20/20 - The After Show: New Insights: Diddy, Karen Read & Luigi Mangione
Episode Date: December 22, 2025Aaron Katersky reveals what he learned covering the biggest stories of 2025. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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Hello everybody, Deborah Roberts here and welcome to 2020, the After Show.
Always great to have you all with us.
And today we're going to do a little bit of a special podcast.
We're going to turn things around a little bit.
Often we are reflecting on a story we just ran, but today we're going to round up some of the big stories, big crime stories that we have covered over the last year.
And I don't have to tell any of you that one of the biggest was the shocking Sean Diddy
Combs case that so many people were following like bit by bit every day. And then we're going to also
talk about the Karen Reed trial, Luigi Mangione case, this young kid who was accused of murdering
an insurance executive, so much to talk about and so much also not only just inside the courtroom,
but kind of behind the scenes. And that's what we'd like to do on this podcast. So joining us to
pull back the curtain a little bit on some of these cases is our ABC News chief investigative reporter
Aaron Kutterski, who has been on the front lines of all of these stories. And, Aaron, you're taking a break
from court today or wherever you're dispatched to join. But you and I always pass each other in the
hallways. And I'm always thinking, Aaron, I need to ask you. I need to find out the scoop on this
story because from DOJ, the Justice Department in our country and the Trump administration, to
Diddy, to Karen Reed, to all these cases, you cover so many of them. And I want to talk first about
just you, because I think you and I met, and you've been here at ABC News for a long time.
You kind of cut your teeth, I guess, in radio, because that's when I met you.
You were, I think we were covering the Royals, and you were there doing radio.
And we never really had a chance to chat that much.
So tell us a little bit about your background.
It's so nice.
Hi.
Hi.
I started in radio, but Court is my favorite place to be.
Yeah.
I guess the Royals is all right, too.
You can't argue with the Royals, just for something different.
Yeah, the scenery is.
but court is is a happy place even though for very many it is not a happy place yeah but for me it's
its own world it's its own community it has its own characters its own dramas its own
histories and and that's what makes it interesting because all of that gets renewed every single
time and you see a lot of these same people from the bailiffs to some of the investigators to
The reporters to, I'm sure, sometimes some of the same judges you've seen over and over again.
And that's the best when, you know, the judges know you, they give you a little nod.
The nod.
Did he like it or did he not like it?
But the judges set the tone for how all of these cases are going to go.
They're sort of the, there's a hierarchy, right?
And it all starts at the judge and the attorneys, the court officers.
and the people from the community that have made it a habit to sit in on these trials.
And some of the same ones sat in on the Trump trial, sat in on the Sean Combs trial,
will undoubtedly sit in on the Luigi Mangione trial.
You mean just average people who just like to come to court and see what's happening?
A lot of them are retirees.
The group of women I met covering the Jo Hart-Sar-Nayev trial, which is a death penalty case
after the Boston Marathon bombing, they were there every single day.
And you'd talk to them to get their impressions of what they saw.
And they became characters in the story just because they wanted to see justice unfold.
Yeah, almost like courtroom groupies.
I think that might be your book or your TV series.
Those are my people.
Those are your people.
Well, Aaron, I'm curious because there's so many intricacies of the law.
And you have to peel back all the layers and you do such a great job of breaking it down.
helping us understand not only legally what is happening, what might happen or why that didn't happen.
And you're not a lawyer.
I married one.
Well, that's helpful.
Yes, sometimes.
That's, well, I can imagine, I can imagine.
But we see you in all of these locations, whether it is, as I said, government cases to the Diddy case and so many others.
And it obviously is very intriguing to you.
So you say these are kind of your people.
Let's go to the Diddy trial, which just happened.
And so many people were glued.
I was just really surprised at how deeply people were invested in it.
If people could only see some of the emails we get back and forth, and I'm on that chain,
when you're sending us emails about what just happened and what we can kind of expect,
it's really, really interesting.
Talk to me first before we get to Diddy about being even in that courtroom,
because when he was arrested, that was one thing.
But just for you, being in that courtroom and seeing things unfold and seeing these defendants
as you got a chance to see Diddy for a long time.
There's never been another defendant, criminal defendant, like Sean Combs.
And this is a storied courthouse, the Southern District of New York, that has seen mobsters.
President Trump has been a defendant in a civil case with E. Jean Carroll, Sam Bankman-Fried, Senator Bob Menendez.
I mean, all sorts of characters, and those are just the recent ones.
Martha Stewart was the first one I covered in that courthouse.
But Sean Combs is larger than large.
life. And he walks in, I'll never forget, the first time looking, to be honest, a little bloated,
a little shell-shocked. White hair? The first time, it was still being colored, I think. Oh, okay,
got it. But over time, there he is looking, you know, like a suburban dad or something, you know,
in his little sweater and the graying and then almost all gray, white hair. Over time. Because this was a guy who was
always put together. If you ever saw, and I used to see Sean Diddy Combs out and about at different
events, and he was always polished and dressed immaculately. He was the fashion play. I mean,
had his own line. He both had his own line, had an entourage with impeccably dressed women
who turned out to be some of the people testifying at the trial. And so to see him just as the
criminal defendant, and then what he was accused of, that I think slapped the celebrity out of it
and made you think this is potentially a very serious criminal. Yeah. Well, I want to get to that in a second
because that is what became a little bit, I guess, complicated at the end, what he was accused of
and also what we heard about him. But just talk to me a little bit about when you were assigned
this story, because we heard, and there have been rumblings that Sean Didi Combs might be arrested,
And then, of course, that video came out, that horrific video of him assaulting Cassie Ventura and everybody was horrified by this.
What was that like for you knowing that you were going to be covering that trial even before it started?
The anticipation started ahead of the arrest and we sort of got word that it might happen now.
It might happen this day.
It might happen that day.
And it caught everybody by surprise because federal agents with Homeland Security investigations ended up taking him formally into custody at a hotel in Midtown.
and they did it ahead of when we were all expecting it.
The scariest part was remembering who he was
because he'd been a little bit out of the...
He was never far from the public eye, but I mean...
He wasn't in the spotlight as much recently.
Not as much recently, but he was certainly an iconic character.
Oh my gosh, those white parties that he would give in the Hamptons
and everybody came to those parties.
Everybody wanted to go.
Big names, big names, not just celebrities,
but CEOs and all kinds of folks came to his parties.
He brought hip-hop into the mainstream, and now he's accused of trafficking women.
And the other part that was, I think, the biggest challenge to cover was to keep focused on the narrow issues at hand in the trial versus what everybody thought.
They were like, when is Justin Bieber going to come testify?
And when is it?
That had nothing to do with the charges that he was facing.
So he was charged with trafficking and racketeering.
And a number of charges that sort of almost were like, as you said, narrower than what we saw.
So talk about what we saw because, well, we didn't see it.
You saw it.
We only could see sketches.
But you saw some of his associates, his assistant who testified.
Of course, Cassie Ventura was the star witness, this woman who had been his girlfriend, kind of a protege, a singer, but who talked about horrible abuse from him.
What was that like, Aaron, emotionally watching these folks?
Because they were very emotional from what you reported.
They were incredibly emotional, and that was difficult.
But just to start with Cassie Ventura, who is a strikingly beautiful woman, and she is pregnant.
Eight months or nine months pregnant, yes, yes.
Ready to go pregnant and comes to the witness stand and then gives this emotional outpouring of testimony and describes what went on.
Oh, horrific.
Most of it I couldn't say on TV, but I wrote a lot about it, and there was no pearl clutching
anywhere because it was very graphic.
Yeah.
And to hear her explain rather methodically, but graphically and through tears, what it was
that she said she was put through against her will, despite what the defense said.
Incredible?
As far as you could feel, you felt credibility there?
Yeah.
Yeah, because who comes on a witness stand and gives all that kind of graphic detail?
I'm making this up.
What about the overarching message that we had gotten over the years, which is that people
were fearful.
This was a man who had that kind of street cred.
You got the impression that even though you had heard rumblings over the years that
Sean Combs might at some point be brought up on charges, people were afraid, right, to testify.
And then suddenly now they're all turning and they're all testifying.
is his body language like a guy who probably did strike fear into a lot of people now he's on trial
and they are actually throwing all this evidence out against him? I saw two different people
because on one hand you could see that the power dynamic would shift. Somebody was testifying
from the witness stand against Combs the defendant who maybe had been a boss or a mentor or
some other kind of power figure in the relationship. But there were moments where you could see he
still held sway, whether they made eye contact, whether there was just a dark look. And there were
moments when you could feel Combs's eyes go dark. And there were moments where he was
outwardly too much for the judge expressing incredulity.
at what some of the witnesses were saying.
In fact, the judge actually chastised him at one point.
He admonished him on a couple of occasions not to gesture or to make particular glances,
especially toward the jury, where it seemed like he was trying to influence testimony.
But then there were times where it seemed maybe like he was slightly cowed by what he was hearing,
maybe from Cassie Ventura.
And in the end, whether the jury bought it or not,
they largely sided with him.
Well, you know, interestingly, I think a lot of people were shocked,
and ultimately, as you said, the jury surprised people,
not guilty of racketeering and sex trafficking,
but guilty of two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution.
And ultimately, he was sentenced to 50 months in prison
and has begun serving his sentence.
People were surprised, but I think a lot of people felt that maybe he was overcharged,
even though we know about the video
and there was a lot that we had heard about
when it came to those specific charges, it might have been tough for the jury.
And then those 50 months, of course, we all heard about it.
And I got a chance to cover just a little touch of this at the very end of it.
And people seem to think, at least lawyers, and I'm sure you heard this,
seemed to think that the judge was trying to acknowledge that he had done some terrible things.
So he gave the 50 months.
But on the other hand, many people felt it wasn't enough.
How shocked were you by it?
I was surprised.
Truthfully, I thought the prosecutors had done enough to convince.
on the sex trafficking of Cassie Ventura.
Jane Doe is a bit more complicated.
But look, it was a tall order.
Prosecutors were asking the jury to believe that women who stayed with Sean Combs,
in some cases for what Cassie Ventura was 11 years,
were forced to do things against their will.
Now, I think in our society, we now have a nuanced view of,
sexual relationships and people understand it can be consensual until it isn't but for for the jury and
certainly for the defense the way they presented the case was this was the life these women wanted
and they were willing to do things and enjoying the money and the privilege and the status and may not be
your cup of tea or my cup of tea but this was Sean Combs's swingers lifestyle and the women were
happy to be part of it and they were going along with it well it was
a controversial verdict on some levels, and then some people seemed to think that, you know,
at least it was something. Sean Combs was clearly shocked. He's been transferred now to a federal
prison. He's not happy with that sentence, even though many people felt that he got off pretty
light because he was facing what? Life in prison, right? I mean, he was facing what would have
amounted to a life sentence for sure. And the judge repeatedly made it clear he didn't like the
violence that was depicted on the video that we've now all seen involving Cassie Ventura.
And, but he's still appealing because he believes that even the transportation for the
purposes of prostitution was too much and misapplied.
Because remember, his theory is, I wasn't profiting from the prostitution.
I just wanted to watch.
So being a voyer is, you know, no harm, no foul.
That's obviously not the way prosecutors saw it or charged him, and the jury found enough to convict.
But we'll see if on appeal, he's successful in arguing that the law was misapplied.
Which is so interesting because, I mean, when you think about it, what is that, like four years?
And he's already had some time served.
I mean, there is a, you're tempted to say, just do the time.
He could be let out before the appeal is fully adjudicated.
It's certainly possible.
It's a case that we could go on and on.
You and I could talk about this for a very long time.
but there are other cases I do want to talk about.
So, Aaron, stick with me here.
And you stick with this, too, because we're going to jump into another case,
another big story of the last year, the Karen Reed case in Boston.
And Aaron is going to help us navigate all the twists and turns in that story.
We'll be right back.
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Hello, everybody.
We are back with a special edition of 2020, the After-Shire.
show, and we're talking with Aaron Kutterski here, who is helping us break down a lot of these
court cases that you have covered over the years with us, but specifically the last year or
so, there have been some heavy hitters. It's been a dozy of a year. It's been a dozy. And I'm
curious, too, you get a lot of last minute notice, something just happened, whether it's a
verdict or whether there's just, you know, something in the Comey case that just happened recently,
and Leticia James, and the court's just ruled. And you are on at a moment's notice. And you know
that that's going to happen. That's, that's got, that's a lot of pressure. Well, you don't want to get it
wrong. Yeah. And, and so you try to follow the cases. So when something does happen, you have a little bit
of reserve in your head. But the verdicts, I still get the heart palpitations. I can imagine.
When there's a verdict, because that's the culmination of the, of the whole show, right? So, and you
never know. Everyone always says, what do you think the jury's going to do? It's a fool's
Nobody knows. You have no idea to get. You can't guess a jury. We were talking about the case of Sean Combs, where I thought the prosecutors had done enough, at least on the trafficking of Cassie, that maybe they could get a guilty verdict there. Jury disagreed. Sometimes juries surprise you. Yeah. Sometimes, you know, they are in line with what you think's going to happen. Well, the jury in the Karen Reed case, I think, surprised people in the very beginning. And then the second time, not so much. But this is a case that.
just captivated people of a woman who was accused, a very attractive young professional woman
in Boston, accused of running down her police officer boyfriend after party and they had all
been drinking and she was accused because they were having a fight and probably breaking up
deliberately running him over with her car, leaving him in the snow to die. Why were so many people
caught up with the Karen Reed? I remember when it broke and it was fascinating, but people were
just, it was like cult status for people. Well, I think there's a couple of points because initially
the way it was portrayed, this is like woman scorned, right? She is apoplectic at the state of the
relationship, perhaps, they're drinking, whatever, and she is, forget it. I'm going to run him over
the way the prosecutor's portrayed it intentionally, and I'm going to let them die in the snow.
Yeah. And drive off. And then I think people also get
get hooked for a different reason because there were questions about how the police handled the evidence.
Right.
And the victim here is a cop.
And did fellow cops try to sway the evidence a certain way?
And then that plays on people's suspicions about authority.
And remember, because this came at a time when, you know, there's been deep skepticism about the integrity of some police forces.
and so you start to wonder there
and then here comes in the end
the defense with an entirely different theory
involving dog bites and all this
and it gave reason for people to be interested.
And people love these cases when there's doubt.
I mean you'd think back to the O.J. Simpson case
and the glove and if it doesn't fit you must acquit
and so whenever there is reason to doubt people
love to doubt these cases.
Well the first case, as she went to trial,
the first case was not, the jury didn't
come to a conclusion. It was a hung jury or? Yeah. Hung jory. Then she's tried again the second time
and people again are just gathering around this trial. It took a long time. Talk to me about
the second case because again, she actually went out and talked a little bit about the story
about her case and which was surprising. One of our reporters actually talked with her and you know,
you kind of thought maybe there's enough doubt there. What were your feelings as you're seeing the
second trial play out? Were you starting a few.
that there was ample doubt here about whether she actually did this?
And when was the last time you saw somebody accused of murdering someone go on television and
talk freely and rather openly about it?
Yeah.
Usually their lawyers will not let that happen.
That's right.
But here, you know, the lawyer, her lawyers had a whole different theory of what Karen Reed was about.
And she became, in their eyes, the victim of a, of a, of a.
messed up prosecution and a corrupt police system and look at the injuries on the victim.
They're more consistent with a dog attack than, and then came the triangulation of the car
and the automatic braking systems and all, and it was convoluted enough.
Yeah.
The jury said, well, we don't, we don't buy it.
There were a lot of armchair, you know, investigators and sleep.
out there who thought they knew what happened. And you're right, it was very convoluted. Now, what about
that verdict? I think a lot of people were shocked when she walked out of that courtroom. They said
people erupted in the streets when she was acquitted. She walked out of the courthouse and down the
steps. This is just outside of Boston and debt of Massachusetts. And there is a crowd waiting and
erupting in shears. And that certainly validated.
dated her defense's argument and her, and there are still some civil cases that may or may not
go anywhere so far, not really. You're left with this one family, the family of John O'Keefe,
that is still trying to find justice somehow. Because they want to know what happened to him.
She was convicted of a smaller charge. Drunk driving, basically. But that's not here or there.
she is in the eyes of the law anyway acquitted of the murder.
Wow. And so we still don't know. There's still not really, you know, finality in this case about what happened to him.
Well, there's no other suspect that police or prosecutors have necessarily put forth. And so for the O'Keeffe's, this may be a dead end, ultimately, unless there is something else.
But prosecutors were pretty clear. They thought they knew.
what happened and presented it in the best way they could to the jury. To the jury. It's going to be
one of those. It's like, you know, everybody loves the mystery of what happened. And I think this one
will resonate for a while. What about her? What's next for her? Well, she's got a civil case or two to
deal with, but that's largely it. Now, if you're her, do you go hide for a while?
Or do you take those offers for movies and all of them, books? And I'm sure those are all coming her way.
And that has to be maybe what's next and a fuller story of her and who she is and how she got
in the position that she did.
Erin, that one is one that, again, people will still be talking about this one for a while,
even though she is acquitted.
Well, we've got another one we want to talk about.
So we can just talk all day, but we won't.
Just give us a second.
We're going to come back and we're going to talk about the murder of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
Aaron had a revealing report on this, in this case involving Louisiana.
Mangione, the young adult who was charged in that murder.
So stay with this.
We're going to talk about that one in just a few.
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apply. We are back with 2020 The After Show and Aaron Kutterski is here with these mesmerizing
stories of the stories that we have covered and you have covered. Our 2020 special
Manhunt Luigi Mangione and the CEO murder. It was a
story that, of course, you would have been following from the beginning. Everybody was talking about
the story, and we, you know, leapt into gear and covered this story. This was one that was just so
perplexing. New York City. This guy was walking in Midtown Manhattan. Suddenly, the CEO was gunned down
early morning on the street. Police are searching for the killer. And New York police mobilized.
I mean, the idea that this would happen. They mobilized, and they eventually bring this young man,
Luigi Mangione from a fairly prominent family. Tell us a little bit about that one and how it
unfolded and what you began to learn the minute you jumped on it. Well, he's caught almost
on a lark sitting at a McDonald's having taken his mask down to eat. And he's recognized in
police in Altoona, Pennsylvania. They call and I say this guy looks like the guy who's wanted
in New York. And he, in the interim, has become something of a
of a celebrity, which to the Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and to police is appalling
that a murder suspect would become endearing.
Well, when you think about the health care crisis in our country and the way people feel
about executives, Aaron, I was shocked by that because oftentimes when you and I cover these
stories and there is such an outpouring of just, you know, exasperation and grief.
and outrage and this man is gunned down.
And there really wasn't that same kind of outrage that,
I mean, he wasn't from the New York area.
He was from Minnesota, I think.
So you wouldn't have necessarily heard it all here.
But I was shocked that there wasn't as much outrage
that a health care executive was gunned down.
Oh, the conversation online was astounding when people,
and some cases more openly say,
eh, health care, it's terrible.
Who hasn't been denied or who hasn't had?
been frustrated by health insurance at one point in their life.
And Luigi Menjione became the embodiment of the, you know, I'm fed up and I just can't take it anymore.
And people almost seeing an excuse for what was a cold-blooded assassination that he is now charged with in both state and federal court.
He's pleaded not guilty and his attorneys are counting on some of those people who see him a certain
way to maybe find their way onto a jury one of a day. Well, talk about him a little bit. And we should
also say, too, that he shared an area with Sean Diddy Combs in the jail where he was being held
at the same time, all these notorious folks there. What a time. Manjione was at the Metropolitan
Detention Center in Brooklyn, which is on the waterfront in Brooklyn. Sam Bankin-Fried was there for
a minute after he was convicted and Sean Combs is there. And you don't know how much these people
interact, but could you imagine these conversations? Oh my gosh. Oh my gosh. That's a movie
onto itself right there. But Mangione was certainly a bit different. I mean, he does not
look like your typical murder defendant. He's been getting thousands of pieces.
of mail. They started to catalog it. The defense started to catalog it online and you could
sort of see the volume. Some had a, there was a package given to him that had some certain socks
that became a focal point for a minute and heart-shaped notes. But he is facing charges
in federal court that could get him the death penalty and in state court that could get him
25 to life. And so there's this real imbalance between how he is portrayed by some of his admirers
and the very, you know, calculated killer that prosecutors say he is.
What's next for him? I think a trial could happen in late 2026, whether it's going to be in
state court first or in federal court first, is up in the air. But the very way he was arrested
and subsequently how we came to know about what he might have been thinking
is all now being challenged by the defense.
They say that police in Altoona, Pennsylvania,
did not arrest him properly,
that the search and seizure of his backpack that contained writings,
that contained the murder weapon, as prosecutors have said,
was all improper, and they're trying to suppress all of that evidence
and it's the writings that gave us a clue, right?
The target is health care.
It checks every box, Mangione was said to have written.
And that gave prosecutors what they believed to be motivation
that he was trying to send a message by gunning down Brian Thompson.
Now, the defense says none of that evidence is admissible,
and they're going to try and leave it out.
some of that thrown out. And let's be honest, Aaron, that's the key. If you get a very clever and
skilled and expensive defense team, which he apparently has, you get people who can make these
arguments. And overlap, because one of the defense attorneys who, I think, was successful in
getting Sean Diddy Combs off on the most serious charges, Mark Agnifalo, is on the defense team
for Mangione. Manjione. Well, you know the cast of characters, that is for sure.
We know them well.
You will know what's happening.
Aaron, we could go on and on, and there's so much to dissect on this case.
By the way, Mangione is from a prominent family in Maryland.
In Maryland.
Politics in his family.
One of his relatives is a state legislator in Maryland.
You know, well-to-do parents went to an elite private school
and traveled around different parts of Asia prior to this.
And one of the things that prosecutors have been trying to do is figure out what led him down the path he's alleged to have gone on.
Because everybody seemed to think that this is a young kid who has a bright future, who may even wind up in politics or some big leadership role in the world.
And here he is now accused of.
Giving a valedictory speech at his, you know, at his graduation.
This is not someone by any account who's dim or who has, um,
anything but everything going for yeah and that's what makes it more interesting for us to cover well
you are going to be on it we know it erin it's always always a pleasure to catch up with you this is
great i'm so happy to be here i hope you i hope you enjoyed it because i certainly did so we'll
have to have you back because there's more to talk about all right this case especially as it unfolds
i'm in erin kuterski great to have you and thank you to the listeners out there we appreciate your
being here with us and remember you can catch the latest 2020 episodes friday nights on abc and you can
stream episodes anytime on Disney Plus and Hulu.
Thanks for coming by.
See you soon.
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