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Friday 29 August 2025 03:54:25 GMT
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The jury in Karen Read’s trial asked three questions today (Tuesday, June 17, day 35):  1) What is the time frame for the OUI (manslaughter operating under the influence) charge, 12:45 a.m. or 5 a.m.? 2) Are the clips of Read’s interviews evidence and if so how should we consider them? 3) Does convicting on a subcharge convict on the overall charge? The answer to the first question is 12:45  a.m., but Judge Beverly Cannone said she couldn’t tell the jurors a time because prosecutors didn’t include on in the indictment.  “You folks have all the evidence,” she told jurors. “And remember, it’s only you who decide the facts in this case.” Judge Cannone also confirmed for the jury that clips from Read’s media interviews are evidence, and she instructed them to weigh Read’s comments as they would any other piece of evidence. She read a so-called “humane practice” instruction, which tells jurors they may only consider a defendant’s comments about an alleged crime if they find prosecutors have proven the defendant made the statements in question and did so voluntarily and rationally.  Read is charged with second-degree murder, manslaughter while operating a motor vehicle under the influence, and leaving the scene of a fatal collision. The OUI manslaughter charge carries lesser included offenses of involuntary manslaughter, motor vehicle homicide, and OUI.  Cannone amended the verdict slip to answer the jury’s question about whether convicting Read of a lesser included offense also convicts her of the overall charge.  The updated verdict slip should be “a little bit easier for you to follow,” the judge said. She instructed jurors to work through the form from the top down, first considering the OUI manslaughter. Read, 45, is charged with the January 2022 death of her boyfriend, John O'Keefe, 46, who was an officer with the Boston Police Department. Prosecutors say she was drunk when she backed her car into him. Her defense is that O'Keefe was murdered by Brian Albert, a Boston police detective, and Brian Higgins, a federal ATF agent, and she is being framed through a broad Massachusetts police conspiracy. Read's first trial ended in a mistrial after the jury deadlocked, though jurors later revealed they voted to acquit on the murder and and the leaving the scene charge but were deadlocked on manslaughter. #karenread #law #crime #court #legal
The jury in Karen Read’s trial asked three questions today (Tuesday, June 17, day 35): 1) What is the time frame for the OUI (manslaughter operating under the influence) charge, 12:45 a.m. or 5 a.m.? 2) Are the clips of Read’s interviews evidence and if so how should we consider them? 3) Does convicting on a subcharge convict on the overall charge? The answer to the first question is 12:45 a.m., but Judge Beverly Cannone said she couldn’t tell the jurors a time because prosecutors didn’t include on in the indictment. “You folks have all the evidence,” she told jurors. “And remember, it’s only you who decide the facts in this case.” Judge Cannone also confirmed for the jury that clips from Read’s media interviews are evidence, and she instructed them to weigh Read’s comments as they would any other piece of evidence. She read a so-called “humane practice” instruction, which tells jurors they may only consider a defendant’s comments about an alleged crime if they find prosecutors have proven the defendant made the statements in question and did so voluntarily and rationally.  Read is charged with second-degree murder, manslaughter while operating a motor vehicle under the influence, and leaving the scene of a fatal collision. The OUI manslaughter charge carries lesser included offenses of involuntary manslaughter, motor vehicle homicide, and OUI.  Cannone amended the verdict slip to answer the jury’s question about whether convicting Read of a lesser included offense also convicts her of the overall charge.  The updated verdict slip should be “a little bit easier for you to follow,” the judge said. She instructed jurors to work through the form from the top down, first considering the OUI manslaughter. Read, 45, is charged with the January 2022 death of her boyfriend, John O'Keefe, 46, who was an officer with the Boston Police Department. Prosecutors say she was drunk when she backed her car into him. Her defense is that O'Keefe was murdered by Brian Albert, a Boston police detective, and Brian Higgins, a federal ATF agent, and she is being framed through a broad Massachusetts police conspiracy. Read's first trial ended in a mistrial after the jury deadlocked, though jurors later revealed they voted to acquit on the murder and and the leaving the scene charge but were deadlocked on manslaughter. #karenread #law #crime #court #legal

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