New York Post

MURDER CASE IS TEARING APART TOWN

Karen Read goes on trial tomorrow for cop beau’s death in Boston ’burb — but true believers claim she’s framed

- By DANA KENNEDY

WAS it the intoxicate­d girlfriend or the crooked cops? A controvers­ial murder trial involving the mysterious death of a Boston police officer starts Tuesday in Norfolk, Mass., Superior Court — despite an ongoing FBI investigat­ion into how local authoritie­s handled the case.

Karen Read, a 44-year-old financial analyst and college professor, is facing second-degree murder charges in the death of her boyfriend, Boston police officer John O’Keefe. His body was found lying in the snow outside a house in suburban Canton, 14 miles south of Boston, on Jan. 29, 2022.

Prosecutor­s say Read and O’Keefe, 46, argued drunkenly in her car as she was dropping him off at a friend's house party after a night of barhopping. They allege she intentiona­lly backed her Lexus SUV into O’Keefe in a rage, killing him and leaving him to die in the snow.

But Read — whose powerhouse legal team is led by attorney Alan Jackson, who represente­d Kevin Spacey when he was cleared on sexual assault charges in 2019 — has pleaded not guilty to seconddegr­ee murder, manslaught­er while operating under the influence and leaving the scene. She denies killing O’Keefe and claims she's being framed by people in the suburban party house.

The case has gripped Massachuse­tts. Many local stories claim O’Keefe's death has "divided the town" and torn it apart in the months since Read's arrest.

Among those who support Read are a flamboyant local blogger known as Turtleboy, who first sounded the alarm about the case, and his many "Turtle Rider" followers, as well as some veteran lawyers and retired detectives who have obsessivel­y parsed the investigat­ion on X and true crime forums for months.

Most extraordin­ary is the ongoing federal probe of a possible police coverup that has turned into a parallel investigat­ion of the murder.

“I've never seen anything like this before,” a source close to the Read case told The Post about the feds’ shadow investigat­ion. “It's pretty crazy and yet the Norfolk DA is going ahead with the trial and no one's stopping it. To me the [prosecutor­s] are on a suicide mission.”

Scene of the crime

According to Read, she and O’Keefe had been drinking with his friend Jennifer McCabe, whom Read did not know well, at the local Waterfall Bar. Around midnight, McCabe invited the couple to the home of her brother-in-law Brian Albert, a retired Boston Police Fugitive Unit commander detective and 60-year-old Gulf War vet who had appeared on Donnie Wahlberg's TNT reality show, "Boston's Finest."

Read dropped O’Keefe off there around 12:30 a.m. There were reportedly around a dozen people partying at the home, though O’Keefe only really knew McCabe.

According to Read, she then drove the three miles to his home in Canton, where the officer lived with his orphaned niece and nephew, and went to bed.

Read claims she woke up around 4:30 a.m., panicked that her boyfriend of a couple of years had not come home. She tried calling him, then phoned McCabe — who claimed to have never seen O’Keefe arrive at the party — as well as an old friend of O’Keefe's, Kerry Roberts.

When no one had answers, Read says, she went to Jennifer's house in hysterics and the two women, along with Roberts, drove back to O’Keefe's home and then to Albert's.

When they finally got to the Albert home on 34 Fairview Road, it was still dark outside — but Karen saw O’Keefe's body on the lawn and ran to give him CPR.

The first responders who arrived on scene after Read, McCabe and Roberts found the body claim to have overheard Read saying “I hit him. I hit him.”

Read disputed that, telling ABC News last August: “I said, ‘I hit him?’ It was preceded by a, ‘Did,’ and preceded by a question mark. What I thought could have happened was that, did I incapacita­te him unwittingl­y, somehow, and then in his drunkennes­s [he] passed out?

“I did not kill John O’Keefe. I have never harmed a hair on John O’Keefe’s head," Read told ABC.

She was arrested on Feb. 2, four days after O'Keefe was found, and charged with manslaught­er. Four months later, the charges were elevated to second-degree murder. She is now out on bond.

But Read's highest-profile supporters believe that someone in the Albert house beat O'Keefe badly, dumped his body on the snow-covered lawn outside — and framed Read for his murder. Their take is a complicate­d conspiracy involving the partygoers as well as Canton police, the state police and the DA's office.

“The cops knitted this together like a tight cap,” says one local resident who is too fearful of repercussi­ons to be publicly identified. “That poor son of a bitch was beaten to a pulp, he wasn't hit by a car. This is a bad, bad crime scene and the people trying to pin it on Karen are evil.”

Vehement supporters

Albert's family has been in Canton for generation­s, and locals say the clan has enormous influence and connection­s in town, as well as Norfolk County and with the Boston Police Department. One of Albert's brothers is a town selectman; the other is a Canton police sergeant.

The lead detective for the state police, who are officially investigat­ing the case, is Michael Proctor, reportedly a close friend of the Albert family.

“I am 1,000% sure that Karen is innocent and what we have here is a botched crime scene investigat­ion,” Sean McDonough, a 35-year veteran of law enforcemen­t, told The Post. McDonough he spent 28 years with the DEA and seven years as a Washington, DC-area cop and crime scene investigat­or.

"The Massachuse­tts state police planted evidence to frame Karen — there's no doubt in my mind," McDonough opined.

Read’s supporters have shown up in such large numbers at various hearings related to the case that a judge recently declared the need for a 200-foot buffer zone keeping #FreeKarenR­ead protesters away from the courthouse.

Some of them have gone overboard, heckling O’Keefe’s family in court and going on so-called “rolling rallies” to the homes of witnesses and Massachuse­tts State Trooper Proctor.

Voluminous and detailed analyses of that wintry early morning tragedy have filled Twitter, YouTube and individual blogs, as the amateur and profession­al sleuths focus on forensic details.

"There is so much reasonable doubt in this case that you could drive a truck through it," said Melanie Little, a Long Island-based trial lawyer with 30 years of experience who has litigated hundreds of auto accident cases. She has analyzed the Read case over more than 50 hours of videos on her YouTube channel.

"It was totally mishandled. There's no way Karen hit him with her car. But the crux of it is that [the Albert] family has been in Canton for generation­s. Most of the witnesses in the case are not only related but are longtime locals. Karen is not," Little said.

Prosecutor­s say that both Read and O’Keefe had been drinking a lot when they left the Waterfall bar and Karen drove O’Keefe to the Albert house where Brian Albert and others were having an after-party. They say Read had been arguing with O’Keefe and when he got out of the car, she rammed into him on purpose and left him there.

Evidence questions

Proctor claimed to have seen Read’s SUV at her parents’ home in nearby Dighton around 4:30 p.m., some 11 hours after the discovery of O’Keefe's body, and that it had a broken taillight, prompting him to arrange for seizure of the vehicle. However, phone records show that Proctor had called for a tow truck more than an hour earlier.

He also claims to have found pieces of her SUV's broken taillight on the lawn near O’Keefe’s body and tainted with his DNA, many hours after the body was discovered.

Prosecutor­s say people at the party claim O’Keefe never entered the house.

Read supporter McDonough, who estimated he’s spent 15 hours a day investigat­ing the case since April 2023, gave The Post timestampe­d video evidence from the Ring camera at O’Keefe’s residence showing Read’s car taillight was intact at 5:08 a.m — more than four hours after the alleged murder.

McDonough said he and a team of retired law enforcemen­t officers went over evidence and leads surroundin­g the case, and that he spent three weeks investigat­ing the alleged broken taillight, even visiting numerous Lexus dealership­s for comparison.

"I'm sure they planted it because when Proctor seized Karen's vehicle, he did not take a photograph of the taillight that he claims was totally shattered with a large piece missing," said McDonough, who is doing this all on his own volition.

McDonough, and the defense team, have said that no evidence linking Read to the crime scene was found until after her SUV was in the possession of the Canton police and state police.

What especially bothers Read supporters were that O’Keefe’s injuries were above the neck and isolated to his right arm, and that the backs of his hands looked like boxer’s fractures — all seemingly inconsiste­nt with a hit-and-run. He also had a two-inch gash at the back of his head yet there was little to no blood at the crime scene. Furthermor­e, they claim, marks on his arms were consistent with dog bites.

Brian Albert and his wife ripped up their basement floor and sold their home, which had belonged to the Albert family for years, not long after O’Keefe’s death, according to Read’s defense team. Their German shepherd Chloe, who reportedly had a history of biting people, was also re-homed not long after.

The defense claims to have found phone records showing that McCabe Googled the phrase “Ho(w) long to die in the cold” at 2:27 a.m.

‘Conspiracy theories’

Turtleboy, a k a Adam Kearney, has written more than 300 blog posts and videos on the case, including a half-hour deep dive titled “Framed.”

Kearney has since been arrested and indicted on more than 15 felony charges involving witness intimidati­on and conspiracy. He served 60 days in jail for violating a protective order but is now free on his own recognizan­ce with a trial date as yet unschedule­d.

“I'm not a conspiracy theorist and I've always been a back-theblue guy,” Kearney told The Post. “But the evidence in this case is overwhelmi­ng and it doesn’t point to Karen.”

Last August, Norfolk County District Attorney Michael Morrissey released a video in which he insists there was no coverup and decries the “conspiracy theories” he said are being spread by Read supporters.

But in January, Read's attorney David Yannetti told Judge Beverly Cannone, who’s overseeing Read’s case, that Josh Levy, the acting US attorney for Massachuse­tts, had told all parties in a motion hearing that he “could not in good conscience allow this trial to go forward.”

Levy then took the extraordin­ary step of releasing more than 3,000 pages related to the federal investigat­ion of the Read case to the prosecutio­n and defense team. The majority of those federal materials remains under protective order from the public.

The feds have been tight-lipped about what they’re doing — but they convened a separate grand jury and called the same witnesses who testified to the Norfolk County grand jury.

Several sources familiar with the investigat­ion told The Post that the FBI has interviewe­d all people in attendance at the house the night of the incident, and at least one witness reportedly said O’Keefe had been there — informatio­n that, if true, would throw the prosecutio­n’s case into disarray. The Post was unable to verify those claims.

Norfolk County DA spokesman David Traub told The Post that the DA’s office was "in the dark" and did not officially confirm the existence of an FBI probe. But he seemed confident about the trial going ahead this week.

“We're looking forward to putting the evidence in front of the jury,” he said.

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 ?? ?? DEATH MYSTERY: John O’Keefe (left), a Boston police officer, was found dead in the snow in front of ex-cop Brian Albert’s house. The defense claims someone in the home beat him and took him outside.
DEATH MYSTERY: John O’Keefe (left), a Boston police officer, was found dead in the snow in front of ex-cop Brian Albert’s house. The defense claims someone in the home beat him and took him outside.
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 ?? ?? UNDER ARREST: Read is charged with killing her boyfriend, John O’Keefe, in 2022 by hitting him with her SUV and leaving him in the snow to die. But defense attorneys claim she is the victim of a massive coverup involving police in Canton, Massachuse­tts.
UNDER ARREST: Read is charged with killing her boyfriend, John O’Keefe, in 2022 by hitting him with her SUV and leaving him in the snow to die. But defense attorneys claim she is the victim of a massive coverup involving police in Canton, Massachuse­tts.
 ?? ?? CYBERSLEUT­HS: Blogger Turtleboy (left) is a Read supporter and, like former DEA agent Sean McDonough (above), has volunteere­d enormous amounts of time to researchin­g the case.
CYBERSLEUT­HS: Blogger Turtleboy (left) is a Read supporter and, like former DEA agent Sean McDonough (above), has volunteere­d enormous amounts of time to researchin­g the case.

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