logo
Karen Read says she poured extra shots into her cocktails before John O'Keefe's death

Karen Read says she poured extra shots into her cocktails before John O'Keefe's death

Yahoo25-04-2025
Sometimes, Karen Read might take things into her own hands, like when she got a "weak pour" at a bar the night her boyfriend died.
Unhappy with the alcohol level, she added extra shots on her own, according to a 2024 interview she gave for a documentary on Investigation Discovery.
The clip aired in court Thursday as part of her retrial on murder charges in the death of her boyfriend, John O'Keefe.
"The drinks that they were pouring me at McCarthy's, which was where I consumed most of the alcohol, was the weakest vodka tonic," she told the camera. "It tasted just like all soda water with lime, not that I need it to be a martini, but it might have a splash of vodka in it."
Key Karen Read Witness Admits Grand Jury Testimony Wasn't True
She said she complained about it to O'Keefe, and he suggested ordering another shot and dropping it in herself.
Read On The Fox News App
"So each drink was being counted as a double," she continued. "I would get a vodka tonic, and then I would pour a shot into it."
Read recounted drinking at CF McCarthy's bar in Canton, where she said she drank "most of [the] alcohol" she'd consumed on Jan. 28, 2022.
Read described how she poured multiple shots into her glass because the bar was serving weak drinks, complaining her vodka soda "tasted just like all soda water with lime."
WATCH: Karen Read recounts night of drinking at local bar in 2024 television interview
"The guys that we were with ordered a round of shots and gave me one that I didn't drink, but I poured it in my drink," Read said.
Karen Read Retrial Kicks Off With Wire-to-wire Drama, Lawyers Brawl In Tense Hearing After Jurors Sent Home
"So, that's now my fifth and sixth drinks, with the seventh, which is a shot that all the men did, and I poured it. So, that's one glass that I'm holding." She added that the cocktail had "three drinks in it."
Special prosecutor Hank Brennan had Massachusetts State Tpr. Nicholas Guarino read jurors a series of texts between Read and O'Keefe from throughout the day before he died.
Guarino read through both the history of phone calls between Read and O'Keefe and their texts throughout the day, beginning with that morning. O'Keefe appeared frustrated over arguments, writing that he was "sick of always arguing and fighting."
By afternoon, the conversation turned toward early evening plans. At 2:38 p.m., Read called O'Keefe, and he rejected the call, sending it to voicemail directly rather than just letting it ring unanswered.
Ten seconds later, Read texted, "Can you pls answer??"
Karen Read Trial: Lead Detective's Wife Slams Suspected Cop Killer's Media Tour As 'Unrelenting Propaganda'
O'Keefe waited nearly a minute before he replied, "No Karen. Not sure why you need to announce that you're grabbing a drink but have fun."
She asked him to call again. He told her he was busy taking care of his niece and nephew, who were in his care after his sister and brother-in-law both died within months of each other.
"Have to take them to the [doctor]," he wrote. "He has practice."
SIGN UP TO GET True Crime Newsletter
She called back twice. He let the first one ring and rejected the second 44 seconds later.
For the next 20 minutes, he continued to ignore her calls before calling her back just before 3 p.m. Nine minutes later, she texted him, "Why don't you meet me at the hillside at 4:30/5."
Killer Or Convenient Outsider? 'Unexpected Celebrity' Karen Read's Trial Explored In New Fox Nation Series
After a few follow-up texts, O'Keefe replied, "Like I said, [doctor] now, and he has practice til 6. If you want to go start drinking then go for it."
Read said she didn't know what time practice was but that she wanted to meet him out rather than at his house to give him "space."
After more back-and-forth, O'Keefe texted her at 3:39 p.m., "You're like jonesing to drink. So go!"
At another point in the conversation, she indicated she'd rather meet in town "for drinks" than hang out at his house.
When O'Keefe said his friend, Mike Camerano, was coming over, he suggested Read drop by too.
"Mike doesn't want to go out for a bit?" she replied. "I would like to, been a s--- day from the jump."
Follow The Fox True Crime Team On X
Guarino read texts the two sent from that morning until around 8:35 p.m.
While Brennan's case highlighted Read's drinking, experts said jurors might side with Read over O'Keefe's responses.
"I thought this presentation backfired in that it looked like a couple with normal issues, and it was like, she will wake up and leave this relationship where you were being used, not as a motive to murder," said Linda Kenney Baden, a New York defense attorney whose past clients have included Phil Spector, Casey Anthony and Aaron Hernandez.
"Plus, the texts showed a jealous John O'Keefe to me, like the plumber," she added.
GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE True Crime Hub
Around 8 p.m., before Read and O'Keefe met for drinks, she told him she was having a plumber stop by because her hot water had run out. He told her he would fix it Sunday or Monday.
That could support the defense theory that O'Keefe did not sustain his injuries in a collision with Read's SUV but rather from a possible altercation with another man at the party who had shared his own romantic texts with the defendant, Kenney Baden told Fox News Digital.
Brennan played the ID clip after Guarino finished reading the texts. After that, Judge Beverly Cannone said, due to some confusion with the witnesses, the jury could go home for the day.
They are expected to hop on a bus for an in-person viewing of the crime scene when the trial resumes Friday.Original article source: Karen Read says she poured extra shots into her cocktails before John O'Keefe's death
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How Jodi Hildebrandt's Arrival Led Ruby Franke to Go 'Off the Rails': 'Wolf in Sheep's Clothing'
How Jodi Hildebrandt's Arrival Led Ruby Franke to Go 'Off the Rails': 'Wolf in Sheep's Clothing'

Yahoo

time21 hours ago

  • Yahoo

How Jodi Hildebrandt's Arrival Led Ruby Franke to Go 'Off the Rails': 'Wolf in Sheep's Clothing'

A new four-part docuseries explores the abusive partnership between Ruby Franke and Jodi HildebrandtNEED TO KNOW A new four-part docuseries explores the abusive partnership between Ruby Franke and Jodi Hildebrandt The docuseries debuts Sept. 1 on Investigation Discovery and will stream on HBO Max Franke and Hildebrandt were sentenced to prison for four convictions of child abuse last yearA new docuseries delves into how a Mormon religious leader influenced a Utah mom whose seemingly wholesome life spiraled into a horrific case of child abuse carried out in the name of God. The series, Ruby & Jodi: A Cult of Sin and Influence, will explore the August 2023 arrest of Mormon family influencer Ruby Franke for felony child abuse and how the mother of six was led down a devious and abusive path by Jodi Hildebrandt, a woman Franke met through her local church who promised to help her become a better wife and mother. The four-part docuseries debuts Sept. 1 on Investigation Discovery and will also be available to stream on HBO Max. 'Over the course of four parts, Ruby & Jodi: A Cult of Sin and Influence offers extensive insight into Jodi Hildebrandt's rise to power within the Mormon community through her popular ConneXions program – and how that program led her to Franke and laid the foundation for the twisted bond they shared,' Investigation Discovery said in a statement provided to PEOPLE on Monday. 'Featuring extensive interviews with former clients, the docuseries underscores the extent of Hildebrandt's cult-like and manipulative tactics that devastated the lives of the individuals who entrusted her with their struggles in hopes of helping themselves and their marriages.' The network says that the docuseries includes exclusive new interviews with Hildebrandt's niece Jesse Hildebrandt, who PEOPLE previously reported had opened up about her own childhood abuse after her aunt was arrested. "This was a wolf in sheep's clothing," one interviewee says about Hildebrandt in the new ID trailer, released Monday. The series also includes an interview with Adam Steed, a former patient of Hildebrandt, who previously told PEOPLE that the religious leader who branded herself for a time as a 'sex therapist' had 'destroyed' his life through her teachings. Investigation Discovery said in its press release that the insight in the docuseries "underscores Hildebrandt's manipulative and dangerous tendencies and how when combined with Franke's strict family values, they created an environment rife with manipulation, control, and abuse.' Franke and Hildebrandt were both arrested in August 2023 and charged with six felony counts of child abuse after Franke's 12-year-old son had escaped Hildebrandt's home, where he was bound and starved, and made his way to a neighbor's house seeking help. The neighbor called 911, leading local police to then discover Franke's 9-year-old daughter being held captive in a similar situation. The women's arrests uncovered a pattern of abusive teaching by Hildebrandt, and confirmed growing suspicions of critics who long questioned Franke's strict parenting style on her popular 8 Passengers family vlogging page on YouTube. Both women were ultimately sentenced to prison on four convictions of child abuse, PEOPLE reported last year, and were sentenced to serve between four and 30 years in prison. Ruby & Jodi: A Cult of Sin and Influence debuts Sept. 1 on Investigation Discovery and will stream on HBO Max. If you suspect child abuse, call the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-4-A-Child or 1-800-422-4453, or go to All calls are toll-free and confidential. The hotline is available 24/7 in more than 170 languages. Read the original article on People

After her acquittal, Karen Read wants her Lexus and cellphone back, court records show
After her acquittal, Karen Read wants her Lexus and cellphone back, court records show

Boston Globe

timea day ago

  • Boston Globe

After her acquittal, Karen Read wants her Lexus and cellphone back, court records show

Advertisement Read's legal team 'is respectfully requesting this Honorable Court order the return of the aforementioned items immediately,' he said. Jurors Prosecutors had alleged that Read backed her SUV in a drunken rage into her boyfriend, Her lawyers said she was framed and that O'Keefe entered the property, owned at the time by a fellow Boston police officer, where he was fatally beaten and possibly mauled by a German Shepherd before his body was planted on the front lawn. Advertisement Read's first criminal trial ended in a hung jury last year. She still faces a wrongful death lawsuit filed by O'Keefe's family in Plymouth Superior Court, where Material from prior Globe stories was used in this report. Travis Andersen can be reached at

New docuseries explores Ruby Franke's 'twisted dynamic' with Jodi Hildebrandt: See trailer
New docuseries explores Ruby Franke's 'twisted dynamic' with Jodi Hildebrandt: See trailer

USA Today

timea day ago

  • USA Today

New docuseries explores Ruby Franke's 'twisted dynamic' with Jodi Hildebrandt: See trailer

Viewers will learn more about the "twisted dynamic" between infamous mommy vlogger Ruby Franke and business partner Jodi Hildebrandt in a new docuseries from Investigation Discovery. "Ruby & Jodi: A Cult of Sin and Influence," set to premiere in early September, combines exclusive interviews, commentary, as well as extensive archival and police footage to offer "unprecedented insight" into Hildebrandt's rise to power within the Mormon community through her life improvement program ConneXions and how it led her to Franke. The show, specifically, will chronicle the women's "doomed partnership" and the "dangerous, disturbing results of unchecked influence to reveal the physical and psychological impact of their abusive actions." Franke, who ran a popular YouTube channel called "8 Passengers" with her family, and Hildebrandt, Franke's counselor-turned-business partner, were arrested and convicted of child abuse after two of Franke's six children were found abused and malnourished. "The docuseries charts the magnetic connection between the two and how the melding of Franke's strict family values with Hildebrandt's controversial beliefs created a microcosm of control, manipulation, and brutality that led to the devastating emotional and physical abuse of the Franke children," Investigation Discovery said in a news release. Here's what we know about "Ruby & Jodi: A Cult of Sin and Influence," including how to watch it. Who is Ruby Franke? And what did she do? Ruby Franke, 43, is a former mommy vlogger who lived in Springville, Utah, with her husband Kevin and their six children. The couple ran a popular and now-defunct YouTube channel called "8 Passengers," which showed snippets of the family's daily life online to an audience of millions beginning in early 2015. Franke later became the subject of widespread criticism online for her parenting choices, particularly her discipline methods that some considered borderline abusive. The pushback intensified when Franke co-founded ConneXions with Hildebrandt, a family counselor turned business partner. Many found that the "parenting style" the pair promoted was extreme and harsh. The frequent inclusion of what has been called homophobic, racist and transphobic comments did not help their popularity. In one often-referenced example, Franke told viewers that children do not deserve, and should not receive, unconditional love. Both women were arrested and initially charged with six counts of second-degree aggravated child abuse in September 2023 after two of Franke's six children were found abused and malnourished, the office of Eric Clarke, the Washington County Attorney in St. Georiga, Utah, announced at the time. They both pleaded guilty in December 2023 to four of the six counts as part of a plea agreement with prosecutors, USA TODAY previously reported. Franke and Hildebrandt were sentenced to prison time ranging from four to 60 years in February 2024 and are currently serving their respective sentences. What will be in 'Ruby & Jodi: A Cult of Sin and Influence'? The four-part docuseries "underscores Hildebrandt's manipulative and dangerous tendencies and how when combined with Franke's strict family values, they created an environment rife with manipulation, control, and abuse," according to Investigation Discovery. "Ruby & Jodi: A Cult of Sin and Influence" does feature "extensive interviews with former clients." Jessi Hildebrandt, Hildebrandt's niece, and others, including local journalists as well as current and former members of the Mormon faith, will also offer "additional and exclusive insight" throughout the docuseries, the TV network said. Jason Sarlanis, president of Investigation Discovery, said in a statement, "The disturbing alliance between Ruby Franke and Jodi Hildebrandt has captivated and horrified the public, and this docuseries peels back the layers of that relationship through exclusive interviews with family members, former clients, and experts to explore the broader implications of family vlogging and the devastating impact of family abuse." Watch 'Ruby & Jodi: A Cult of Sin and Influence' trailer How to watch 'Ruby & Jodi: A Cult of Sin and Influence' The four-part Investigation Discovery docuseries will premiere over two nights, Sept. 1 and Sept. 2, at 9 p.m. ET/midnight PT. Episodes will be available to stream on HBO Max.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store