The high-profile Karen Read trial continued in Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham, Massachusetts on Thursday, though testimony ended earlier than originally planned due to confusion over expected ...
Last week Karen Read returned to a wood-paneled courtroom about 25 minutes southwest of Boston for her second murder trial. Brennan found himself on the defense too. In the last six months, Read’s ...
The Karen Read trial continued Friday with a key investigator reading text messages between Brian Higgins and the defendant in the high-profile murder case. Massachusetts State Police Sgt. Yuri ...
Karen Read exchanged flirty texts with another man two weeks before her cop boyfriend was found dead in the snow, jurors heard during testimony in her murder trial Friday. “You’re hot,” Brian Higgins ...
After the verdict, Karen Read addressed supporters in front of the courthouse After nearly four years and two trials, Karen Read was found not guilty of second-degree murder in the 2022 death of ...
The retrial of Karen Read is shaping up to be altogether similar to her first murder trial, but there are several differences that could influence whether the jury reaches a verdict this time around.
Karen Read could be convicted of just drunk driving as jurors apparently remained at odds over one count and received a new, easier-to-follow verdict slip from the judge. The amended slip was offered ...
Jurors in Read's retrial heard how after a night of drinking, she called her Boston police officer boyfriend 44 times when he failed to call or text her back AP Photo/Charles Krupa Karen Read is ...
Karen Read pleaded not guilty to murder charges in the death of Boston police officer John O’Keefe and is facing a retrial after a jury was unable to reach a verdict last year. Karen Read is facing ...
Karen Read’s defense called its first witness on Friday, marking a new phase in her retrial in the killing of John O’Keefe, her off-duty Boston police officer boyfriend whose body was found buried in ...
As murder defendant Karen Read rounds the corner on the halfway point of her second trial, the crippling weight of unpaid legal bills could be alleviated by an unlikely source: online crowdfunding.