Crime Junkie - INTRODUCING: Crime Junkie AF
Episode Date: April 26, 2024Have you heard yet? Your newest obsession and the ultimate destination for 24/7 true crime, Crime Junkie Radio, is here and exclusive to SiriusXM’s app!On Crime Junkie Radio, you’ll hear episodes ...from not only Crime Junkie, but from some of our other chart-topping titles like The Deck. But the best part is… it will be the home for our brand-new show, Crime Junkie AF, where we’ll explore cases that are unfolding right now, hosted by the OG Crime Junkie herself, Ashley Flowers.On this first episode, Ashley sits down with special guest Delia D’Ambra to discuss one of the wildest headlines she’s seen in a while – the death of John O’Keefe. Be sure to head over to SiriusXM’s app and follow Crime Junkie AF so you don’t miss out on brand-new episodes releasing at the end of each month.Don't forget to follow Crime Junkie Radio on the SiriusXM app for your 24/7 true crime fix.You can click HERE to download the SiriusXM app directly and receive 3 months free right now. Offer details apply.  Source materials for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit: crimejunkiepodcast.com/introducing-crime-junkie-afDid you know you can listen to this episode ad-free? Join the Fan Club! Visit crimejunkie.app/library/ to view the current membership options and policies.Don’t miss out on all things Crime Junkie!Instagram: @crimejunkiepodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @CrimeJunkiePod | @audiochuckTikTok: @crimejunkiepodcastFacebook: /CrimeJunkiePodcast | /audiochuckllc Crime Junkie is hosted by Ashley Flowers and Brit Prawat. Instagram: @ashleyflowers | @britprawatTwitter: @Ash_Flowers | @britprawatTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, Crime Junkies.
Happy Friday.
Are you surprised to hear from me today?
Well, if you haven't heard yet, we recently had a very special announcement.
Over on SiriusXM's app, we launched their very first ever True Crime Channel Crime
Junkie Radio.
It's your ultimate destination for 24-7 true crime.
But that's not all.
We are also launching a brand new show called Crime Junkie AF,
where each month I'll be bringing on a special guest to explore the latest headline cases with me that I cannot stop thinking about.
We've actually released our very first episode today, but I wanted to make sure that you guys didn't miss it.
And I wanted to make sure you knew what to expect every month hereafter.
So I'm dropping this first episode in our feed.
It is an episode with special guest, who you guys know,
Delia D'Ambra, and her and I get to talk about
something that is going on in true crime right now
that is one of the most wild cases
I have come across in years.
I'm telling you, it is a doozy of a story.
And if you like the show, if you like the format,
please head over to the SiriusXM app
and follow Crime Junkie AF
so you don't miss this brand new show.
Brand new episodes are gonna be dropping
at the end of every single month.
And of course, I'm not gonna leave my Crime Junkies hanging.
There's actually a promo code link
in the show notes of this episode
that will give you 90 days free access to SiriusXM's app.
So make sure you use that code and I'll see you over there in the app. But first, enjoy this episode.
Hi everyone, I'm Ashley Flowers and welcome to my new show on SiriusXM,
Made by a Crime Junkie, Ashley Flowers, for people who are crime junkie AF.
My plan is to come here every month and share with you the cases you have to know about,
you have to be able to talk about beyond the clickbaity headlines, but like really get into.
And I don't want to do that alone.
It's more than just storytelling.
I want to have conversations with other people,
people who are experts in their field,
journalists, different forensic experts,
people who are actually connected to these cases.
So I know I probably should do like a bigger intro
since it's the first show, but I'm just dying
to get into the case that we're talking about today.
So my first guess, if you are a crime junkie, you know her, you love her,
Miss Delia D'Ambra.
Hi, I'm so excited to be here. This is so awesome.
I don't like it to do crime junkie stuff as much, it's so fun to focus on this.
I am jazzed.
For people who don't know you, we have been working together for
five, six years now. Oh my gosh.
But a minute. Delia is one of the most tenacious investigative journalists I
have ever met in my life. She hosts the limited series Counter Clock, which is an
investigative series. You are currently working on season, well season seven, but
season six is about to come out. I know. Yeah, you know me.
It's like making a movie.
I'm like years ahead.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You also host Park Predators.
You had a new show come out with us, Dark Arenas.
So you are very well known in the podcast field, very well known in the journalism field.
And you and I, because we've known each other a long time, I texted you as soon as I asked
you to come on.
I was like, we get to play my favorite game with you, which is conspiracy or incompetence.
Because every time you and I get in a case together,
I'm like, it goes all the way to the top.
And you're always like, they probably just
don't know what they're doing.
I mean, I always want to be on the side of like, hey,
you can't just say the most wild thing.
But at the same time, some of these cases,
and this case that we were going to talk about today,
it is that.
It is this sense of like, does it go this far, like this so deep? And so that's
definitely something that I'm like, I've had way too many run-ins with.
And before you knew we were coming here, did you know this case?
I did not know it like intimately, but the headline, like the headline, like I had remembered. So this case happened in
January, late January 2022, which for those of you that don't know, you and I were
having children, like literally birthing children at that time. So postpartum, like
I remember in those weeks after, you know, when when my son is sleeping like
hours a day, right, and there's nothing to do, I remember just kind of like
peeking into the real world and being like, what's happening? And this headline was one that stood out probably on Twitter
or probably on X or something like that.
And I just remember being like, what?
That seems really wonky.
So I didn't have anything but truly the sheer headline,
which is really interesting.
And the headline is...
Breaking news, Karen Reed.
Karen Reed.
Karen Reed is her name.
Charged with murder in January 2022 death The headline is... Breaking news, Karen Reed. Karen Reed. Karen Reed is her name.
Charged with murder in January 2022,
death of her boyfriend,
Boston police officer, John O'Keefe.
So Karen Reed, this woman in Boston,
is accused of killing her boyfriend, John O'Keefe,
who was a Boston police officer.
And it's interesting when you're talking about the headlines,
because actually one of the first things that I read
when I was really diving into this was a piece
that was written by one of John O'Keefe's friends.
And it was all about the family's perception of this,
because this case has really grown beyond just what are the facts
or the fact that she's going to trial.
It has taken on a life of its own.
The conspiracy theories are wild in this case.
And the thing she said is she said,
this has become about Karen, and it is about Karen.
She's the one who's going to trial,
but she said John has gotten lost in all of this.
Her friend has gotten lost,
and people are forgetting the real family
that is behind this tragedy.
And they do believe that Karen's responsible.
They think the right person is going to trial.
And whether I agree with that or not, one of the things I took away from the article
is this woman said, everyone reads the headline.
Maybe they read a little bit beyond that.
But very few people actually have read the court documents and can speak to it that way
and are now forming their own opinions.
And so that's what I wanted to do coming into this is thanks to the Boston Globe, they actually
have been the ones who have been going out requesting so many of these records, these
court proceedings, these filings, these motions, and they've made all of that available online.
So everything we're going to talk about today doesn't come from a flashy headline.
It comes directly from these very long, very legal court documents. But I want to try to put it all in a way that people
understand.
Yeah, because the people that know this case the absolute best at this point are the ones
that have crafted these documents. And so really, like, that is key to a case like this
where there's so much going on. Because, like you said, there is so much that sort of polluted the space around
this story and this headline.
So these documents are really the people who have been putting their heart and
soul into this case for so long.
So I think that's where you get that level of credibility that is good.
And it's interesting because you get the narrative piece by piece.
Every filing, every document, you get one more thing that you can file away
like, oh, this fills in that gap or oh, this contradicts that. So I want to give you kind
of an overview of the case itself or at least what the prosecution originally put forward
in their like statement of the case. So this all started in the very end of January 2022.
This is in Canton, Massachusetts,
which is right outside of Boston.
And at the center of our story is John O'Keefe,
the victim, and his girlfriend, Karen Reed.
That night, they go out to a bar,
they're drinking, they're together,
they go to another bar called The Waterfall.
And that's where they meet up
with some of John's acquaintances.
It seems like he knows one woman there,
this woman named Jennifer McCabe,
and he knows Jennifer's husband, Matthew,
and maybe one or two other people there.
Karen has only met these people like a handful of times.
Everyone's drinking, everyone who's there that night,
even the court documents say this
in the initial statement of filing that is happy.
No one's fighting, everyone's having a good time.
The bars start to close down.
This is around midnight or everyone decides to go,
but they're not ready to call it a night.
One of the people there, this man named Brian Albert,
who is also with, he's a police officer himself.
He heads up like a pretty big unit.
And he's like, you know what,
everyone come back to my house.
It was his son's birthday or was about to be his birthday.
His son had some friends over.
He's like, we can keep it going there.
So they head out, they go back to Brian's house,
and there's some texts exchanged between Jennifer and John
where he's like, hey, where are we going?
He calls to get directions.
They all head back, and Karen and John
are seen like walking to her car.
She gets in the driver's seat and presumably they make it
because people who were at the house,
Jennifer talks about this,
her husband Matthew talks about this,
they see a dark SUV, which is what Karen was driving,
right outside of the front door.
And she's even, Jennifer is even texting John like,
are you coming in?
She even says, hey, pull up right texting John like, are you coming in?
She even says, hey, pull up right behind me, meaning like pull up in the driveway. At some
point, the vehicle moves like one to one and a half cars length up. So, I mean, we're still
right in front of the house. And I don't know, did you get a chance to look at Google Maps?
I did.
You know I did.
Of course you did. I live on Google Maps.
And this is where I, in the court documents, there's all this talk about, again, they break
this down 15 different ways, 15 different times, about when this car moves up and it
goes, it says, you know, goes to the left of the property or whatever by the flagpole
and the fire hydrant.
And for some reason, when I'm reading this in black and white, I'm imagining that she's
going like around the side of the house like not being seen by people and
If you Google the address, it's I mean everything can be seen from the yeah, it's all visible
Yes, and it's not it's not a huge property. We're talking a regular neighborhood in a regular subdivision
So the car moves up a little bit, but then John never comes in the house
But then John never comes in the house. Karen doesn't go in the house either.
And the next thing anyone knows is they're getting calls
from Karen saying that John didn't come home.
I'm worried that something happened.
I'm worried that he's dead.
I mean, what exactly she said and how distraught she was
is a little bit up for debate, again,
depending on who's telling the story. exactly she said and how distraught she was is a little bit up for debate, again, depending
on who's telling the story. And she meets up, she goes to meet up with Jennifer McCabe,
they meet up with another friend, Carrie, and the three of them go back to Brian Albert's
house to see if they can find him. That's the last place, like, in her mind, right,
where I, that's where I left him. Now, on top of this, it is a blizzard.
Yeah, whiteout.
Whiteout, which is the timing of it.
If you put it in a novel, someone would be like,
I don't know, it feels like a little, a little much.
Yeah, it feels like it's just like a scene setting thing.
Yeah, like a book.
It had started snowing the night before,
but we are talking full on blizzard,
almost whiteout conditions in the morning.
So when they're driving up, Carrie and Jennifer say they don't see anything.
But almost right away, Karen says that she sees him.
She pulls open the van or the vehicle, the door, whatever, like hops out and goes to
him.
And he is.
He's laying there in the snow.
They say there's like six inches of snow on top of him.
His phone is underneath him.
I don't know if they move him or what, but immediately two of them start performing CPR and one of them calls
911. So 911 comes and there's a lot said. People are saying that Karen is completely distraught.
One firefighter even says that she is saying, I hit him, I hit him.
Yeah, she's making these declarations that are like,
whoa, what's going on?
And he is pronounced dead at the hospital later.
His injuries were mostly to his head and to his forearm.
So according to the autopsy,
he had several abrasions to his right forearm,
two swollen black eyes, a small cut above the right eye, a cut to the left side of his nose, a two-inch laceration
on the back right side of his head, multiple skull fractures that resulted in bleeding
of the brain.
And the autopsy will later note that he has his pancreas is a very dark red, which indicates
hypothermia, which they say contributed to his death.
So, he was injured. They say he's made incapacitated, and that's why he's laying in the snow,
but then he really died from hypothermia.
And then he has that snow on top of him, right? The snowfall that's fallen that covered him.
So, that's another indication that he has been out there for a period of time.
Six inches of snow on top of him.
Yeah, like, and I know snow can fall fast in the Boston area, but I think all of that,
right, like you said, that plus his autopsy results show that, you know, he was there
and you very well could have been still trying to live.
And that's super heartbreaking for sure.
Now nobody comes out of the house from what's been said, reported, whatever.
Again, everyone wants to make a lot of that.
It's also a blizzard.
Other neighbors aren't even coming out of the house
to see what's going on with all the police there.
It's freezing.
Karen is taken to the hospital as well.
They end up pulling a blood sample from her,
and they're able to determine, it's 9 in the morning
by the time they pull that blood sample,
but backtracking it, they think that her blood alcohol was somewhere between 0.13 and 0.29 at the time she would
have been dropping him off, which was, I think, about between 1240ish, 1245, like that time
in the morning.
So what ends up happening pretty quickly, like within a couple of days of his body being
found is they end up charging Karen
with manslaughter, basically saying that she backed
over him because she was drunk and he died of hypothermia
and it's her fault.
Now, do you want to talk about why they think
that she backed over him?
I mean, there's been so many reasons, right?
But I mean, the issues with their relationship and the voicemails and stuff like that.
The charge will get changed later, but when there's a state trooper, so originally Canton
PD comes, Canton PD gets conflicted out of the case because there's all these police
officers there.
So they bring in the state police.
That state police officer goes to get Karen's statement
after she's released from the hospital,
she's staying at her parents' house,
and he says he notices that her taillight,
her passenger side rear taillight is broken.
So that becomes part of their theory
is that she backed into him,
the taillight broke as a result of that.
And again, she was drunk.
This is a tragic accident.
So she's charged.
And at the time that she is charged, it all happens again, really fast.
She meets with her lawyer, like while she's there at the court, and then the lawyer comes
out and says something to the press where like, this is a tragic accident.
Like we're going to figure this out.
She's devastated, whatever.
And that's kind of all it was.
And then I don't know that it would have made
national headlines if it ended there,
but it doesn't end there.
Because shortly after her lawyer,
this tipster had called his office,
and so after he goes and he gives this statement,
he calls this tipster back,
and I'm gonna read it directly. It says, or what he calls this tipster back, and I'm going
to read it directly.
It says, or what they say this tipster said is, quote, your client is innocent.
John was beaten up by Brian Albert and his nephew.
They broke his nose.
And when O'Keefe didn't come to Brian and a federal agent dumped his body on the front
lawn.
End quote.
Now, it's worth noting where that was reported, it said that an attorney for the man that
this, like the man that was identified says that this did not happen.
The tipster's lawyer.
Yeah, so a journalist did track down the actual tipster and the tipster's lawyer is like, nope,
didn't say that.
So, is it, is it, right?
So, and again, right now, all it is is just this, like, kind of wild, hair-brained tip.
But it kind of starts working its way into the back of everyone's mind.
And what Karen talks about on, she did an interview with Nightline, is that she is up
one night, she starts just going on Facebook because she can't even figure out, to me the
question's like, why is this even happening?
Like, why?
And she starts finding pictures of the police who are investigating the case connected to
the people who were at the house that night.
Again, what's the motive, what's the why, I don't know, but something feels fishy.
And is this some kind of coverup?
And so this is when things really start
to explode a little bit.
And shortly after all of this too,
so what was a manslaughter charge, they end up changing.
They end up coming and recharging her
with second degree murder.
And leaving the scene of an accident, which is, you know, it's kind of like, okay, duh,
but it is an extra charge.
Now I didn't really understand why go out.
You already had her on manslaughter.
You're saying she was drunk.
You're saying this, but like, so then why, why do that?
Why go to that extra step?
Like I don't get it. Well, and I think something that sort of would make that make sense is
if they continue to investigate and they discover issues in the relationship.
Which they did.
Preceding the event, and I think in this case,
as they continue to work the investigation,
whatever law enforcement officials were working
the investigation, whether they were connected to some of the witnesses or not, they began
to discover, hey, was this truly an accident?
And they started to ask the question of what preceded these events?
And I think that's what led them to go, hey, I think that maybe we can sell that more to
a jury, right?
Like a second degree, they're having potential issues.
There is this moment of issue and passion and heat
of the moment kind of thing.
That's a lot easier to sell to 12 strangers, right?
Like when you're going to take someone to court
and try and get a solid conviction.
But if you just go with manslaughter of like, oh,
this is a tragic accident, like,
I'm thinking of where they were looking ahead
to the future of a court proceeding.
I get that, but this is like such the problem
I have with the legal system.
It's like, it's not, I want to say it's not about winning.
It's about what happened.
And if what happened was an accident,
was drunk driving, charge her with that.
And listen, to be fair, they do find stuff, right?
There is a reason that they think that there was a motive.
So they say, the prosecution says that they,
in looking at John O'Keefe, the victim's phone,
they find a series of text messages
leading up to his death.
Quote, leading up to the night at Waterfall, the defendant and O'Keefe exchanged several text messages leading up to his death. Quote, leading up to the night at waterfall,
the defendant and O'Keefe exchanged several text messages
about their strained relationship.
In the voicemails that the defendant left O'Keefe
on January 29th, 2022, and that is the morning,
the early morning hours when he's found, she stated,
"'You are f***ing using me right now.
"'You are f***ing another girl. now. You are f***ing another girl.
You are a f***ing loser.
F*** yourself.
She called him a f***ing pervert and she yelled at him,
John, I f***ing hate you.
That right there, the discovery of that and when they discovered that,
to me would feed into potentially why they changed that charge.
Like, I think it was a factor.
I don't think it was necessarily the entire factor.
But that right there says something.
And I think that they're building out this story,
that there were clearly problems in their relationship.
And they get this from really John's niece.
So, and again, to make sure John doesn't get lost in all of this
John had actually taken in his niece and nephew his
Sister had died and then his sister's husband died shortly after that and yeah He the single man he was the one to take them in and so
they obviously live with him Karen didn't live with them, but she stayed the night their house all the time and
There was a story that was told or or a couple, especially by Denise and the nephew,
they say, you know, they were fighting a lot in the time leading up to it.
Denise had said, you know, there's this incident where basically John was like,
I think it's, this isn't working out. Like this is getting unhealthy.
But Karen was really against ending the relationship. She didn't want to leave his house.
There also is this story about them vacationing in Aruba on, for like New Year's Eve, which
would have been, again, we're talking less than a month prior, and an incident where
he had gone out, Karen said, he had gone out drinking, he doesn't come home till three
in the morning, she's, you know, bringing in the New Year with his niece and nephew,
and she comes out of the elevator and he's hugging someone. She thinks maybe kissing someone.
Everyone says there was no kiss,
but it was enough that it was an incident
everyone talks about.
Yeah.
I think it just like, whatever that story is,
again, the more law enforcement learns of things like that,
the more they're going, let's widen out the scope
of this very specific incident that we think we're looking at.
Let's widen out.
And I think all those things really contribute to that.
And that's what makes it, too, like, just very personal.
I think that's why people get interested in this kind of story, right?
Because a lot of people, like, everyone has relationships.
Everyone has drama in their life.
But that's what kind of perpetuates, I think, too, some of that interest is like,
well, what about this? And what about that? And that's wild.
But what I have a hard time piecing together is how do you...
Everyone says they were getting along that night, or at least not fighting that night.
Everyone says everything was good that night.
And here, you know, what is Karen's memory? I don't know.
Because I will say, again, first we get this story, and it might have been her lawyer
saying this was an accident, she doesn't remember.
But we have people who were initially with her,
the two women in the car, saying something
to the effect of her giving them a statement,
I don't even remember going to Brian's,
like, last thing I remember was being at the waterfall,
like, I don't remember last night.
Then she has a story, a memory.
So, oh, and in the first story, by the way,
she hadn't planned to go to Brian's,
or I guess the second story,
when she remembered that they were gonna go there,
I don't know.
Yeah, it was like, I was just gonna drop him off
and leave anyway.
Because I was having stomach issues, right.
I'm gonna drop him off, I'm gonna leave,
I'm having stomach issues.
And then the second time around, it's, her story is, and this is what she told Nightline,
was I didn't know if we were invited.
I didn't actually, again,
we don't know Brian Albert personally.
I didn't hear him invite me or invite John.
So we're going there,
but I didn't wanna just like walk into the house,
like of someone I don't know.
So-
Understandable.
Yeah, I get it.
So she said, I told John,
like go in and make sure it's cool for us to be here
so she says she's waiting in the car and
waiting in the car and
he's not coming and not coming and so then
She finally gets pissed and is like oh
He just ditched me and forgot that I'm sitting here waiting for him. And so she leaves.
Do I love that the story changed?
Absolutely not.
Do I understand they're already having problems?
Can you picture her leaving that voicemail when she thinks he ditched her while she's
waiting outside for him?
Yeah, those connections can totally be made.
And I want to go back and look at the situation where it is John texting Jennifer McCabe
to coordinate the meeting up at Brian Albert's house,
like after the bar.
I think some people on that face would go,
well, wait a minute, like if Karen and John
had these sort of issues about these things
she's claiming in this voicemail,
like John texting another woman, even in friendly, like,
hey, we're all having a party, come back to my house.
Like, you could see where that might escalate, right?
In a drunken state where it's like,
you went into this house, you didn't come back,
you were texting this other person, like this other woman.
I think that, like, right, to your point,
like that could all feed into,
I'm going to make these nasty voicemails and then peace out.
And you're drunk.
We know nothing is better with alcohol.
Yeah, no, and late at night.
So she claims that she left,
that she was trying to text and call him.
She ends up falling asleep on the couch.
And then it's 4.30 in the morning when she again wakes up,
realizes he's not there.
She goes to get his niece to call Jennifer McCabe and then you know everything else is pretty much the same.
All right, so I, we are limited on time, we have an hour. I could keep going and going
in like the details
of even those text messages and those times
of the text messages because I think
that becomes important later, so maybe we'll hit it.
But I wanna go back to the physical evidence yet
because we're still laying the scene
to even get to the conspiracy stuff later.
So at the scene, when we talk about physical evidence,
again, what do they have to even charge Karen? So where
John was found, they said that they found pieces of glass, which their story or the
theory is he is actually seen on video surveillance when they leave the waterfall, whatever time
that was. He actually takes a short, clear glass out with him.
He's seen on video.
So they're thinking that's the glass that he was holding.
I think some of that glass is also found in her bumper, they say.
They also say that they find some pieces of red plastic and white plastic, whatever they
think, like, oh, this could be tail light pieces.
Similar to the tail light.
Similar pieces there at the scene.
And some, I laugh, they found some patches of blood,
spots of blood.
Here's where things get wild.
So the glass and the blood is collected first.
But Delia, I sent you a picture
of how they collected the blood.
I actually didn't even know what I was looking at
at first when you sent it to me.
But yes, the picture is a like brown grocery store bag
and there's six red solo cups in the bottom
that all have what appear to be little clumps of snow
in them.
And then you told me what is in the clumps of snow.
That's the blood. In the solo cups.
What? What?
Yeah, these officers on the scene were. And granted, again, it's a blizzard, so you're
in a race against time. That's the only-
But whose solo cups are these? They're not the cups.
I think they're our neighbors, and I hope they're not used, but-
What?
Yeah, so they...
In what world does that make sense?
It doesn't to me, but they collect the blood evidence in solo cups and that's all that
they initially collect, right? And again, so his phone's underneath him, they obviously
collect that as well. This is where things start to get a little fishy in my mind, because they go back again multiple times.
And it's even that same day or whatever,
but there is a point where they take a snowblower
and they're blowing the top layer of snow off,
looking for more things.
And the first time they found him, by the way,
he's missing one of his shoes.
So the second time that they go back,
they find his other shoe,
and that's when they start finding tail light pieces
Why those red tail light pieces didn't stick out before is a big question to me because
You said that the Massachusetts State Police investigator like early on noted that the tail light was broken
So you would think that going back in additional searches that would be like something you're actually
was broken. So you would think that going back in additional searches, that would be like something you're actually looking for if you have this theory of is this a hit and
run.
Yeah, but you would also think that the first time that when you removed John's body and
you found you found pieces of clear glass on the ground in the snow, you didn't find
pieces of red plastic.
Yeah, I don't. That's a hard thing to wrap your mind around, but I also just know and you know as well
that whenever additional evidence is found on subsequent searches, that is so par for
the course, like in terms of just happens all the time.
All the time.
It does.
And I mean, they went, and again, there was so much snow that day.
They went back multiple times.
And it's almost one of those things where it's like they keep finding more and more
and more and more
it said that
some of John's DNA was on a piece of
Tail they don't they don't get specific though. We don't have again, but this hasn't gone to trial yet
So I don't have a lot of the details how much tail light what piece of the tail light
I haven't seen anything that said that any of the tail light was found on him on his clothing anything like that
Would you point pointed out? Yeah, that would be, to me,
if you have these little shards and pieces
that are recognizable enough in snow,
you would think that would be in his or on his clothing,
the fact that he is on the ground
and had been there a while,
that stuff probably wouldn't have moved.
So that's what I was really curious about.
So they obviously took her car, they processed her car.
This happens on February 1st, after they take like an initial,
the Massachusetts State Police Crime People or whatever,
they do the initial pass at her car.
They don't spot this, but then they bring in someone,
they bring in a forensic scientist named Maureen Hartnett.
And she probably works like for them again,
but she comes in and she's the one
who ends up finding this hair.
It's referred to as hair.
So singular hair, as far as I can tell, on Karen's car.
And this is like what they keep pointing to.
On the bumper.
Yeah.
That they're like, oh, like, again, we don't, maybe we don't have the tail light on him.
We don't like, but they find thisarent hair on the rear passenger side quarter panel
So all they have so they had glass in her bumper, which was like again
That's not that that's not John on her bumper, right?
But then they get this apparent hair and they're like this is this is the proof that like he his head made contact with her
car Now this hair is talked about non-stop This is the proof that like his head made contact with her car.
Now this hair is talked about nonstop and this case is getting litigated before it goes
to trial.
I mean in the media nonstop these motions are becoming public, they're fighting about
these in hearings and this hair is something that they keep pointing to over and over again
and at some point the defense is even like,
well, we want to do our own testing, but then the state won't release it to them.
And it becomes this big point of contention.
Well, fast forward, their Massachusetts state police, their lab,
it takes them a year to even examine it.
And I don't know if it just didn't become important then or,
I mean, over this year is when things
Really the conspiracy theories really started to tick up. I don't know but over a year whatever this next year They look at the hair the Massachusetts State Lab says that there is no human DNA
Detected when they finally examine it which what which is the app?
This is your if this is one of your pieces of key evidence like that's not even a human hair. Yeah
Which is, yeah, this is one of your pieces of key evidence. Like, that's not even a human hair.
Yeah.
So the prosecution, what they do,
that's obviously not the results they want.
So they want a contract with an outside private lab, Bode.
The defense is like, okay, before you do that,
we want to examine it.
You might use up everything in testing,
that ends up getting denied.
But if this was their only piece of putting John on the car, what do you have?
Nothing.
So if we're still talking about John, his injuries, again, how's the hair on the bumper?
The other thing I want to talk about, it's really hard for me to understand how his injuries
come from being run over.
Again, if you want to say it's an accident, then she's going a few miles an hour backing up whatever.
If you want to say it was intentional,
second-degree murder, maybe she was going a little faster,
but nobody saw that.
More than anything, he's a tall guy.
How is her tail light meeting his head?
The only injuries he has really below his neck
are his forearm is all cut up
Mm-hmm the people who think Karen Reed is innocent and being framed say it looks like a dog scratched or bit his arm
Mm-hmm what everyone kind of conveniently leaves out on Karen's side
He's got these bruises on the back sides of both of his hands that they say look like defensive wounds
Yeah, explain it to me deal.ia. I know, I can't.
And I get the whole like, okay, sequence of events, right?
But from what I know from talking
to a lot of forensic pathologists,
when people have those impact and like heavy pressure, right?
Like getting run over by a car tire or, you know,
getting side swiped, it doesn't necessarily look
how we like think it should look,
which is that like that blunt force trauma injury. But I mean, yeah, those scratches on the right
forearm specifically are really significant to me. And I think even in some of the images,
they really stand out. But like the dog bite marks, that is introduced by the defense. And that
really leads down and supports the path
and the theory of was it someone at that home's dog
that did that?
And that brings a lot of questions in.
So yeah, the injuries are hard to wrap your head around,
but there are some things that a logical person could say,
maybe?
In my mind, for his injuries,
you had brought up something to me the other day.
You're like, what if he got like stuck in the, or he was like getting out of the car
and then fell?
Yeah.
So my thought is if he's getting out of the passenger side and stepping out, that passenger
side door is going to be open.
The left side of his body is going to be more in the car, right?
And if he is standing in that space or getting out and the car begins to go in reverse, he's
going to fall down more likely on his right side and he's going to get run over and potentially
dragged under that tire.
You're talking about snow.
Car tires don't just like peel out in the snow.
They behave differently.
And so I'm wondering if he got dragged for a little bit and then that pressure of being,
it sounds terrible, compressed like,
it caused a lot of problems.
But that doesn't add up to me
because he's not found in the street.
He's found in the yard.
Yeah, so that's another thing.
It's like, okay, where, again, the sequence of events,
where is the car oriented to him
if in fact this is how this happened?
Yeah, there's a lot of questions.
And it makes me like want to,
like the one thing that would convince me without a doubt
would be video of some sort of things.
But in this case, the video is like,
you brought that up and I was like, wait, there's video.
And you're like, well, there is and there isn't.
So we'll start to get into a little bit of this conspiracy
because the video that we have, the video that has been
introduced is video from John O'Keefe's house.
He's got a ring camera and he had two cameras.
One was at his front door, one was over his driveway.
And we've got video from over his driveway of Karen Reed.
So she wakes up at 430, she's calling around at around 507, 508.
She backs out of the driveway and this is her, she's calling around at around 507, 508. She backs out of the driveway, and this is her,
she's on her way to go to Jennifer McCabe,
they're gonna go look for John.
She backs out, and here's where things get really interesting
is because John's car is in the driveway.
She was in the garage, she backs out,
and wouldn't you know it,
that passenger side rear taillight
comes awfully stinking close, if not potentially hits,
John's car.
We will have this video in the source material.
Like, people have analyzed this to death,
but she backs up, and people will say that you can see her,
and I can kind of see it, you can kind of see her car
just shake just ever so slightly back and forth
when it potentially makes contact.
So when she like pulls forward and drives away,
that's when you can see on the camera,
her tail light is broken.
Now the prosecution specifically lays out
in their statements, like they even address it.
They're like, she almost comes close to, but does not.
And then you see her tail light's broken
because she broke it when she ran over John.
The defense says, no, that's when her tail light was broken.
Now, it would be really easy to solve this.
Let's just see when she came home that night.
If it's broken.
But that video doesn't exist. And we don't know why it doesn't exist.
So the prosecution, the cops have kind of alluded to, oh, well, you know, she had access
to his ring system on her phone and on the app. Maybe she deleted it. I could say the
same thing that, you know, anyone who had access to John's phone, I know it was in police
custody, could have deleted it.
Because they basically said they have all these incidents between, they have about 15
incidents between 6 p.m. that night and then 6 a.m.
But they do not have her coming home.
That's super frustrating because I'm like, it completely destroys the timeline of the
prosecution.
If her taillight is not broken when she gets home.
If there could be proof of that, it destroys the timeline, right?
If it is broken...
It doesn't just destroy the timeline, it destroys their whole theory.
Yeah, it destroys the whole theory.
But then I'm also thinking we go back to this, it was a blizzard out.
And I know, because I have the same system at my home, like if there's like a spider web or like a lot of condensation or
frost or whatever that that
Technology doesn't always capture every single motion event that's happening
It's super unfortunate that it doesn't capture this one thing
But to your point I want to know like in that app like who can delete stuff
Is there like a metadata trail for that because that right there it should be able to tell you like which
user of the app accesses it. Did it just not register it? Or there's gotta be something there.
Yeah this is 2024 like how are we not... Or 2022 when this is happening.
Well yeah but come on we've got to be able to look at that. And well apparently
they're using new technology as it pops up, because if you want to pop to another
big thing that people who believe in a conspiracy theory
point to, is it goes back to tech.
So, there is supposedly a search
on Jennifer McCabe's phone at 2.27 in the morning.
2.27 is hours before Karen is supposed to have called her and said
John didn't come home.
Let's go look for him.
At 2 27, there is a search on her phone that says, quote, Haas long to die in cold.
They believe that it was supposed to be how long to die in cold.
Why is Jennifer McCabe searching that at 227?
Well, why is her phone searching that?
Such a technicality, yes.
Why is her phone searching that?
Right.
This alarming, because we know now with the evidence in John's autopsy
that there is this factor that he died out in the snow and the cold.
I don't love it. I think, again, for people that support Karen Reed's side of things, it would be indicative of there are people at that home who are in his company that are trying to figure out what to do with him, which is, again, super disturbing. But again, I go back to what I said about the driveway footage.
Like, what is the metadata situation and what can investigate and determine?
This is where it gets really messy because originally when they,
when the defense was given everyone's phone records, this search wasn't even included.
this search wasn't even included. It comes out later.
And what the prosecution is saying is, no, they're like, Karen asked Jennifer, as they're
out there, please search, see how long it takes.
Is he dying?
Is he already dead?
And there are searches at 623 and 624 for that as well.
Now granted, the 911 call is 604 or something like that.
So it's like 20 minutes,
the timing doesn't totally add up.
But they're like, no, it was just,
there was a webpage that was opened at 227.
And then if you use that webpage,
they had all these excuses for it.
And okay, fine.
Here's the big thing that comes in. So it comes out later that another software basically was used to do this phone extraction.
And that software, supposedly, and it's one done by the feds, says that it was at 227.
Like, we can stop talking about it.
That's what the defense says.
That search was made at 227 a.m.
And I don't know how you explain that. I don't think you can explain it.
I'll be very interested to see how it's explained in court at trial. I think
that's absolutely something a jury is gonna, if we're so hung up on it, that's
what 12 strangers are gonna go, let me find the answer to that question. There's some other phone data that's really interesting too.
So they, he had an iPhone and Jennifer McCabe had an iPhone and they've got the Apple health
data, you know, always being watched. Always being tracked. And it says that John took some steps around the time that he would have,
if Karen's story is true, he would have been going into the house.
And the defense says, look, that's proof that he left the car
and didn't just get run over right there. He wouldn't have done that.
He climbed three flights of stairs.
He was in that house.
But the prosecution says, no, it also says
that he's taking steps after he's found dead at 6 a.m.
Now, I say, of course it shows that it's taking,
it doesn't know John is taking steps.
It's the phone is moving.
The phone had got collected.
It's getting moved from department to department as they're figuring out what to do with it. So to me, him moving around after he's
dead, of course that's not him. It seems like a weird thing to even point out. The health data
also says that Jennifer McCabe is up all night pacing. She doesn't go to bed.
She says she's woken up by a call from Karen
that she can't find John, but Apple Health data says no ma'am.
Yeah, and that, okay, that's not the best look for her,
but I go back to what I said,
it's her phone that's pacing around.
So I'm always on the side of devices are devices and they are in the hands of whoever is holding
And it does not mean that that is the owner so I get not as hung up on that
The search is what's to me of like great interest
Someone is plugging that search in and they can find out what time and you can explain the device thing to me
I guess for Jennifer, but everyone has agreed John's phone is found under his body.
So I don't know how...
The activity before he dies is hard.
That's hard to wrap my head around as well.
Is he in the home?
Is he walking around the yard?
Is he getting in and out of a vehicle?
Yeah, that's really hard to face.
So this is all the stuff that they're fighting about, right?
The defense is like, there's no way his injuries were made this way.
The tail light, they're going so far as to accuse the lead investigator of planting the
evidence.
They say that he, I don't know where he got tail light, but he planted the evidence.
They're making a lot of accusations.
He's covering up for them.
That sound wild. Now, it all sounds wild until it comes out that the federal government is conducting
an investigation simultaneously.
Now what they're conducting an investigation into is not totally confirmed.
But we know that they're calling all of the same witnesses.
So the defense at one point gets a,
like rumblings of this.
Because the thing I'm not going into,
that's like, it is the,
honestly a huge part of this case,
is one of the biggest supporters of Karen Reed
is this online blogger, YouTuber,
who goes by the name Turtle Boy.
And there has been a ton of controversy around him.
He's been accused of harassing witnesses.
Like, there's a lot of stuff there.
So I assume that it's, you know, through all of that, the defense gets some kind of tip
that, hey, your witnesses are being—there's been a grand jury that indicted Karen, but
there is another grand jury that's happening that they're getting called for.
And it's, you know, it's not one of them, it's all of them.
And it seems like they're investigating the same thing you are simultaneously.
Which is really out of the norm to have a federal investigation happening simultaneously in tandem with a state investigation
into a second degree, formerly manslaughter charge.
That right there raises the profile for me.
And everything that people are saying, this is unprecedented.
Yeah.
Usually, they let things play out, and if there's something to look into, if it's prosecutorial
misconduct, if it is something, I don't even think they would deal necessarily because there's also at the same
time there ends up being an internal investigation into Michael Proctor, who's the lead investigator
for how he handled it and did he have a conflict of interest and did he lie about that conflict.
Because he knew a lot of the witnesses at Brian Albert's house.
Yeah.
But again, that's being handled by internal affairs.
What is the federal government investigating?
So when the defense starts hearing this, they basically go to the prosecution.
They're like, what is going on here?
If you're calling these witnesses, something is happening that we haven't gotten in discovery.
And they do basically notice a discovery and the DA responds and is like, listen, we have
no idea what's going on.
We don't know about a federal investigation, so there's nothing for us to give you.
Well, so that's in December of 2023.
Cut to Fox 25 had actually been working on a public records request, which they succeeded
in getting.
And, you know, I don't know exactly like the days, but like as they're
getting this, the DA is like, oh, we found some things that we would like to give you.
And they are communications from back in May. So they asked for this in December, months
before. There are email communications from the district attorney's office, the Commonwealth,
to the United States attorney's office, where the United States Attorney's Office in May
confirms, yeah, we're doing an investigation.
So they knew.
We're subpoenaing your witness.
And you know, if you need to disclose, oh, and like the emails are also just like shady
themselves because the DA is like, you know, if you do anything, we're going to have to
share it, which is basically like, don't mess it up for me.
We're going to have to share it with the defense.
Yeah.
And it's been said that there was like some shady stuff
even on the other side and that the state's attorney's like,
well, you don't have to share what you don't have.
Back and forth, the point is that they knew this was going on
and all of that gets disclosed.
So there is this federal investigation
and in doing so the federal investigation,
they didn't have to, but they ended up releasing
like 3,000 pages of their investigation to the defense and to the prosecution.
Part of what they've gotten, and I've inferred this just from some of the filings, is testimony
from their grand jury hearings where people are, main people from their case are being asked about, again, it's
clearly about John O'Keefe's death or the investigation into it.
And this is how we learned that Michael Proctor, the lead investigator, for sure had a conflict
of interest.
And not only did he have a conflict of interest, they went out of their way to make people
believe he didn't.
I mean, there was, did you see the video from
the DA?
Yeah. Oh, yeah. That's a very bold, very bold thing for a district attorney to do.
Because there were rumblings, right? Even early on, like I said, very early on, Karen's
like trying to figure out who's connected to who. And the DA, I mean, like it was firm.
He was like, there is no impropriety, basically.
He has no conflict of interest.
This is all some wild fishing expedition.
But you know what perpetuates that, though?
When you keep a secret from the defense that a federal investigation is going on that could
potentially result in exculpatory information for your client.
So if the defense is already going down this, what the prosecution is saying, a conspiracy
theory, you're perpetuating that district attorney. By hiding.
By hiding and not being forthright. So like if that's what you're saying then
part of the blame could be on you and your office. Like did the DA know? Like
was Michael hiding for everyone? And it's I mean it's very clear so ten days
before John dies Michael Proctor lead investigator, is texting with Julie Albert,
who is related to Brian Albert, whose house it was,
about babysitting his child.
That is someone you know.
Yeah.
No doubt.
You trust with your kid.
More concerning is that two days after John died,
there are text messages between Michael Proctor
and Michael Proctor's wife.
And Michael Proctor's wife is relaying a message.
It says, quote, just saw Julie, they're talking about Julie Albert,
and Julie said when all this is over,
she wants to give you dot dot dot a thank you gift.
I don't know if the dot dot dot is leaving out things,
I don't know if it was a true like dot dot dot.
Apparently, he responded and said that the gift should be sent to his
wife and not him.
I don't love communication like that because, right, you can read into it 10 different ways,
but I think what that says in the big picture is you're too close for comfort. And because
of that, again, you could be perpetuating a lot of questions and
windows and theories that ultimately bring your integrity into question.
And in a case that that is at the core of it at this point, that's super problematic.
Julie Albert actually comes into this a little bit more too, because we haven't
really heard much about her.
Was she there that night?
Was her husband, his name Chris Albert, were they there that night? Were Was she there that night? Was her husband, his name Chris Albert,
were they there that night?
Were they not there that night?
Nobody really seems to agree, which is really strange.
There is some grand jury testimony.
They're both at the waterfall.
We know that before.
Julie says she goes home early with a headache.
Chris walked home when everyone left the bar.
The defense says that there is a February 21st report
memorializing a statement that the officer,
whatever, took from them back on the 10th.
So this is like this memory of a statement
that happened, you know, days ago.
But it says that they did go back to Brian Alberts after.
So the defense is like,
you didn't even point out this inconsistency
in the original
grand jury that indicted her. Were they were there? Were they not there? So the only theory
when I talk about motive, because again, that's like the what the heck happened? John barely
knew these people. The only theory I've seen anyone come up with is that he got into it
with Brian's nephew. Again, that's the original tipster said something happened with Brian
and his nephew.
And so for there to be a lot of questions, was Chris there, was Chris not there, for
his wife to be the one like, we want to give you a gift when all of this is over, very
suspicious.
Well, I think the question is, is if you're looking at a, in the moment something happened
in that house, the question naturally is, okay, who had the beef?
Who had the beef with John O'Keefe? Even if it was in the momentary split second, you know, you spilled a drink
on me or something, or is it something that preceded it where there's this kind of growing
issue? And I think that's where we need to get to the bottom of who was in the house?
When did they get there? When did they leave, all of that surrounding the timeline
of when we know John dies, it's hard.
What they had always said is that everyone stayed
for about an hour and then people left or went to bed.
This is also what's strange to me
because you have people leaving the house at say 1, 1.30,
like around that time, nobody sees John laying in the yard.
And this is not a big property.
I can't wrap my head around it.
Yeah, how can you not see that unless you're just blackout,
which we know some of these witnesses were not.
Some were drunk, some were not blackout.
But then, yeah, how do you not see someone lying there?
Because we know at 1 and even 132,
he's not covered in those six inches of snow yet.
So my question is, are there external witnesses
like people that were driving on that street
or working the blizzard conditions, right?
There's supposedly a snow plow driver
who was plowing the street at 2.30,
who according to the defense is willing to testify that he did not see John out in the yard at 2.30, who, according to the defense, is willing to testify that he did not see John out in the yard
at 2.30 in the morning.
I mean, that's a good witness for sure,
but again, my mind goes to video.
Can we strap some video cameras on these snow plows
for the future so that they can start like...
Or just more ring cameras.
I'm shocked that there's nothing.
And maybe there's something that will come out in trial,
but I'm shocked that none's nothing, and maybe there's something that will come out in trial,
but I'm shocked that none of the neighbors have anything
that is helping solve that or like piece that together.
Now you talked about who is in the house,
who's not in the house, what are these,
there are witnesses driving by,
but I think that's what's so wowed me.
There are a lot of witnesses in that house. There are a lot of people, I said this early on, who talk about seeing Karen's car.
One of the people in the house was another person in law enforcement whose name is also
Brian, and that's Brian Higgins.
And there's some strange communication.
So again, everyone says that they leave after an hour or so.
Everyone's asleep.
But then again, you have weird movements.
You have a phone moving.
There's also some calls reportedly between Brian Albert
and Brian Higgins in those early morning hours.
The federal probe revealed that Brian Albert called him
after 2 a.m. and then Higgins called Brian Albert back.
Both men say that these were butt dials,
even though they also say that they were sleeping.
And they were supposed to be together at the same house
earlier in the night.
Well, earlier in the night. Right, right, right.
Yeah, but they, like, left at this point,
and then they're calling each other.
So it doesn't totally add up.
I think that would raise questions, right? Any communication between any members of these
witnesses after the fact throughout that night should certainly be observed. These stand
out for a lot of reasons.
And then we also know that Brian Higgins apparently, according to the defense, stops responding
to Brian Albert at some point after all of this happens.
He kind of goes dark.
And I want to read something from one of the hearings from the defense.
Quote, Your Honor, there's only one way to interpret that.
Brian Albert was panicked that Brian Higgins had flipped on him.
Brian Albert enlisted his Canton police officer brother to contact Higgins to try and find
out if that was the case.
So I said early on that Canton PD got conflicted out.
Well, that's because Brian Albert's brother, Kevin, was a Canton police officer.
Apparently, when the federal investigation is going on, Kevin Albert reaches out to Brian
Higgins to be like, hey, why won't you talk to Brian Albert?
And they're saying the only way you can interpret that
is like, we need to like get our story straight.
Yeah, and for me, I think you have to look at
what the defense is saying.
They're saying, hey, this is all interconnected.
This is all really problematic.
And when you have communications like this,
that really supports that, especially when
those communications could be interpreted as them not only discussing what happened,
but this federal probe that's happening simultaneously that is everyone's a little worked up about,
right?
Yeah.
It's not, everyone's story seems to have changed, including Karen's, everyone's story seems to have changed a little bit.
And is that time?
Is that people getting together
and making their stories match?
Is it misremembering?
Is it hard to remember something that's not the truth?
Or what?
And it's the influence too
of all of this sort of circus around it
in that small community, right?
Like people begin to get much more on edge.
And I know that in some of the source material it's pointed out that the Alberts like moved away, they got rid of their dog.
Yeah. So that again, you can go either way with this.
So the conspiracy people will say, okay, he replaced his floors, moved out of his house
and got rid of his dog shortly after this happened.
Like all of the things, and by the way,
Brian Albert's house was never searched
at the time that this all went down.
They will say, they said they've talked to Nate,
like it's already, it was planned for them to move
before this happened.
Their dog got in a fight with another dog.
Like none of this has ties to the case, but it looks bad.
And you had even pointed out I'd move too because you go back to the Turtle Boy
and all of Karen's supporters. There was a point where they had a group of people,
protesters, like a hundred people who were driving by all these key people's homes
and like shouting with megaphones. I would move too.
Yeah. And if you're going to be a witness at a trial, like you should as much as you
can remove yourself from things.
But I also, again, just to speak to that circus element to it, I know in this trial that's
like playing out right now, there's a buffer zone around the courthouse.
200 feet.
Which, of course, as a journalist and someone who's like, no, let me in there.
You know, I'm not a demonstrator
I'm always like no don't keep the people out. But at the same time with where this case is now
It's clearly necessary or or there's a reason right because of all this background and back history of what's been going on
So that really stuck out to me for sure
I was like a buffer zone around a public courthouse for public proceedings,
but that just tells you the level that it's gotten to.
And I feel for John's family
because they have received so much hate,
which is to me disgusting because,
again, they do believe that Karen is responsible.
Karen's supporters have been very vocal
that somehow they're bad people.
This is their truth and they want it to play out in court.
And I think it will play out in court.
And again, not that I necessarily even agree with them, but they have already been victimized.
I think about John's mom who already lost her daughter and now she lost her son.
You've got his niece and his nephew. These are real people feeling real pain.
And this is, I just can't imagine
how this is adding to all of that.
There is so much to this case.
I could go on for another hour.
We didn't get into, there was another witness
who says that they were parked behind Karen in the driveway.
There is, Julie Albert has two different stories
of why or when she learned about John's death.
The stories don't add up.
When you talk about a case,
we're supposed to talk about it in reasonable doubt.
Do I know if Karen did this?
Do I know if anyone else did this?
I don't know.
I do think that there is a lot of reasonable doubt with what's been put forward
in the filings so far. I do think that the federal government wouldn't be looking at this unless
there was something to look at. They wouldn't be setting this precedent. A federal nexus is what
they have to be looking at, which goes to much bigger things that have to be observed, right?
And that has to do with processes, public entities, people that hold certain positions,
how are their offices managing things. It's not, the federal government is not looking into whether the prosecution is sharing discovery with the defense. They are looking at what happened on a federal level that violated a federal law potentially
by these characters or players on either side.
And that to me is of great interest.
And I think I kind of want to know what the outcome of that's going to be either at the
same time or maybe before even a trial verdict.
Which is going on right now. So Karen's trial has started. They've gone through jury selection,
at least at the time of this recording, which is why I wanted to make sure everyone is up
to speed on what had happened so far, what we're all walking into, because I think we're
going to find out so much more once the trial begins. Are you officially on the conspiracy
train? Are you, are you, it goes all the way the top?
Are you here? I'm officially on this could be its own limited series train, which is my wheelhouse. Yes. So send me to Boston.
Yes. I'm there. I've heard that Netflix has like already been following and planning a doc.
It's, I mean there's, there's stuff planned for this.
Yeah, this is one of those stories that like deserves to have a very hard look at it.
Obviously some of the elements that are in play,
I'm super familiar with and it's hard for me
not to make that leap because I've seen it myself.
I was just gonna say, so this has a lot of parallels,
not necessarily the federal investigation.
You've kind of had to do the overall investigation,
but the season you have coming out,
season six of Counter Clock,
do you wanna talk about that for like just a second?
Cause it's a wild intertwined case.
Yeah, so it's a case that involves
different law enforcement agencies,
conflict of interest of certain individuals.
It involves, you know, a death that could be looked at
from a lot of different ways of is it just an accident?
Is it something intentional?
So-
Which is how it started.
I mean, much like this case,
you got in with this one man's death.
Was it an accident?
Was it murder?
And then it grew and grew and grew.
All the way to the top.
All the way to the top.
So actually, Counter Clock Season Six,
the trailer comes out today,
the first day that we're launching this show.
You can listen to the trailer on the SiriusXM app
or wherever you get podcasts.
Don't forget to follow this show and Counter Clock
and Crime Junkie. Add it to your library.
We're gonna have a brand new episode
the last Friday of every single month.
But if you can't wait, head to Crime Junkie Radio for your 24-7 true crime fix.
You can follow me at Ashley Flowers on Instagram, Delia.
At Delia.DiAmbra.W on Instagram.
And you can follow Crime Junkie at Crime Junkie Podcast.
So that's all for this first episode of Crime Junkie AF.
I will see you back here next month with a new case.
Crime Junkie AF.