Anonymous ID: b3c987 May 26, 2023, 10:26 a.m. No.18906619   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6661 >>7056 >>7126 >>7237 >>7298 >>7305

MARY CAITRIN MAHONEY,

White House intern, and as a lesbian was well aware of goings on inside the Clinton White House, including Hillary's apparent love affair with another White House woman, who was able to reportedly get top secrets from Hillary.

Mahoney was murdered in a Starbucks Coffee Shop, right in the District of Columbia, in July 1997

Anonymous ID: b3c987 May 26, 2023, 10:33 a.m. No.18906651   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6672 >>6935 >>7056 >>7126 >>7237 >>7298 >>7305

Mary Mahoney Murder

 

Mary (“Caithy”) Mahoney was a lesbian former intern at the White House who had served as a den mother to all the young interns who were being sexually harassed by Bill. She had left the White House and was working at a Starbucks in DC when the Lewinsky scandal became public. Monica Lewinsky and other interns, George Stephanopolous, and Chelsea Clinton frequented the establishment regularly and Monica often had conversations with Mary while at Starbucks. Monica began confiding in Mary about her affair with Bill.

 

Three days before the murder Monica had told Bill she was going to tell her parents about their relationship. Bill reacted angrily, telling her, "It's a crime to threaten the President." Monica took the threat seriously telling Linda Tripp that she feared for both their lives if her affair with Clinton ever became public. After Mary's murder, Monica knew she could wind up like Caity Mahoney.

 

Right before Mary's murder there was gossip swirling through Washington based on a columnist's blind item that a former White House intern whose name began with the letter M was about to reveal news of a sexual relationship with Bill Clinton. Was it Mahoney, Clinton damage controllers no doubt wondered?

 

Just two days before the murders Matt Drudge first reported that Clinton had put the moves on a then-unnamed White House volunteer.

 

Of course, the DC police were aware of this and were big supporters of Bill. Bill was very popular with the black community in Washington and had a lot of support in the police department.

 

The Starbucks where Mary worked had closed at 8:00 pm the night of the murder and the doors were routinely locked until they left. No one could understand why the workers had opened the door after the store was closed. The only thing that explains it is that the murderers had pulled up in a police car and were wearing police uniforms and that's why they were let in. After killing all three workers and making sure Mary would never talk again with five bullets (one in the back of the head) they for some reason decided to lock the door on the way out.

They picked up a local loser (Carl Derek Cooper) and pressured him into confessing to the murder.

Anonymous ID: b3c987 May 26, 2023, 10:35 a.m. No.18906662   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7056 >>7126 >>7237 >>7298 >>7305

On July 7, 1997, the bodies of 25-year-old Mahoney and two others, Emory Allen Evans (also age 25) and Aaron David Goodrich (age 18) were all found in the cold storage room by the morning crew at the Starbucks Coffee shop where Mahoney worked as a night manager. All had been shot to death.

 

Evans and Goodrich also worked at Starbucks, located in the relatively low crime area of Burleith, north of Georgetown in DC. The store was not robbed. One local radio station reported that all three were shot in the head but that one body was riddled with bullets.

 

The following strange circumstances were discovered around the murder scene:

 

1) The store’s doors had been locked from the outside as if the night crew had locked them before leaving the night before, as they did every night. Apparently, the assailant(s) locked up behind them after committing the murders.

 

2) Nothing in the store was out of place. Though there were thousands of dollars in cash on hand, not one dime had been taken from the day’s receipts. This fact would seem to rule out a robbery.

 

3) Despite being located in the densely populated Georgetown neighborhood, no one heard the shots. This fact suggests the assailant(s) used a silencer which would point to a professional hit.

 

4) While all three of the Starbucks employees had been shot, the former intern Mahoney was shot five times, once in the back of the head.

Anonymous ID: b3c987 May 26, 2023, 10:43 a.m. No.18906690   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6694

https://missnightterrors.wordpress.com/2021/08/27/the-starbucks-triple-slaying/

'' The Starbucks Triple Slaying in Georgetown ''

A seven minute read.

 

Why were the lights on?

 

A Starbucks day shift supervisor parked her car just before 5 a.m. on Monday, 7 July 1997. The Fourth of July weekend was still in full swing in Washington DC and the salubrious swathe that is Georgetown would be chock-a-block with tourists later that day.

 

She noticed the assistant manager’s silver 1994 Saturn, still in the car park. Odd.

 

The door was locked but from the inside. After unlocking it, the shift supervisor stepped inside. Why was the music on?

 

She checked the schedule to see who had closed the night before. Calling for the assistant manager was a waste of time: she was meant to be alone that morning. But with the lights and music on, was it possible that a co-worker was in the back?

 

An early version of events (as reported by The Washington Post, no less) had her opening a walk-in freezer and finding the frozen bodies of the manager and two baristas inside.

 

What really happened was this: finding the bodies en route to the office in the back, gunned down in the corridor.

 

Distraught, she ran into the street and frantically waved a city bus down. The driver, realising something was terribly wrong, pulled over and rang the police.

 

The victims were assistant manager Mary Caitlin (‘Caity’) Mahoney, 25; part-time barista Emory Allen Evans, also 25 and full-time barista Aaron David Goodrich, 18. All had been shot to death, execution-style.

 

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Anonymous ID: b3c987 May 26, 2023, 10:44 a.m. No.18906694   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6707

>>18906690

 

Evans and Goodrich lived with their fathers in Washington. Evans was a new hire who wanted to attend Howard University in Washington and study music. Goodrich had been at Starbucks for a while, his father reportedly helping him get the job.

 

Mahoney, on the other hand, was brought up in privilege in a Baltimore suburb. She, her brother Patrick and her sister Molly were raised by her mother and the man who became her second husband, Barnet Annenberg. Annenberg was a well-to-do businessman with a strong sense of social justice, his company was one of the first in Baltimore to hire African-Americans, women, the disabled, and parolees. (Many of the parolees were among the best employees the company ever had, working there for decades.) Annenberg met Mahoney when she was six and was a positive influence on her. Her mother Mary Belle remembered how unusually sympathetic her daughter was, ‘struggling’ with her conscience after sacking a member of staff for theft. Mary Belle told the Washington Post: ‘She had an enormous heart,’ adding: ‘She probably would have had compassion for the person who killed her.’

 

Mahoney’s commitment to social justice prompted her to volunteer for Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential campaign, becoming an intern at the Clinton White House. A university graduate, Mahoney did not aspire to work in politics and applied to Starbucks at 1810 Wisconsin Avenue NW Northwest) in 1995, hoping for an HR job in the Baltimore office, but was hired as an assistant manager. She loved her job. The only reminder of her White House past was when Chelsea Clinton ordered a coffee, then realised she had no money on her. Mahoney swiftly smoothed over an awkward situation by paying for the coffee herself.

 

After participating in her brother’s wedding that summer, Mahoney was looking forward to celebrating her birthday on 22 July.

 

Her killer took that happiness away from her and her family.

 

No weapon was recovered from the crime scene, but the Washington DC Metropolitan Police found bullet casings spat out by two different weapons, a .380 semiautomatic, and a .38 handgun.

 

The post-mortems revealed that Mahoney had been shot five times, Evans three times, and Goodrich once, that single bullet managing to penetrate both lungs and the heart.

 

The police wondered why the employees were murdered: was it a robbery gone wrong or a random act of violence? No money was taken and there was no evidence of anyone trying to break into the safe.

 

They found 10 bullet casings and what appeared to be a warning shot, fired into the ceiling. And there was a footprint.

 

Was the motive personal? To be blunt, there were more bullets in Mahoney than in either barista. Did a boyfriend or a former boyfriend come to see her as they were shutting up shop? Was there an argument he chose to settle with bullets, killing the baristas to avoid being identified?

 

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Anonymous ID: b3c987 May 26, 2023, 10:47 a.m. No.18906707   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18906694

 

There were no security cameras and the police would note that the alarm ‘had not been breached’, nor was there any sign that the lock on the front door was tampered with; the door was locked when the shift supervisor arrived in the morning. Odd, very odd indeed.

 

Or had a recently sacked employee returned at closing time for revenge?

The police quickly tracked down the drug-addicted employee Mahoney was dismissed for stealing $300 from the till. The New York Times was led to believe (by law enforcement) that the employee, livid over being terminated, may have returned to Starbucks for revenge.

 

But Starbucks had not pressed charges. And the police would discover that the employee was out of town for the Fourth of July – and he and Mahoney had worked out a reimbursement plan. They photographed the soles of his shoes, but their footprints left behind at the scene of the crime were not his.

 

Howard Schultz, CEO of Starbucks, cut his holiday short to go to Washington, announcing his intention to stay as long as he might be needed. Starbucks offered a reward of $50,000 for information leading to the arrest of the killer or killers; since more than one handgun was used, the police believed there was more than one perpetrator.

 

Feeling frustrated, Metropolitan Police homicide detective James L. Trainum (now retired and the author of the fascinating book How the Police Generate False Confessions: an Inside Look at the Interrogation Room) contacted FBI Special Agent Brad Garrett for an outside opinion, as he had in the past. There were very few clues: a shoe print found at the crime scene, the casings, and the slugs removed from the ceiling.

 

And there was Mahoney’s to-do list, including a reminder to apologise to an employee she felt she reprimanded too sternly for a less-than-professional appearance. The police went to see him, but he bore her no ill will.

 

Councilman Jack Evans (D-Ward 2), who has represented Georgetown and Burleith in D.C. City Council since 1991 and chaired the Council Judiciary Committee at the time, expressed his shock when he told reporters: ‘To have a triple homicide anywhere in the District of Columbia is an unusual event. To have a triple homicide in Georgetown is extraordinary: Georgetown has never been a place where crime has been a problem.’

 

It was the first case of murder in Georgetown in 18 months, Evans pointing out that of 397 murders in Washington in 1996, only 6 occurred west of 16th Street.

 

There wasn’t a break in the case until 27 September.

 

Metropolitan Police homicide was contacted anonymously; the man on the telephone said two men were involved in the triple slaying; one was named Carl, surname unknown. But he provided a description: Carl was a slender African-American male with a dark complexion in his mid-20s who lived with his mother, his wife, and his son on Gallatin Street in Washington. And the informant said that call drove a car painted an unusual shade of blue.

 

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Pat C…

Anonymous ID: b3c987 May 26, 2023, 11:03 a.m. No.18906762   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6765

July 09, 1997, |By Ellen Gamerman and Melody Simmons | Ellen Gamerman and Melody Simmons, SUN STAFF writers Mary Maushard, Kris Antonelli, Eric Lekus, and Stacey Patton contributed to this article.

 

WASHINGTON Caity Mahoney ran to the phone to call her friends. Chelsea Clinton, of all people, had just walked into Starbucks but could not find enough money for coffee. Before anyone could intervene, Caity reached into her pocket for change and bought the president's daughter a drink. Could they believe it she had treated the president's daughter to a cup of coffee?

 

It was such a Caity story, mainly because it was the kind of thing that just doesn't happen to ordinary people. Brimming with enthusiasm and 10 times the political junkie of any of her friends she was thrilled at such encounters as a newcomer to Washington from her native Baltimore.

Ms. Mahoney's mother had just returned from a funeral home near Baltimore when she told this story yesterday.

It came to mind as she tried to describe her 25-year-old daughter, one of three young employees of a Starbucks who were shot to death Sunday night in the upscale Georgetown neighborhood. "None of us are as active or as selfless as Caity was," said Mary Belle Annenberg, who had identified her daughter in a back room of the coffee shop on Monday.

 

"She had enormous promise, and that's the sadness."

Mary Caitrin Mahoney was found murdered execution-style, with two bullet holes in her head.

Police are still seeking clues and a suspect in the incident, in which two other Starbucks employees Emory Allen Evans, 25, and Aaron David Goodrich, 18 were also fatally shot.

 

Security tapes from the nearby Four Seasons Hotel have been requested by detectives because a man speaking on a hotel telephone was overheard trying to reach his lawyers after the killings, a police source told the Associated Press.

Yesterday, Starbucks Corp. offered a $50,000 reward to find the killer.

In Washington, where Ms. Mahoney had worked for more than a year, and in Baltimore, where her family still lives, loved ones tried yesterday to put her ebullient life into words.

 

Ms. Mahoney was the one who never cried as a baby and who stopped eating meat as an adult because she felt sorry for the animals.

She was the one who gave leftover food to homeless people on her way home from her waitress job, who trekked across Alaska with her 74-year-old grandmother, who danced literally until dawn with friends most weekends.

 

She was the one who watched CNN every day, who included her cat's name in the greeting on her answering machine, who still became homesick every now and then and didn't mind admitting it.

"Why does God take the angels and leave the rest?" asked Molly Mahoney, her sister.

The question went unanswered yesterday in the Towson home of Ms. Mahoney's father and stepmother, Patrick and Virginia Mahoney, where her relatives made preparations for a memorial service.

 

Funeral services are scheduled for 10 a.m. Friday at McDonogh School in Owings Mills. In a memorial tribute, the family established the Mary Caitrin Mahoney Fund at the school.

 

Ms. Mahoney grew up in the Baltimore area, standing out in her classes with her red hair, freckles, and inquisitive nature.

She attended McDonogh and majored in women's studies at Towson University, graduating with honors in 1995.

She was the youngest in a family of six children blended by divorce and remarriage. Instead of tearing the family apart, those separations seemed to expand her family circle.

 

Ms. Mahoney was close to her older brother and sister, as well as to her three step-siblings. On Christmas and Thanksgiving, she typically shuttled between their homes.

 

"How do you respond?" asked her stepmother, Virginia Mahoney, who served as a victim witness coordinator for the U.S. attorney's office in Baltimore several years ago.

 

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Anonymous ID: b3c987 May 26, 2023, 11:03 a.m. No.18906765   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18906762

 

 

"The horror of it is we lose a person who could have contributed to society and we still have whoever took her."

Ms. Mahoney was delighted at the chance to break into Washington after having campaigned on the East Coast for Bill Clinton during the 1992 presidential campaign.

 

She was one of the first interns to work at the Clinton White House. So excited about her job in the public liaison office, Ms. Mahoney was known to arrange and rearrange the tables, chairs, and telephones to make sure everything looked perfect.

 

"She had this wonderful way of loving life, and she was very eager to be helpful," said Doris Matsui, the office's deputy director.

After her internship, Ms. Mahoney lived in Baltimore and worked at a series of coffee bars and restaurants while serving on the board of directors for a feminist bookstore, the 31st Street Bookstore.

 

More than a year ago, she moved to her own efficiency apartment in the eclectic neighborhood of Adams Morgan, where she lived with her cat, Marlu. She had originally moved to Washington to live with a friend.

 

At the same time, Ms. Mahoney warmed to the job she had landed at Starbucks. Promoted to assistant manager two months ago, she would draft business plans on her computer at home, stop by the shop on her days off, and think nothing of working extra-long shifts.

Some of her best friends worked at the shop.

 

Life full of promise cut short Slaying: The family and friends of Mary Caitrin Mahoney remember her energy and enthusiasm, and try to understand her death in a D.C. coffee shop.

 

July 09, 1997, |By Ellen Gamerman and Melody Simmons | Ellen Gamerman and Melody Simmons, SUN STAFF writers Mary Maushard, Kris Antonelli, Eric Lekus, and Stacey Patton contributed to this article.

 

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