Massachusetts
Karen Read prosecutors face ‘uphill battle’ in Massachusetts case’s retrial, expert says
The lawyer who defended the notorious Boston gangster James “Whitey” Bulger will next week deliver the prosecution’s opening statements in the retrial of Karen Read.
Read is a financial analyst from Mansfield, Massachusetts, who is accused of striking her police officer boyfriend John O’Keefe with her car and leaving him to die in the snow.
Her case, recently explored in a Max docuseries, A Body in the Snow: The Trial of Karen Read, is seemingly made for TV: it will be broadcast, gavel-to-gavel, from Norfolk superior court in Dedham, Massachusetts.
Read’s first trial ended with deadlocked jury in July last year. Now Hank Brennan, special prosecutor for the commonwealth, will make the state’s case against Read.
The 45-year-old has pleaded not guilty to charges, including second-degree murder, vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated and leaving the scene of a collision.
Prosecutors have claimed that, after a night out drinking, Read dropped O’Keefe off at a house party just after midnight on 29 January 2022 and intentionally struck him as she made a three-point turn in her Lexus SUV outside a fellow police officer’s home.
Read’s lawyers claim she was framed, that she saw O’Keefe enter the home where he was allegedly fatally beaten and possibly attacked by a German shepherd before his body was placed on the front lawn.
Brennan has said the defense’s suggestions that someone other than Read is responsible for O’Keefe’s death is a tactic meant to confuse the jury.
“We should not engage in a process where we allow witnesses to be asked questions with no ability of the defense to follow up on those questions with actual proof,” he recently said.
Brennan has also challenged Read’s attorney-client privilege, arguing that she sacrificed her right by discussing her conversations with her lawyers in interviews. He has since sought access to private conversations between Read and Aidan Kearney, the blogger known as Turtleboy – who was instrumental in bringing the case into the wider public realm. Just this week, Kearney said he would invoke his fifth amendment rights against self-incrimination if he were called to testify.
For her part, Read has accused Brennan of being disingenuous about his desire for her to receive a fair trial.
“It has evolved from wanting ME to get a fair trial to ‘the COMMONWEALTH deserves a fair trial,’ which is not a right I’ve ever heard of. But it doesn’t matter – I shouldn’t even be on trial,” Read told Vanity Fair.
Since the mistrial, Read’s celebrity has only grown. A defense fund for her has soared beyond $845,000, and her supporters will surely pack into the courtroom – again – when the case gets underway before Judge Beverly J Cannone, who also oversaw the first trial.
Joining Cannone will be Michael Proctor, lead state police investigator, who was dismissed last month after a months-long suspension following his disastrous testimony in the first trial. In that trial, he read texts about Read he’d sent to friends and co-workers describing her as “babe” and “a whack job cunt”.
“We’re gonna lock this whack job up,” Proctor said in another text.
The defense will probably, as it did in the first trial, try to use the texts to show that the investigation was biased from the outset and focused on Read because she was a “convenient outsider”.
They are expected to call witnesses who will describe how Read and O’Keefe’s relationship had turned bitter before O’Keefe’s death.
“It’s still going to be an uphill battle for the commonwealth because there is some level of incoherence in the forensic evidence – the body just doesn’t look like a body that was only struck by a car,” Rosanna Cavallaro, a professor of law at Suffolk University in Boston who has commented widely on the case, told the Guardian.
“Whatever the alternative narrative is may not be coherent either, but it doesn’t need to be. There just needs to be reasonable doubt. The defense doesn’t need to present an airtight story, it just needs to punch holes in the state’s story.”
Cavallaro notes that the state is obliged to call Proctor because he directed the investigation at the outset: “They have a dilemma. Either call him and stick their head right in it, or they are evasive and the evasiveness comes back to bite them.”
This time around, Read has ramped up and expanded her legal team, adding nine law students who will act as clerks. To fund her defense, she has invested a whopping seven figures – relying in part on donations but also liquidating her retirement funds and selling her house.
For the prosecution’s part, its selection of Brennan as a special prosecutor could turn the trial into more of a performance than a rerun.
Brennan was responsible for “one of the most riveting days” of the 2013 Bulger trial, according to the New York Times, when he cross-examined Stephen “The Rifleman” Flemmi, the mobster’s former crime partner, who had been involved in the killing of his stepdaughter Deborah Hussey. Brennan caught Flemmi off guard with his first question: “Did she call you Daddy?”
Given that Read is seeking an all-out acquittal, the state may be making an error in pursuing the top charge when jurors rejected it at the first trial.
Offering Read a deal on manslaughter and dropping the murder charge might have resolved the matter, Cavallaro said. “It may be that Read is thinking that it will now be impossible for prosecutors to convince a jury on any of the level of charges in the indictment.”
Massachusetts
Governor files bill to cover pay, benefits for Chelmsford firefighter hurt in fall at Massachusetts Fire Academy
Governor Maura Healey said Wednesday that she has filed legislation to ensure that Chelmsford firefighter Nick Spinale will receive full pay and benefits while recovering from injuries he suffered during a 40-foot fall at the Massachusetts Firefighting Academy.
Spinale was nearly killed during the fall on April 7 at the academy in Stow. He suffered significant internal and external injuries, and had to learn to walk again at Spaulding Rehabilitation in Charlestown before being released.
Because Spinale was working as a part-time instructor for the state, and not on duty for Chelmsford Fire Department at the time of the fall, the town did not place him on injury leave. He had to use accrued paid sick time, while Chelmsford firefighters swapped shifts to make sure his job would be there when he is ready to return.
But on Wednesday, Healey announced that her legislation would ensure that he receives full pay and benefits, and also maintains his full-time position in Chelmsford while he recovers.
“Nicholas Spinale is a hero. Firefighters run into danger every day to keep people safe, and Nick went even further to lend his expertise to train the next generation of firefighters,” Healey said in a statement. “He suffered from a tragic, life-altering accident while doing this important work, and the last thing he needs is to worry about whether he will continue to be able to support himself and his family. This legislation will ensure that he receives the full pay and benefits that he deserves so that he can rightfully focus on his recovery.”
In a statement, the Professional Fire Fighters of Massachusetts urged the House and Senate to fast-track the legislation and get it to Healey’s desk so she can sign it.
Chelmsford Firefighters IAFF Local 1839 thanked the governor for drafting the legislation.
“This bill demonstrates that through collaborative efforts and challenging discussions, significant and equitable decisions can produce positive impacts for first responders throughout Massachusetts,” the union said.
Massachusetts
‘It’s maddening’: FIFA licensing delays threaten Massachusetts’ World Cup party plans – The Boston Globe
Without those approvals, municipalities cannot legally show the matches in public, leaving many local organizers frozen in place — unable to lock in vendors, rent giant screens, hire security, or recruit volunteers.
If the licenses do not come through soon, the vision of fans of diverse ethnicities and generations gathering in a rolling soccer party from one end of Massachusetts to another could fade before the first whistle at Gillette Stadium, on June 13.
“It’s maddening,” said Sandhya Iyer, economic development and tourism director for Lexington, which is planning a watch party at the lawn of the town’s visitors center. “The World Cup is right around the corner, but we can’t invite people to a celebration that might not happen.”
FIFA did not respond to multiple requests from The Boston Globe for comment on its licensing process.
The only two entities to receive FIFA licenses so far are the City of Cambridge and the MetroWest Tourism and Visitors Bureau, which is organizing events in Franklin and Marlborough, according to the state Executive Office of Economic Development, which has been helping local communities alongside Boston’s World Cup host committee. Officials in at least two municipalities, Framingham and Weymouth, have decided against holding World Cup watch parties due to concerns over security and costs.
Compounding the frustration, local planners say they have been unable to get clear answers — or even reach a real person — at FIFA. Instead, they are routed back to the organization’s online licensing portal, where they repeatedly encounter the same three words: “Application in Review.”
The licensing delays are just the latest manifestation of mounting frustration with FIFA, the Zurich-based organization that owns and runs the World Cup.
Chief among the concerns is ticket pricing, which for many fans has become prohibitively expensive. For the highly anticipated France-Norway match on June 26 at Gillette, remaining tickets range from $750 to $5,680 each.
Speaking at an event last week in Beverly Hills, Calif., FIFA president Gianni Infantino defended the ticket prices, saying they reflect demand to watch the World Cup as well as laws in the United States that allow tickets to be resold for thousands of dollars above face value. Tickets are available via resale platforms including FIFA’s own marketplace; last month four seats for the World Cup final at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey were listed at just under $2.3 million each.

Now FIFA — already accused of squeezing millions from soccer fans — is facing a new charge: acting like a party crasher, spoiling the festivities the World Cup is supposed to inspire.
“This is all wildly unconventional. It’s like being a month out from a big event and not having a venue,” said Greta Teller, a soccer marketing consultant from Roslindale who is assisting more than two dozen organizations statewide on World Cup festivities. “The frustration is that nobody can get a straight answer [from FIFA], and that makes planning really difficult.”
The community watch parties are anything but small undertakings.
While the events vary in size, they’re costly and labor-intensive to stage — one reason the Commonwealth is helping foot the bill. A single giant screen to broadcast the games during the tournament can run up to $100,000. Security, portable toilets, food vendors, signage, and trash removal can add tens of thousands more. And then there’s the FIFA public-viewing license itself, which can range from about $1,000 to $20,000 depending on expected crowd size.
In Easthampton, preparations for a five-day World Cup watch party that would coincide with a festival to celebrate the nation’s 250th birthday have been months in the making. The city has lined up a half-dozen food trucks, musical bands, two breweries and a local production company to operate the big screens and lighting at Millside Park. The event is expected to cost about $250,000; a $100,000 state grant will cover part of the expense, while the remaining $150,000 will come from private and in-kind donations, city officials said.
Mayor Salem Derby of Easthampton said many of those plans hinge on the yet-issued FIFA license. Until the license comes through, the city cannot finalize contracts with key vendors. And with Easthampton facing a projected $6.5 million budget deficit next fiscal year, Derby said officials are reluctant to spend money upfront without clear authorization to broadcast the games.
Derby called the FIFA licensing process “nerve-wracking,” adding, “You would think [the license] would be the easy part — that FIFA would want us to broadcast these games.”
That uncertainty is being felt elsewhere, including about 100 miles east in Lexington, where local planners envisioned a 10-day celebration on the spacious lawn at the town’s visitor center, with a beer garden, food trucks, two large screens, and soccer games for kids.
But two months after it submitted its application for a FIFA viewing license, Lexington’s plans are in limbo.
Iyer, the town’s economic development and tourism director, said she checks the FIFA website multiple times each day, hoping for any new information. Each time, the status is unchanged: “Application in Review.”
Now, town planners are exploring whether to scale back the festivities and have smaller watch parties at a movie theater or restaurants that already broadcast games and do not need a special FIFA license, Iyer said. “It’s hard to nail down specifics if we’re not even sure we can show the games,” she said.
In Lowell, the Revolutionary Valley Regional Tourism Council is finalizing plans for 14 watch parties around the city, with an expected $10 admission fee and capacity for tens of thousands of attendees. The group has already matched its $75,000 state grant and raised more than $200,000, but still needs about $400,000 more to meet its target.
Its initial FIFA license application, submitted in February, was rejected on March 10 because a full list of sponsors wasn’t yet in place, said council executive director Brian Bradbury. A second application was resubmitted in early May after most logistical details were finalized.
“We anticipated that it was going to be a quicker, smoother process, that it’s something that’s been done a million times and that they’d be able to give the license to us in a turnkey way,” said Bradbury. He said the initial license refusal was for “unnecessary” reasons.
“It is frustrating, and if we don’t have our license by next week, it’s going to be much more frustrating. We expected a quicker process.”
Even organizations that received FIFA licenses say the labyrinthine process and delays left them scrambling to finalize plans at the last minute.
MetroWest Boston Visitors Bureau is organizing a total of five free MetroWest Regional Fan Zones: three outdoor watch-party festivals in Marlborough June 11-13, and two in Franklin, June 24 and 25.
After filling out a relatively simple FIFA application form in mid-December, MetroWest did not receive its license until mid-April.
“The timeline was certainly more extended than we had hoped,” said Stacey David, MetroWest executive director, whose group received $120,000 from the state and is still trying to raise funds from the private sector to cover costs. “So now we’re crunched.”
Other grant awardees simply have their fingers crossed their licenses will come through.
Chelsea is planning one of the biggest watch parties in the state: 38 continuous days, 60-plus matches in Chelsea Square.
“That’s going to take us a lot of marketing, and the more time we have, the better it is,” said City Manager Fidel Maltez. “I think our team is trying to be respectful and appreciative but . . . we need this approval as soon as possible.”
Chris Serres can be reached at chris.serres@globe.com. Follow him @ChrisSerres. Michael Silverman can be reached at michael.silverman@globe.com. Laura Crimaldi can be reached at laura.crimaldi@globe.com. Follow her @lauracrimaldi.
Massachusetts
Dover Saddlery, Massachusetts-based equestrian retailer, announces store closures and potential layoffs
Dover Saddlery, an equestrian retailer based in Massachusetts, has announced multiple store closures and will potentially lay off more than 100 workers as it explores a sale.
The Littleton-based company said in a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act filing that it’s preparing to let 112 workers go this July.
“Whether the layoffs or closures occur will depend in part on our success in obtaining funding or selling our business,” Dover Saddlery wrote in the notice.
Dover Saddlery sells saddles, blankets and other gear for horses, as well as boots and apparel for riders. WBZ-TV reached out to the company for comment but has not heard back.
Brothers Jim and David Powers opened the first Dover Saddlery store in Wellesley in 1975. A Facebook page for the store said it is closing soon, with sales of up to 20% off.
“Thank you for your support and loyalty over the years,” a message from the company said. “Serving you and your horse has truly been our privilege, and we’re grateful for the trust you’ve placed in us.”
Dover Saddlery has about three dozen stores nationwide. Stores in Connecticut, New York, Maryland, Illinois, Michigan and California are also set to close, according to social media posts.
In 2022, Dover Saddlery was acquired by Promus Equity Partners, a private equity firm, and said it was “positioned for growth according to a robust, strategic plan.” The company said last year it would be opening a new flagship store in Ocala, Florida at the World Equestrian Center in 2026.
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