Metro

Skakel slay appeal KO’d

NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Kennedy cousin Michael Skakel lost his bid for a new trial in the 1975 slaying of his 15-year-old neighbor as the state Supreme Court yesterday rejected his appeal that cited a claim implicating two other men.

The court ruled 4-1 against Skakel’s request, saying the evidence doesn’t back up the alternate claim.

Skakel, a nephew of Robert Kennedy’s widow, Ethel, was sentenced to 20 years to life in prison in 2002 for beating Martha Moxley to death with a golf club in 1975 in Greenwich, Conn. Yesterday’s decision came after years of appeals and a campaign by Skakel’s cousin, Robert Kennedy Jr.

Skakel, 49, had asked for a new trial after Gitano “Tony” Bryant, who attended the same private school as Skakel, implicated two friends in the killing. A judge turned down that request in 2007, and Skakel then appealed to the state’s highest court.

Bryant gave a videotaped statement to an investigator hired by Skakel in which he said his two friends were in Greenwich the night Moxley was killed. He said they told him they got Moxley “caveman style.”

Bryant, a cousin of NBA star Kobe Bryant, has since invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, as have the two men he implicated.

Skakel still has an appeal pending in federal court.