Northeast
Karen Read murder case: Lead Massachusetts State Police investigator relieved of duty following mistrial
The lead Massachusetts State Police investigator in the Karen Read murder trial has been relieved from duty, officials said Monday, hours after she walked free when jurors were unable to reach a verdict.
Trooper Michael Proctor was relieved following a mistrial in which Read was accused of killing her Boston police officer boyfriend.
“Upon learning today’s result, the Department took immediate action to relieve Trooper Michael Proctor of duty and formally transfer him out of the Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office State Police Detective’s Unit,” a statement from State Police Colonel John Mawn read in part, on Monday.
KAREN READ TRIAL COULD SINK OTHER HIGH-PROFILE MURDERS, EXPERT WARNS: ‘HARD TO SEE HOW IT DOESN’T’
Massachusetts State Trooper Michael Proctor testifies during Karen Read’s trial, Wednesday, June 12, 2024, in Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham, Mass. (Greg Derr/The Patriot Ledger via AP, Pool)
Proctor’s last day with the DA’s office will be July 7, Boston 25 News reported. Fox News Digital has reached out to the state police.
Proctor came under fire for a series of text messages he sent regarding Read which were read aloud in court, in which he admitted on the witness stand that these messages were “unprofessional.”
In the personal texts, he called Read a “wack job,” a “babe … with no a–” and a “c—.” He also said he wished that she would kill herself and joked about looking for nude images on her phone.
Many law experts believe Proctor’s testimony sank the prosecution’s case.
The Massachusetts jury had been deadlocked for days and couldn’t come to a unanimous decision about Read’s innocence or guilt after nearly 26 hours of deliberations.
STATE TROOPER’S VULGAR TEXTS ABOUT ‘BABE’ MURDER SUSPECT COULD AFFECT OTHER HIGH-PROFILE CASE, EXPERT WARNS
Karen Read smiles as defense attorney David Yannett speaks to reporters in front of Norfolk Superior Court, Monday, July 1, 2024, in Dedham, Mass. A judge declared a mistrial Monday after jurors deadlocked in the case of Read, who was accused of killing her Boston police officer boyfriend by striking him with her SUV and leaving him in a snowstorm. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
Read, 44, was accused of killing her boyfriend John O’Keefe. After leaving court, she stood next to her lawyers, who said prosecutors relied on a compromised investigator.
“We will not stop fighting,” Read’s lawyer, Alan Jackson said.
“The Commonwealth intends to re-try the case,” the Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office said within minutes of the outcome.
O’Keefe’s body was found in several inches of snow outside the home of Boston police officer Brian Albert in January 2022.
Prosecutors alleged Read intentionally backed into him with her SUV during a booze-infused fight and let him die on the front lawn of a Canton, Massachusetts, home during a nor’easter.
Read claimed she was framed in an elaborate cover-up to protect the Albert family, which has deep law enforcement ties.
Supporters of Karen Read gather outside the courthouse in Dedham, MA on Friday, June 28, 2024. Read is facing three charges, including second-degree murder of her Boston police officer boyfriend John O’Keefe in January 2022. (Patriot Pics/Backgrid for Fox News Digital)
She pleaded not guilty to charges of second-degree murder, motor vehicle manslaughter while driving under the influence and leaving the scene of a collision causing injury and death.
Jurors heard from dozens of witnesses and were presented with 700 pieces of evidence during the trial.
Fox News Digital’s Chris Eberhart contributed to this report.
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Boston, MA
Pols & Politics: Boston’s $325M White Stadium deal could be killed with booze ban
Plans to serve booze at White Stadium’s professional soccer matches in Boston have encountered pushback by critics of the city’s public-private rehab plan, but a ban on alcohol would effectively kill the $325 million project.
Buried in the city’s 321-page lease agreement with Boston Legacy FC, the National Women’s Soccer League team set to play home games at the rebuilt stadium, is a provision that allows the team to walk away from the deal should the city’s Licensing Board choose not to grant its application for a liquor license.
“If … both the Boston Licensing Board and the Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission issue a final non-appealable decision in which the applicable entity refuses to grant such a liquor license (for White Stadium) … then the tenant may terminate both this lease and the stadium usage agreement,” the lease states.
“Upon delivery of such termination notice, the parties’ rights, responsibilities, and the obligations under this lease and the stadium usage agreement shall be null and void, and without recourse to either party,” the lease states.
Boston Legacy FC has signed a 10-year lease agreement with the city to share use of Franklin Park’s White Stadium with Boston Public Schools student-athletes.
The team is paying more than $190 million for its half of the stadium renovations, with the city’s $135 million half of the costs paid for by taxpayers.
The Boston City Council defeated a resolution last month, by a 9-3 vote, that sponsors Ed Flynn and Julia Mejia said sought to uphold state law restricting alcohol at public school facilities.
Mejia and Flynn argued that booze should not be sold during professional soccer matches and other private events held at Franklin Park’s White Stadium, given that it is a city-owned public school facility.
“The Boston Public School policy is clear and the state law is clear,” Mejia said last month. “Alcohol is not permitted on public school premises, except under very limited circumstances, which this situation does not meet.”
Most councilors disagreed, including Gabriela Coletta Zapata, who called the rule “antiquated” and said it was not applicable in this instance.
“I think generally this is an antiquated viewpoint of how we regulate alcohol,” Coletta Zapata said last month. “It ignores how Boston responsibly balances public use, economic opportunity and community activation. We can’t pretend that a blanket prohibition is the only pathway forward, especially in a shared-use facility like White Stadium.”
The Emerald Necklace Conservancy and a group of park neighbors suing the city to try to block the project have also argued that alcohol should be banned at the facility. The lawsuit, which alleges the professional soccer stadium use would illegally privatize public parkland, is under consideration by the state Supreme Judicial Court.
— Gayla Cawley
No boos this time
Not sure what to make of Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll tossing out the ceremonial first pitch the other night at Fenway Park while the governor was away in California. The stands were still filling up, but nobody seemed to be voicing their political feelings. Is that good? As the saying goes, any publicity is good publicity.

Pittsburg, PA
A grieving mother’s undying effort to keep her son’s spirit alive in the Strip District
Connecticut
Mary (Beebe) Crocker Obituary
Born on March 9, 1945, in East Hartford, Connecticut, to Robert and Mary (née Bragg) …
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