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Live court video, updates: Day 18 of witness testimony in Karen Read's retrial
Live court video, updates: Day 18 of witness testimony in Karen Read's retrial

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Live court video, updates: Day 18 of witness testimony in Karen Read's retrial

Monday marks the start of the fifth week and Day 18 of witness testimony in Karen Read's murder retrial after the judge presiding over the case issued an important ruling. WATCH LIVE: Streaming coverage of Read's second trial starts at 9 a.m. Read, 45, of Mansfield, is accused of striking John O'Keefe, her Boston police officer boyfriend, with her SUV and leaving him to die alone in a blizzard outside of a house party in Canton at the home of fellow officer Brian Albert following a night of drinking. A new witness is expected on the stand when testimony resumes. On Friday, right after Judge Beverly Cannone sent the jury home for the weekend, she announced in Dedham's Norfolk Superior Court that she would not penalize the prosecution for entering new evidence. One of Read's lawyers called it an 'ambush.' A prosecution expert shifted the timing of a 'trigger' event that was recorded by Read's Lexus. That data is expected to be compared to the last movement of O'Keefe's phone. The defense has called it a Rule 14 violation and said there is no remedy for it. 'We will not ever be able to recover strategically or substantively from it, given all that's been presented to the jury,' defense attorney Robert Alessi said. The prosecution says there is no time change, and the defense's expert made an improper conclusion. 'The government is not changing its timeline. The Commonwealth is not changing any information. The Commonwealth is not offering anything that affects in any way the testimony of witnesses,' Special Prosecutor Hank Brennan argued. 'Because their expert made an improper conclusion. It's not our fault.' Also on Friday, Andre Porto, a forensic scientist who works in the DNA unit of the Massachusetts State Police Crime Lab, detailed various items he tested, including the broken rear taillight on Read's SUV. Porto found three DNA contributors, but only O'Keefe was found to be a likely match. He also tested DNA from parts of a broken cocktail glass found in the yard, and only O'Keefe was seen as a likely match. Porto also tested a hair found on the taillight. No human DNA was found on a hair recovered from the right rear panel of the SUV. Porto also took DNA samples from stains on O'Keefe's jeans, sweatshirt, and T-shirt. He found DNA from several sources, but the only likely match was O'Keefe. Under cross-examination by defense attorney David Yannetti, Porto acknowledged that he didn't know the source of the other DNA found on O'Keefe's clothing and other items. Porto also acknowledged that he was never was asked to test for the DNA on the taillight of Kevin Albert, who is a Canton police officer, or a former Canton police chief. He also said he was not asked to test the broken cocktail glass for the DNA from Brian Albert, a former Boston police officer who owned the house where O'Keefe was found nor Brian Higgins, an ATF agent who attended a party at Albert's house that night. Prosecutors allege Read intentionally backed into O'Keefe after she dropped him off at a house party and returned hours later to find him dead. The defense has claimed that she was a victim of a vast police conspiracy and that O'Keefe was fatally beaten by another law enforcement officer at the party. A mistrial was declared last year after jurors said they were at an impasse and deliberating further would be futile. Read has pleaded not guilty to charges of second-degree murder, manslaughter while operating under the influence, and leaving the scene of a crash resulting in death. Get caught up with all of the latest in Karen Read's retrial. Download the FREE Boston 25 News app for breaking news alerts. Follow Boston 25 News on Facebook and Twitter. | Watch Boston 25 News NOW

Karen Read hearing could have Alan Jackson in the hot seat. All the details we know so far.
Karen Read hearing could have Alan Jackson in the hot seat. All the details we know so far.

CBS News

time21-02-2025

  • Politics
  • CBS News

Karen Read hearing could have Alan Jackson in the hot seat. All the details we know so far.

A hearing in Karen's Read's case abruptly ended on Tuesday, when Judge Cannone called off the rest of the day in court amid allegations that defense attorneys may have made misrepresentations to the Court. Judge has "grave concern" "The Commonwealth just provided the court with information that causes me grave concern," Cannone said about 20 minutes after calling a recess."The implications of that information may have profound effects on this defense and defense counsel. So, for that reason I'm going to suspend today, so that when we meet again to address these issues, all affected will be appropriately prepared." Immediately following the hearing, WBZ Legal Analyst Katherine Loftus said the Judge was likely considering whether to revoke Defense Attorney Alan Jackson's "pro hac vice" status, which gives the California attorney the right to practice in Massachusetts as Read's lawyer for this case. "[Judge Cannone] said not only for the defense, but for defense counsel. I took that as, Alan Jackson is going to be on the hot seat next Tuesday," Loftus said. On Thursday, Cannone then put out a scheduling order confirming that lawyers should be prepared to argue about prior representations made to the court on the record. What we know about the facts surrounding these allegations: June 10, 2024: In the middle of Read's first trial, outside of the presence of the jury, Defense Attorney David Yannetti argues in front of Judge Cannone about certain upcoming expert witnesses, and allegations from the Commonwealth that defense did not comply with its discovery obligations. This argument, which was heated at times, involved conversations about so-called "ARCCA Experts," independent crash reconstructionists who had been hired as part of a federal investigation into the death of John O'Keefe. "These experts did not arise from us," Yannetti said on June 10. "These experts were hired by the federal government, and they provided a report to us, pursuant to the Touhy request, and it was specifically outlined and ruled that they could not prep with us for trial." "So, I'm to believe that the defense is calling three witnesses that you've never spoken to, and putting them on the stand here?" Judge Cannone replied. "That's essentially – we've only spoken to them for the purpose of coordination of their testimony, and their background, that's it," Yannetti said. "We have not been able to interview them regarding their findings, which are outlined in detail–" After a bit more back and forth, Judge Cannone said, "You have not complied with your Rule 14 obligations," to which David Yannetti responded, "we can't, your Honor. We can't." June 24, 2024: ARCCA experts testify at Read's first trial. In his direct examination of them, Defense Attorney Alan Jackson points out that he and the experts had never met, and that they were hired by an independent third-party agency. (Jurors were not allowed to know about the federal investigation, hence the mystery surrounding a "third party.") ARCCA Experts Dr. Andrew Rentschler and Dr. Daniel Wolfe testify that based on their testing, John O'Keefe's injuries were not consistent with having been hit by a car. February 12, 2025: The Commonwealth moves to exclude ARCCA experts from Read's second trial, arguing that because of protective orders that prohibit access to the federal investigation details, the defense will not be able to meet its discovery obligations. Karen Read's team filed an opposition to this motion. February 18, 2025: In a hearing to cover a number of motions, the Commonwealth argues its motion to exclude ARCCA experts. In doing so, Prosecutor Hank Brennan reads the transcript from June 10 to the Court, in which David Yannetti discussed an inability to prep with ARCCA experts as outlined above. Brennan then reads a series of emails between Defense Attorney Alan Jackson and one of the ARCCA experts, as described below: March 22, 2024: Brennan alleges that Alan Jackson emailed the ARCCA expert and mentioned an engagement letter and retainer agreement. June 22, 2024 and beyond (exact dates unclear): Brennan alleges Alan Jackson and an ARCCA Expert email to coordinate testimony, and reads a line from the email in which the ARCCA expert tells Jackson to "feel free to make whatever changes you feel necessary." Brennan alleges an outline of questions and answers for a direct examination from ARCCA was sent to the defense, saying the Commonwealth had no knowledge of an outline from this "totally independent witness who took no side other than that of the truth." Brennan alleges the margins of the outline include notes from the ARCCA witness like, "If you don't want me to say this, that's fine." As a part of his argument, Brennan says the information he is reading was provided to him by the federal government, not the defense. "Now, this isn't information provided by the defense and reciprocal discovery, this is information provided by the federal government after numerous requests… And I insist to the best that I can to get as much information as I can," he said. After a recess, he then told the judge the information actually was provided to him by defense attorneys. February 18, 2025: Brennan finishes his argument by reading a bill from ARCCA to the defense for $23,925. "That's not trial by ambush. That's getting duped," Brennan said. It's unclear if defense actually paid that bill. Judge Cannone takes a sudden recess, comes back after about 25 minutes, and suspends the hearing without further discussion, saying she has "grave concerns." WBZ's Kristina Rex asks Alan Jackson outside court what that was about, to which he says he has "no idea." When asked if he paid ARCCA experts to testify at Read's first trial," Jackson says, "No, of course not, no." February 20, 2025: Judge Cannone issues a scheduling order that reads, in part, "Counsel should be prepared to address issues related to the Defendant's recent production pursuant to Rule 14, especially as the materials produced relate to prior representations made to the court on the record by defense counsel concerning the ARCCA witnesses." Retired judge says "This is ominous" Regarding Judge Cannone's order, retired Massachusetts Judge Jack Lu told WBZ, "This is ominous. Mr. Jackson needs a top-shelf professional responsibility lawyer asap." The issue on Tuesday, Judge Lu says, will be about whether Alan Jackson and defense counsel made misrepresentations to the Court during the first trial about prepping with and paying ARCCA witnesses. Alan Jackson is a California-licensed attorney who was given special status, known as pro hac vice, to be Karen Read's lawyer in Massachusetts. "This is a complicated situation," Lu said. "It appears that California does not have a requirement that the defense disclose promises, rewards, and inducements to a witness. I am not a member of the California bar. If we assume Mr. Jackson doesn't not know about this Massachusetts requirement, it is immensely helpful to him. Technically, he is required to know Mass law, but we have to understand that these are fallible humans trying a homicide case." "If Mr. Yannetti does not know about Mr. Jackson's invitation for an engagement letter, retainer request and possibly a bill, and Mr. Jackson' possibly small preparation of the witness(es) he cannot fairly be held responsible," Lu explained. "The same analysis holds true if the question is whether they violated a continuing duty to disclose any of this information and no disclosable information existed at the time of Mr. Yannetti's statement. We don't know the facts but as an attorney discipline matter it is unfair to penalize fallible lawyers acting in good faith for technical violations." This issue will be argued at a hearing on Tuesday, February 25 at 11 a.m. Who is Karen Read? Karen Read is accused of hitting and killing her boyfriend, former Boston police officer John O'Keefe, with her SUV during a snowstorm in Canton in January 2022. She says she is the victim of a cover-up by law enforcement and others and 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. Read's first trial last year ended in a mistrial with a "starkly divided" hung jury. Read's second criminal trial is scheduled to start on April 1, 2025 in Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham.

Judge tells Karen Read's lawyers to ‘be prepared' to explain allegations that cut hearing short
Judge tells Karen Read's lawyers to ‘be prepared' to explain allegations that cut hearing short

Yahoo

time21-02-2025

  • Yahoo

Judge tells Karen Read's lawyers to ‘be prepared' to explain allegations that cut hearing short

Norfolk Superior Court Judge Beverly Cannone on Thursday told Karen Read's legal team to 'be prepared' to explain bombshell allegations related to two of their expert witnesses that cut Tuesday's pre-retrial hearing short. 'Grave concern': New info 'may have profound effects' on Karen Read case, judge says In a notice to appear, Cannone scheduled the resumption of the hearing at 11 a.m. on Feb. 25 and advised, 'Counsel should be prepared to address issues related to the defendant's recent production pursuant to Rule 14, especially as the materials produced related to prior representations made to the Court on the record by defense counsel concerning ARCCA witnesses.' Two analysts from the multidisciplinary engineering consulting firm, accident reconstruction specialist Dr. Daniel Wolfe and biomechanical engineering specialist Dr. Andrew Rentschler, both testified on behalf of Read in June 2024 and stated that injuries to Read's Boston police officer boyfriend weren't consistent with a vehicle strike. During Tuesday's hearing, special prosecutor Hank Brennan suggested that Read's lawyers were more involved than they let on when it came to the testimony of ARCCA crash analysts Wolfe and Rentschler. In Read's first trial, defense attorneys told the court that they didn't talk with ARCCA about their testimony ahead of time. The company was initially hired as part of a federal investigation into state law enforcement's handling of the murder case. But Brennan revealed new documents that show Read's legal team paid the ARCCA experts more than $23,000 and exchanged emails with at least one of them about what they planned to say on the stand. 'I don't care if the ARCCA witnesses testify at trial. I don't care about their opinions. But I care that it's unfair, imbalanced, and hidden,' Brennan said. Cannone immediately called for unplanned recess after Brennan's comments. Upon returning from that recess, Cannone told the court, 'The Commonwealth just provided the court with information that causes me grave concern. The implications of that information may have profound effects on the defense and defense council.' Brennan also recently filed a motion to block the defense's ARCCA witnesses from testifying in Read's retrial. In his motion, Brennan said, 'Both Dr. Wolfe and Dr. Rentschler admittedly did not review all pertinent and relevant evidence that exists in this case.' Cannone declared a mistrial in July 2024 after finding Read jurors couldn't reach a unanimous verdict on all three charges of second-degree murder, leaving the scene of a crash, and manslaughter. Read is accused of hitting John O'Keefe with her Lexus SUV on Jan. 29, 2022, and leaving him to die after a night of drinking. The defense has sought to portray Read as the victim, saying O'Keefe was actually killed inside the Albert family home and then dragged outside and left for dead. The retrial of Read has been delayed until April 2025. In an exclusive one-on-one interview on Super Bowl Sunday, Read told Boston 25′s Ted Daniel that she has 'nothing to hide' and that she's 'been framed' for murder. Download the FREE Boston 25 News app for breaking news alerts. Follow Boston 25 News on Facebook and Twitter. | Watch Boston 25 News NOW

Guernsey Airport spent more than £330k on overtime last year
Guernsey Airport spent more than £330k on overtime last year

BBC News

time12-02-2025

  • Business
  • BBC News

Guernsey Airport spent more than £330k on overtime last year

Staff at Guernsey Airport did more than 7,850 hours of overtime last year because of late openings caused by plane delays, costing more than £330,000, the States' trading arm has the airport made 24% more from parking charges in 2024, after prices increased the previous October the States' Trading Supervisory Board (STSB), which oversees the island's airline Aurigny, information was revealed as part of a series of Rule 14 Questions raised by Deputy Simon Vermeulen which also showed the airline made a loss in 2024 because of "exceptional" costs such as wet leasing and repairs to its Embraer STSB said Aurigny's underlying financial performance remained "positive" and the company would have broken even if not for the unexpected costs. 'Historically good levels' A review commissioned by the airline last year found its management had made no "misjudgements" but a separate report said Aurigny's prices were 30% higher than comparative prices for Jersey and the Isle of Peter Roffey, STSB president, said he "[appreciated it would] be of no comfort" to passengers affected by disruptions but "Aurigny's punctuality rates [had] returned to their historically good levels".

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