Bay State Banner March 4, 1993
The first thing the inmate in the 65-degree interview room at Gardner Correctional Facility wants you to know is that his name is William Bennett.
Not Willie Bennett, unless you know him personally. And not Slick Willie or Willie Horton either. Yet for three-and-a-half years, he has constantly been mistaken for someone else.
“They lied to get me in here,” embitters Bennett. “I don’t see why in hell they don’t lie to get me out of here.”
The lie that sparked Bennett’s current incarceration on November 13, 1989 was Boston’s most notorious case of mistaken identity: the claim by Charles Stuart that Bennett was the imaginary black man who a month before shot his wife Carol and unborn son Christopher.
Yet, though Bennett was exonerated by Stuart’s apparent suicide of the Tobin Bridge in January 1990, the former Mission Hill convicted cop-shooter says he is still serving time for the racial hoax of the century.
“I’m at the top of [the police department’s] brains,” Bennett philosophizes. “When they wake up in the morning, they think of me because of what I did in the past.
“You’ve got people that keep on saying that this robbery case and the Stuart case are unrelated,” assesses Bennett of the two robbery convictions for which he is serving a 12-to 25-year sentence. “They’re not unrelated. They’re related. Because they used the same identification that Chuck Stuart did.”
On October 9, 1990, Bennett was convicted of the armed robbery of a Brookline video store in a trial moved to Cape Cod because of Stuart case publicity. Two weeks later, Bennett was also sentenced for the robbery of a Beacon Hill yogurt shop.
Yet, says Bennett, placing a ream of court documents and newspaper clippings on a prison table, evidence used to convict him closely mimicked false allegations made by Charles Stuart.
One document, a 1989 Brookline police report, then overlooked by the media in exhaustive searches of Boston Police records, cites
a “black man in a running suit” description of the video store robber.
The wording is nearly identical to Stuart’s fictitious account.
“[Stuart]
said that I had a raspy voice. And then you got people in Brookline who
said I had a raspy voice,” compares Bennett. “Where did those people
get that identification from? They got it from the police who coerced
those witnesses and said, `listen, we need this guy, we got him, we want
him.’”
“On November
11 when they first picked me up, they said in the paper that I had a
nickel-plated .38. Brookline case: nickel-plated .38. Stuart case: I had
a raspy voice and a spotted beard and a short afro. Well, that’s a
coincidence because the people in Brookline, they said the same damn
thing! Now, January 4, 1990, this lame jumps over the bridge and takes
his life. Everything that he said was a lie.”
But
a jury’s verdict and threeand-a-half years later, authorities refused
to label the Brookline and Beacon Hill convictions a similar lie. In
that time, Bennett was moved from Walpole to Gardner prisons, and has
seen his name resurface again and again in connection with the Stuart
case.
“They asked me
if I ever got cards from Chuck Stuart or if I ever worked at [Stuart’s
employer] Kakas Furs,” relates Bennett of Boston Globe and Boston Herald
interviews that he says he will no longer grant. “They were trying to
trick me into saying that I knew him. I never knew the man. I never
heard of the man.”
Other
allegations of a relation ship between Bennett and Stuart have come
from more official sources, including a Boston Police detective, Tommy
Montgomery, nearly two years after the Carol Stuart killing.
Yet
in September 1991, a month after Montgomery’s charges, Bennett was
exonerated a second time of any role in the case by former Suffolk
County District Attorney Newman Flanagan. While being transferred
between prison facilities following Flanagan’s statement, Bennett
responded with a middle finger to gaping television cameras.
“I
did that because I couldn’t say what I wanted to say,” explains Bennett
to suggestions that his gesture may have offended some people. “I did
that because they were still trying to put the Stuart Case on me and
they couldn’t do it. Plus I didn’t have enough time. I was shackled and I
was handcuffed. I couldn’t say what I wanted to say.”
Bennett
also cares little if he offends black community leaders, who he says
did nothing for him before Stuart’s apparent suicide and little
following.
“After [the
police] tore my mother’s house up, I thought that they were going to do
something for me then. But they didn’t do nothin’. When they walked
into my daughter’s mother’s house on Warren Street, they tore her house
inside out. And when I was staying out in Burlington with my other kid’s
mother, they tore her house up. Nobody did nothin’. I don’t have
anything good to say about the black community because they didn’t do
nothin’ for me.”
The
43-year-old inmate, who says he spent nearly half his life behind bars
but never felt despondent until the Stuart allegations, reserves his
strongest condemnation for the police and the mayor.
Under
Mayor Ray Flynn’s directive, Boston police conducted a massive manhunt
for the fictitious black assailant named by Charles Stuart after the
1989 murder. A 1991 U.S. Attorney’s report strongly condemned the
department for coercing young Mission Hill residents into implicating
Bennett.
“They put
guns to my nieces’ and nephews’ heads, [saying] ‘where’s your uncle?’ My
nephew can’t even talk or hear,” recalls Bennett.
Last
fall, Bennett filed suit against the Stuart estate and the City of
Boston. Also, the state Supreme Judicial Court has heard arguments by
Bennett’s attorney that he was denied a fair trial in the video store
case.
If for no one else, Bennett believes that there may be a lesson in the case for the police.
“I bet the police woke up. And they won’t be able to do things like that no more.
“When
I was in Dedham Jail, President Bush made a statement. He only did this
because the Boston police all voted for him. I’ll never forget this. He
said ‘the Boston Police did a tremendous job in the Stuart
investigation.’ In 1990, I think it was either August or September. I’m
sitting in Dedham Jail, and I’m thinking, what the hell does this man
have to say? And the Boston Police felt so embarrassed. I know they felt
embarrassed. Everybody knows the Stuart case!
“But
I’ll tell you, things like this case, some people want it to die down.
But as long as I’m black and as long as I’m still living, I’m not gonna
let it die down because I’m still in jail for something I didn’t do. The
joke’s over. I want to get out. I want to go home.”