Murder: True Crime Stories - UNSOLVED: The Murder of John O'Keefe 1 with Katie Ring
Episode Date: December 2, 2025When Boston police officer John O’Keefe is found dead in the snow outside a fellow officer’s home, his girlfriend, Karen Read, becomes the prime suspect. Investigators claim she hit him with her c...ar while driving drunk — but as the case unfolds, it becomes clear something much darker might be hiding behind the badge. In this first episode, we explore John and Karen’s relationship, the night of the tragedy, and the investigation that would divide an entire community.Listen to Crime House Daily with Katie Ring wherever you get your podcasts: https://play.megaphone.fm/x_6ohcviru2meohozntvgq If you’re new here, don’t forget to follow Murder True Crime Stories to never miss a case! For Ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Murder True Crime Stories is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios 🎧 Need More to Binge? Listen to other Crime House Originals Clues, Crimes Of…, Killer Minds, Crime House Daily and Crimes and more wherever you get your podcasts! Follow me on Social Instagram: @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is Crime House.
In towns where many residents work in law enforcement, loyalty runs deep.
Bonds are forged through shared cases, shared danger, and a shared understanding that when things get hard, you protect your own.
but loyalty can be a double-edged sword.
In a place where friends and neighbors wear badges,
what looks like unity can become a culture of silence.
In January 2022, a Boston police officer named John O'Keefe
was found dead in the snow outside another officer's home.
At first, it seemed obvious.
His girlfriend, Karen Reed, was to blame.
She'd hit him with her car while driving under the influence.
But as the investigation unraveled, so did the argument against Karen.
And before long, it became clear that the same people who'd sworn to uphold the truth
had flat out lied.
This revelation left the people of Canton, Massachusetts at a crossroads, because now they
had to decide who to trust.
The officers they'd known for so long.
long, or Karen, who was virtually a stranger.
People's lives are like a story.
There's a beginning, a middle, and an end.
But you don't always know which part you're on.
Sometimes the final chapter arrives far too soon, and we don't always get to know the real
ending.
I'm Carter Roy, and this is murder, true crime stories.
a Crime House original powered by Pave Studios that comes out every Tuesday and Thursday.
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Follow murder true crime stories and subscribe to Crime House Plus on Apple Podcasts
for ad-free early access to each two-part series.
And if you can't get enough true crime, go search and follow Crime House Daily.
Our team's twice a day show bringing you breaking cases, updates, and unbelievable stories
from the world of crime that are happening right now.
This is the first of two episodes on the 2022 murder of John O'Keefe.
We even did a deep dive on Crimehouse Daily,
hosted by our very own Katie Ring,
which is why she is the perfect guest to help me bring this episode to life.
Katie, welcome to murder true crime stories.
So excited to have you here.
Thanks, Carter.
I'm so excited to be here, and I cannot wait to dig in.
As most listeners know, this is one of the most,
controversial homicide investigations in recent history, and it is the case that originally got me
into true crime. And there is so much ground to cover, so I'm so excited. Okay, yes, I can't wait
to get into this case. It is, yeah, truly incredible. So let's get started. Today, I'll introduce
you to 46-year-old John and his girlfriend, then 41-year-old Karen Reed. We'll dig into their
backgrounds, their relationship, and the events that changed both of their lives forever.
Next time, I'll continue the investigation into Karen Reed and the trials that followed.
We'll see how the case against her unraveled in real time
and discuss why so many people still aren't sure what really happened to John O'Keefe that winter night.
All that and more coming up.
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Canton, Massachusetts was and is a police town, a quiet pocket of suburbia, just 20 miles south of Boston,
with about 24,000 residents. Most people who lived there were either police officers, were related to one,
or had one in their circle. There's the kind of place where a badge carried weight,
and loyalty ran deep.
John O'Keefe didn't grow up in Canton,
but in nearby Braintree,
a suburb with a pretty similar vibe.
He was born in 1975 as one of three siblings.
He was street smart, kind, and a natural leader.
From a young age, John knew he wanted to follow
in his grandfather's footsteps and go into law enforcement.
So when John got older and went off to school,
he did his undergrad at North Carolina.
Eastern University, then got a master's in criminal justice from the University of Massachusetts.
Around that time, John also met someone who would change his life.
In 2004, 30-year-old John O'Keefe was at his sister, Kristen's birthday party.
One of the guests was a 24-year-old woman named Karen Reed.
She had come to the party with a friend and didn't know anyone else there.
But she noticed John right away.
He had a great smile and laughed easily, and he was cute.
They started talking, exchanged numbers, and began dating soon after.
Their relationship lasted just a few months.
They were in their 20s, and it seemed like their lives were headed in different directions.
When the relationship ended, there were no hard feelings, just two people parting ways.
Karen went on to become a financial analyst at Fidelity Investments,
And two years later, in 2006, John joined the Boston Police Department, just like he'd always dreamed.
Back in the day, his grandfather's badge number had been 490.
When John joined the force, he was assigned to 490.
It felt like fate.
And for the next few years, it really did seem like his life was picture perfect.
But then tragedy struck.
In 2013, when John was 37, his sister, Kristen, passed away from a brain tumor.
Just two months later, her husband suffered a fatal heart attack.
That meant their children, six-year-old Kaylee and three-year-old Patrick were suddenly orphans.
John was devastated by the loss.
He'd been incredibly close with Kristen.
Despite his own grief, he stepped up to the plate and became Kaylee and Patrick's
guardian. Not because he was obligated, but because he wanted to. The kids called him their
funcle, short for fun uncle, and nicknamed him JJ. And while they missed their parents,
they love John dearly. To give them stability, John moved from Braintree to Canton, where
Kaylee and Patrick had grown up. It was where he would raise his niece and nephew, build a quiet
life and learned to balance his pain with parenthood, all on his own.
John took to it like a fish to water.
As the kids got older, he loved going to Kaylee's dance recitals and Patrick's baseball games.
His niece and nephew gave him purpose, and John's loved ones could see the change in him.
John dated during this time, but nothing lasted.
If he wanted a partner, he needed someone special.
someone who fit into his and the kids' world.
Then, in the spring of 2020, John was scrolling through Facebook when he saw a familiar face.
Karen Reed.
At that point, John was 44 and Karen was 40.
They'd both grown up since dating in 2004, but for John, there was still some lingering interest.
So while the world was sheltering in place from COVID, John sent her a message.
message. Hey, blast from the past, how's things? They hadn't seen each other in 16 years,
and Karen had been through a lot in that time. She'd undergone 10 abdominal surgeries in 18 months
before being diagnosed with Crohn's disease, a condition that causes severe inflammation
in the digestive tract. In rare cases, it can spread to other parts of the body. For Karen,
that meant bouts of temporary blindness.
Then, less than a year after her last major surgery,
she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.
But by 2020, she'd built her life back up.
She was a financial analyst
and an adjunct professor at Bentley University near Boston.
She owned a four-bedroom colonial house in nearby Mansfield,
which happened to be just 20 minutes away from John.
It seemed meant to be.
It wasn't long until John and Karen reconnected and started dating again.
Karen was impressed by how John had stepped up for his niece and nephew.
She called him the patron saint of Canton and said you'd be hard pressed to find anyone who didn't like him.
And with a pandemic keeping everyone at home, Karen was lucky enough to have him all to herself.
and they spent almost all of their time together.
The world was standing still, but their relationship moved fast.
Soon, Karen was spending most of her time at John's place.
She worked remotely, so she was able to watch the kids
when John had to commute into Boston for work.
She helped Kaylee and Patrick with online school,
made them lunch, and tried to make the house feel like a home.
She thought she was doing what John wanted,
and maybe in a way she was,
But at the same time, John felt like Karen was getting to do all the fun parenting stuff.
The outings, the treats, the laughter.
Meanwhile, by the time he got home, all there was left to do was be the disciplinarian.
He worried that his niece and nephew were starting to prefer Karen over him,
and supposedly he began to resent her for it.
Karen didn't see a problem.
She thought kids simply picked up on energy.
She was warm and playful, well, John was serious, exhausted, and still carrying a lot of unprocessed grief.
She'd urged him to try therapy.
She said he went to one session, but refused to do any more.
She described him as having a, quote, Irish Catholic south of Boston, rubbed some dirt on it, drink through your problem's mindset.
That mentality might have worked for a while, but now it was causing issues for broken.
both of them. Instead of facing their problems head on, John and Karen started drinking more,
especially on the weekends. It took the edge off until the next morning, when they were hung over,
and the resentment was still there. Before long, their relationship began to fracture. During a New Year's
trip to Aruba at the start of 2022, 41-year-old Karen claimed she caught 46-year-old John
kissing another woman. A few weeks later, maybe in retaliation, Karen started flirting over
text with one of John's work contacts. He was an alcohol, tobacco, firearms, and explosives
agent named Brian Higgins. She knew Higgins was interested in her, and the attention
felt good. It filled a space John no longer did. After two years together, John and Karen's
relationship was unraveling.
Toward the end of January, 2022, John's niece overheard them fighting.
She remembered John saying their relationship wasn't healthy and that it had run its course.
Unfortunately, John would never get the chance to finish what he started, and what came
next would shock Canton and the world.
And right now I want to bring Katie in to talk a little bit about where we're at with the case just as we start to unpack it.
Do you think their relationship was reported accurately by the media or was it sensationalized some?
I think it was pretty accurate.
I covered this trial day by day.
And in the trial, they went through almost every single text message between the two on the day before the murder.
I'm not a psychologist or therapist.
But from my knowledge on relationship attachments, I think that Karen was an anxious, maybe anxious avoidant attachment, and John was very much an avoidant.
So those are just definitely not two people who are good to be together. And I think John was struggling from transitioning in a role from a fun uncle to an actual father who had to discipline these kids.
and he was kind of jealous that Karen was the one who was able to step into this role of
the fun person and through the text that day you can see them going back and forth and Karen
just wants to solve it she wants to talk about what's going on John's just like please stop
reaching out to me I don't want to talk about it stop calling me when an anxious person keeps pushing
because they can feel that avoidant running away they keep wanting to solve it and that just
pushes the person further and further away.
If you're familiar with this case, they went to Aruba.
Karen believed that John cheated on her.
That created a lot of tension in the relationship.
And I think Karen kind of had one foot out with her text with Brian Higgins,
probably trying to make John a little jealous.
But I think in general, it was not a healthy relationship.
I definitely think it was on a way out.
So, yeah, so you think they were, it wasn't just sort of like,
oh, this is their MO, this is how they are, but they'll be fine.
And this did seem like it was Crestner peeking toward like a new phase of something.
You need a new balance.
Yeah.
But I definitely don't think it was a, if I can't have you, no one else can situation.
I think it was kind of, you know, from her text with Higgins, I think it was her just being like, you know, I don't know if this is the right thing.
I'm going to test the waters.
So she almost seemed like almost out of it, but she still loved him and still wanted it.
But that's why I say almost like anxious avoidant.
Like you're trying to fix it, trying to fix it.
And at a certain point, you're like, totally. So it sounds like in a way, like they both might have been aware that it could be soon to end and both just in that place of like, oh, figuring out how that would be and what it would look like. Because it seemed like, obviously, they loved each other and they both seem to love the kids. So even though there's this acrimony, it seemed like a very, I don't want to say normal because not everybody goes through that. But like, as far as breakups go, you're like, yeah, this is what happens. This is not the world's craziest thing that these people are coming to realize they're not a good match.
Yeah, I think it's normal relationship problems, especially in these kind of dynamics.
But I don't think it was anything like the crazy girlfriend who wants to kill her boyfriend because he's leaving her kind of scenario.
Yeah, that's what it seems like to me too.
All right, coming up, we're going to get back into the story and look at the night that John and Karen went out.
By January 22, 46-year-old John O'Keefe and his girlfriend, 41-year-old Karen,
Karen Reed had been dating for about two years.
Their relationship had its ups and downs, but from the outside, it looked like they were still
trying to make things work.
On Friday, January 28th, the couple went out for a night on the town.
Just after 7.30 p.m., John showed up at a canton bar called C.F. McCarthy's.
A little over an hour later, Karen joined him.
Over the next hour and a half, the bartender served Karen six drinks plus an extra shot.
Until finally around 10.40 p.m., the couple got in Karen's car together and headed to a second location,
a popular sports bar called the Waterfall Bar and Grill.
When John and Karen arrived at about 11 p.m., they spotted some familiar faces across the room.
a table full of local law enforcement and friends.
At the center of the table was Boston police officer Brian Albert.
John admired Albert.
The man was a 30-year veteran, a former Marine, and a respected name in the department.
His brother, Chris Albert, who was also at the table, was a local politician and John's neighbor.
Their wives were there, too, along with Brian's sister-in-law, Jennifer McKay.
Cabe and her husband.
A few more friends rounded out the group,
including one person who complicated things,
ATF agent Brian Higgins.
The man Karen had been flirting with over text.
It's unclear whether John knew about those texts.
But by all accounts,
the night at the waterfall grill was relaxed and friendly.
John and Karen were affectionate.
They were laughing, touching, and cuddling up with each other.
John drank beer while Karen stuck to vodka sodas.
She'd down two more drinks in addition to the seven she'd had at CF McCarthy's.
The last call came around midnight, but instead of going their separate ways,
Brian Albert invited the group to keep the party going at his place.
John was in.
Karen, tired and drunk, wasn't as enthusiastic, but she agreed to give John a ride.
So, around 12.10 a.m., John grabbed a half-full cocktail and followed Karen out the door.
Outside, snow was falling. A nor-easter was moving in, the kind of storm that makes even a short drive
dangerous. Karen slid behind the wheel of her black Lexus SUV as John climbed into the passenger
seat. At that point, her blood alcohol content was somewhere between.
point one three percent and point two nine percent well above the legal limit but she drove
anyway they made it to Brian Albert's house at 34 Fairview Road around 12 24
a.m. Karen wondered whether they were at the right address and there weren't
many cars outside and something felt off she couldn't even tell if anyone was
home let alone if they were actually invited in. Jennifer McCabe had
been the one to send John the address, but this was her brother-in-law, Brian Albert's house.
Maybe he didn't want them there.
And this is where the stories of what happened that night began to diverge.
According to Jennifer McCabe, who was already inside the house, she saw Karen's black
SUV parked on the street.
So Jennifer texted John, telling him to pull into the driveway behind her car.
When he didn't respond, she sent more messages, but there was no reply.
Finally, the black SUV drove away.
Jennifer said neither John nor Karen ever came inside the house.
But according to Karen, John did go inside.
He told her he was going to see if they really were invited.
She said she waited in the car for about ten minutes, but John never came back out and never called or texted her.
Frustrated, Karen decided to leave.
She drove back to John's house, where his niece, Kaylee, was home alone.
His nephew was at a sleepover.
At this point, Karen was still upset.
It seemed to her like John had ditched her.
She left him an angry, expletive-filled voicemail saying she hated him.
Then she called again.
And again.
She left more voicemails, accusing him of sleeping with another woman,
In total, she called him 53 times that night without getting an answer.
Until finally, Karen was too exhausted to call again, and she passed out.
A few hours later, around 4.30 or 5 a.m., Karen woke up and realized John still wasn't home.
Outside, the blizzard continued to rage.
At the sight of the snow-filled streets, Karen's anger turned to panic.
She worried that something bad had happened to John.
John. Karen called Jennifer McCabe, who was back at her own house at that point. Karen asked if she'd
seen John. Jennifer said no. The last time she spotted him was at the waterfall bar. And
Jennifer later said that Karen sounded disoriented, maybe even still drunk. She kept rambling
about leaving John at the bar until Jennifer reminded her that she and John had gone to Brian
Albert's house after midnight. Jennifer had seen Karen.
Karen's car parked outside.
That's when Karen asked Jennifer to help search for John.
Jennifer agreed and told Karen to meet at her house.
Karen grabbed her keys and hopped into her car, backing her Lexus out of the driveway.
In the process, she clipped John's car.
She didn't stop to check the damage, but later said she had hit her taillight.
Karen made it to Jennifer's where she and another one of John's friends
a woman named Carrie Roberts were waiting.
Carrie followed in her own vehicle while Jennifer drove Karen's car.
Karen was clearly distraught, shouting that John was missing, and she didn't know where he was.
According to Jennifer, at one point, Karen said something really strange.
She wondered aloud if she might have accidentally backed into John with her car.
It was an odd thing to say, and Jennifer couldn't.
shake the feeling that it had a ring of truth to it. But she didn't dwell on it. They had one
task at this point to find John. When the women pulled up to the Albert's house, a blanket of
white covered everything. About six inches of snow had fallen overnight, but one spot stood out. The snow
had collected in a mound near a flagpole on the lawn. Karen screamed that John was under it,
Before Jennifer and Carrie could question her, Karen launched herself out of the car and ran straight toward the snowbank.
She dropped to her knees, frantically clearing the snow to reveal John, buried underneath it.
As she uncovered her boyfriend, she lifted both their shirts and lay across him,
trying to use her body heat to warm him up against the freezing air.
He wasn't moving or breathing.
but she desperately gave him mouth-to-mouth CPR to try to resuscitate him.
Carrie joined, taking over chest compressions.
Meanwhile, Jennifer called 911.
It was now 604 a.m.
Police and EMTs arrived within minutes.
John was unresponsive.
His face bruised and swollen with blood visible around his nose and mouth.
One sneaker and his baseball cap.
were missing. Despite all the commotion, no one inside the Albert home had come outside.
Brian Albert and his wife would later claim they'd been asleep and hadn't heard a thing.
It was strange, but that wasn't the only alarming detail.
As first responders and law enforcement gathered around John, several witnesses recalled Karen
saying she'd hit John, but it wasn't clear if she was just panicking or if they
This was an admission of guilt.
Still, no one dwelt on it at the moment.
They needed to get John to the hospital stat.
While doctors tried to save John, Karen was spiraling.
It was so bad she was given a psychiatric evaluation,
but the doctor wasn't too concerned,
and a short while later, Karen's father, Bill, arrived at the hospital.
Before seeing Karen, he stopped to get an update from the nurses.
When you heard the latest, he steeled himself and went to find Karen.
In the hospital room, Karen was going on and on about needing to see John.
Bill took his daughter by the shoulders and steadied her.
Then he told her what the nurses had just told him.
46-year-old John O'Keefe was gone.
Doctors had pronounced him dead at 7.50 a.m.
Now, there was only one question.
on everyone's mind.
How did John end up
under that pile of snow
and who put him there?
Okay, I want to turn again to Katie
to see what she thinks of where we're at.
So they've gone out.
John is in the snow.
It's sort of like traveling back in time
before any of the widespread theorization takes over
that's going to come in the following days
and weeks and on.
Just looking at the facts that are there,
what seems to be the most plausible scenario?
So from the beginning, I'm a very common sense person, but I'm open to alternative theories. And when I saw the injuries on John's body, I was just thinking to myself, there's no way that someone is hit by a 4,000 pound SUV and doesn't have a single bruise, a single torn ligament, a single broken bone below the neck. It just didn't make sense to me.
And then you start hearing about the behavior of the people inside of the house.
Every time I think about this case, I think back to a documentary.
I watch on one-punch deaths.
And the injuries to John are in such alignment with those stories.
And these stories are basically about guys who got in stupid bar fights.
They hit a guy, he fell wrong, cracked his head, bled, died.
now they're in prison. So I think John went in the house. There's a bunch of theories surrounding
what happened, why this happened. My belief is that someone, for some reason, hit him.
They got into a confrontation and someone punched him. He fell wrong. I don't think they meant
to kill him. I think he fell wrong. I think he hit his head. And this is a house of cops who know
that regardless of your intention, if you hit someone and they die, you're going to.
to jail. So I think they're like, we don't want to risk any of us or any of our loved ones going
to jail. And so I think they covered it up from there. Right. It does seem like if he were hit
by a truck and knocked 20 feet and then had face injuries that somehow were from, yeah, it seems
like impossible that his body wouldn't be bruised or broken because you're like, well, how could it
just hit him in the face and scratch his arm? Yeah, that's what I thought as well. Yeah, and the
investigators at their original scene, said that it looked like he got in a fight at first.
Don't quote me exactly, but I believe Paul O'Keefe, which is John's brother, said it looked like
he went 12 rounds with Tyson.
That's right.
I think that is, I don't know if the quotes exact, but I remember that.
It's around there.
Around there.
And think of some other clues as well.
Now, do you know, were there any tire tracks, like, leading on the yard?
Nothing.
So, to me, none of the evidence points to a car.
They're saying she backed up 84 feet at 24 miles per hour in a snowstorm, and you're telling me she didn't spin out.
She just hit him perfectly and then drove off.
She didn't go on the curb, didn't go onto the grass, and then he flew 20 feet onto the yard.
It just doesn't seem bad.
Yeah, yeah.
And knowing as well, yeah, under the influence, even harder to, like, control the car.
All right, well, coming up, we're going to look at what happens as far as fallout goes as Karen learns her fate.
and they start to investigate this case.
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Early in the morning on January 29th, 2022, 46-year-old John O'Keefe was found under a pile of snow outside his friend Brian Albert's house.
Less than two hours later, he was pronounced dead.
His girlfriend, 41-year-old Karen Reid, was distraught.
After learning his fate, she begged her father to take her home.
not to her house in Mansfield, Massachusetts, but to John's place in Canton.
She wanted to be with his niece and nephew.
But as soon as Karen walked through the door, any hopes of a warm reunion quickly vanished.
John's parents and brother stood in the living room, grief-stricken, and suspicious.
When Karen asked how John had looked in the morgue, his brother said he looked like he'd gone.
on five rounds with Mike Tyson.
John's mother added quietly that it looked like he got hit by a car.
Karen felt the accusation hanging in the air.
It had only been a few hours,
but the news of what she'd said at the crime scene had obviously spread,
and it was clear that John's family thought she'd hit him.
Karen knew she couldn't change their minds,
and she definitely couldn't stay in the house,
So she went upstairs, packed her things, then hugged Patrick and Kaylee before leaving.
Little did Karen know it would be the last time she set foot in that house, and the last time she ever gave the kids a hug.
While Karen was processing everything, the investigation into John's death was underway at Brian Albert's home.
He wasn't just John's friend. He was a fellow Boston police officer.
And though the Canton PD was taking the lead, they knew the Albert family well.
Canton Police Sergeant Michael Lank had grown up with them.
The lead investigator, state trooper Michael Proctor, was a friend of the family too.
Technically, both men should have recused themselves from the case, but they didn't.
Maybe because it would have been difficult to find anyone on the Canton force without ties to the family.
another one of Brian Albert's brothers was also a Canton police officer.
Because of that, the investigators probably treated the witnesses in the case differently.
For example, instead of knocking on the Albert's door themselves, officers sent Jennifer
McCabe inside to wake up her sister and brother-in-law.
Not only was Jennifer the last person to have texted John, but she was also there with Karen
when they found John's body.
She was involved in all aspects of the case,
and yet Canton Police gave her the chance to speak to the other witnesses without them present.
Then, when they all came outside, officers spoke to the Alberts and Jennifer for about 10 minutes
without recording the conversation.
They didn't separate them.
They didn't take notes.
And afterward, they decided there was no reason to believe John had ever been.
been inside the house.
From the start, there was plenty of room for bias in the case.
John's body had been found in the yard of a fellow police officer, and the investigators
were colleagues, even friends of the homeowner.
Whether they realized it or not, they were inclined to believe Brian Albert's version of
events.
But bias wasn't the only problem.
There were also serious missteps in how the crime scene was processed and analyzed.
To start, evidence was collected in red solo cups.
A lieutenant used a leaf blower to search for clues in the snow,
and despite the body being found in their front yard,
the inside of the Albert's house was never searched,
not just that day, but throughout the entire investigation.
Instead, Canton investigators focused on one person and one person only, Karen Reed.
Later that same morning of January 29th, authorities measured Karen's blood alcohol level.
They found that it was still over the legal limits more than eight hours after she'd left the bar.
From that, a toxicologist estimated that at the time she supposedly hit John with her car,
her blood alcohol content could have been between 0.13 and 0.29%.
That became the backbone of the state's theory.
That Karen had been so drunk and angry that she'd hit John with her car and driven away,
leaving him in the snow to die.
And whether it was murder or manslaughter, that was still up for debate.
Either way, the state was clear.
Karen Reed killed John O'Keefe.
But this theory had holes, including the fact that no car parts were found in the yard that morning.
No witnesses saw Karen hit John, and none of the guests reported seeing John lying outside when they left the Albert's home.
And then there was a snowplow driver who came forward after hearing about the case.
He said he had passed the house at 2.45 a.m. with bright,
lights and a high vantage point from his truck, but he didn't see a body either.
When he circled back 30 minutes later, around 3.15 a.m., a Ford Edge, the kind of car
Brian Albert drove, was parked out front on the street. Cars weren't supposed to be parked there,
but the driver didn't say anything because he knew the Alberts and he didn't want to get them
in trouble. But now, the Alberts were looking a little suspicious.
suspicious. And while Kent and authorities had a theory that revolved around Karen Reed,
they had no evidence to back it up, at least not yet. Less than 12 hours after John's body was
recovered, Massachusetts State Trooper Michael Proctor and his team arrived at Karen's parents' home
where she was staying. According to their reports, they saw her black Lexus SUV parked
outside and it had a shattered taillight. They seized the SUV as evidence along with her phone.
When Proctor later filed his report, he wrote that he picked up Karen's car at 5.30 p.m.
But that wasn't true. According to Karen, he actually seized it at 4.12. Her family, along with a
local police officer who witnessed the seizure of the SUV backed up her claims. Then that evening,
just after 5.30 p.m., a state emergency response team went to Brian Albert's house to search
the yard again. They had been called in by Proctor himself. And what do you know? They found three
pieces of taillights scattered on the lawn. To Karen, it looked like a setup. She said her
taillight had only been cracked when authorities took her car and that the damage had occurred when she
backed out of the garage that morning to search for John. She had security footage from John's
house to prove it. She believed Proctor smashed her taillight once he took it into custody,
then planted the evidence back at the scene of the crime. After that, he fudged the times on his
report to align with his version of events. Whether the conspiracy was true or not,
there was no doubt that Proctor had it out for Karen.
That night, he texted some of his friends about the case.
He called Karen a, quote, whack job, critiqued her figure in the way she spoke,
described her with expletives, and said there was, quote, zero chance she skates.
He even sent a text that read, quote, hopefully she kills herself.
Meanwhile, Karen stayed hold up at her.
her parents' house, numb and sleep deprived.
Her father urged her to call a lawyer just in case.
And then, after three days, she finally went back to her own home, trying to reclaim some
normalcy.
But when she looked out her window that night, she saw nearly a dozen police officers
gathering outside.
And at 7.40 p.m. on February 1, three days after John's death, 41-year-old Karen,
was arrested.
Karen spent the night in jail before being transferred to a holding cell at the courthouse the
next morning.
By then, the story had already blown up in the newspapers.
A beautiful, blonde finance professional accused of killing her cop boyfriend.
It was exactly the type of story that got endless clicks.
Eager reporters lined up outside to snap a photo as she was escorted into the building in
handcuffs.
Before her arraignment, Karen met with her lawyer, a Boston defense attorney named David Yenetti.
Together, they reviewed the charging documents.
The medical examiner noted John had sustained several injuries.
Bloody abrasions on his arm.
Two black eyes, cuts on his face and head, and multiple skull fractures.
They concluded that John had died from a combination of blunt,
forced trauma and hypothermia, and per the charges, Karen was responsible.
When the bailiff brought Karen into the courtroom, she was met with John's family and dozens
of his fellow officers. Even the Boston Police Department's superintendent was there to see
justice served. The judge read the charges, manslaughter, motor vehicle homicide, and leaving
the scene of a collision causing death.
The prosecution's argument was straightforward.
They said Karen had been drunk and had either accidentally or intentionally backed over John with her car,
left him for dead, then admitted it the next morning when she said she'd hit him.
Karen disagreed with that characterization.
She pleaded not guilty to all charges and was released on $50,000 bail.
On his drive home from the hearing, Yenetti called a attention.
tipster who'd phoned his office earlier. The man had a gravely voice and claimed to have a
background in Boston law enforcement, and he had a shocking revelation that could prove
Karen's innocence. The man told Yenetti that on the night of John's death, Brian Albert and his
nephew, Colin Albert, had gotten into a fight with John inside the Albert home. John was badly beaten,
They'd broken his nose and knocked him out.
When he never came to, Brian Albert and a federal agent dumped his body outside.
Yenetti didn't know whether to believe him, but the tip included something only an insider would know.
The fact that Colin had been at the house that night, he had never been listed in any of the police reports.
Later, when Yenetti called the tipster back to ask follow-up questions,
the man backtracked and said he'd only been speculating based on photos of John in the news.
But the photos of John's injuries hadn't been released when the tipster first called.
So, Yenetti had to wonder, why would the tipster recant his information?
Had someone scared him off?
Armed with this new information, Yenetti began to form an alternative
theory. He believed that John had gotten into a fight inside the Albert's home and was
fatally beaten. Or maybe he was even attacked by the Albert's German Shepherd who had a
history of aggressive behavior. Then someone at the party dumped him outside in the snow.
Maybe Karen had been right all along and she really was being set up. Maybe the Canton police were
closing ranks to protect one of their own.
If that was true, then the story that painted Karen as the villain wasn't just wrong.
It was a cover-up, and the people who were actually responsible were the ones wearing badges.
Okay, before we end this episode, how did this tip change for the defense and for the groundswell of support Karen will soon receive?
I think this tip changed everything for the defense.
it changed their entire strategy, that someone called them and told them that something else
really happened in the house that night, that the homeowners were responsible for his death
and that she's being framed. So I think, you know, they're probably originally thinking they're
going into this that she was drunk and she accidentally hit him and didn't need to do it.
And then it completely switched to this whole conspiracy theory. Again, I think people love a good
conspiracy theory. But then also looking at all the evidence in this case, people start to
be like, yeah, I 100% believe that this woman was set up. And so they just went from there.
I know. I mean, when hearing about the tip, and then, you know, when the tipster kind of recants,
but then her attorney's like, oh, wait a minute. The information you gave wasn't public yet.
So even though you recanted, the very fact that you mentioned, I think Colin being in the house,
no one would just make that. These particular details.
tales that are just like, oh, it doesn't even matter if necessarily if you find out that's
exactly true, you can just tell something's being hidden.
And how, you know, as far as Proctor's very inappropriate message, how did that shape our
understanding the investigation and did they take it seriously enough at the time?
No.
Absolutely not.
There's so much about Proctor's text messages, and they didn't actually even come out
until the FBI got involved in this case.
But a lot of people who think Karen might be guilty
or at least question the conspiracy theory
that all these cops covered it up.
And a lot of people are saying,
you know, how could so many people be involved in a cover-up?
Everyone in the house besides two people,
no, three people were related, their family.
Of course family is going to cover for family,
especially these cops who, you know,
already have a sense that they're going to be able to get away with this
because of their connections.
But just the stuff they do, the people inside the house do,
is everything they do is so sketchy.
So I'm excited to get into all of that.
Yeah, it will dog it.
And it is, yeah, it'll make the hairs in the back of your neck stand up
when you realize kind of how grossly obvious, it seems like, the cover-up was.
Well, thank you so much for joining us, Katie.
Really appreciate having you here.
And we will also have Katie for the next episode
when we take a look at the rest of the investigation
and the trials that follow.
Looking forward to it.
Thanks so much for listening.
I'm Carter Roy, and this is Murder True Crime Stories.
Come back next time for Part 2 on the Murder of John O'Keefe
and all the people affected.
Thanks again to Katie Ring for joining us,
and she will be joining us once again for the next episode.
Murder True Crime Stories is a Crime House original,
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Murder True Crime Stories is hosted by me, Carter Roy, and is a crime house original powered by Pave Studios.
This episode was brought to life by the Murder True Crime Stories team.
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