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Karen Read's Google timeline derailed again as 2nd expert disputes defense claims
Karen Read's Google timeline derailed again as 2nd expert disputes defense claims

Fox News

time08-05-2025

  • Fox News

Karen Read's Google timeline derailed again as 2nd expert disputes defense claims

Join Fox News for access to this content Plus special access to select articles and other premium content with your account - free of charge. By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News' Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive. Please enter a valid email address. Having trouble? Click here. A second expert on smartphone forensics testified Wednesday in the Karen Read trial that Jennifer McCabe's Google search about hypothermia happened after John O'Keefe's remains were found, not before, as the defense has argued. Jessica Hyde testified that she could say with scientific certainty that McCabe used her iPhone to search the phrase "hos (sic) long to die in cold" at 6:24 a.m. The defense claim that the search happened at 2:27 a.m. – hours before investigators say Read, McCabe and Kerry Roberts found O'Keefe dead in the snow at 34 Fairview Road – is incorrect, she testified. The earlier timestamp has no connection to the search but is actually assigned to the time McCabe opened the browser tab on her phone. That testimony supported earlier testimony from Ian Whiffin, a digital forensic expert from the firm Cellebrite, which makes some of the software and hardware that investigators use to look for information on phones and other devices. KAREN READ'S VOICEMAILS TO JOHN O'KEEFE PLAYED IN MURDER TRIAL: 'I F---ING HATE YOU' Hyde testified using specific terms – "hex editors," "hash values" and database files, wading into technical details about how phone data is extracted, preserved and interpreted. Even inexperienced analysts can have trouble making sense of things, she testified. David Gelman, a Philadelphia-area defense attorney who has been following the case, questioned the prosecution's decision to have an expert witness for such technical testimony take the stand before the court's midday break. "For an expert, you want them to make it make sense to a 5-year-old," he told Fox News Digital. "They failed today. Add in that it was an incredibly boring subject, I would bet the jurors were just looking at the clock the whole time thinking what they will order for lunch." KAREN READ TRIAL: CANTON COP EXPLAINS USING LEAF BLOWER, RED SOLO CUPS, STOP & SHOP BAG FOR EVIDENCE After lunch, defense lawyer Robert Alessi handled the cross-examination, bringing up the same technical terms and grilling Hyde about her testimony at Read's first trial, which he was not part of. The trial last year ended with a deadlocked jury, leading the state to bring in special prosecutor Hank Brennan to retry the case. Without the jury present, Alessi asked the court for permission to reference a recent Maryland case that he said showed Hyde was an unreliable witness. Judge Beverly Cannone sided with Brennan's team and said he could not bring up the judge's decision in that case, but she said he would be free to cross-examine Hyde on the methodology she used to make her findings. KAREN READ SCORES MAJOR WIN AS JUDGE ALLOWS CRASH RECONSTRUCTION TESTIMONY Under cross-examination, she testified that O'Keefe's phone was not secured in alignment with established "best practices" after police recovered it from the scene. She sparred with Alessi, often using the same technical terms that may have alienated the jury on direct examination, Gelman said. SIGN UP TO GET TRUE CRIME NEWSLETTER "Jurors don't want to sit through this for days and days," he said. "They want to get into the meat and potatoes." Read has pleaded not guilty to charges of murder, manslaughter and fleeing the scene. She could face life in prison if convicted of the top charge. Massachusetts prosecutors allege she backed her Lexus SUV into and fatally struck O'Keefe before driving away after a night out drinking in Canton, a suburb of Boston. Through her defense lawyers, she has denied striking him at all. JENNIFER MCCABE DOUBLES DOWN ON KAREN READ'S ALLEGED 'I HIT HIM' CONFESSION BUT CAN'T FIND IT IN PAPER TRAIL Earlier in Wednesday's proceeding, Massachusetts State Trooper Connor Keefe took the stand to discuss how he collected evidence in the case, including phones from McCabe and Roberts as well as broken pieces of a taillight and O'Keefe's sneaker from the crime scene. At one point, he opened an evidence bag in front of the jury, and it had three pieces of broken plastic inside, not the expected two. "Do you know if the other piece in the bag is a piece that broke off?" Brennan asked. "Do you know how that arrived there?" FOLLOW THE FOX TRUE CRIME TEAM ON X "I do not," Keefe said. Brennan asked for the pieces to be moved into evidence, but after an objection from Read's defense, the court instructed Keefe to place the third piece in a separate evidence bag. GET REAL-TIME UPDATES FROM THE FOX TRUE CRIME HUB But Keefe's testimony helped prosecutors establish a firm timeline of when and where police found broken taillight fragments: in the snow-covered street in front of 34 Fairview Road, where O'Keefe and Read had been seen the night before. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Testimony is expected to resume shortly after 9 a.m. Thursday.

Epsom residents attempt to stop council accessing proposed homes
Epsom residents attempt to stop council accessing proposed homes

BBC News

time06-05-2025

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Epsom residents attempt to stop council accessing proposed homes

Attempt to stop council accessing proposed housing 10 minutes ago Share Save Emily Dalton Local Democracy Reporting Service Share Save Emily Dalton/LDRS Residents claim the council doesn't have access rights on the privately owned street Epsom residents are attempting to block a council's access to a site where it plans to build temporary housing. Epsom and Ewell Borough Council obtained planning consent to build three temporary homes at a former builder's yard on Fairview Road in November despite objections from the street's residents. HM Land Registry is now considering residents' application to prevent the council accessing the yard on the grounds that the road is privately owned. Steven McCormick, who chairs the council's planning committee, said the local authority "remains confident" it has the right to access the site. The council applied for right of way on the street in September, based on the long-term use by the site's previous occupant Adrian Giles. Anyone can claim access rights if they have used a route for 20 years without requiring permission or using force, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service. Debbie Ransome, who lives next to the site, claims Mr Giles forfeited access when he moved his business from the road and handed the land back to the council in 2016. Mr Giles has declined to comment. Ms Ransome, a long-time opponent of the homes project, added that it would be "detrimental to hundreds of school kids" who use the road as a cut through to the nearby Glyn School. Pedestrian safety concerns were discussed by councillors before the planning application for the houses was approved, according to McCormick. He said the development will "allow the council to house local families facing homelessness within the borough, close to schools and local support networks". He added: "The council has followed the process laid out by the Land Registry. "Residents have challenged the Land Registry's decision, but the council remains confident in its position. The council refutes any further allegations." A Land Registry spokesperson said it was unable to comment on whether or not the council could legally access the site from Fairview Road. Follow BBC Surrey on Facebook, on X, and on Instagram. Send your story ideas to southeasttoday@ or WhatsApp us on 08081 002250.

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