Peter Manso Finds ‘Reasonable Doubt’ In Worthington Case

Christopher McCowen reacts to the jury's guilty verdict at the Barnstable Superior Court in Barnstable, Mass., in this file photo taken November, 2006. (AP)

Christopher McCowen reacts to the jury's guilty verdict at the Barnstable Superior Court in Barnstable, Mass., in this file photo taken November, 2006. (AP)

This segment may prove inappropriate for some listeners. It includes graphic descriptions of a murder.

Christa Worthington was 46 years old when she was found murdered in her Truro home in 2002. It was a headline-grabbing, ultra-high profile case that gripped the Cape for years.

Peter Manso was living nearby at the time. This summer, he published a new book about the grisly murder, “Reasonable Doubt: The Fashion Writer, Cape Cod and the Trial of Chris McCowen.”

In the book, Manso raises two disturbing questions about what he terms the “real Cape Cod”: Is the wrong man in prison for murder? And is he there because he is black, because of a culture of racism on the Cape?

The Murder And The Muckraker

Manso is a familiar name to longtime Cape Cod residents.

“I’ve been on Cape Cod for most of my adult life,” Manso told Radio Boston’s Meghna Chakrabarti. “In fact, my child life, I was brought here in the summer, my father was a Provincetown painter and artist.”

His father was the abstract painter, Leo Manso. By virtue of growing up among authors and artists, Peter Manso himself became a writer, with more than 14 books to his name.

Manso is notorious, contentious and controversial. He once shared a house with Norman Mailer, but Manso’s searing biography of Mailer so infuriated the literary giant, it destroyed their friendship.

Another of Manso’s books, “P’Town: Art, Sex and Money on the Outer Cape” was such an unflattering view of what he called “the new gay gentry” of Provincetown that it made him more than a few enemies on the Outer Cape.

Christa Worthington was found dead in her home in Truro. (AP)

Christa Worthington was found dead in her home in Truro. (AP)

“As a writer, I’m a troublemaker,” Manso said.

The “troublemaker” was at his Truro home on the night when Christa Worthington was murdered in 2002. The two were neighbors.

Worthington was from an old Cape family. She was a Vassar-educated writer and the mother of a 2-and-a-half-year-old daughter. The little girl was found clinging to her mother’s half-naked bloody body days after Worthington was murdered.

“On her bare stomach were tiny red handprints,” Manso writes in his book. “She had tried to clean her mother, as her mother had so often cleaned her, using a hand mitt to wipe up the blood.”

The Journalist Joins The Defense

Three years after Worthington’s murder, police arrested Christopher McCowen.

McCowen was a trash collector in Truro. He is black, and reportedly has an I.Q. of 76. In 2006, McCowen was tried and found guilty of the rape and murder of Christa Worthington.

It’s at this point where Manso’s relationship to the case, and the charges he levels in his book, cross over from complication to controversy.

“I don’t believe he did it,” Manso said.

But, Manso isn’t a disinterested journalistic observer of this case. He was actively assisting the defense team during McCowen’s trial, providing them with research he was gathering for the book.

Manso does not deny collaborating with the defense. But he brushes off any problem such a partnership might pose to his objectivity.

“Had the defendant in this trial not been black but been white, I believe that there would not have been guilty verdict,” Manso said. “There would have been at the very least a hung jury, if not an acquittal.”

Manso is not a man to pull his punches. His book is a unflinching indictment of what he believes is a deep-seeded culture of racism on Cape Cod. The Boston Globe once quoted him as saying the “Cape is a suburb of redneck Mississippi.”

“There’s no way of understanding this trial and the outcome of this trial without dealing with the issue of race,” Manso said. “There was no mention of rape in the three years of investigation. The medical examiner said there was not evidence of rape. So why rape? Well, because this guy was black. And also because the prosecutors needed a motive for the killing.”

Critics point to such bombastic pronouncements as evidence of Manso’s personal bias in this case, and that his enmity seems especially acidic in his attack on Cape and Islands District Attorney Michael O’Keefe.

O’Keefe indicted Manso on a dozen firearms charges, unrelated to the Worthington case, in 2008.

Still, Manso asserts that there were holes in the prosecution’s case against McCowen. Chief among them, there was no physical evidence tying him to the act of the murder. No fingerprints. No witnesses. No weapon.

However, as Manso admits, there was DNA evidence at the scene.

McCowen’s sperm was found on Worthington’s body. They had had sexual intercourse. But according to Manso, here’s where racism again rears its head.

“The case hinged on the jury’s refusal to believe that this well-to-do, Vassar educated, white woman would have a relationship not only with a black man, but a garbage man,” Manso said.

Controversy On The Cape

The media frenzy and the way in which the Worthington case engulfed life on the Cape was unlike anything anyone had seen in a generation.

“It had set something loose in the mass consciousness,” Manso said. “Writing this book, I realized that Cape black folk make up only 1.6 percent of the population compared to 14 percent nationally … There’s been a hardening on the Cape that I can only call overt racism.”

Many residents on the Cape reject Manso’s charge. Wellfleet Police Chief Richard Rosenthal told the Cape Cod times, “What happens with these kind of books is someone comes up with a theory and the theory is then bolstered by supposition and supported by conjecture.”

And yet, Manso feels such denials only further his claims. For example, though McCowen was found guilty on all counts, it has been well established that racism played a very serious role during the jury’s deliberations.

“There’s no way of understanding this trial and the outcome of this trial without dealing with the issue of race.”
–Peter Manso, author

“There was one female black juror who was the real holdout,” Manso said. “They sort of ganged up on her. Asked her – how do you straighten your hair? At one point they had to close the windows for all the screaming that was going on.”

Shortly after the trial three jurors came forward to complain to McCowan’s attorney that even more incendiary racist remarks had been made during the jury’s deliberations.

So incendiary, in fact, that in 2008, a Massachusetts Superior Court judge called the jurors back for an extremely rare public hearing. Nevertheless, the superior court judge upheld McCowen’s conviction.

The case was then appealed to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. In December 2010, the SJC heard the case. It, too, refused to overturn McCowen’s guilty verdict.

But not without a sharply worded concurring opinion written by the SJC’s chief justice, Roderick Ireland.

Comments in the jury room had raised “the specter of racism, warranting closer examination” of the initial verdict, Ireland wrote. He went further, wondering if such comments were “simply small talk or indicative of implicit bias.”

Ireland is the first African-American to lead the state’s highest court. He had been appointed just two days before hearing McCowen’s case.

Manso’s Ultimate Indictment Of The Cape

Manso’s book is 416 pages long. It is exhaustively researched, passionately written and destined to infuriate Cape residents.

“This book is not about Chris McCowen’s innocence or non-innocence,” Manso said. “My foremost interest here, is how this awful crime has impacted on this community.”

It’s an odd assertion, given that he so ferociously argues McCowen’s innocence.

Yet, one thing remains uncertain: How much of Peter Manso’s claim is true? How much was racism a part of this case?

But another thing is absolutely clear. In publishing “Reasonable Doubt: The Fashion Writer, Cape Cod and the Trial of Chris McCowen,” Peter Manso has not made new friends on the Cape Cod.

Tony Jackett, Christa Worthington’s former lover and father of her child, told the Cape Cod Times, “I don’t believe for a minute she had an intimate relationship with McCowen. She was such a devoted mother. Why would she, in the middle of the night, have sex with a slobbering drunk on the floor with the baby in the house? It didn’t happen.”

  • Spradley03

    So I recently lived on the ‘edge’ of the world. Meaning I was stuck in a really bad job in Provincetown, Massachusetts. My job title was called ‘cabin boy’ and boy oh boy did I not understand what I was actually getting into. Honestly looking back I lost myself in that ‘townie’ culture and worked under scary and intimidating conditions. One month there, with a college degree will get you no where. I felt like my boss wasn’t showing his real colors, he and all the other townies put on this act like Provincetown and Cape Cod are amazing. That is completely a lie, I felt like this is the most corrupt place I have ever lived. My room was a nightmare, it was unsafe, my boss and some of my co-workers intimidated me, to the point where I felt like I was getting brainwashed into a alcoholic druggie. I left in a rush, I didn’t tell any one why I or when I left. I felt scared, frightened and confused. Looking back now I see three things which scare me. One was the threatening voice mails from my boss, and self proclaimed ‘evil’ co-worker. Two my curiosity sucks and the corruption is everywhere, from town hall to the corporation I worked for “Backstreet Hotel Inc.” And three, the police, I will never forget the fourth of July when a black man screamed at the cops to taze him. You would think they would shoot one at him, instead they shot 6 or 7 into him. It is scary when you are intelligent person and realize that the April 2nd Campground murder was last seen at Backstreet Hotel Inc., he pleads not guilty yet Michael O’Keefe and the Provincetown police don’t release any more facts than that. Something is happening in that town or area of the Cape, Kennedy’s family made a fortune during prohibition there, and we still have drug prohibition…

    • Petergriffith5

      Not sure how this relates to the story being reported.

      Too bad that college degree didn’t cover controlling flow with paragraphing.  

      Maybe you could edit a bit for coherency.

      Interesting account of the Worthington murder from Mansco.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_IOO5JIYNYXAHBUJRQR6ZV33RVY gail

    Wonder if the reporter asked Rosenthal about the time he pulled a gun on a black student?

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002368556302 Kevin Mulvey

    I liked the Interview, but being the Uncle of the “Hitman” – I know the details to the rest of this horror story.  Some of the comments below sound like many know just how corrupt the Cape is, but it’s way beyond just being the Cape.  Arms, Drugs and PUBLIC CORRUPTION are big money nationally and globally.

    WorthingtonGate – Where all the crooked dots connect.

    http://LibertyAndJusticeUnited.org

  • Jacqueline Leary

    Alas, what Tony Jackett claims seems not to be true:  without being judgmental, from the opening of this tragic case, tragic most of all for the baby left alone, hungry, lonely with her dead mother, Christa.  Without judging her, Worthington was widely considered to be promiscuous, having had relationships with at least half the men in Truro, hence the DA asked many of them to submit to DNA testing, which poor Chris McCowen willingly did.  If he had killed her I doubt he would have been so submissive.  I recall from the early days of this case opening that it was said–by McCowen?–that he was with another man who has since disappeared.  I wonder how assiduously this man has been sought after.   I think it is all of a piece with the racial aspects of this trial, that that avenue has not been followed.   I think O’Keefe’s investigation, if any, was slipshod.  I recall reading in the Globe a little over a year ago that there were serious doubts raised about the pathologist, that he’d never really been completely certified but had been strongly recommended by O’Keefe who reacted to this question angrily.  For as long as I’ve been reading about O’Keefe on the Cape he’s come across as a very shaky D.A.  I think the entire investigation of this Christa Worthington case has been seriously flawed and has continued throughout the court case.  I’m baffled and disturbed that it’s been allowed to stand as the final verdict.  An innocent man will spend the better part of his life in prison, as if expendable. 

    • Animus

      Jacqueline,

      Where do you get your “facts”? Christa Worthington had relations, as they say, with two, maybe three men. Half the male population of Truro? Give me a break. Your post also seems to impute the same racism to the judge as to the police, as if Michael O’Keefe was running the entire show.
      Again, wrong.
      I am tired of people who have no idea what they are talking about passing judgment on this case, even ones who did a lot of research.

    • Tii

      I totally agree. As far as being baffled and disturbed about the verdict, that is the life of most black men…innocent or guilty. They just hope while they are outside of their homes, no crimes are committed in the area they are in and God forbide they are not dressed in a 3 piece suit because they are guilty just because of their fashions added to their color.  There are many inocent black (and other races too) men in prison just because they are black….I get nervous when my law abiding brothers leave their homes at nights….As a black woman, I taught my godson (that I raised) never to leave the house after dark….and when he leaves during the day, only go where is suppose to be…never decide to do something last minute without me knowing exactly where he is….it’s sad because he can’t live a normal life due to fear and I can’t relax when he not in the house with me….

      • Animus

        It is my belief that the poster has used faulty logic. She is moving from a general truth, that many innocent black men are in prison, to the false conclusion that Chris McCowen must therefore be innocent. The evidence just doesn’t back that up. Petr Manso notwithstanding, much evidence points to Mr. McCowen as the murderer.

  • Guest

    I am the cousin of Ava, she has grown into my bestfriend/ sister and i know for a fact that christa did not have a “relationship” with half the men in Truro.  I believe that McCowen did kill her.  I do understand that i have been raised in a family discriminating against Mr. McCowen but i have not been given a reason not to beleive he killed her.  I often read through articles concerning Christa because i am directly related to her through Ava.  Ava and i are the same age and we totally understand eachother.  I realize it may be hard for her to talk about this subject but we rarely talk about this anyways.  It intrests me because like any girl my age, i like drama.  Either way i dont care.  Someone killed Christa and it was, brutally wrong.

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