logo
Plow driver testifies he saw no body in snow during crucial hours in Karen Read murder trial

Plow driver testifies he saw no body in snow during crucial hours in Karen Read murder trial

Yahoo2 days ago

Karen Read's defense team is looking to build on momentum yesterday from a surprise police witness who testified that her taillight was less damaged when he helped seize it with a warrant than it appears in photos taken after it arrived at the Canton Police Department, where authorities first towed it.
Read's defense called Brian "Lucky" Loughran, a Department of Public Works employee, to the witness stand Wednesday morning.
He testified that he passed by 34 Fairview Road, the home of Brian Albert, where John O'Keefe was found dead in the snow, multiple times between 2:40 a.m. and around 6 a.m. Prosecutors allege Read hit her boyfriend outside and drove off, leaving him to die amid blizzard conditions.
Loughran said he had good visibility despite the blizzard conditions due to multiple lights on the plow truck and a high seat. Asked if he saw a body in the snow, he said no -- but he added that he did see a Ford Edge SUV parked outside the address on a later pass around 3:30 a.m.
Karen Read's Silence In Murder Trial Raises Stakes For Defense
He said it stood out to him because he was from the area and knew the Albert family -- and he had to maneuver around the vehicle as he cleared the road.
Read On The Fox News App
"For as long as I can remember, they have never parked a vehicle in front of their house," Loughran testified. "They've always had enough ample parking in the driveway."
Special prosecutor Hank Brennan asked Loughran during cross-examination about purported threats from an online blogger and inconsistencies in his timeline.
Karen Read Judge Blocks Sandra Birchmore Mentions; Expert Says Cases Should Be Wake-up Call For Police
Loughran said he never felt threatened by the blogger and denied having a bad memory when Brennan confronted him with multiple statements that offered different times for when the river passed by Fairview Road.
Then Brennan played police dashcam video taken outside 34 Fairview that showed the heavy snowfall and the distance between the house there and Cedarcrest Road, where a plow truck drove by multiple times in the background.
Loughran agreed that some of the passes were him in the plow, dubbed "Frankentruck," but said he couldn't be sure at other moments.
Follow The Fox True Crime Team On X
The taillight fragments were not found at the crime scene until later, too, and her defense's implication is that they could have been planted there.
Wednesday marks the 27th day of Read's retrial on murder and other charges in the January 2022 death of O'Keefe, her then-boyfriend, a Boston police officer, and an uncle who had taken in the orphaned children of his late sister and brother-in-law.
She denies hitting him with her 2021 Lexus SUV and leaving the scene, where he died with head trauma and signs of hypothermia. The defense says no collision happened and something or someone else caused his injuries.
On Tuesday, Dighton Police Sgt. Nicholas Barros testified that when he arrived at Read's parents' house to help state police confiscate the vehicle, fewer pieces of taillight were missing from the cracked taillight.
He said that a photo of Read's SUV taken at the Canton Police Department's sallyport – a secure garage – did "absolutely not" show the taillight in the same condition it was in when he saw it in the driveway.
Barros surprised the courtroom when he testified for the commonwealth during Read's first trial, which ended with a deadlocked jury last year. This time, he was a defense witness.
Karen Read's Suv Reached '74% Throttle' Moments Before John O'keefe's Final Movements, Crash Expert Testifies
"He was a devastating witness who has the [district attorney's] case on life support," said Mark Bederow, a New York City-based defense attorney who is closely following the case.
He said special prosecutor Hank Brennan conducted an "excellent" cross-examination, showing Barros and the jury images of Read's taillight taken over the course of the day, before police took her SUV, but defense attorney Alan Jackson performed equally well in redirect questioning.
Sign Up To Get The True Crime Newsletter
"The sum total is that Barros is 100% unequivocal: the taillight he saw on January 29 was not anywhere near as destroyed as when the [Massachusetts State Police] had it," he said.
GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE True Crime Hub
Grace Edwards, a Massachusetts defense attorney who is also following the case, called Barros' testimony a "bombshell" and said the surprise in trial 1 was "a clear Brady violation" – referring to a rule that prosecutors must share exculpatory evidence with the defense.
"The fact that a police officer drove to the Omni Hotel to meet with the defense team of a defendant on trial for murder clearly indicates he wanted to tell his story," she told Fox News Digital.
Dr. Judson Welcher, an expert for the prosecution, explained to jurors how he found that O'Keefe appeared to have been struck in the arm by the back corner of Read's SUV before he fell to the ground and fractured the back of his skull.
Christina Hanley, an analyst with the state police's crime lab, testified that investigators recovered plastic fragments from O'Keefe's clothing that were a match with the broken taillight or something made of the same material.
Read could face life in prison if convicted of the top charge, second-degree murder.Original article source: Plow driver testifies he saw no body in snow during crucial hours in Karen Read murder trial

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Karen Read defense expert challenges hit-and-run theory with collision tests showing key inconsistencies
Karen Read defense expert challenges hit-and-run theory with collision tests showing key inconsistencies

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Karen Read defense expert challenges hit-and-run theory with collision tests showing key inconsistencies

Karen Read's legal team is nearing the end of the case for her defense with crash reconstruction expert Dr. Daniel Wolfe called to the stand Friday. Dr. Wolfe played video for the jury that showed multiple recreations of an impact involving a 2021 Lexus LX 570 SUV and a crash dummy to simulate that alleged impact of Read's vehicle of the same make and model on her former boyfriend, John O'Keefe, whom she is accused of killing in a drunken hit-and-run. In each simulation, at speeds ranging from 10 to 29 mph, the damage to the vehicle's taillight was "inconsistent" with that damage police recorded on Read's actual taillight. Karen Read Denis Noticing Confrontation Between Deceased Boyfriend And Atf Agent WATCH: Crash expert plays video reconstruction of Lexus SUV on crash dummy While most of the impacts shattered the outer lens, internal components that were destroyed in Read's vehicle remained intact in multiple test taillights. Read On The Fox News App "Did you reach any opinions or conclusions as to whether the damage to the right rear tail light of the subject vehicle is consistent or inconsistent with an impact to a right arm during a high-speed reversing maneuver?" asked defense attorney Alan Jackson. "It was inconsistent," Wolfe replied. Wolfe also obtained sweatshirts that were the same brand and fabric blend of the one O'Keefe was wearing when he died. Notably, the impacts did not produce similar holes in the cloth. Karen Read Defense Floats Theory That 'Jealous' Brian Higgins Fought John O'keefe Before Death "Do you have an opinion or conclusion as to whether or not the damage that you saw to the hoodie related to John O'Keefe is consistent or inconsistent with an impact from a right rear taillight of the subject SUV?" Jackson asked. "It was inconsistent," Wolfe replied. "And what do you base that opinion on?" Jackson followed up. "Based upon all of the impact testing that we did with the closed ATD arm in the laboratory, as well as the field," Wolfe said, using an acronym that refers to the formal name for crash dummies – Anthropomorphic Test Device. Judge Beverly Cannone called a midday lunch break around 12:40 p.m. Special prosecutor Hank Brennan was expected to kick off cross-examination when court resumes. Friday marks the 28th day of her retrial on murder and other charges in the death of O'Keefe, a 46-year-old Boston police officer. Wolfe is the director of accident reconstruction at a firm called ARCCA. Earlier in his testimony, he said ARCCA designed a specialized "cannon" to simulate throwing a cocktail glass at Read's taillight and determined that similar damage could have been caused if someone threw the glass at around 31 mph and 37 mph. "From the 37 mile per hour test, we are getting damage that's generally consistent, and by that I mentioned we have portions of the outer lens missing, the underlying diffuser," he said. Karen Read Defense Gets Boost As Plow Driver Testifies He Saw No Body In Snow During Boston Cop Death Case "There was also some fracturing on the backside of the assembly. So again we observed damage that was generally consistent with that of the subject taillight." Wolfe said he gave an opinion that the damage Read's SUV was generally consistent with someone throwing that drinking glass at least 37 mph. Follow The Fox True Crime Team On X In another ARCCA test, the reconstructionists wanted to see if an impact between the taillight and the back of O'Keefe's head could've caused his skull fracture. Wolfe said he tested at 15 mph. Damage to the test taillight was significantly more than Read's taillight at that speed – but it didn't generate enough force to cause a skull fracture. ARCCA obtained sweatshirts from the same company and of the same fabric blend as the one O'Keefe was wearing when he died and also simulated strikes to see if the fabric would puncture in the same way. At 10 and 17 mph, the taillight sustained different levels of damage but the fabric remained undamaged. Sign Up To Get The True Crime Newsletter Prosecutors accused Read, 45, of hitting O'Keefe with her 2021 Lexus SUV and driving away as he died on the ground with a skull fracture during a blizzard. Investigators recovered a broken cocktail glass and a black straw from the scene and found additional glass on Read's bumper. However, experts testified earlier at trial that the bar glass was not a match for the fragments found on her car. The defense denies that she struck him and has called witnesses who have attributed his injuries to other causes, including a dog bite and a potential fistfight with a man Read was flirting with behind his back. GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE True Crime Hub Special prosecutor Hank Brennan unsuccessfully tried to have Wolfe and a colleague, Dr. Andrew Renstchler, blocked from testifying before the start of the trial. Wolfe testified during the first trial, which ended with a deadlocked jury, that damage to Read's SUV is inconsistent with a collision involving O'Keefe. Read told reporters outside court Wednesday that her defense could rest as soon as next Tuesday. There was no court on Thursday. She could face up to life in prison if convicted. Her first trial, in which the defense claimed she had been framed, ended with a deadlocked jury last article source: Karen Read defense expert challenges hit-and-run theory with collision tests showing key inconsistencies

Biden book author reveals how White House staff truly felt about Karine Jean-Pierre as press secretary
Biden book author reveals how White House staff truly felt about Karine Jean-Pierre as press secretary

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Biden book author reveals how White House staff truly felt about Karine Jean-Pierre as press secretary

CHICAGO - One of the authors of the new bombshell Joe Biden book pulled back the curtain Thursday on how White House staffers truly felt about former White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre. During their book tour in Chicago, "Original Sin" authors Alex Thompson and Jake Tapper were asked about the announcement of Jean-Pierre's new book promising to shed light on the "broken White House" she worked in and that she left the Democratic Party to become an independent. "Someone just texted me before I got on stage, a former Biden person, which is, 'It is quite the ballet move to say that you're leaving the Democratic Party because they were disloyal to Joe Biden.' But that is what she's saying," Thompson told the Windy City audience Thursday at The Vic Theatre. Biden-era White House Reporters Express Disbelief On Karine Jean-pierre's Sudden Party Switch Thompson noted that despite "mass bad reviews" within the Biden administration of Jean-Pierre's job performance as White House press secretary, she was seen as "untouchable" due to her allyship with top Jill Biden aide Anthony Bernal. "I think what's really provoking anger from former Biden people… there was mass frustration on how she went about the job, felt that she was not good at it, was not aware she was not good at it, she did not try hard to get better at it. And there's more focus on elevating her own profile than not," Thompson said. Read On The Fox News App "And now for her to then go out after the Democratic Party elevated her to the top spokesperson job in the country and then for her to then try to sell books by leaving the party, they say that simmering resentment just exploded instantly," the Axios reporter added. Tapper speculated that there would have been less "scorn" aimed at Jean-Pierre if she didn't announce she had become an independent, something the CNN anchor made little sense to him. Credibility Crisis: Karine Jean-pierre's Defense Of Biden's Mental Fitness Over The Years The event moderator, NPR media correspondent David Folkenflik, asked Tapper and Thompson why former Biden staffers by and large "aren't using their names" as they criticize Jean-Pierre. "I totally wonder that too," Tapper reacted. "Because, like, what are you afraid of?" Click Here For The Latest Media And Culture News Thompson responded by insisting many of them don't want to speak publicly because they have since landed new jobs and don't want their employers to be associated with the mudslinging. "I'd also say that the Biden culture was to punish and try to destroy people who spoke out," Thompson said. "And yes, they don't have power anymore, but they are watching very closely. I think some people still fear retaliation." Tapper added that since Jean-Pierre was a trailblazer" as the first Black woman and LGBTQ press secretary, that was another reason why her former colleagues aren't speaking out. Both authors took turns scrutinizing Jean-Pierre's credibility following her loyal defense of Biden before and after his disastrous debate performance. Tapper recalled a 2023 private fundraiser Biden attended in which he didn't have a teleprompter and how he told donors his canned remarks about how the events of Charlottesville inspired his presidential run in 2020 twice in the span of a few minutes, and how at the following press briefing, Jean-Pierre told reporters, "Well, that's how strongly he feels about that moment." "In her defense, she rarely saw him," Tapper article source: Biden book author reveals how White House staff truly felt about Karine Jean-Pierre as press secretary

Karen Read live updates: Crude text messages from fired state trooper read to jury
Karen Read live updates: Crude text messages from fired state trooper read to jury

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Karen Read live updates: Crude text messages from fired state trooper read to jury

Editor's note: This page summarizes testimony in the Karen Read trial for Thursday, May 8. For the latest updates on the Karen Read retrial, visit USA TODAY's coverage for Friday, May 9. Another Massachusetts state trooper took the stand in the murder trial of Karen Read on May 8, reading crude text messages sent by one of his subordinates during the investigation. Read, 45, is accused of hitting her boyfriend, Boston Police Officer John O'Keefe, with her Lexus SUV and leaving him for dead outside the home of a fellow cop in January 2022. Prosecutors say Read deliberately hit O'Keefe, 46, in a drunken rage. The testimony comes after defense attorneys sparred with an expert over the timing of a star witness' Google search. An analysis of the phone of Jennifer McCabe, a friend of the couple who testified for the prosecution, found she Googled how long does it take to die in the cold the day O'Keefe was found. A second expert testified that the search was made after O'Keefe was found unconscious, not before as the defense has suggested. Read's lawyers say she was framed for O'Keefe's murder. Court ended May 7 with prosecutors playing a clip of Read saying "Jen McCabe, it's me or her. Either I'm going down, Jen, or you are." The case out of Dedham, Massachusetts has turned into a years-long whodunnit legal saga that has garnered massive intrigue from true-crime fans across the country, spurring an array of podcasts, movies, and television shows. The former financial professor is back in court after a 2024 trial ended in a hung jury. The first full day of testimony was April 23. Judge Beverly Cannone estimated the trial could last between six and eight weeks and told jurors recently that the proceedings are on or slightly ahead of schedule. One of Read's attorneys questioned Yuri Bukhenik, a Massachusetts State Police trooper, about the thoroughness of his investigation, including whether he investigated the possibility that O'Keefe was involved in a physical altercation before his death. Bukhenik said it was possible he told the medical examiner's office on Jan. 29, 2022, that O'Keefe had potentially been struck in the face with a cocktail glass. Bukhenik said he did not go into the house or secure the lawn as a crime scene on the day O'Keefe was found outside. But he said he interviewed the homeowner, Brian Albert, and two witnesses, McCabe and her husband, to determine if anyone in the house had been involved in an altercation. Read's attorney asked if witnesses who were in the house would be motivated to lie if they were involved an altercation with O'Keefe. Bukhenik said he couldn't answer that, but later acknowledged that someone who appears to be a cooperating witness could be a suspect who's lying. Bukhenik is expected to return to the stand on May 9. One of Read's attorney started questioning by pressing Bukhenik about the involvement of his former subordinate, Michael Proctor, in the investigation. Bukhenik said Proctor, who was later fired for unrelated charges, was involved with collecting evidence, authoring search warrants and conducting interviews. But Bukhenik denied that Proctor had a major role in the investigation in the contentious back and forth. Ultimately, Bukhenik said bias and Proctor's involvement did not taint the investigation. 'This investigation was conducted professionally with integrity and all the evidence collected, all the statements collected pointed in one direction,' Bukhenik said. 'All the evidence pointed in one direction and one direction only,' he later added. Bukhenik read aloud to the jury crude text messages sent by an officer he supervised during the investigation into Read. In the August 2022 messages, trooper Michael Proctor used a slur and said he was going through a person's phone but had found 'no nudes so far.' Bukhenik did not identify the people Proctor was referring to in the messages. Bukhenik said an internal investigation later found he failed to adequately supervise Proctor and gave an inaccurate quarterly performance review. He said he lost five vacation days as a result. Proctor, who testified in Read's first trial, was fired in March for reasons unrelated to the text messages. Bukhenik also described the process of finding evidence as the snow melted in the days following O'Keefe's death including his hat, a drinking straw and more pieces of clear and red plastic. Prosecutors played Ring and dash camera footage showing the damage to Read's taillight. Bukhenik began to walk jurors through surveillance footage from the two restaurants where Read and O'Keefe went drinking the night prior to his death before the court broke for lunch. Bukhenik told jurors what Read said to police and what O'Keefe's body looked like the day he died. Bukhenik said blood was pooled beneath O'Keefe's head and seeping into the sheets of his hospital bed after his death. Both of O'Keefe's eyes were swollen and discolored and there were small cuts on his face. Bukhenik said there were also cuts and bruises on his right arm, hand and knee. Bukhenik showed jurors pieces of clothing O'Keefe was wearing the day he died. He said he found it 'very significant' that one of O'Keefe's shoes was missing and while he was at the hospital, he began to theorize that O'Keefe had been struck by a car. 'I was suspecting that he was hit out of his shoes,' Bukhenik said. O'Keefe's sneaker was later found at the scene, according to previous testimony. Bukhenik then went to talk to Read at her parents' home, where he saw that a large piece of the red taillight cover was missing from her SUV. When asked about the damage, Read said, 'I don't know how I did it last night.' Read told police that after a night of drinking, she dropped O'Keefe off at 34 Fairview Road. She said she made a three-point turn and left without seeing him go into the house, according to Bukhenik. When asked how O'Keefe might have sustained his injuries, Read told police O'Keefe had bumped his head two nights before and had asked her about it. Police then seized Read's vehicle and cell phone, Bukhenik said. Jessica Hyde, a digital forensics examiner, said a tab was opened on Jennifer McCabe's phone at 2:27 a.m. on Jan. 29 and multiple searches were made at some point, including for sporting events, a video of the song It's Raining Men and two crucial, misspelled questions 'hos (sic) long to die in the cold' and 'how long ti die in cikd (sic)' Hyde said 'hos (sic) long to die in cold' was the final search made in the tab at 6:24 a.m. O'Keefe was found around 6 a.m. Hyde is the second expert to tell jurors this search was made after 6 a.m. Ian Whiffin, a digital intelligence expert, testified on April 28 that forensic data showed the Google search occurred at about 6:23 a.m. Read's attorney attempted to poke holes in Hyde's testimony by pointing out differences between her previous testimony, her report and Whiffin's findings. CourtTV has been covering the case against Read and the criminal investigation since early 2022, when O'Keefe's body was found outside a Canton home. You can watch CourtTV's live feed of the Read trial proceedings from Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham, Massachusetts. Proceedings begin at 9 a.m. ET. Contributing: Michael Loria, USA TODAY This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Karen Read trial updates: Jurors hear crude texts from fired trooper

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store