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BOSTON – The high-profile Karen Read murder trial that got underway on April 16 at Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham, Massachusetts ended months later in a mistrial due to a hung jury.
Read is accused of killing her boyfriend, Boston police officer John O’Keefe, with her SUV in 2022. Her defense argues she is the victim of an elaborate coverup and is being framed by a group of people that includes law enforcement.
Here is a look at the timeline of events in the Karen Read investigation and trial.
Shortly after midnight: Karen Read, John O’Keefe and a group of friends went to the Waterfall Bar and Grill in Canton on the night of January 28, 2022. According to prosecutors, Read consumed several alcoholic beverages. Read drove O’Keefe to the home of Boston police officer Brian Albert. That is where police said people from the bar were meeting back up.
1 a.m.: Court documents later revealed that in the weeks before and even the hours leading up to the night out, text messages between Read and O’Keefe as well as voicemails showed a strained relationship. Investigators said that around 1 a.m. on January 29, Read allegedly left O’Keefe a voicemail that said “…you are a f—— loser, f— yourself” and “John, I f—— hate you.”
4-5 a.m. – At 4:23 a.m. while heavy snow was falling, O’Keefe’s niece called Jennifer McCabe, Brian Albert’s sister-in-law and a friend of O’Keefe’s. She said Read was “distraught” because O’Keefe had not come home and was not answering his cellphone. According to court documents, McCabe said she heard Read screaming “John didn’t come home. We had a fight.” Around 5 a.m. Read called another woman whose husband was friends with O’Keefe. Prosecutors alleged that Read said while they searched “What if he’s dead? What if a plow hit him? … I don’t remember anything from last night, we drank so much I don’t remember anything.”
5:07 a.m. – Read, McCabe, and the third woman went to look for O’Keefe. Prosecutors said Read mentioned to the women that she had a crack in her tail light and wondered if she could have hit O’Keefe. At 5:07 a.m., a surveillance camera at O’Keefe’s house shows Read’s SUV coming “extremely close” to O’Keefe’s SUV in the driveway. Prosecutors say no tail light pieces were found in the driveway. Read’s defense argues the vehicle did strike SUV, breaking the tail light and providing an explanation for damage to SUV.
6 a.m. – Around 6 a.m., Read sees O’Keefe lying in the snow outside Brian Albert’s home. An emergency responder said that while hysterical and inconsolable, Read repeatedly says “I hit him. I hit him.” The defense argues that one of the first responding officers from Canton police gave “false and deceptive testimony” to the grand jury that would later indict Read.
January 29, 2022 – Prosecutors and defense attorneys agree that at some point the morning O’Keefe was killed, someone googled “hos (sic) long to die in cold.” The sides disagree on when the search was made. Prosecutors say the search happened at 6:23 a.m. and 6:24 a.m. after O’Keefe’s body was found. The defense says a federal forensic expert determined the search was made at 2:27 a.m., before police were alerted that O’Keefe’s body had been found.
January 29, 2022 – Police say they found a broken cocktail glass and pieces of tail light at the scene. A forensic toxicologist estimated that Read’s blood alcohol content (BAC) would have been around .13-.29 around 12:45 a.m., more than the legal limit.
January 31, 2022 – An autopsy is completed on O’Keefe. Prosecutors said the medical examiner ruled the cause of death was blunt impact injuries to the head and hypothermia. They say the medical examiner did not find “any obvious signs of an altercation or a fight.”
February 2, 2022 – Read appears in Stoughton District Court for the first time, pleading not guilty to manslaughter, motor vehicle homicide, and leaving the scene of a motor vehicle collision causing death.
June 10, 2022 – A Norfolk County grand jury indicts Karen Read on charges of second-degree murder, manslaughter while operating under the influence of alcohol, and leaving the scene of personal injury and death. Read is arraigned on the new charges in O’Keefe’s death. She pleaded not guilty in Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham and was ordered held on $100,000 bail. Read made bail and has been out on release since.
May 3, 2023 – Defense attorneys Alan Jackson and David Yannetti allege that O’Keefe was involved in a fight inside Brian Albert’s home. They claim O’Keefe was beaten and his body was later dumped outside. Jackson and Yannetti focused on wounds to O’Keefe’s arms, which they said showed he was attacked by Albert’s dog during the fight.
“This is not just fishing,” Jackson said during the May 3 hearing. “We’ve got a fish on the hook, we just need the court to help us reel it in.” Norfolk Assistant District Attorney Adam Lally argued that O’Keefe never went in the home and added “There is no evidence that Mr. O’Keefe was beaten and left for for dead.”
May 24, 2023 – During a pretrial hearing, Read’s attorneys laid out what they allege to be a coverup by law enforcement.
“Certainly the Massachusetts State Police is involved. There are people that were in that house that are involved,” Jackson said. “Brian Albert is involved. Jennifer McCabe is involved. The rest of the folks that were in that house, there’s some level of involvement by every one of them. Every single one of them. We’re not going to rest until we get to the bottom of exactly who’s behind this coverup. Not only Karen Read deserves this. John O’Keefe deserves this, and has deserved this from moment one. And that’s why they’re not going to rest.”
Following the dramatic hearing, Read spoke to reporters for the first time.
“We know who did it. We know. And we know who spearheaded this coverup. You all know,” Read said on the courthouse steps. “I tried to save his life. I tried to save his life at 6 in the morning, I was covered in his blood. I was the only one trying to save his life.”
August 1, 2023 – Judge Beverly Cannone denied a prosecution request for a gag order in the case. The Norfolk District Attorney’s office had asked for the gag order saying witnesses were being harassed. Yannetti countered by saying it was prosecutors who are “controlling the narrative.”
August 25, 2023 – Norfolk County District Attorney Michael Morrissey released a video statement slamming what he described as “absolutely baseless” harassment of witnesses in the case.
“Conspiracy theories are not evidence,” Morrissey said. “The idea that multiple police departments, EMTs, Fire personnel, the medical examiner, and the prosecuting agency are joined in, or taken in by, a vast conspiracy should be seen for what it is – completely contrary to the evidence and a desperate attempt to re-assign guilt.”
October 11, 2023 – Aidan Kearney, the blogger who operates the site “Turtleboy News,” was arrested on charges of witness intimidation related to the Karen Read case. Kearney had been covering the case for months, often recording himself confronting witnesses. His defense attorney told the judge that Kearney was exercising his First Amendment right.
December 26, 2023 – A judge revoked Kearney’s bail amid new assault and battery charges. Kearney allegedly went to his ex-girlfriend’s home, demanded to see her phone, then shoved her during a confrontation. Kearney remained in jail for nearly two months but was later released on personal recognizance.
February 22, 2024 – In court filings, prosecutors said they have DNA evidence recovered from a broken tail light that implicates Read in O’Keefe’s death. They said the tail light is the same material from Read’s SUV, and that the DNA matched O’Keefe’s. They also said broken tail light material was found on O’Keefe’s clothing.
March 12, 2024 – Read’s defense team said that a federal investigation into the case led to an FBI expert concluding that evidence does not support the theory that O’Keefe died after being hit by an SUV.
“The damage on the car was inconsistent with having made contact with John O’Keefe’s body. In other words, the car didn’t hit him, and he wasn’t hit by the car,” Jackson said. Prosecutors disagreed, accusing Read’s attorney of “defense by obfuscation.”
March 13, 2024 – In a brief statement, Massachusetts State Police said they have opened an internal investigation into “a potential violation of department policy” by Trooper Michael Proctor, who was the lead investigator in the case. Police did not say what prompted the investigation, but said he remains on full duty. Read’s defense attorneys said the federal investigation showed Proctor hid personal ties to people involved in the case. In a statement, Proctor’s attorney Michael DiStefano denied any wrongdoing.
“Trooper Proctor has been fully cooperative in responding to the investigations conducted by the US Attorney’s Office and the Massachusetts State Police Internal Affairs Unit,” DiStefano said. “To be clear, Trooper Proctor remains steadfast in the integrity of the work he performed investigating the death of Mr. John O’Keefe. To the extent that Trooper Proctor’s personal text messages are alluded to in court proceedings regarding Ms. Read, he respectfully submits that the objective investigative steps he and members of his unit took are in no way undermined by the content of the personal messages.”
March 26, 2024 – Judge Cannone denied a defense motion to dismiss the case. Cannone said she was denying the motion due to “extensive evidence supporting the indictments.”
April 12, 2024 – During the final pretrial hearing in the case, Cannone heard 30 different motions on which she had to rule, listening to arguments from both sides on many of them.
Among them was an argument by Read’s attorneys that they should be able to make a third-party culprit defense during the trial. They say Brian Albert, Colin Albert, and Brian Higgins, all of whom were present at the party John O’Keefe was at the night he died, could have killed O’Keefe.
Prosecutor Lally called it a “fanciful story,” but told the judge “there’s actually no actual evidence.”
April 16, 2024 – Karen Read’s second-degree murder trial began with jury selection. A total of four jurors were added on the first day.
April 17, 2024 – Jury selection continued for a second day, with seven more jurors added.
April 17, 2024 – A third day of jury selection wrapped without a full jury seated. Two more jurors were added, but one from a previous day was excused, bringing the total number of jurors seated so far to 12.
April 24, 2024 – A jury was seated on the fifth day of jury selection over the course more than a week. The trial is scheduled to last 6-8 weeks once a jury is seated.
April 29, 2024 – Opening statments and testimony got underway with the first witnesses called. John O’Keefe’s brother Paul and his wife Erin were the first two on the stand. Canton police officer Steve Saraf also began his testimony. Prosecutors showed video from Saraf’s dashboard camera as he arrived on scene.
April 30, 2024 – A Canton paramedic who treated John O’Keefe the day he died testified that he heard a woman saying “I hit him, I hit him.” Read’s defense team argued that the man’s testimony has changed over time.
May 2, 2024 – Four paramedics and firefighters testified about what they heard Read say the morning O’Keefe’s body was found.
May 6, 2024 – Jurors heard the 911 calls from the day O’Keefe’s body was found. Police who responded to the scene testified as well on the fifth day of testimony.
May 7, 2024 – Several Canton police officers testified about their handling of the crime scene. Among them was Sgt. Michael Lank, who Read’s defense team argued had personal connections to the home where John O’Keefe’s body was found in 2022.
May 10, 2024 – There was a pause in the trial as Judge Cannone heard arguments about whether Aidan Kearney, who publishes as “Turtleboy” for his site, TB Daily News, should be allowed in the courtroom. He is facing charges of witness intimidation involving people in the Read case. The judge ruled that Kearney must leave the courtroom when certain witnesses take the stand.
Also that day, retired Boston police officer Brian Albert took the stand. He owned the home where O’Keefe’s body was found. Albert testified that O’Keefe and Read never entered his home the night of the incident.
May 14, 2024 – A woman who was at Brian Albert’s Fairview Road home the night O’Keefe died said she saw a “black blob” in the lawn as she was leaving. The defense called it a “made-up story.”
May 15, 2024 – Allie McCabe, a prosecution witness, broke down in tears on the stand describing harassment in the case. Colin Albert, who the defense claims could have been involved in a fight that killed O’Keefe, was also called as a witness.
May 16, 2024 – Colin Albert finished his testimony with cross-examination that focused on what defense attorneys claim is a history of violent behavior.
May 17, 2024 – Jennifer McCabe, a key witness in the case, took the stand. She was with Read the morning O’Keefe’s body was found. McCabe testified that Read asked her to Google how long it would take someone to die in the cold. Defense attorneys argue the search actually happened before O’Keefe’s body was found. Court ended for the day before Read’s attorneys began to cross-examine McCabe.
May 21, 2024 – Jennifer McCabe was back on the stand, this time for several hours of contentious cross-examination by Alan Jackson. This day marked the first time Kearney’s “Turtleboy” site has been directly referenced.
Jennifer McCabe said defense attorney Alan Jackson had put the information out on social media, but Jackson said he had not. “I’m sorry. Turtleboy did,” the witness responded. Earlier in the day, Jennifer McCabe referred to Kearney as “some named blogger that I think the defense is very familiar with.”
May 24, 2024 – Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agent Brian Higgins was on the stand. Prosecutors presented “flirty” text messages he and Read shared in the weeks leading up to O’Keefe’s death. Defense attorneys have said Higgins is one of three men they claim could have been responsible for killing O’Keefe during a fight.
May 28, 2024 – Brian Higgins completed his testimony. Other witnesses were called, including O’Keefe’s niece and nephew. They testified about a strained relationship between Read and O’Keefe.
June 3, 2024 – Testimony focused on broken taillight pieces that were found at the scene of O’Keefe’s death.
June 5, 2024 – Several videos were played that prosecutors say show Read drinking numerous cocktails in the hours before O’Keefe died. They also focused on what they say was a broken taillight in Read’s SUV.
June 6, 2024 – Defense attorney Alan Jackson told reporters that Massachusetts State Police Trooper Michael Proctor, who Read’s attorneys have tried to show could have planted evidence to help friends who are witnesses in the case, will take the stand as a witness for the prosecution. There had been uncertainty when and how Proctor would testify, as he is listed on the defense and prosecution’s witness lists. Proctor is currently under investigation by Massachusetts State Police for his conduct in the case, though the specific reason is not known and he has denied wrongdoing. It is not yet known when Proctor will take the stand.
The same day as Jackson’s comments, Judge Beverly Cannone told jurors “I can safely say that you will get this case for your deliberation sometime in the last week in June.”
June 10, 2024 – Cannone heard arguments from both sides without the jury present about the prosecution’s motion to exclude testimony from a witness who is expected to testify that scratches on O’Keefe’s arm were consistent with injuries from a dog attack.
Trooper Proctor also took the stand that day, reading derogatory text messages he sent to friends and colleagues about Read while investigating the case.
June 12, 2024 – Proctor completed tense cross-examination and stepped down from the witness stand. During his testimony, Proctor was grilled over a text message he sent about Read saying “hopefully she kills herself.”
June 14, 2024 – Testimony focused on Read’s SUV traveling in reverse the night of O’Keefe’s death, as well as the time of when Jennifer McCabe search on Google how long it would take a person to die in the cold.
June 20, 2024 – Prosecutors played angry voicemails that Read left for O’Keefe not long after prosecutors say she hit and killed him.
June 21, 2024 – The prosecution rested its case and defense attorneys began calling witnesses.
June 24, 2024 – The defense rested its case after calling its final three witnesses.
June 25, 2024 – Attorneys presented closing arguments and jurors began deliberating.
June 26, 2024 – Day two of juror deliberations ended without a verdict after about seven hours. While jurors deliberated, Read’s attorneys question the verdict slip, leading to a tense moment with Judge Beverly Cannone.
June 28, 2024 – Jurors sent a note to Judge Cannone, telling her they are deadlocked. The judge responded that she did not believe they had deliberated long enough, and asked them to continue trying to reach a verdict.
July 1, 2024 – The jury sent another note to Judge Cannone, for a second time telling her they are unable to reach a unanimous verdict. The jury said they are “deeply divided,” and Cannone asked them to return for one final round of deliberations. Later in the day, a mistrial was declared due to the hung jury.
July 1, 2024 – Hours after the mistrial was declared, Massachusetts State Police announced that Trooper Michael Proctor, the lead investigator in the case, has been “relieved of duty.”
July 3, 2024 – In an exclusive interview with WBZ-TV, John O’Keefe’s brother addressed the mistrial.
July 8, 2024 – Read’s defense attorneys filed a motion to dismiss for two charges. In the filing, they claim the jury unanimously agreed that Read was not guilty on those counts while being deadlocked on a third charge.
July 8, 2024 – Massachusetts State Police Trooper Michael Proctor was suspended without pay following a duty hearing.
July 9, 2024 – The union for Massachuestts State Police troopers responded to the suspension, calling it “disappointing.”
July 9, 2024 – The Board of Selectmen announced that Canton police officer Kevin Albert was put on leave related to Proctor’s testimony during the trial.
July 10, 2024 – In a new court filing, Read’s attorneys say another juror told them there was a unanimous agreement that Read was not guilty on two counts.
July 12, 2024 – Prosecutors fired back at the defense’s attempt to get two of the three charges against Read dismissed, saying she consented to the mistrial.
July 18, 2024 – An unnamed juror in the case said in a court filing that they fear for their safety.
July 22, 2024 – An anonymous juror tells WBZ-TV that the jury didn’t know how to communicate to the judge that they had unanimously agreed to acquit Read of two charges. Judge Cannone sets a new trial date for Jan. 27, 2025.
August 9, 2024 – The case returned to court for a dismissal hearing as the defense tried to convince the judge to throw out two charges against Read. Judge Beverly Cannone took arguments under consideration, but did not make a ruling.
August 23, 2024 – Judge Cannone rejects Karen Read’s attempt to get two of the charges against her dismissed. Read’s attorneys plan to appeal.
September 11, 2024 – Karen Read’s legal team files an appeal to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.
September 12, 2024 – Canton police officer Kevin Albert, the brother of Brian Albert, is back on the job after being placed on leave during the trial.
September 18, 2024 – Norfolk County District Attorney Michael Morrissey appoints Special Assistant District Attorney Hank Brennan to lead the Commonwealth’s retrial of Karen Read.
September 20, 2024 – Karen Read’s appeal of two charges will be heard by the full panel of Massachusetts’ highest court, but it could delay her trial.
September 23, 2024 – Discipline was announced for two people connected to the Karen Read investigation. Canton Police detective Kevin Albert was suspended without pay for three eight-hour shifts. An investigation found that the detective, whose brother Brian Albert owned the home where John O’Keefe’s body was found, behaved in a way that was unbecoming of a police officer and violated department policies about alcohol consumption or possession on the job.
Massachusetts State Police announced the same day that Sgt. Yuri Bukhenik, who was one of the lead investigators in the case, forfeited five vacation days following an internal affairs investigation. Bukhenik was in one of the group chats in which Trooper Michael Proctor sent the inappropriate text messages.
October 17, 2024 – Massachusetts State Police say they spent $258,278.94 on security for Karen Read’s first trial.
October 18, 2024 – Prosecutors seek phone records from Karen Read’s father. When her second trial begins, prosecutors plan to call William Read as a witness.
October 18, 2024 – Detective Lieutenant Brian Tully, the subject of an ongoing internal affairs investigation, was transferred out of the Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office. Tully testified during Read’s first trial.
October 28, 2024 – Lawyers for Karen Read want a wrongful death lawsuit against her to be delayed until after her second criminal trial, an issue they argued before Judge William White, Jr. in Plymouth Superior Court in Brockton.
October 29, 2024 – Vanity Fair releases the first part of its highly anticipated Karen Read interview. She told the magazine she owes at least $5 million in legal fees.
October 30, 2024 – The second part of Vanity Fair’s interview with Karen Read is released. She responds to criticism from the O’Keefe family, including directly responding to quotes from Paul O’Keefe’s interview with WBZ-TV in July.
November 1, 2024 – The judge overseeing the wrongful death lawsuit against Karen Read rules that she will not have to be deposed in the civil case until after her second criminal trial is over.
November 4, 2024 – The prosecution and defense teams filed a motion in court calling for Read’s second criminal trial, scheduled to start on Jan. 27, 2025, to be postponed until April 1, 2025.
November 6, 2024 – Read’s attempt to get some criminal charges against her thrown out on the grounds of double jeopardy came before the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. Attorneys for both sides made their case during the hearing. No decision has been announced yet.