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cover of episode The Suspicious Death of Eduardo Tirella (Rhode Island)

The Suspicious Death of Eduardo Tirella (Rhode Island)

2024/12/12
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Dark Downeast

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Donna Lohmeyer
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Doris Duke
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Kylie Lowe
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Peter Lance
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Robert Walker
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Kylie Lowe:本集探讨了1966年爱德华多·托雷拉的死亡事件,至今仍存在争议,是意外还是谋杀尚不明确。事件发生在1966年10月7日,富有的女继承人多丽丝·杜克驾驶一辆租来的汽车撞死了她的朋友爱德华多·托雷拉。近60年来,关于其死因的争论一直持续不断。 Edward Angel:作为到达现场的第一位警官,他描述了当时的情景:多丽丝·杜克坐在车里,面部受伤,情绪激动,而爱德华多则被压在车下。由于经验不足,他在处理现场时犯了一些错误。 Sergeant Fred Newton:警官Newton提出了一个理论:爱德华多先开车到大门,下车开门,然后多丽丝·杜克开车撞到他。这可能是意外或蓄意行为。 Donna Lohmeyer:作为爱德华多的侄女,她回忆了叔叔的生平,他是一位快乐、有才华的人,人缘极好。她认为爱德华多在遇难当晚计划离开多丽丝·杜克,追求好莱坞事业。 Doris Duke:多丽丝·杜克在陈述中声称爱德华多是驾驶员,车辆突然启动撞到他。她还提供了第二次证词,但其真实性受到质疑。 Dr. Philip C. McAllister:验尸官阻止警方讯问多丽丝·杜克,这使得调查过程受到阻碍。 Peter Lance:作家Peter Lance的书《Rough Point的凶杀案》中包含了丢失的案卷部分内容,提供了更多细节。他认为多丽丝·杜克可能蓄意谋杀。 Robert Walker:50年后,一名目击者Robert Walker提供了新的证词,他声称听到争吵声和汽车加速的声音,以及随后发生的撞击声和尖叫声,他还看到多丽丝·杜克在车外,并被她命令离开现场。 Tom Shelvin:Newport警方发言人表示,没有足够的证据来对多丽丝·杜克的行为下结论,案件将留给公众舆论裁决。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

What happened on October 7, 1966, in Newport, Rhode Island?

On October 7, 1966, wealthy heiress Doris Duke hit and killed her friend Eduardo Tirella while driving a rented car. The incident occurred near the gates of her estate on Bellevue Avenue.

Why is Eduardo Tirella's death still debated?

Eduardo Tirella's death is still debated because it remains unclear whether it was an accident or an intentional act of murder. Doris Duke's actions that day have been questioned, and various theories suggest foul play.

What was Eduardo Tirella's role in Doris Duke's life?

Eduardo Tirella was a close friend and confidant of Doris Duke. He was involved in curating her art, designing her estates, and providing artistic direction for various projects, including film sets.

What was Eduardo Tirella's background and career?

Eduardo Tirella was a talented artist and designer who worked as a milliner at Saks Fifth Avenue and later as a costume designer for Broadway and Hollywood films. He also designed interiors and landscapes for Doris Duke's estates.

What was Doris Duke's financial status during her lifetime?

Doris Duke was one of the wealthiest women in the world, inheriting an estate worth between $30 million and $133 million from her father, James Buchanan Duke, founder of the American Tobacco Company. Adjusted for inflation, her wealth was over $1 billion.

What evidence suggests that Eduardo Tirella's death may not have been an accident?

Evidence includes inconsistencies in Doris Duke's statements, tire marks in the driveway suggesting sudden acceleration, and the autopsy report showing injuries that don't align with her account of the incident. Additionally, witnesses reported hearing an argument and two distinct accelerations of the car engine.

What was the outcome of the civil lawsuit filed by Eduardo Tirella's family against Doris Duke?

The civil lawsuit was decided in favor of Eduardo Tirella's family, who were awarded $75,000 in damages plus interest and costs, totaling about $96,000. However, Doris Duke was not found guilty of criminal charges.

What role did Bob Walker play in the re-examination of Eduardo Tirella's case?

Bob Walker, a former paperboy, came forward in 2021 with a detailed account of what he witnessed on the day of the incident. He claimed to have heard an argument and two distinct accelerations of the car engine, which supported the theory of intentional murder.

Why did Newport Police Department close the case as an accident?

Newport Police Department closed the case as an accident after Doris Duke provided a statement that seemed to satisfy investigators. However, many have since questioned the validity of this conclusion due to inconsistencies and missing evidence.

What was Doris Duke's reaction to Eduardo Tirella's decision to leave her employment?

Doris Duke was reportedly upset and had a violent argument with Eduardo Tirella before his death. Staff at her estate overheard the argument, which fueled suspicions that her actions were motivated by anger and jealousy.

Chapters
On October 7, 1966, Eduardo Torella died after being hit by a car driven by Doris Duke. The incident occurred outside an estate on Bellevue Avenue. Initial reports labeled it an accident, but questions remain about the circumstances.
  • Doris Duke hit and killed Eduardo Torella
  • Initial police report labeled it an accident
  • Questions remain about whether it was intentional

Shownotes Transcript

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On October 7th, 1966, the wealthy heiress Doris Duke hit and killed her friend Eduardo Torella while behind the wheel of a rented car. Whether his death was an accident or an intentional act of murder is still up for debate nearly 60 years later. I'm Kylie Lowe, and this is the case of Eduardo Torella on Dark Down East.

It was 7 o'clock in the evening on September 17th, 2021, and Newport, Connecticut's Police Department cold case detective Jackie West had just hit record on an interview. Detective West had been assigned to review a closed case from more than five decades earlier, a motor vehicle versus pedestrian collision that resulted in the death of 42-year-old Eduardo Torella.

Newport Police Officer Edward Angel had been the first law enforcement official to arrive at the scene just outside of an estate on Bellevue Avenue that day, October 7th, 1966. It was early evening, a little after 5 p.m., when the call came in. He was a rookie cop with just about a year on the job.

In the 2021 interview with Detective West, the now-retired Officer Angel said that his training and experience so far had not prepared him for what he encountered. There was a time I observed a car off the road, on the sidewalk, up against a tree. I got out of my car, approached the vehicle. The driver of the car, who I had no idea who it was, was sitting in the car behind the wheel.

bleeding from, I think, the forehead, if I remember right. Some facial. And she was upset, and she was crying, my friend, my friend. I don't know where my friend is. And I looked in the back seat, passenger side, looked around, and then I got down on my hands and knees, and he was under the car, rolled up. I reached in. There didn't appear to be any signs of life. There wasn't a lot of blood, as I remember it.

Officer Angel said what he did next, he regrets. It was his inexperience showing. I get, this is where I goofed up. I stood up and I said, rather unprofessionally,

He's under the car, which put her into a shock. And fortunately there was a woman there that said she had some medical training and I asked her if she could look at the driver of the vehicle and then proceeded with letting the station know what was happening.

The woman with medical training he mentioned was Judith Tom, a Navy ensign, who had come upon the scene with her father, Louis Tom, before Officer Angel got there. Officer Angel admitted that his recollections were spotty. After all, this was 55 years ago.

Detective West tried to jog Edwards' memory with a few original reports and diagrams with his name on them. She reads a few lines of an incident report out loud, including an excerpt from a statement he took from Judith's father, Lewis, who the detective mistakenly refers to as the nurse.

Edward said he didn't remember taking the statement.

All that stuck out in his mind from the scene itself so many years later was the woman at the wheel bleeding from her face and the victim pinned beneath the car, who he later learned was Ed or Eduardo Torella, who the woman had been calling out for. After the victim and the driver had been taken away in ambulances, Officer Angel took statements and then measured and noted what he saw at the scene.

Tire marks in the position of the involved vehicle indicated it had come from inside the gates of a nearby estate and crossed Bellevue Avenue before hopping a sidewalk and ripping through an iron rail fence. It came to a rest at the base of a tree on the west side of Bellevue Avenue.

The iron gates of the nearby estate were damaged and parts were strewn across the road. Those were collected and bagged as evidence, along with pieces of glass found in the driveway of the estate. In Edward's diagram from 1966, which Detective West references in the 2021 interview, he noted that the gates of the estate swung outward into the road and that he believed the point of impact with the victim was in the middle of Bellevue Avenue.

This was based on residue, what he thought to be human skin tissue, that he witnessed on the ground. But Edward explained to Detective West that the next day, Newport PD Sergeant Fred Newton called him back to the scene to fix something in his diagram. Sergeant Newton showed Officer Angel that the gates of the estate were supposed to open inward, not out as he'd noted in the diagram. They had only been forced outward by the impact of the vehicle.

The sergeant then shared his theory of the incident with the rookie officer. Sergeant Newton believed that the victim, Eduardo Torella, had driven the car, a rented Dodge Polaris station wagon, up to the gates and then got out of the driver's seat to open them.

Sergeant Newton suggested that the woman in the passenger seat slid over to take the wheel, and when she did, she either accidentally or intentionally stepped on the gas and hit the victim, causing him to roll up on the hood as she drove through the gates onto Bellevue Avenue, where he fell off the hood in the location where Officer Angel had seen evidence of skin tissue in the road.

The car then continued forward until coming to a stop up against a tree, with Eduardo beneath it. Satisfied with the hypothesis offered by his superior, Officer Angel signed off on a corrected version of his report, noting that the gates of the estate opened in toward the property. That was his theory, and whether it was an accident or intentional, it has always been a bone of contention.

A bone of contention indeed, but this theory by Sergeant Newton would not be part of the official conclusion of the case. Soon after, Newport Police Chief Joseph Radice took over the investigation. Within days, the case was closed. Chief Radice labeled Eduardo Torella's death as nothing more than an unfortunate accident.

But in all the years since he made that call, many have doubted its basis in truth. Rumors still linger like a dense fog over Bellevue Avenue, whispering that the driver, Doris Duke, got away with murder. Bellevue Avenue is its own majestic enclave within Newport, Rhode Island, and one of the most iconic streets in all of New England, known for its historic homes, opulent architecture, and ties to the Gilded Age.

According to the Preservation Society of Newport County and Newport Discovery Guide, the two-and-a-half-mile stretch of Bellevue Avenue was once the summer playground for some of America's wealthiest families, who built grand estates there in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. They were referred to as cottages, though mansions is much more fitting.

Among the estates on Bellevue Avenue, where the road bends into a sharp right-angle turn, is Rough Point. It was initially designed for Frederick W. Vanderbilt in the early 20th century by architect Horace Trumbauer, but it is best known as the estate of heiress Doris Duke.

Doris Duke had been called the richest girl in the world when her father, James Buchanan Duke, the founder of American Tobacco Company, passed away in 1922. After suing her mother over the estate, it was almost entirely awarded to Doris, who was just a teenager. The dollar amount assigned to her inheritance varies from source to source.

It was anywhere from $30 million to $133 million or more in assets. Adjusted for inflation, that's upwards of $1 billion today. Doris Duke's exceptional wealth and lifestyle have made her the object of intrigue for generations. Journalists, authors, television networks, and podcasts have not missed an opportunity to highlight the life and times of the tobacco heiress.

In a majority of the newspaper clippings I've been able to access about the case of Eduardo Torella, it is Doris's name that snags the headline, not Eduardo's. And yet, it was Eduardo who was behind so many of the beautiful and spectacular things in Doris's world. He curated her art and to some extent her life.

That's Donna Lohmeyer, Eduardo Torella's niece. Donna's mother was Eduardo's closest-in-age sibling in a large Italian immigrant family living in Dover, New Jersey. When I think of Eddie, of Uncle Eddie, I think that he was the happiest person I ever knew. And he spread that to everybody. Donna calls him Uncle Eddie.

His birth certificate states his name as Eduardo, E-D-W-A-R-D-O. But he was most widely known as Eduardo E-D-U-A-R-D-O. So that's the name and spelling I'll use. Eduardo's creative interests and abilities were obvious from an early age. Throughout high school, he was involved with drama club and the arts, and he was a cheerleader.

After graduating high school in 1942, he entered the military during World War II. He earned a Bronze Star for his service. His hands and feet were frozen in the Battle of the Bulge, which left him hospitalized in France.

Eduardo returned to civilian life in the United States with doctor's orders to settle in a warm climate. But before he eventually made his home in California with his partner, Edmund Cara, Eduardo lived in Brooklyn, New York. That's where his creative career blossomed. He worked as a milliner in New York City, designing and making hats at Saks Fifth Avenue.

His designs were the crowns atop the heads of singer Peggy Lee, you might recognize her song Fever best, as well as Mae West, an American actor, singer, and entertainer known for her boundary-pushing roles that challenged social norms. Eduardo went on to design costumes for Mae West's Broadway production Diamond Lil'.

Donna has read reports that Eduardo may have even danced in the show. He certainly could have, with his multifaceted talent and sparkle. He loved to dance. He loved to sing. He made friends with everybody. He brought Frank Sinatra home for Italian food. You know, just people would gravitate toward him. And that's really the secret of his success, his incredible talent and the fact that he was a magnet for goodwill with people.

He brought Frank Sinatra home for Italian food. Donna mentions this in passing to her next anecdote about Eduardo. As casually cool about the big names who knew and loved her uncle as Eduardo was himself, his art, whether designing hats or later designing home interiors, landscapes, and film sets, would lead Eduardo into a life among actors and singers and Hollywood royalty, even actual royalty.

Eduardo was friends with the Duke and Duchess of Windsor. He never wore their celebrity as a badge of honor for him. He was a very modest and down-to-earth person. People revered him. He made everyone feel good. He helped wherever he could, and he made everybody feel like a person, so to speak. He was the first person to say, how can I help? He was tireless.

Eduardo met Doris Duke sometime in the 1950s. As a tribute to her late father, Doris was looking to bring her vision to life for a gardens-of-the-world display at her Duke Farms estate in New Jersey. Donna believes it was Peggy Lee who introduced Doris to Eduardo, who had already earned a reputation for his taste and eye when it came to design. He was hired for the job.

The Gardens of the World project consisted of massive greenhouses. The objective of them was to have glass above head so tall that you forgot that you were in an enclosure. They almost had their own environment, in addition to being so vast that you could walk around and see trees and sky and never realize that you were inside.

Each one was a different continent. And for example, India had the Taj Mahal with an incredible long reflecting pool. There was a rainforest with orchids of all varieties. Doris and Eduardo's relationship only grew from there.

He eventually had private living quarters at all of her estates and traveled around the world with her, weighing in on acquisitions of antiques and providing artistic and design direction for many more projects. For years, Eduardo was by Doris's side, but by the fall of 1966, his dreams reached far beyond the heiress.

Eduardo's career in show business was taking shape in a big way. The first film he worked on was Don't Make Waves with Tony Curtis, Claudia Cardinale, and Sharon Tate. He did the artistic design and had a brief cameo carrying a plant into a room during one scene. His next gig was serving as the artistic director on The Sandpiper, a film starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. He also made an on-screen appearance in that movie.

Donna says Eduardo wanted to go all in on Hollywood, but he couldn't do that while working for Doris. So, when Eduardo returned to Newport and Doris' Rough Point estate on October 7th, 1966, there was something he planned to do. He was there, I'm pretty safe in saying, to quit Doris Duke. Before his employment ended, though, Doris reportedly had one more project to complete with Eduardo—

Donna tells me that Doris had recently purchased a piece of antique art that she was having restored. Doris wanted Eduardo to accompany her to pick the piece up. That's where they were going when the pair approached the gates of Doris' estate on the night that Eduardo was killed.

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The original case file for this investigation is inexplicably missing from the Newport Police Department archives. I already knew this when I requested any and all documents from Newport PD as part of my reporting for this episode. Sergeant Gregory Belcher was able to provide me with some materials, including the audio recording from the 2021 interview with Officer Angel, but nothing from 1966.

The missing case file is part of the lore of this case, and it's something that author Peter Lance picked apart in great detail in his book Homicide at Rough Point. The author spent years investigating Eduardo Torella's death and drawing his own conclusions about what really happened that day.

In the process, a confidential source emailed the author a copy of the missing case file, parts of which are printed among the pages and in the appendices of his book. It's in those pieces of the case file, printed in Lance's book, where a few more details that Officer Angel couldn't remember during his interview with Detective West came to light for the first time in decades.

The initial call reporting the crash on Bellevue Avenue was made by witness James Hanley. According to his brief statement in Officer Angel's report, James was driving south on Bellevue Avenue when he noticed a car that had crashed into a tree. He didn't see it happen. James went to help a woman who was sitting behind the wheel of the car, bleeding from her mouth. The woman told James that her friend left, and she started walking around looking for the friend.

Another passerby who had since come upon the scene stayed with the woman, presumably Judith Tom and her father. The other witnesses Officer Angel described. In Judith's statement, she says she got out of her vehicle to help the bleeding woman and then followed the woman as she walked up the driveway and into her house. Judith says that the woman appeared to be in a state of shock, walking rapidly throughout the house calling out the name Edd.

As the woman came down the stairs, she said that she'd run over Ed and left the house to find him. Judith tried to comfort the woman.

Officer Angel received the call to respond to Bellevue Avenue from the fire department at 5.07 p.m. His report states that he spoke to the driver of the vehicle at the scene, just as he recalled in his 2021 interview, and that when he realized a victim was underneath the vehicle, he and the man who first called for help tried to lift the car with their bumper jacks but were unsuccessful.

Officer Angel called over his radio for urgent help from a wrecker and rescue wagon. Middletown and Newport rescue wagons responded, and then a wrecker arrived soon after and lifted the car off the victim, who was later identified as Eduardo Torella.

Eduardo's body was transported to Newport Hospital. Meanwhile, the driver of the vehicle, who had been identified as Doris Duke, was transported to the same hospital by the Middletown rescue wagon to be treated for shock and a laceration of the mouth, according to Officer Angel's report printed in Peter Lance's book.

As news broke the next morning of the crash on Bellevue Avenue, Newport police were hush-hush about the ongoing investigation. They said that they wouldn't be making any decisions or taking any action until they were able to question the driver, and that wouldn't end up happening for two days.

According to Associated Press reporting in the Press of Atlantic City, county medical examiner Dr. Philip C. McAllister, who was also serving as Doris' personal physician, said he would not allow her to be questioned yet. He said, quote, End quote.

Police finally questioned Doris at Rough Point late Sunday, October 9th, in the presence of her attorney. According to reporting by the Providence Journal, Doris gave a brief statement saying in part, quote,

Mr. Torello was the operator. We did what we have done a hundred times before. The gate was locked. He was at the lock. The car was about 15 feet from the gate. I was getting ready to drive through the gate. The car just leapt forward and I was on top of him. He was in the middle of the gate at the lock at the time, end quote. She couldn't remember anything after that.

This statement aligns in part with the theory that Sergeant Newton had developed just a day after the incident. Peter Lance reports in his book that Doris had apparently given an unofficial statement to a patrolman while she was in the hospital lobby on the day of the incident, so at least pieces of her story were discussed with a member of law enforcement before this official interview on October 9th.

In any event, Doris was the sole witness to the incident that brought a violent end to Eduardo's life, and that brief statement two days later seemed to satisfy investigators. By Monday, Chief Radice was calling the case an unfortunate accident.

The next day, Tuesday, October 11th, at St. Mary's Cemetery in Dover, New Jersey, the man celebrated for his landscape and botanical designs was laid to rest amidst the floral displays of sympathy from friends and family and celebrities like Kim Novak and Elizabeth Taylor, the producers and other industry colleagues alike.

The Herald News reports that among the flowers were two unusual arrangements of red roses, sent by Doris Duke herself. Doris was not in attendance. The same day of Eduardo's memorial service in New Jersey, Doris was supposedly questioned for a second time up in Newport.

A United Press International report in the morning call dated October 12th, 1966, indicates that after the initial statement from Doris, police still needed answers to a few questions. Now, I say supposedly questioned for a second time because the author Peter Lance suggests that there is doubt as to whether Doris actually answered any questions.

He writes that a source close to the case told him that Chief Radice knew that the investigation into Eduardo's death was lacking, and with the Attorney General breathing down his neck, Chief Radice turned to Doris' attorney. They came to the agreement that if Chief Radice wrote something up, Doris would sign it. A supposed three-page transcript of the second interview with Doris was the result.

Excerpts of the transcript were published in the Providence Journal in 1971. The book Homicide at Rough Point contains scans of the entire transcript in question. According to the transcript, Doris claimed Eduardo stopped the car about 12 to 15 feet from the north gate of Rough Point and he got out to open it so they could drive out.

Doris continued, quote, I slid over to the driver's seat and I placed my left foot on the brake and I disengaged the gear with my right hand. The car shot ahead, end quote.

The full transcript shows that Doris gave one-word answers to most of the questions that followed. Did you shift the gear from parked position? Yes. What gear did you shift into? Drive. You placed your foot on the brake also? Yes. The car then moved forward? Yes. Can you estimate the speed the car went forward? No.

Question. Was there any possibility, Miss Duke, that your foot could have engaged the accelerator pedal? Not to my knowledge, she said. Doris went on to say that the handbrake was not on when the car was in the parked position and she did not have time to pull the handbrake to stop the car once it was in motion.

When asked again if there was a possibility that her foot slipped off the brake pedal and onto the accelerator pedal, she responded that it could have happened. In a handwritten and initialed correction, she adds, Along with this second statement, another outstanding item was cleared up in the investigation.

Doris apparently proved that she had a driver's license at the time of the incident. Although records don't support this conclusion, the most recent license of Doris's that Peter Lance could find in his investigation of the case had expired in 1956, some 10 years before Doris's.

But with Doris' full account of the crash from that second interview, whether it happened or not, as far as Newport PD and Chief Radice were concerned, the case was closed. Eduardo's death was officially ruled an accident.

A week after news broke of the accident and Eduardo Torella's death, and just days after the case was closed without criminal charges, Doris Duke's name made headlines again for an entirely different reason.

T. Curtis Forbes writes for the Newport Daily News that on Saturday, October 15, 1966, Doris made a $25,000 pledge to the Cliff Lock restoration effort. If adjusted for inflation, that sum is equivalent to just under $240,000 today.

Her generous contributions to Newport classes didn't stop there. Peter Lance writes in his book that Doris Next gave $10,000 to Newport Hospital, where she received care following the accident. Donating large sums of money was not unusual for Doris Duke. Though she was known to spend her money on extravagant projects at her numerous estates and invest in rare and expensive art, Doris had a philanthropic side too.

But however generous she was known to be, Doris' contribution to the cliffwalk restoration project specifically raised eyebrows. She had been publicly resistant to the project in the past. The three-and-a-half-mile-long path along the oceanfront flanked her roughpoint estate and brought looky-loos to her property.

In the late 1950s and early 60s, she put up a wire fence and tall hedges in an attempt to keep people from passing that section of the path. But still, they got through. Reports say that Doris had been wanting to do something for Newport for a while, and the contribution could have been in the works before Eduardo's death. But whether that's true or not, the rumor mill didn't care.

When the case was quickly closed as an accident without further investigation, the timing of her donation to that cause she previously rejected was called into question. Were Doris's monetary moves in the wake of the incident her way of thanking the city of Newport for looking the other way and masking her culpability for the tragic incident? I asked Donna what she thought.

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One of the most compelling arguments lies in the details of Eduardo's autopsy report and the inconsistencies between those findings and what Doris said happened that day. Now, Doris stated that Eduardo was crushed against the gates of her estate when the car leapt forward.

However, Donna managed to dig up her Uncle Eddie's autopsy report, which had been incorrectly filed under the name Edwin, and the pathological diagnosis does not align with what Doris claimed happened.

If Eduardo was pinned and crushed against the gates, you might expect to see extensive lower body injuries, especially given the force of the vehicle moving forward. I mean, it was strong enough to force the gates the wrong way out into the street, and based on photos, all the damage to the gates was at a height below Eduardo's waist. But the only documented injury of Eduardo's lower body was a fracture of his right hip.

The other injuries included skull fractures, broken spine, extensive sternum and rib fractures, broken right arm, massive brain hemorrhage, complete tear of the spinal cord, and more. According to Peter Lance, these injuries could be more accurately explained by the theory Sergeant Fred Newton shared with Officer Angel that Eduardo was hit, flew up onto the hood of the car, but then fell off and was dragged beneath the vehicle.

What would have caused Eduardo to fall off the hood of the car? Perhaps a hesitation, the driver hitting the brakes and then accelerating again. It's an argument for intent.

But why would Doris want to kill the person who had been by her side for years, who helped make her life beautiful, who was her confidant and friend? What motive could she have to intentionally step on the gas and drag his body across Bellevue Avenue and violently end his life? Doris has been called possessive, controlling, jealous, and vindictive. And she had demonstrated her violent nature in the past.

A 1964 UPI report in the New York Times states that Doris' former common-law husband, jazz musician Joe Castro, was suing Doris for $150,000 in damages after she allegedly stabbed him in the arm.

Donna told me that Eduardo's partner and friends and even a psychic had cautioned him about Doris. They believed the heiress to be volatile and violent and feared what her reaction would be to learning that Eduardo planned to leave her side in pursuit of growing his career in Hollywood. And accounts by Roughpoint staff support a theory that Doris was indeed upset and that they had argued before the fatal event occurred.

Apparently, he had told her that he was leaving, and the estate manager and others overheard a violent argument prior to their leaving for the antique place, prior to his death. What's more, Donna told me that her father saw evidence at the scene of an intentional acceleration.

My brother and dad got in a car almost immediately and drove up to Newport and inspected the scene and then spent the night and went over the scene again during the day. My father was an electrical engineer in avionics, aerospace, moon program, and very bright man, not given to histrionics, a very analytical guy.

and he knew immediately what had happened. There in the gravel of Rough Point's driveway were two gouges about the width of tires. It looked like someone suddenly stepped on the gas pedal, and the car tire spun into action, leaving the telltale marks behind. For Eduardo's family, there was no doubt in their minds that foul play was involved, but they had little recourse with the police investigation closed.

There was something they could do, though, outside of criminal proceedings, to prove that Doris was responsible for Eduardo's death and be compensated for it.

On December 7, 1967, Eduardo's sister, Alice Romano, filed a negligence suit on behalf of all her siblings against Doris Duke for the sum of $1.25 million. A second suit for an equal amount was also filed against the rental car company for the vehicle involved in Eduardo's death.

The file for the negligence suit against Doris is gone. Missing, destroyed, whatever happened to it, it's not at the Judicial Records Center. But there are bits and pieces of the proceedings documented in the Providence Journal, Newport Daily News, and other publications. The plaintiffs alleged that Doris negligently and carelessly drove the vehicle which dragged Eduardo across Bellevue Avenue for a great distance, causing his death.

As a result, the suit claimed, Eduardo's surviving family members were deprived of his potential earnings. The case proceeded in June of 1971. Doris herself was among the witnesses who testified, recounting the story of that day five years earlier when Eduardo got out of the driver's seat to open the gate.

The field investigator for the Registrar of Motor Vehicles testified that when he inspected the car three days after the accident, the car could only move about 10 feet forward and backward due to the damage sustained in the crash. However, their tests showed that the throttle moved freely and the foot pedals moved as they should. These findings were in the face of any suggestion that the car was faulty and that it could have accelerated forward on its own due to defect.

During the damages phase, Eduardo's siblings testified to the success their brother was already seeing in Hollywood.

According to an Associated Press report, Eduardo had told his brother Francis Torella just a few months before he was killed that he felt like he had finally arrived. But Doris' defense team worked to discredit this assessment of Eduardo's earning potential and presented the victim instead as a ne'er-do-well who was bad with money and didn't have a nickel to his name.

A ruling was finally issued in July of 1971, and the case was decided in favor of Eduardo's family, though nowhere near the amount they sought when they first filed the suit. They were awarded just $75,000 in damages plus interest and costs, about $96,000 total. The amount was split among eight siblings.

So, Doris Duke was found negligent in civil court. But since this was not a criminal case, she wouldn't face jail time for her negligence. Still, there was lasting suspicion from Eduardo's family and many others that what Doris did that evening was not merely negligence, but an intentional killing. Yet, the case remained closed.

Until 50 years later, when a witness called Newport police with an unbelievable story. Meta's open source AI models are available to all, not just the few. Because they're open source, small businesses, students, and more can download and build with them at no cost. Learn more about the benefits at ai.meta.com slash open.

Following the release of Peter Lance's book Homicide at Rough Point, a man named Robert Walker caught wind of the conclusions the author had reached from his investigation. He felt it was finally the right time to come forward. You see, Robert, who goes by Bob, had been keeping a secret from Newport police since 1966. He says he was there on the day Doris Duke hit and killed Eduardo Torella.

Bob called Newport Police on July 1st, 2021, and his story prompted a review of the case. It was assigned to Detective West, who sat down with Bob for an interview the next day. So you've come here on your own, and you'd like to just offer some information in regards to the incident with the accident that occurred with Doris Duke and Eduardo... Let me get his last name correct...

It wasn't an accident. Okay. In my opinion. No, that's fine. So tell me what you wanted to talk about. Yeah, the story. In 1966, Bob was a paperboy in Newport. His route included Bellevue Avenue, and he was supposed to be done by 4.30. But that Friday, October 7th, he was running a little late.

It was around 5:00 p.m. when he rounded the corner of Ledge Road onto Bellevue. "So just about the time I hit the corner of Ledge and Bellevue, I could hear two people arguing, fighting, screaming at each other." He believes the voices were a man and woman in an argument. He couldn't make out what they were saying, but the tone of voice wasn't nice. He was still on his bike pedaling up the street when the screaming stopped

The next thing I hear is the roar of an engine, like a roar, you know. Then I hear a crash. And in the consequences of that, I'm hearing a man screaming, you know what I mean? Now, when you hear the crash, do you look over? Well, I can't look because I haven't got there yet. Okay. You know what I mean? I'm still, I'm heading the blind side of the building, what happened on the corner?

Bob keeps pumping the pedals, bringing him closer to the source of the sounds. And I swear, I heard after the crash, the guy screaming, and I actually heard, I believe I heard like a little skid. Definitely a deceleration of the motor. Acceleration? Deceleration of the motor. And slight delay. And now the screaming of a man, and he was saying no.

After that, the sound of another crash. I cleared the corner.

Bob said he saw a woman was standing outside of the car and looking down as he rode up on his bicycle.

The woman was unaware of his presence until the telltale clicks of his 10-speed bicycle seemed to snap her out of a daze. And she spins on me, and she looks at me, and I was like, are you all right, man? Can I help you? And she spins on me, and she goes, you better get the hell out of here! You know, as a kid, I was like... Bob said he did as he was told. He pedaled off, taking a right on Ocean Avenue, and rode past Bailey Beach and beyond.

Bob could hear sirens in the distance and assumed they were responding to the scene that he'd just been ordered to leave. When Bob got home late for dinner, he was greeted by his strict father, who asked why he was late. Bob told his dad there was a car accident. But it wasn't until the next day when reports of that accident hit the press that Bob realized exactly what he'd encountered the night before. Bob decided to tell his dad about what he saw and heard.

Bob says he didn't speak of it again until he was 17 years old and about to enlist in the Marine Corps. He asked his father why he forbade him to speak about what he saw that day on Bellevue Avenue.

As Bob got older, the volume of his father's warnings faded in his mind, while the nagging feeling that he should have spoken up and gone to the police with what he saw grew stronger. The story started to seep out of him, bit by bit.

In 1973, when friends from the Marine Corps came to visit him in Newport, Bob says he took them up to the gates of the Doris Duke estate and recounted what he heard and saw there on the day of the incident. He also told his brother and sister. Each time, he says he recounted the yelling between a man and woman, the two distinct accelerations of a car motor, the face of the woman who ordered him away from the scene.

Soon, by Bob's own estimation, he told the story at least 50 times. In fact, before sitting down for the interview with the Newport Police Department, he'd called many of the people who'd heard his first-hand account of that day, just to make sure they all remembered and would corroborate that he'd told them the story sometime in the past.

Because it's a fascinating story. It really is kind of, you know. Yeah, no, it is. It's a fascinating story. It is the story. Bob's version of events was compelling. If what he says he heard was true, an argument and two distinct accelerations, it gives more credence to an intentional murder theory.

There was one more piece of Bob's story that Detective West teased out towards the end of their over two-hour long conversation. One last question. Do you remember if Doris Duke had any injuries when you were talking to her? You know, that's something that I kind of thought about. No, none, no. They say she was bleeding in her face. No. You don't remember seeing it? No, it's not that I don't remember, no. I mean, I don't remember. There was no blood.

If Doris Duke was out of her car without any visible injuries or blood immediately following the crash, how, then, did she get those injuries on her face that Officer Edward Angel reported seeing when he arrived at the scene? Did she give herself those injuries as part of an already hatched scheme to cover up murder? If what Bob Walker says he heard and saw is true, it could change everything.

Eduardo Torella's case was not technically reopened, but Newport Police continued with a review of the original investigation through the summer and fall of 2021. This review included Detective West's interview with retired officer Edward Angel, part of which you heard at the beginning of this episode. During that conversation, Edward Angel wonders out loud about the legitimacy of Bob Walker's story and the timing of it all.

Like I say, along comes this testimony, and it kind of, you have to figure out, if he's telling the truth, there's reason to quit. He does sound credible. I mean, I've talked to, you know, people he grew up with, who he told the story two years ago, and everything's pretty consistent. And he's told this story, like, I don't know, several times. It's pretty consistent. If this is, in fact, what he observed, then there's very good reason to think that she tried to cover it up.

But however credible Detective West found Bob Walker to be, it did not change the conclusions reached by Newport PD after the 2021 review.

According to Rob Duca's reporting for Newport this week, Newport's communications officer, Tom Shelvin, released a statement on November 23rd saying, quote,

To that end, it would be imprudent to either reclassify this incident or to offer any further commentary beyond our official opinion. Accordingly, as we have previously articulated, it remains the opinion of the Newport Police Department that there is not sufficient evidence to draw any firm conclusions as to the motivations of Ms. Duke.

For that reason, it appears that this will continue to be a case that will have to be left to the court of public opinion. End quote.

Whatever you believe about Eduardo Torello's death, what you choose to take from the autopsy results, the witness statements, the timing of Doris' financial generosity in Newport, the disappearing case file and court records, Bob Walker's story 50 years after the fact, all of it, Doris has never and will never face any criminal charges related to Eduardo's death. She died in 1993.

Eduardo's niece, Donna, maintains her own conclusions. While I think it was intent to kill murder, I don't think it was premeditated. I don't think she premeditated anything, ever. People made decisions for her or she reacted with knee jerk. And that's what I think this was. I think it was, he's not going to leave me and get away with it. Nobody leaves me.

Donna keeps photos of her Uncle Eddie up around her house. Her favorite one is of Eddie walking down the street in Europe. A briefcase in one hand and what looks like a stack of books in the other. He's in motion, walking towards the camera, with a grin that reaches all the way up to his eyes. And that's the way I think of him always.

He had wonderful eyes that sparkled. He laughed constantly. I mean, I remember his laugh more than his voice. His eyes were, we call them, their family eyes. And he had them. And people would just melt into them and gravitate toward him. If he were in a room with 100 other people, he would be the magnet that people were attracted to. It made you feel good about yourself.

Uncle Eddie's legacy lives on in Donna's life and the lives of countless others who still, to this day, almost 60 years later, remember Eduardo for how he lived, not how he died. I think that whatever he did, he made the world, in whatever his endeavor, he made the world more beautiful, and that was his intent. He made the world kinder and made life better for many, many people.

Thank you for listening to Dark Down East. You can find all source material for this case at darkdowneast.com. Be sure to follow the show on Instagram at darkdowneast. This platform is for the families and friends who have lost their loved ones and for those who are still searching for answers. I'm not about to let those names or their stories get lost with time. I'm Kylie Lowe, and this is Dark Down East.

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