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A Massachusetts jury has found Karen ... frame Read. Read had pleaded not guilty to all three charges: second-degree murder, manslaughter while operating under the influence and leaving the scene of a ...
"We should start some type of investigation of what went on in that house," the jury foreman from Karen Read's second murder ...
A jury found Karen Read not guilty of second-degree murder and manslaughter on Wednesday, nearly three and a half years after the mysterious death of Read’s police officer boyfriend, John O’Keefe.
Read was acquitted last month of second-degree murder and manslaughter in the death of her Boston police officer boyfriend.
Josh Reynolds/AP On the fourth day of deliberations in Read's second trial, the jury found Read not guilty of second-degree murder, the most serious charge, which carried a sentence of life in prison.
Jurors in Karen Read's second trial for the murder of her Boston police officer boyfriend found Read not guilty of the most serious charges and guilty on a lesser charge, ending a weekslong trial ...
Karen Read’s legal troubles not over This was Read’s second time on trial for murder, after jurors in her first trial last summer returned deadlocked and Cannone declared a mistrial.
The wrongful death suit filed by John O'Keefe's family will continue after being largely on pause during Read's second criminal trial.
Karen Read, the Massachusetts woman accused of drunkenly striking her off-duty police officer boyfriend and leaving him to die in January 2022, was found guilty of drunk driving today – though ...
Read was accused of hitting her boyfriend with her car and leaving him to die in a snowstorm, but alleged she was the victim of a cover-up by his fellow officers. Her 2024 trial ended in a hung jury.
Read was cleared on murder and manslaughter charges but found guilty of operating under the influence of alcohol. She was sentenced to one year of probation for the OUI charge.
Karen Read and members of her legal team gesture to supporters with the American Sign Language "I love you" sign after she was found not guilty of second-degree murder on Wednesday, in Dedham, Mass.
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