The Karen Read case has ended in a mistrial after jurors said they fundamentally could not agree on whether she murdered her Boston cop boyfriend in January 2022 following seven days of deliberation.
Judge Beverly Cannone ruled Monday that the deadlocked jury in Dedham, Massachusetts, is not able to reach a unanimous verdict after jurors sent her notes on Friday and again on Monday that they disagreed because of “deeply-held convictions that each of us carry.”
The sensational two-month trial featured stunning revelations, including crowds of fawning Read supporters who cheered her on outside court each day. The lead detective on the case texted a friend saying she was a “babe” and a “wack job c–t.”
The jurors — six men and six women — were tasked with deciding whether Read, 44, backed over Boston Police Officer John O’Keefe, with her Lexus SUV and then leaving him to die in the cold outside of a home in Canton on Jan. 29, 2022.
She was charged with second-degree murder, manslaughter while operation a motor vehicle under the influence and leaving the scene of an accident resulting in death. She faced up to life in prison if she had been convicted on the top count of murder.
The night of O’Keefe’s death, the couple had been out on a bar crawl with Read allegedly consuming seven drinks in just 90 minutes.
Read was accused of then drunkenly driving O’Keefe to cop pal Brian Albert’s home for a party with a group of officers before mowing him down in a rage and hightailing away, then sending a slew of swear-laden voicemails and text messages to her beau.
During the two-month trial in Norfolk County Superior Court in Dedham, Mass. — that featured testimony from 74 witnesses — Read’s lawyers argued she is a the victim of a frame job carried out by law enforcement in order to cover-up that O’Keefe was actually fatally beaten up by his officer friends.
The theory has galvanized hundreds of supporters to come out to court to advocate for her innocence.
It was not immediately clear whether prosecutors would seek to try Read again.
Outside court on Monday, supporters said the mistrial should vindicate Read and the prosecutors should drop the charges.
“They will never retry the case. There is no way,” said Marilyn McCabe, 71, of Norwood, jabbing her finger.
Another supporter said no prospective jurors in Norfolk County, a Boston bedroom community, could have avoided the wall-to-wall coverage of the trial, which was live-streamed across the internet.
“I think you’ll have a really hard time finding jurors that are number one not biased and number two not living under a rock,” said Stacy Bettancourt, 47, who was wearing a red “Free Karen tank top.