Karen Read Remains Stoic As Judge Declares Mistrial in Murder Case

A mistrial is declared after five days of deliberations and the 12 jurors could not reach a decision about the fate of Massachusetts woman Karen Read, who is accused of killing her police officer boyfriend.

Read remained stoic as the judge declared the mistrial on Monday afternoon after the jury submitted its second note of the day saying there are apparently "fundamental disagreements about what the evidence means."

"Our perspectives on the evidence are starkly divided," the letter to the judge read. "The deep division is not due to a lack of effort or diligence but rather a sincere adherence to our individual principles and moral convictions. To continue to deliberate would be futile."

When court was dismissed, Read turned to hug her father. The court will reconvene for a status update on July 22.

Defense attorney Alan Jackson just said outside that they'll continue on this case "no matter how long it takes."

"This is what it looks like when you bring false charges against an innocent person," Jackson said outside of the courthouse. "The Commonwealth did their worst... No matter how long it takes, no matter how long they keep trying, we will not stop fighting. We have no quit."

Attorney David Yannetti asked for continued support and said he was "in awe with strength and courage" of Read.

The Norfolk District Attorney plans to continue to pursue the case against Read as well.

"First, we thank the O'Keefe family for their commitment and dedication to this long process. They maintained sight of the true core of this case – to find justice for John O'Keefe," the Norfolk District Attorney told Newsweek in a statement. "The Commonwealth intends to re-try the case."

About three hours earlier, Judge Beverly Cannone read a Tuey-Rodriguez instruction, which is read to the deadlocked jury to encourage them to reach a verdict.

"I think this has been an extraordinary jury," Cannone said. "I've never seen a note like this reporting to be at an impasse."

Karen Read
Judge Beverly J. Cannone greets jurors in Norfolk Superior Court, on their fifth day of deliberations in the murder trial for Karen Read in Dedham, Mass., Monday, July 1, 2024. Pat Greenhouse/The Boston Globe via AP, Pool

Cannone's decision follows the request of Karen Read's lawyer, David Yannetti.

"This is what Tuey-Rodriguez is for and we ask the court to give it," Yannetti said.

Karen Read
All stand as the jury files out to the courtroom, to start their fifth day of deliberations in the murder trial for Karen Read in Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham, Mass., Monday, July 1, 2024.... Pat Greenhouse/The Boston Globe via AP, Pool

Assistant district attorney Adam Lally, however, noted the jury has not had the equivalent of one hour of deliberation yet for each of the days of testimony.

Read, 44, is charged with murder, manslaughter while operating a motor vehicle under the influence and leaving the scene of an accident resulting in death of John O'Keefe.

Karen Read
Karen Read stands as jurors depart the court to continue with deliberations at the trial of Read at Norfolk Superior Court, Friday, June 28, 2024, in Dedham, Mass. Read, 44, is accused of running into... AP Photo/Charles Krupa, Pool

The jurors deliberated for over 23 hours since Tuesday afternoon. They sent a letter to the judge Friday around noon to say they have not been able to reach a unanimous decision. Judge Beverly Cannone, however, said they did not have enough time to truly conduct a diligent deliberation.

Read was on trial for two months for murdering O'Keefe on Jan. 29, 2022 with her car after he was found dead in a fellow police officer's driveway after a night out drinking.

Read, a financial analyst and college professor, had pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder, and her legal team argued that she is the victim of a police conspiracy to frame her.

"There is no case against me," Read said after court on June 18. "It's smoke and mirrors, and it's going through my private life and trying to contrive a motive that was never there."

A Norfolk grand jury indicted Read in 2022 on charges of second-degree murder, manslaughter while operating under the influence and leaving the scene of a personal injury and death.

She pleaded not guilty in Norfolk Superior Court and was ordered held on $100,000 bail. She posted bail and has been out on release since.

Supporters of Read gathered near the courthouse in Dedham, Mass. during each day of the jury's deliberation with flags, posters, T-shirts and umbrellas that voiced their support for Read. Some people have even dressed the part of Cannone. They are calling themselves the "sidewalk jury."

Karen Read
Supporters of Karen Read gather near Norfolk Superior Court, Friday, June 28, 2024, in Dedham, Mass. Read, 44, is accused of running into her Boston police officer boyfriend with her SUV in the middle of... AP Photo/Charles Krupa

A small group of non-supporters stormed through the cheers calling for a guilty verdict. Their signs read "Karen Read killed a man," "This is about Officer John O'Keefe, not you" as well as "Karen Read is guilty."

What happened to John O'Keefe?

Read and O'Keefe along with a group of friends went to the Water Bar and Grill in Canton on Jan. 28, 2022. After a night of drinking, according to prosecutors, Read drove O'Keefe to Boston police officer Brian Albert's home.

The couple, who began dating in 2019, had a strained relationship, according to court documents. There were cheating allegations on both sides, as shown through text messages and voicemails.

"Things haven't been great between us for awhile," O'Keefe wrote at one point.

A forensic toxicologist estimated that Read's blood alcohol content would have been around 0.13 to 0.29 when she was driving O'Keefe around 12:45 a.m.

Around 1 a.m. on Jan. 29, Read allegedly left O'Keefe a voicemail that called him an "f---ing loser." Read allegedly told O'Keefe "John, I f---ing hate you."

karen read john o'keefe
John O'Keefe and Karen Read in undated photo. David Yanetti

Brian Loughran was driving his plow down Fairview Road on Jan. 29 and said he could see "the entire front lawn" around 2:45 a.m.

"I saw nothing," Loughran said, adding he did not see a body when asked by Read's lawyer David Yannetti.

Loughran said the only vehicle he saw on the street was a Ford Edge.

A few hours later at 4:23 a.m., O'Keefe's niece called Albert's sister-in-law, Jennifer McCabe, telling him Read was "distraught" because O'Keefe did not come home and wasn't answering his cellphone.

McCabe recalled on the stand the frantic moments when she and Read found out O'Keefe was dead in her testimony.

McCabe had texted O'Keefe around 5 a.m. saying "karen is worried we need to find u" and "please answer so i know ur ok."

State Police Dt. Lt. Brian Tully told the court that between 12:33 a.m. to 6:03 a.m. Read made 53 calls to O'Keefe.

Around 5 a.m., Read called another woman whose husband was friends with O'Keefe.

"What if he's dead? What if a plow hit him?" Read allegedly said, according to the prosecution. "I don't remember anything from last night, we drank so much I don't remember anything."

Read and two women went looking for O'Keefe shortly after 5 a.m.

Around 6 a.m., Read saw O'Keefe lying in the snow outside of Albert's home. An emergency responder said Read was hysterical and inconsolable and kept repeating "I hit him."

According to McCabe, Read "stated that she hit him" when a paramedic asked what happened.

Brian Albert has appeared in court during the jury's deliberation.

Police found a broken cocktail glass and pieces of taillight at the scene.

A surveillance camera at O'Keefe's house shows Read's SUV coming "extremely close" to O'Keefe's SUV in the driveway. Prosecutors said no taillight pieces were found at O'Keefe's house.

Karen Read
Karen Read, center left, walks near defense attorney David Yannetti, center right, as they depart Norfolk Superior Court, Wednesday, June 26, 2024, in Dedham, Mass. AP Photo/Steven Senne

Dr. Daniel Wolfe, a crash reconstructionist who was called to the stand, said the crime scene photos showed fragments of red and clear plastic as well as chrome and black plastic. There was also pieces of glass and a black drinking straw. Wolfe works with ARCCA, which was hired by the FBI to look into O'Keefe's crash.

Wolfe said Read's right taillight was disfigured, but the damage is isolated. Dr. Andrew Rentschler also testified that there would be additional contusions if O'Keefe was hit by a car.

Police witnesses had said O'Keefe was projected about 30-feet after the alleged impact.

Prosecutors said the medical examiner ruled O'Keefe's cause of death as hypothermia as well as blunt impact injuries to the head.

Defense attorneys Alan Jackson and Yannetti allege that O'Keefe was involved in a fight at Albert's home. They say O'Keefe was beaten and his body was later dumped outside.

There was a focus on wounds to O'Keefe's arms that could suggest Albert's dog attacked him during the fight.

"I believe that these injuries were sustained by an animal, possibly a large dog, because of the pattern of the injuries," Dr. Marie Russell, a retired emergency room physician in California, said on the stand. "Those were inflicted by either teeth or claw marks."

Dr. Frank Sheridan, a retired forensic pathologist who was called on by the defense on Monday, June 24, said O'Keefe's injuries were not consistent with being struck by a vehicle.

"If it's a significant impact at all, you're going to get bruising and we don't have any bruising here," Sheridan said. "We just have linear abrasions without any bruising. That does not look to me at all remotely like an impact from a motor vehicle."

The investigation

Massachusetts State Police said in March that they opened an internal investigation into a "potential violation of department policy" by Trooper Michael Proctor, who was the lead investigator in the case.

"We know who did it. We know. And we know who spearheaded this coverup. You all know," Read said when she spoke to the public for the first time. "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."

Karen Read
Judge Beverly Cannone addresses the jury before deliberations continue in the trial of Karen Read at Norfolk Superior Court, Friday, June 28, 2024, in Dedham, Mass. Read, 44, is accused of running into her Boston... AP Photo/Charles Krupa, Pool

State Police Trooper Michael Proctor was questioned for his conduct. Proctor is the case officer for Read's case, but Read's defense team accused him of having a role in framing Read for the murder of O'Keefe.

Proctor testified to making several insulting comments about Read over text during the beginning of the investigation into O'Keefe's death. He wrote that he hated one of Read's attorneys and joked about not finding nude photos when he was going through Read's phone. Messages include remarks on Read's medical condition, her "ass" and that he hoped Read "kills herself."

"She's a wack job," he wrote in texts according to court. "Yes, she's a babe. Weird Fall River accent, though. No ass."

Proctor testified his "juvenile" texts had "zero impact on the facts and the evidence and the integrity of this investigation."

Multiple witnesses denied erasing data or destroying evidence.

Albert, who owned the home in front of which O'Keefe died, testified that he had disposed of his cellphone the day before a court order was issued demanding it be preserved. He said he needed to upgrade his phone.

"That just happened to be the day that I got it," Albert testified.

Who is Karen Read?

Read was a Bentley University finance lecturer in Massachusetts. The school announced in 2022 that she would not be teaching and her Financial Markets and Investment course would be taught be the chair of the finance department instead.

"By now you may have seen or heard the news involving a member of our community and the death of a Boston police officer," said Donna Maria Blancero, Provost & Vice President for Academic Affairs, in a statement at the time. "Karen Read is an adjunct lecturer at Bentley. The university cannot comment on an active investigation, but we are aware of the evolving situation and following it closely."

Karen Read
Karen Read reacts to he attorney Alan Jackson as he cross examines state trooper Michael Proctor during her trial, Wednesday, June 12, 2024, in Norfolk Super Court in Dedham, Mass. Read is facing charges, including... Greg Derr/The Patriot Ledger via AP, Pool

Blancero had announced that her "thoughts go out to Officer O'Keefe's family and loved ones."

On LinkedIn, Read still lists herself as a part of Bentley's faculty. Read had graduated from Bentley's Elkin B. McCallum Graduate School of Business in 2004 and she has a BS in Finance from the college as well. She wrote that she graduated from an accelerated studies program for her undergraduate in three years. Read also listed she was a "Presidential Scholar" in both 1999 and 2000.

Read's LinkedIn also shows her currently working at Fidelity Investments for equity research within the tech sector. Previously, she was a financial analyst at Sensata Technologies, client account manager at Brown Brothers Harriman, and a trading room assistant at Hughey Center for Financial Services.

Who was John O'Keefe?

The Boston Police Department remembered O'Keefe as a "kind person, dedicated to his family," in a Facebook post in 2022.

Boston Police Department John O'Keefe
An image of deceased John O'Keefe provided by the Boston Police Department. Karen Read, the Massachusetts woman accused of killing her police officer boyfriend in 2022, John O'Keefe, has offered her own version of events... Boston Police Department

He grew up in Braintree and graduated from Northeastern University. O'Keefe also earned a master's degree in criminal justice from UMass Lowell.

O'Keefe was a 16-year veteran of the Boston Police Department.

Karen Read
Flags, flowers and remembrances flank the headstone of John O'Keefe, a Boston police officer, at Blue Hill Cemetery, Thursday, June 27, 2024, in Braintree, Mass. A jury is deliberating the fate of O'Keefe's girlfriend, Karen... AP Photo/Charles Krupa

He lived in Canton, where he was raising his niece and nephew since his sister and brother-in-law's death.

Do you have a story Newsweek should be covering? Do you have any questions about this story? Contact LiveNews@newsweek.com

Uncommon Knowledge

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.

About the writer


Monica is a Newsweek reporter based in Boston. Her focus is reporting on breaking news. Monica joined Newsweek in 2024. ... Read more

To read how Newsweek uses AI as a newsroom tool, Click here.
Newsweek cover
  • Newsweek magazine delivered to your door
  • Newsweek Voices: Diverse audio opinions
  • Enjoy ad-free browsing on Newsweek.com
  • Comment on articles
  • Newsweek app updates on-the-go
Newsweek cover
  • Newsweek Voices: Diverse audio opinions
  • Enjoy ad-free browsing on Newsweek.com
  • Comment on articles
  • Newsweek app updates on-the-go