BODY OF RFK GRANDDAUGHTER RECOVERED IN MD.; AUSTRALIAN COURT DISMISSES CARDINAL’S SEX-ABUSE CONVICTIONS
ANNAPOLIS, Md. — The body of the daughter of former Lt. Gov. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend was located in about 25 feet of water and recovered, authorities said Monday, and they will keep searching for her son, after the two went missing following a canoeing accident last week.
The body of Maeve Kennedy Townsend McKean, 40, was located by Charles County Dive and Rescue and recovered about 2.5 miles south of her mother’s residence in Shady Side, Maryland, where the canoe was launched, Maryland Natural Resources Police said. The recovery came after a days-long search that involved aviation and underwater imaging sonar technology.
Kathleen Kennedy Townsend is the sister of Chris Kennedy, the Chicago businessman who ran for Illinois governor in 2018.
Maeve McKean’s husband, David, in a Facebook post Friday said their family was self- quarantining in an empty house owned by his wife’s mother hoping to give their kids more space to run around than they had at their home in Washington, D.C.
Authorities say they will resume searching Tuesday for her son, 8-year- old Gideon McKean. The search started Thursday after authorities responded to a report of two people on a canoe in the Chesapeake Bay who appeared to be overtaken by strong winds.
David McKean, who said he was heartbroken to even have to try to explain who his son was, described him as an old man. “He might as well have been 38,” he said in his post. “He was deeply compassionate, declining to sing children’s songs if they contained a hint of animals or people being treated cruelly.” He said he used to marvel at his son as a toddler, thinking he was too perfect to exist in this world. “It seems to me now that he was,” McKean said.
He described his wife as his best friend and soulmate whose laugh you could hear a block away.
“She was magical—with endless energy that she would put toward inventing games for our children, taking on another project at work or in our community, and spending time with our friends,” McKean wrote. “She was the brightest light I have ever known.”