Jury Finds Karen Read Not Guilty of Second-Degree Murder, Guilty of Drunk Driving in Boyfriend’s Death

Karen Read, pictured outside of the Norfolk Superior Court for a hearing in August. Her legal team tried for months to get her second trial dismissed.
Karen Read, pictured outside of the Norfolk Superior Court for a hearing in August. Her legal team tried for months to get her second trial dismissed.
Via NPR| John Tlumacki/Boston Globe via Getty Images
Share
Karen Read, pictured outside of the Norfolk Superior Court for a hearing in August. Her legal team tried for months to get her second trial dismissed.
Karen Read, pictured outside of the Norfolk Superior Court for a hearing in August. Her legal team tried for months to get her second trial dismissed.
Via NPR| John Tlumacki/Boston Globe via Getty Images
Jury Finds Karen Read Not Guilty of Second-Degree Murder, Guilty of Drunk Driving in Boyfriend’s Death
Copy

A jury found Karen Read not guilty of second-degree murder Wednesday in the death of her Boston police officer boyfriend but guilty of a lesser charge of drunk driving.

The jury handed down its decision after deliberating for at least 22 hours since June 13.

The verdict in the polarizing and highly watched case comes nearly a year after a separate jury deadlocked over Read’s involvement in the January 2022 death of John O’Keefe and resulted in a judge declaring a mistrial.

It’s a huge victory for Read’s lawyers, who have long asserted she was framed by police after dropping O’Keefe off at a party at the home of a fellow officer. Prosecutors argued the 45-year-old Read hit O’Keefe, 46, with her SUV before driving away, but the defense maintained O’Keefe was killed inside the home and later dragged outside.

Read faced charges of second-degree murder, manslaughter and leaving the scene outside Boston. A second-degree murder conviction would have carried a life sentence.

Much like during the first trial, attorneys spent months presenting their case, featuring hundreds of pieces of evidence and dozens of witnesses.

This story was originally published by the Associated Press.

Nova One kicks off our very first Biggest Little Desk: a Rhode Island spin of NPR’s Tiny Desk
Rodney Chatman is out after five years as Brown police chief. He’s succeeded by High Clements, who led the Providence police department for 12 years
Jon Mitchell points to gains in crime, schools and development, but sidesteps offshore wind slowdown and immigration concerns
From a show at AS220 to New Bedford’s film festival and a high-energy performance at Mundo’s, here’s what to do this weekend
While he says the state’s reputation as a hotbed of political corruption is overstated, Marion says government oversight today isn’t as ‘robust as it should be’