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Watch Live: Karen Read case hearing to consider off-the-record interview notes and other pre-trial motions

Watch Live: Karen Read case hearing to consider off-the-record interview notes and other pre-trial motions

CBS News31-01-2025

DEDHAM - The Karen Read case returns to court today for a hearing to consider several pre-trial motions, including whether a journalist's off-the-record notes and recordings can be used at her retrial.
You can watch Friday's hearing at Norfolk Superior Court live on CBS News Boston and in the video player above.
Judge Beverly Cannone in December ruled that prosecutors can have access to the reporter's unedited recordings and notes for a Boston Magazine interview with Read in 2023, as well as an interview her parents William and Janet did with WFXT. A similar effort by the prosecution at Read's first trial was denied "on narrow grounds," the judge said.
Special Prosecutor Hank Brennan has said he'll use the evidence to show how Read's story has changed over time, and claims the interview materials suggest admissions of wrongdoing.
Other topics expected to be considered on Friday include a motion to exclude a digital expert witness from the defense from testifying about Jen McCabe's"hos long to die in cold" Google search, and a bid from Read's legal team to get the state to reimburse a defense expert for more than $12,000 in travel expenses.
3 years since John O'Keefe's death
This week marked three years since Read's boyfriend, Boston police officer John O'Keefe, was found dead in the snow in front of 34 Fairview Road in Canton.
"The void in our lives grows with each passing day, week, month and year," O'Keefe's family said in a statement to WBZ-TV. "His absence is profound and we will continue to seek justice for him. He is always in our hearts."
O'Keefe was the legal caretaker of his teenage niece and nephew. The medical examiner testified at Read's trial that he died from a combination of blunt force trauma to the head and hypothermia.
Who is Karen Read?
Read, 44, is a financial analyst who was living in Mansfield when she was accused of hitting O'Keefe with her SUV and leaving him to die after a night of heavy drinking in January 2022.
Read has pleaded not guilty to charges of second-degree murder, manslaughter while operating under the influence of alcohol, and leaving the scene of personal injury and death. She alleges there is an elaborate coverup involving law enforcement to frame her in O'Keefe's death.
Her first trial ended in a mistrial with a "starkly divided" hung jury. Read's second criminal trial is set to begin on April 1, 2025.

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Karen Read trial live updates: Defense expected to call final witness
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Karen Read trial live updates: Defense expected to call final witness
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Karen Read's second murder trial continued Tuesday with testimony from a defense expert who says John O'Keefe likely smashed his skull during a fall backward. Elizabeth Laposata, a forensic pathologist and former medical examiner, retook the stand to explain what she believes caused O'Keefe's head, brain and face injuries. Prosecutors say Read, 45, backed into O'Keefe, her Boston police officer boyfriend, with her Lexus SUV in a fit of jealousy after a night of drinking and then left him to die in the snow outside the home of another cop. Her defense team has maintained that Read was framed for the crime by people inside the house, who they say beat O'Keefe, let a dog attack him and then dropped his body on the front lawn. They've argued that police purposefully bungled the investigation into O'Keefe's death. This is Read's second trial, after her first ended in July 2024 in a hung jury. Lawyer Alan Jackson, one of Read's defense attornies, said Monday he expects to also call biomechanist Andrew Rentschler Tuesday as the eleventh and final defense witness. Questioning Rentschler should take about three hours, Jackson told Judge Beverly Cannone. The prosecution also intends to call several witnesses to rebut the defense's arguments. Elizabeth Laposata is a clinical associate professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at Brown University's Warren Alpert School of Medicine. Judge Beverly Cannone previously ruled Laposata was unqualified to testify about whether markings found on O'Keefe's arm are consistent with dog bite wounds, but can discuss what she believed caused O'Keefe's injuries. On Tuesday, Cannone said Laposata could testify that O'Keefe's injuries were consistent with animal bites she has seen throughout her career. Cannone's ruling came after the prosecution tried to prevent Laposata from testifying, arguing she did not have the proper expertise. Laposata is expected to support the defense's argument that O'Keefe did not die in the cold by explaining how his body did not suffer from hypothermia. Read's defense team previously presented testimony from Marie Russell, an emergency physician and former forensic pathologist, who told jurors she believed surface-level gashes found on O'Keefe's arm came from canine claws and teeth. They have suggested a German Shepard, which lived at 34 Fairview, attacked O'Keefe. Jury instructions filed by Read's lawyers suggest the Massachusetts woman may not testify in the retrial. They include a section informing the jury of Read's Fifth Amendment right not to testify, telling them they 'may not hold that against her.' Christopher Dearborn, a law professor at Suffolk University in Boston who has followed the case closely, said the instructions are likely a 'harbinger' that Read's attorneys are not going to call her to the stand, though he noted they could change their mind. 'Frankly, I don't think it would make a lot of sense to call her at this point,' Dearborn said, noting the number of public statements Read has made that could be used against her. The court has already heard from Read in the trial through clips prosecutors played of interviews in which she questioned whether she 'clipped' O'Keefe and admitted to driving while inebriated. Dearborn told USA TODAY there are two schools of thought around whether to include a section on a defendant's right not to testify in jury instructions. Some defense lawyers don't include the section because they don't want to "draw a bull's eye" around the fact the defendant didn't testify and cause jurors to "speculate," Dearborn said. Other times, he said, it is the "elephant in the room," and the specific instructions telling the jury they can't hold the defendant's lack of testimony against them are necessary. CourtTV has been covering the case against Read and the criminal investigation since early 2022, when O'Keefe's body was found outside a Massachusetts 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. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Karen Read trial day 30: Defense expected to call final witness

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