Alan Jackson sheds light on Karen Read's legal expenses
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Alan Jackson takes VF behind-the-scenes of the trial, from the not-guilty verdict to his withering cross-examinations, to what comes next for his client.
Karen Read added three new lawyers to her defense team to represent her in the wrongful death lawsuit brought by the family of her boyfriend, Boston Police officer John O’Keefe. Read, 45, was acquitted of all charges connected to the death of O’Keefe last month following a lengthy trial.
A Mass. State Police sergeant involved in the investigation of Karen Read has been reassigned from his position at the Norfolk District Attorney’s Office. Sergeant Yuri Bukhenik was moved to the state police’s Division of Standards and Training effective Sunday, July 6, a Massachusetts State Police spokesperson told Boston 25 News on Monday.
Special prosecutor Hank Brennan admits evidence mistake in Karen Read's murder retrial as defense requests mistrial, with legal experts divided on whether the error was intentional
A jury in Dedham, Massachusetts, has convicted Karen Read of operating a vehicle under of the influence but not on charges of second-degree murder and leaving the scene of a collision resulting in death. As a first-time offender, she has been sentenced to a year of probation and classes.
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What is the Karen Read trial? Is there a verdict? Here is everything you need to know - MSNJurors in the Karen Read trial are continuing their deliberations Monday morning for the first full day of deliberations. Here is how to watch the documentary in the meantime, while we anxiously ...
Fresh off her gripping murder acquittal, Karen Read was spotted easing back into everyday life on Friday, hauling trash like any regular American outside her hotel room in Boston.
A broken taillight. A dead cop. A bombshell admission. The jury is now deliberating over whether Karen Read killed John O'Keefe.
Karen Read trial jury The jury heard from 49 witness during 31 days of testimony over eight weeks in Read's second trial. "I just hope they were listening, that's all I can ask for.
The trial’s most debated digital artifact was a Google search from Jen McCabe’s iPhone: “hos long to die in cold.”