apartment building as Michael. I do know that Michael’s parents later moved and we heard that they had gotten separated. Chris, if you read this, please know that we all prayed that God didn’t let him suffer. Peace to you and your family. Laura Cox Lunsford. Please let me know if Gussy was your brother. (laura.lunsford@pillsburylaw.com)

Margaret said...

Thank God I found your blog. I am a 63 year old Black woman who was raised in the Brookland neighborhood since 1956 and I still live in the neighborhood. I attended Brookland Elementary School literally next door to St. Anthony's Elementary School. I live 2 blocks from the former Condetti family home. I remember Michael playing in the neighborhood when I would visit friends living on his block. My best friend was raised and still lives on the same street where the Condetti family lived. I vividly remember the day she called me about his murder. As a child, it was a fearful time. The story has haunted us for years and we continue to have conversations about this case. Because we were so young, we did not learn that Joseph Haverman Alvy was arrested rendering the crime solved. It was a scary time for us being so young and having the fear of being kidnapped and taken away from our families. Our parents never talked about it because I guess it was considered a conversation among adults. For all these years, we thought it remained an unsolved murder. In fact, we suspected one of our childhood friend's father comitted the murder. I learned about 20 years ago, he was questioned as a suspect back in 1960. My friend and I often bring up Michael's name in conversations year after year. Michael came across my mind today and I decided to research the crime. I didn't think I would find anything on the Internet because 50 years has gone by since he was murdered. Thanks for writing your Blog. There several generations of families who still remain in the Brookland neighborhood and remember the case well. I will share your Blog with them. Today, I can finally exhale and feel some relief in learning the outcome of the case, especially that it was not my childhood friend's father that committed the crime. God bless the Condetti family. Chris, if you are still reading the Blog, just to let you know, I will tell my friend about you. I'm quite sure she remembers you.

CNight42 said...

I remember my Dad coming home angry and crying from having seen some photos at the police station where he knew some of the police and overheard him telling Mom about it. Truthfully, I read a report somewhere on it. And, I cried often and had trouble sleeping after it. And, I didn't know the family but it was so horrible, I followed it all and felt pained for the family all the way. It, too, was the first time we had heard of such a terrible thing happening to a child and it was shocking to the senses. This may be why Gym Junkie 13 has little memory of it. It may have been to traumatizing. Back then, though bad things happened, there remained somehow this innocense unless one had gone to War or served on a Jury. Today, we see and hear so much. And I don't recall the year but if in 1960 I was 18 and still very naive and innocent then and am 70 yrs old now,grew up strict Catholic. Don't know what caused me to look this up. I grew up having ESP and may have been upset to because I didn't sense it in order to be of help then. It had an impact on my life. I don't know what made me look this up. I can remember to this day some of it. We all prayed for his family and the splitup it caused them, the press dogged them so much, how could they heal? When they described Alvey's homelife in the newspaper. He lived with his mother. I think it was an attic like room. He had a discriptive diary that his mother
found and she I believe eventually notified the police. I remember being angry because it came out that she knew he wasn't right in his mind and did nothing. Of course, I know that people were afraid to do anything about something bad, because that was a time when PG County police were known to to be ruff on prisoners making people afraid of the police as much as of the criminal. I remember my Dad's friend who had a wife and 3 children and on his way home he came upon a body of a navy man lying in the road on old Route 4. He contacted police (details here I don't recall and before cell phones)They held him and beat him tormented him for 3 days trying to make him confess to harming the man. He was finally released was never well or right again. People didn't sue police much back then but he died for trying to be of help. This was in the 1940's. Well, to Chris I pray you are living a Blessed and Godly life, and Born Again in Christ so that you will before long see your Dear Brother again. The Rapture of the Church will be happening soon, evidenced by the turmoil in the World and the Book of Revelation or The Apocalypse depending on which Holy Bible you read.

Unknown said...

To Laura..My name is Mike Tino, and we lived in Brentwood Village at this time. I was 2 yrs old at the time of Michaels murder. Gus Maestrales is my brother. He was not related to Michael. Sadly I was too young to have personal memory of his tragedy other than hearing abou it from my parents and brother Gus..

Unknown said...

My father worked this case for the FBI. I was eight years old at the time and my father asked me questions about "getting into cars with strangers... going with strangers to look for lost dogs..., etc." This murder really did change a child's outlook on the world from a safe place to a dangerous landscape

Unknown said...

My name is Susan and I lived in Kentland, Maryland right along side of George Palmer Highway. I remember this case very well because Michael was found along George Palmer Highway under some brush. It had everyone scared to death. Our parents talked to us about the murder and we were not allowed to stop and play at the playground after school anymore. I also read everything on the case and I was around 9 years old. Just yesterday my sister and I discussed the case and we both remember that this was the first murder we were ever told about. We didn't know things like this happened to children. I was also exposed to the details of the murder. I remember the parents divorced after the murder and the mom eventually moved back to England because she was so heartbroken. I'm 65 years old and have a 31 year old son. I kept close watch on my boy mainly because of the memory of this case. I remember Michael looked like a little angel.

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

Michael, I have thought about you for 60 years. I was 10 years old. I will be visiting Arlington this summer and hope to pay my respects at your resting place.