BOSTON (CBS) - More than twenty years ago Boston was rocked by the story of Charles Stuart, who claimed a black man had shot him and his pregnant wife. It was actually Stuart who did the shooting. For ...
A young and affluent Boston couple were just about to welcome their first child in 1989 when the pregnant woman was shot, killing the mom-to-be and eventually, her baby. The murder of Carol DiMaiti ...
If you’re watching HBO’s latest true crime documentary series Murder in Boston: Roots, Rampage & Reckoning, you might be wondering where Charles Stuart is now. Carol DiMaiti married Charles “Chuck” ...
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu issued a formal apology Wednesday to two Black men who were wrongly accused in a 1989 murder of a white woman, a case that coarsened divisions in a city long split along ...
The new Max true crime docuseries, Murder in Boston: Roots, Rampage & Reckoning, tells the tragic story of a pregnant woman who was murdered in her car in 1989, triggering a manhunt in Boston. As the ...
The Globe has won the prestigious duPont-Columbia Award. Spotlight editor Brendan McCarthy shares the behind-the-scenes story. A team of Globe reporters spent two years re-investigating the 1989 ...
The Yuppie Murder revisits the terrifying shooting of a young married couple, Charles and Carol Stuart, during what was initially reported as a robbery. The episode is set to air on Saturday, August ...
That night 20 years ago is one that I will never forget. I had been out in a ride-along with two Boston Police detectives as they enforced the department's new "Stop and Frisk" policy. Gang violence ...
Charles Stuart shot his pregnant wife, Carol, and himself on the way out of a birthing class at the Brigham and Women's Hospital. When Stuart, a white man, called 911 for assistance, he implicated a ...
Murder in Boston: Roots, Rampage & Reckoning is a three-part HBO original documentary series exploring Boston’s history of race-based hostilities against the backdrop of the notorious Carol Stuart ...
Charles Stuart`s story is the kind of yarn Alfred Hitchcock would have loved to tell. He might have cast a young Jimmy Stewart or Fred MacMurray to play the clean-cut young man whose tale of ...