SERIALously - 289: Kared Read: Verdict Watch, Closing Arguments & Powerful Final Week
Episode Date: June 13, 2025We’re officially on verdict watch. The Karen Read trial wrapped with explosive closing arguments, emotional moments in the courtroom, and a final week that could change everything. Let’s break dow...n the most powerful moments and what happens next. We're going on tour - AGAIN!! Tickets go on sale TODAY at 9am PST! Grab yours at www.annieelise.com 🔎Join Our True Crime Club & Get Exclusive Content & Perks 🔎 Join The Club: https://www.patreon.com/annieelise 🎧 Need More to Binge? Listen to EXTRA deep dive episodes every week on Apple! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/serialously-with-annie-elise/id1519456164 Follow Annie on Socials 📸 🩷Instagram: @ _annieelise 💜TikTok: @_annieelise 🗞️ Substack: @annieelise 💙Facebook: @10tolife Shop Annie’s Closet & Must-Haves! 👗 Poshmark: https://posh.mk/Tdbki6Ae0Rb ShopMY: https://shopmy.us/annieelise Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/shop/10tolife?ref_=cm_sw_r_apin_aipsfshop_BKN1ZMCMEZHACVFQ2R75&language=en_US Disclaimer ‣ Some links may be affiliate links, they do not cost you anything, but I make a small percentage from the sale. Thank you so much for watching and supporting me. 🎙️ Follow the podcast for FREE on all podcast platforms! Apple:https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/serialously-with-annie-elise/id1519456164 Spotify:https://open.spotify.com/show/6HdheEH8WeMTHoe5da34qU All Other Platforms: https://audioboom.com/channels/5100770-serialously-with-annie-elise Get Involved or Recommend the Case 💬 About Annie: https://annieelise.com/ For Business Inquiries: 10toLife@WMEAgency.com . *Sources used to collect this information include various public news sites, interviews, court documents, FB groups dedicated to the case, and various news channel segments. When quoting statements made by others, they are strictly alleged until confirmed otherwise. Please remember my videos are my independent opinion and to always do your own research.
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Karen Reed accused of the January 2022 death of her boyfriend, Boston police officer John O'Keefe,
has consistently asserted her innocence,
alleging a concerted effort by law enforcement to frame her.
Charged with hitting her boyfriend,
Boston police officer John O'Keefe,
with her SUV early Saturday morning
and leaving him in a snowbank.
The closely watched murder trial has ended in a mistrial.
The prosecution is indicating that it will retry this case
and the question becomes one of how will they do it?
Hey, true crime besties.
Welcome back to an all new episode of Serialistly.
Hello, hello, hello, and welcome back to an all new episode of Serialistly with me, Annie Elise, and we are in our Karen Reed recap era right now, but actually it's the end of
an era because this more than likely is the last recap.
The next episode you hear where I'm talking about Karen Reed will be the verdict.
And let me just say, this trial, it went on as expected. They had forecasted eight weeks.
Well, technically, I guess it may spill into nine, possibly. But it went on the full time,
which kind of surprised me because it seemed like when we were at that halfway point that
it might end up being under eight weeks. But this week was like a full banger of an ending
because the defense continued to bring their witnesses. These witnesses really held their own
and in my opinion illustrated a lot of proof and a very compelling argument that John O'Keefe was
never hit by a vehicle. And what was really interesting this week too, I feel like there
were so many iconic moments, but Hank Brennan on his own cross-examination was kind of
put into his place by some of these experts, where he tried to challenge
them or make them look stupid by asking, you know, well isn't there something
called this? Like a medical term. And I mean like, I think you actually mean this.
Like it was just, again, iconic. And there was one part
midweek where they ended up calling for, the defense ended up calling for a
mistrial with prejudice, meaning if it's with prejudice they would never be, they
wouldn't be able to file charges again. And they did that because during one of
the cross examinations with Arka, Brennan held up John O'Keefe's shirt and said, he
asked the guy like, hey look, see all these holes in the back of his shirt?
Did you take any of this into consideration when you were doing your analysis?
All this come to find out, or not even come to find out,
everybody who was watching it knew it at the time, except apparently Hank Brennan.
But those holes were not caused from the incident, or alleged incident, those holes were cut
after the fact.
So then the defense goes for a mistrial with prejudice, which then Brennan comes in and
had to throw his tail between his legs, make this very uncomfy apology where he basically
admits to Bev, the jury was out of the courtroom at this point, like, I made a mistake, this
is really what it is, and to everybody's, I don't even want of the courtroom at this point, like, I made a mistake. This is really what it is.
And to everybody's, I don't even want to say everybody's disbelief.
I think everybody could see it coming from a mile away, but Bev did not grant the mistrial.
But it was a huge epic failure on the Commonwealth.
And there's just kind of been a few of those, right?
And the guilty poll that we have up, the public one, it went down this week.
It went down back to 2%.
So it'll be interesting to see what the jury's been thinking about all of this and what verdict
they're going to come to.
So Thursday we had the charge conference, which is basically where they go over all
the jury instructions, they make any last minute motions or asks of the court of what
to include in those jury instructions, what not to include, and then closing arguments was on Friday.
And I gotta say, nobody does a closer like Alan Jackson. It was strong, it hit hard, and we're gonna see.
They basically talk about, many times too, and they've done this throughout the trial, how the Commonwealth's own medical examiner could not rule that John was hit by a vehicle.
Some of the experts even saying
he was not hit by a vehicle.
It couldn't have happened,
especially the defense experts saying that,
saying his injuries are just not consistent with a collision.
And that really needs to be the very first question
that is asked in the deliberation room.
Before we vote on, you know,
is Karen guilty, not guilty,
let's vote on this.
Was John O'Keefe hit by a car?
And if anybody votes no, case closed right there,
you can't convict her because that is what
the entire case is built upon.
That is the foundation.
And I don't believe that the Commonwealth
proved their argument in this.
I don't.
I know I've been mentioning how I think it leans way more in the reasonable doubt category. I think also after this week, it was
such a compelling week, I still am sitting now, I'm leaning more towards just not guilty, that
there's something else here. And we've been talking about that for weeks too, right? That
it seems like it would be such a common, easy explanation. She was wasted. She hit John.
He flew back, hit his head, was incapacitated, and then died in the snow. But then you layer in all of the other
shady shit. The butt dials. The deleted search histories. The rehoming of the dog. The redoing
of the basement. The lying about being in the sally port. The this, the that. And it's like,
you know, how do you explain all of that? Unless you are the worst
investigators on the face of the planet, which, spoiler alert, you probably are, but it's like,
how do you explain all of that away? I will be shocked if Karen Reed is found guilty. I think
they do have a lot of grounds for appeal, and I'm sure they will file appeals if she is, but
I would be shocked if she's found guilty. So we're gonna be on Verdict Watch. I will let you know as soon
as we have a verdict and interested to know what you think. But anyway, as I said,
this was probably one of the most iconic weeks in the trial so far, so I'm gonna
have Elena jump in. She's gonna break down everything that went down this week
for you, all the way through closings, and then we will be on Verdict Watch together.
And just as an FYI guys, I know Alaina is very, very smart
and you can hear that in her voice, but she's a scientist.
She went to MIT, so she is like incredibly thorough and smart.
So anyways, I just love when she breaks it all down,
but I'll shut up now, Alaina, take it away.
Hey, Yanny.
Well, both sides have rested
and it's all up to the jury now.
Let's break down the testimony that they heard this week since this will be the freshest
in their mind as they go to deliberate.
We kicked off the week on Monday the 9th.
Now this was a full day but I gotta say, there was a lot of sidebars, a lot of wadiers, a
lot of breaks, and not a lot of new testimony.
First thing, we finish up Dr. Daniel Wolff's testimony.
On redirect and then recross and re-redirect and then re-recross, they covered a lot of
the same things that we already talked about last week, specifically about the different
weights that were used in different tests.
Know ultimately, neither the prosecution expert Welcher nor the defense expert Wolff know
the actual weight of John's arm.
And they both used a medium weight crash dummy, so it's kind of a wash in the end.
But hey, at least Wolf actually tested different speeds and different arm positions and different collision types.
That reason alone is enough for me to give my vote to Wolf over Welcher.
Then, get this. We heard another motion for the defense for a mistrial with prejudice.
This is their third time asking for a mistrial in as many weeks.
Do any of you guys have a weekly chores list like me?
Mine's like scrub the bathroom, take out the trash, hear the defense motion for a mistrial
with prejudice, listen to Kanoni deny it, and that's exactly what happened.
In all jokes aside, this one was actually a bit different and a bit more dramatic.
And it had to do with Brennan holding up John's hoodie to the jury and then asking Dr. Wolf
if the holes on the back of it could have been caused by him falling backward and hitting
the road.
Now the issue here is that those holes were actually cut by the prosecution's own forensic
scientist, Maureen Hartnett.
They clearly had nothing to do with how John died, so it was really out of line for Brennan
to bring it up and act like they could be.
And shockingly, Brennan actually admitted to this mistake.
He got up to the podium and characterized it as an honest mistake and said he simply
didn't realize that Hartnett cut the hoodie.
But the defense?
They saw it very differently.
Alessi for the defense said, quote,
What could be more egregious?
What could be more misleading?
The prosecution picked the most opportune, sensitive time to pull this stunt.
This is intentional, this is irremeable, and this is on the key issue of this case, whether
there was any
collision at all.
Even after that, unsurprisingly, Judge Kenoni denied the mistrial and instead gave the jury
instructions that the cuts were made by Hartnett.
What was really bad though is that she totally snapped at the defense while they were trying
to figure out what to say to the jury.
Jackson and Alessi were talking amongst themselves about this jury instruction and it must have been at the same time that Kanoni was trying to speak because she did
that thing that you might hear from your middle school teacher, you know, where the teacher is
like, well, if you're not going to listen, I guess I just won't talk. That kind of thing. She totally
did that. And honestly, I found it pretty rude, especially during this really important moment for the defense. After that whole thing, we did hear briefly
from private investigator John Tiedemann. He made measurements at 34 Fairview and he
testified that the distance from the mailbox to the main door is 66 feet, the distance
from the mailbox to the side door is 70 feet, and the distance from the mailbox to the side door is 70 feet, and the distance from the mailbox to the
garage door is 78 feet. And those are all less than the 84 feet that we know John took leading
up to his phone locking for the last time. But he did admit that the distance from the flagpole
through the street and then back up the driveway would be more than 84 feet. He also testified that the garage at 34 Fairview
had concrete flooring and steps with a ridge, and the defense is implying that that's
where John could have hit his head, but the judge told the jury to strike that part of
the testimony, which basically means they can't consider it.
And then on Monday and into Tuesday, we heard testimony from Dr. Elizabeth Lappasada, who
is a forensic pathologist and a medical examiner.
Before that, though, Judge Canone ruled that a bunch of her testimony had to be excluded,
especially the parts about dog bites and car crashes.
And I thought this was disappointing because Dr. Lappasada seemed very qualified to me.
She's a professor of pathology at Brown University, and she was previously the
chief medical examiner for the entire state of Rhode Island. She's done over 3,000 autopsies,
and of those she said hundreds were on car crash victims, and at least 50 were on dog
bite victims. But Kanoni still didn't find her to be qualified.
Now after some back and forth with the lawyers, Kanoni did agree to at least
let Dr. Lappasada testify about animal bites, but not about dog bites specifically. And
after all that mess with the lawyers, Dr. Lappasada was still able to give some really
powerful testimony for the defense. She said quote, Mr. O'Keefe went backwards onto something
that had a little ridge. It had some sort of irregularity to cause the different scrapes.
And when she was asked if the injuries were consistent with John hitting flat ground,
she said, quote, It has to be a surface that has some ridges in it
to make those little vertical patterns, end quote, which directly disagrees with what we
heard from the prosecution expert, Dr. Isaac Wolf. Lappasada also said that she looked at pictures of the
lawn at 34 Fairview and she didn't see anything that would cause the type of skull injury that
John had. And also that cut to John's right eye? She said it was consistent with being punched with
a closed fist. She added that all of the injuries to his torso area, like those rib fractures and
the bleeding to his stomach lining, were caused by
medical chest compression, not by being hit by a vehicle.
Now Cross definitely got a little interesting.
Dr. Lappasada was the first defense witness to really go toe to toe with Brennan, to give
him a little bit of sass.
And it started right off the bat when Brennan got to the podium a couple of minutes before
noon and said, good afternoon, doctor, and she replied, uh, it's not afternoon for six more minutes. That really set the tone
for the cross. And I didn't realize this before, but apparently Brennan and La Posada have some
sort of history. Not romantic history, obviously, but legal history. When Brennan was a defense
lawyer, he himself hired Dr. Laappasada at least a couple of different
times. But this week he said, quote, I don't use her anymore. I'm not going to disclose why I don't
use her anymore, but I don't use her anymore. Weird verbiage, by the way, Brennan. But the point
is these two have some bad blood and it definitely showed. Now as for the substance of Cross,
there wasn't all that much because these two could not agree on anything.
They argued about how quickly John's brain would have started swelling after the impact.
They argued about when blood would have pooled under his eyes.
They argued about the specifics of hypothermia.
They argued about whether or not this counts as a classic wound.
They even argued about how similar the brain is to tofu. Brennan also tried to
call her credentials into question by bringing up her work at the station nightclub fire
in Rhode Island. She admitted that she received quote, a flurry of negative press for showing
up late to the scene, but she said it was without basis and she came as soon as she
was called. Now in another line of questioning, Dr. Lappasada did admit that a wound on a dead person wouldn't spurt blood,
which calls into question if John was actually passed away when Karen found him.
Because remember, she said she pulled out a piece of glass from his nose and blood gushed out. And finally, after the prosecution went through
all of that effort to get Dr. Lappasada's testimony regarding car crashes thrown out,
Brendan asked her about it anyway.
She specifically asked if she knew how fast Karen's car was going at the time of the
incident, and she replied, quote, Well, it didn't hit him, so it doesn't matter. It
was not relevant to my opinion. By looking at the body, I could tell there was no evidence
of impact with a vehicle. So whether a vehicle was going slow or fast was not relevant."
And that was about it for Cross. I was surprised that Brennan didn't really press her on her
most damning opinion, which were that John's injuries could not have been caused by falling
backwards onto a flat surface, and that hypothermia did not contribute to his death. Now I'm
really interested how the jury will weigh the testimony from Dr. Lappasada and
Dr. Russell against that from Dr. Isaac Wolff and Dr. Scordi Bello.
Because in my opinion, all four of them were extremely reliable medical experts with some
solid reasoning to back up their opinion.
Then on Tuesday afternoon and into Wednesday, the defense called their last witness Dr.
Andrew Rentschler, a biomechanist who's
also from the reconstruction firm ARCA.
Now Dr. Rentschler, he was a good witness for the defense, don't get me wrong.
The actual content of what he testified to was really important, but I didn't find
him quite as calm, cool, and collected as the other defense witnesses.
He said some odd things, like he gave a shout
out to his kid for his birthday, which I don't think is appropriate at all for a murder trial.
But anyway, I digress. And getting to his actual testimony,
Rentschler's main conclusion was that John's injuries were not consistent with being hit by
Karen's car. He did searches into literature, he looked at Aperture's
report, and he did his own field testing to come to his conclusion. And he also considered
if either a head-on collision or a side-swip collision could explain John's injuries.
He testified that a head-on collision would have caused much more damage to Karen's
car than was actually found, while a side-swipe collision would have pushed John's body
into a completely different position than it was actually found in.
He said, quote, I've seen no evidence anywhere in this case that would suggest that if you
get a glancing blow that somehow would produce enough force to push you 8 to 10 feet into a yard.
He also pointed out that there are 36 injuries on the outside of John's arm,
but only 9 holes in the
sleeve of his hoodie, which doesn't make sense if he was injured while wearing the hoodie.
He said that the lack of internal injuries to John's arms and legs is also significant. He said,
quote, At these speeds you would likely expect fractures, certainly to the hand and likely to
the ulna and radius in the forearm, if
the hand was struck by the rear of the SUV.
And likewise, all of Rentschler's testing showed serious damage to the dummy's leg,
which John didn't have at all.
Then he explained why the cut on John's nose is also inconsistent with the collision.
He said, quote, the shard can't come out, make a hard right hand turn, and then somehow
embed itself on the left side of the nose.
End quote.
Then Dr. Rentschler also directly called Dr. Welcher's studies out.
He testified that during the blue paint experiments, Welcher physically pushed himself into the
taillight area and leaned into the impact, which is not at all how an actual pedestrian
would act.
He added that the paint test didn't involve any force calculations, it didn't show how John's arm
would have moved after this alleged collision, and it didn't show how the tail light would actually break.
Rentschler said quote,
You have to explain how these things happened. If you don't have details,
if you haven't performed a proper analysis, then you can't come to a conclusion that
something happened.
You can't depend on just your experience."
Now after that we moved on to cross, which was… tiring I guess is the best word I can
think of.
Maybe I just have trial fatigue at this point.
Probably everyone does.
I'm sure the jury does.
And don't get me wrong, again, Dr. Rentschler did do a good job.
There were just
a lot of sidebar, a lot of objections, a lot of questions that weren't very relevant in my opinion,
and all of that made it feel pretty tense and tiring.
Now we kicked things off with the whole debate over a sandwich. Seriously.
Basically Brennan asked Dr. Rentschler if he communicated with the defense after the
first trial and he said that he had a ham sandwich with them.
Now I guess this was to show that ARCA isn't impartial at this point.
You know they're buddy-buddy with the defense.
But hey, Aperture isn't impartial either.
Now after Sandwich Gate, Dr. Rentschler said he was aware of studies that say crash dummies
shouldn't be used to study staph tissue injuries, but he argued that he didn't actually do that in his analysis.
He also admitted that he determined that John didn't have any internal arm injuries just
by looking at x-rays, which can only show fractures and breaks, they don't show things
like muscle tears or nerve injuries.
Although I will say if those injuries had been present in John's arm, I do think the medical examiner Dr. Skorty Bello would have documented them. So I think
it's fair to say that John didn't have any internal injuries to the arm.
Venn and Brunning spent a lot of time pressing Renshler about his opinions on Dr. Welcher
in kind of a bizarre way. He basically kept saying, well, how can you say that Dr. Welcher
didn't do a good job if he wasn't even trying to reenact the collision?
Brennan asked this in like six different ways, and each time Rentschler was like, uh, well,
if your expert wasn't trying to replicate the collision, then what the heck was he doing?
What's the purpose of his studies?
And I agree with Rentschler here.
It's so odd to me that Brennan would try to discredit Rentschler by making his own witness look bad.
Brennan also repeatedly asked if Rentschler knew specific details about the collision, like the angle and the position of John's body, things like that.
And each time Rentschler was like, no, I don't know, because there was no collision.
He really got to drive that point home, even across examination, that he believes there
was no collision at all.
And given that, I'm not surprised that the defense used Rentschler as their last witness.
We know that no collision is the cornerstone of their case, and I think Rentschler made
that point well for them.
And with that, the defense rested their case.
And then, get this, after spending all of that time filing so many motions
to get their rebuttal witnesses in, the prosecution decided not to call any of them, not their
dog bite experts, and not even Dr. Welcher. This really surprised me. I thought for sure
Brennan would be chopping at the bit to get Welcher back up on that stand. He must have
either been so confident in Welcher's original
testimony that he doesn't feel like he needs him again, or on the other end of things he
felt like Welcher already got torn apart by Rentschler so he didn't want to bring him
back and leave a sour taste in the jury's mouth. I don't know which one it is and I'm
not even going to try to get into Brennan's head and guess. But either way, both sides
are done with
testimony, and the last thing that the jury heard a witness say was that there was no collision,
and I think that might really stick with them. Now comparing all of this witness testimony from
this trial to the first trial, a couple of things stick out to me. Both trials were similar in length,
but I felt that both sides put on a stronger case
this time.
And I think the biggest reason for that is that they both focused on experts instead
of eyewitnesses.
There's a whole host of characters who testified last time that we didn't hear from at all
this time.
Obviously the ones that stick out are Michael Proctor, Brian Albert, and Brian Higgins.
But we also didn't hear from Colin Albert, Matt McCabe, Allie McCabe, Nicole Albert,
Kaitlyn Albert.
Most of the gang was missing.
And I think that was strategic on both sides.
Think about it, if you're the defense, you probably don't want to call a bunch of eyewitnesses
who are going to say your client did it.
And if you're the prosecution, you probably don't want to call a bunch of witnesses who are sketchy as hell. It's going to make you look untrustworthy.
Instead, both sides honed in on a couple of key eyewitnesses.
Carrie Roberts and Jen McCabe for the prosecution, and Lucky Loughran and Karina Kalakithis for the
defense. And then they made up the bulk of their cases with expert witnesses and numbers of law
enforcement, which I do think was smart on both sides.
And then on Friday morning, we heard closing arguments for both sides.
Alan Jackson gave what I thought was a really great closing statement for the defense.
And he focused on the same two main prongs that he started with in opening statements.
First, that there was no collision.
If there was a motto for the defense, that would be it. There was no collision. there was no collision. If there was a motto for the defense, that
would be it. There was no collision. There was no collision. There was no collision.
He said it three times, just like that. And he added, they cannot and they will never
be able to prove that John was struck by a vehicle. Jackson pointed out that not a single
medical expert on either side of the case has ever testified that John was hit by a vehicle. Jackson pointed out that not a single medical expert on either side of
the case has ever testified that John was hit by a car. The prosecution's own medical
examiner said she didn't see any evidence of an impact site, and she refused to conclude
that the death was a homicide. And John's arm, that one that was supposedly hit by a
6,000 pound car? No brakes, no fractures, not even a bruise.
How about those tests from Aperture? Jackson says all they prove is that John was tall enough for
his elbow to hit the taillight. He added that every single test done at every single speed
shows damage that's inconsistent with what was found on Karen's car. The internal diffuser and
her taillight was very badly damaged and no expert
on either side could produce a test that showed that level of damage. But John's DNA was on the
tail light, what about that? Well Jackson said remember it was only on the outer smooth part of
the tail light housing where John could have brushed against it doing anything. It was not on
the tail light shards. In fact those shards didn't have DNA or blood or human tissue at all.
And speaking of the tail light shards,
how did they make 36 cuts in John's arm, but only nine cuts in the sweatshirt?
Now Jackson's second main point was that former trooper Michael Proctor ruined the investigation from the start.
Remember eight weeks ago when I said that in his opening statement, Jackson was giving the jurors glasses to view the case with?
Those are the Proctor is biased glasses. And now Jackson is asking the jurors to put those glasses
back on and view all the evidence during deliberations through that lens, through the
lens of whatever the prosecution might have, it can't be trusted
because it was collected by a biased source. A source that's now fired for his conduct
in this case. Jackson said quote,
Their investigation was flawed from the start because their investigator was corrupted from
the start. He reminded us about some of those nasty texts that Proctor sent his friends
and even his boss.
She's a whack-job C-word.
There will be some serious charges brought on the girl.
Zero chance she skates.
No nudes yet.
How about the homeowner?
Is he going to get in trouble for all this?
Proctor says, nope.
Homeowner's a Boston cop too.
Jackson added, quote, He was fired for this blatant bias.
If the Massachusetts State Police can't trust him, how can you trust him with the investigation,
with your verdict, and with Karen Reed's life?
And about that tail light evidence, Jackson reminded us that not a single piece of tail
light evidence was found at the scene until AFTER Proctor had access to Karen's
car. He said, quote, this is the man who touched every single piece of important evidence in
this case. All the evidence that was brought before you in this trial went through his
hands one way or another. Remember that. The shirts, the shards, all in Michael Proctor's
possession.
Jackson also emphasized the
sketchy behavior of Brian Higgins and he pretty clearly pointed the finger at him
for John's death and laid out exactly how he thinks it happened. He reminded us
about Higgins' texts with Karen, his motioning to John in the bar, and him
coaxing John to 34 Fairview. Then once he got to 34 Fairview, remember John took 84 steps in a
westerly direction toward the house. That's from Ian Whiffin, the prosecution's own witness.
Then at that point Jackson says, remember that John's phone battery? It dropped 20 degrees in
temperature over an hour. I meditated constant at 50 degrees for four hours. Jackson says that's because John was not
outside at all. Quote, he was someplace warmer like a basement or a garage. And
Dr. Lappasata confirmed that. She said quote, he did not die of hypothermia
because he was not outside. So if not hypothermia, how did John die? Well
according to Jackson, the injury to the back of John's head and his eyelid show that he was punched and fell backward. And then at some point,
Chloe, the Albert Strumming Shepherd, she must have gotten involved. Jackson pointed out that
no medical expert from the prosecution disputes that John's arm injuries are from a dog.
Alright, well now John is dead, what does Higgins do?
Well according to Jackson, he takes that late night trip to Canton PD to mess around with
some evidence.
And then later, Higgins and Police Chief Ken Berkowitz, they're in the garage with Karen's
car for quote, a wildly long amount of time.
At least that's what Officer Kelly Dover said before the police chief told her to do
the right thing.
Then Jackson outlined why some of the other main players for the prosecution can't be trusted.
We've got Matt McCabe texting, tell them to say the guy never came into the house, and Brian Albert agreeing, exactly. We've got Jen McCabe googling house long to die in the cold
and then deleting it. We have Carrie Roberts admitting to incorrectly
testifying that Karen told Jen to Google that? We've got Jen not going inside of the Albert's
house to her sister's house to see if they were okay. Jackson says quote, the only way
that makes sense is if she knew what happened already.
We also have the Sallyport video, shown completely inverted so it looks like Proctor didn't
go near the right tail light, but he did.
We have Dr. Welcher leaning in to the impact during his blue paint tests.
We've got Brennan holding up John's hoodie to the jury, saying this happened on January
29th, but we know it didn't.
Jackson says all of those examples and more show why you can't trust the
prosecution. And Jackson also reminded the jurors about the meaning of reasonable doubt, that they
must be absolutely certain beyond all reasonable doubt of all of the facts in this case to convict
Karen. He reminded them that if they think it's likely, even very likely that the prosecution is
right, that's not enough. They have to be certain. And he said in this case it's impossible to be
certain. There are quote, dozens and dozens of holes of reasonable doubt. Then
Brennan gave his closing statement for the prosecution. And if the prosecution
had a motto it would be quote, she was drunk, she hit him, she left him to die.
Brennan started by reminding us of the person that John was.
He was only 46 years old when he died.
He was described as someone who was kind, hardworking, and quick to help.
He took in his niece and nephew and they had no one else and they had lost both of their
parents.
And he said that when John, John who was someone who was always quick to help others, when
he himself was laying in the snow dying and needed help himself, Brennan says Karen didn't
help him.
Brennan painted a pretty bleak picture of Karen and John's relationship.
He played those voicemails of Karen saying, John I effing hate you.
He recalled the testimony from John's niece who said that their trip to Aruba was
ruined by Karen's jealousy, and Brennan said that it's that jealousy that was the motive
for the murder.
And after that, Brennan spent a lot of time laying out the prosecution's timeline of
the case, calling it impenetrable and based on data that can't be disputed. Brennan
also relied a lot on clips from Karen's interviews to support his arguments. To try to show that even Karen herself knew she was too impaired to drive,
Brennan played a clip where she said, quote, Well, I've had a few drinks and I drive.
I always drive extra slow, so I know my alerts aren't as sharp as they should be, and I
shouldn't have been driving. To try to show the prosecution's theory that Karen knew she made
contact with John, Brennan played a clip where she said, quote, could I have clipped him? Could I have
tagged him in the knee and incapacitated him? He didn't look mortally wounded as far as I could see.
Then along a similar vein in the next clip, Karen said, quote, and I was looking to find him on the
side of the road. I was expecting I'd find him.
And finally to try to discredit the defense's theory that the eyewitnesses were mistaken
about what Karen said at the scene, Brennan played a final clip where Karen says quote,
I know I said I hit him, but did I really say it as many times as law enforcement's
claiming I said it?
Now when it comes to the inconsistencies in John's injuries, like
the lack of an impact site, Brennan argued that car accidents affect every person differently.
And the lack of lower body injuries doesn't necessarily mean that no impact occurred.
Brennan also admitted that Proctor's conduct, it was deplorable, but he argued that the
Commonwealth doesn't even need Proctor to prove their case. He said quote, it's distasteful and dishonorable, but it doesn't give a read of free pass.
When you read those text messages, they're hard to look at.
It's unfair.
But it has nothing to do with justice in this case.
It just doesn't.
There is not one piece of evidence that was tampered with, planted, or distorted.
Then Brennan looked to call the credibility of the defense witnesses into question.
He pointed out that one of the defense's star witnesses, Dr. Wolfe, used signal and
deleted his text messages with the defense.
Brennan also implied that Sergeant Nicholas Barros changed his story for attention to
ride on the fame of this case.
Similarly, he said that Dr. Murray Russell inserted herself into the case and
didn't use reliable methods when assessing the dog bites. And Brennan pointed out that
Dr. Russell and Dr. LaPasada don't even entirely agree about the dog bites. Dr. Russell
said that John's arm didn't have any puncture marks, while Dr. LaPasada said it had many.
Then Brennan described what it takes to get a second degree murder
conviction and clarified exactly what the Commonwealth is accusing her of. Brennan said that
Caron intended to put her car on reverse and impact John. He says if the jurors believed that she
intended to hit her car's accelerator, then that second degree murder. He added, quote,
it's not a matter of intending to kill. it's not a matter of intending to kill.
It's not a matter of intending to hit.
It's the conduct of the operation.
Did her conduct create a clear, plain,
strong likelihood of death?
And he ended by reminding us
of the prosecution's theory of the case.
She was drunk, she hit him, she left him to die.
And now it's all in the hands of the jury.
My guess is that it could take a couple of days to hear the verdict, even until late next week.
Because I think the jury has a lot to consider.
How are they going to weigh the different medical examiners?
How are they going to weigh the different reconstructionists?
Are they going to take these interview clips from Karen as admissions?
Are they going to see the entire
investigation as botched or just Proctor as one bad character? There's really a lot for
them to comb through. It's going to be really interesting to see what happens with the verdict.
Now my personal opinion, I do think the prosecution has some decent circumstantial evidence against
Karen. I think the tail light evidence plus the three witnesses who say that Karen said I
hit him, plus her interview, plus that text stream data that shows that John's phone
locked for the last time, sometime around when Karen backed up, all those things together
on the surface I think they make an okay case.
But when you look deeper at the damage to the tail light and the injuries to John, I
think there is reasonable doubt as to if they collided.
And I also think that the investigation was so botched from the beginning that it's
hard to trust really any of the evidence from the prosecution.
And for those reasons, I personally think that Karen should be found not guilty on all
three charges.
But I don't really think any verdict here would be true justice for
John, and I really hope that through all of this we don't lose sight of John and the person he was
and what he meant to his family. And with that, it's been a long eight weeks for everybody,
but I'm so grateful to Annie for having me on for these recaps and I'm thankful for all of you who've
been so welcoming. Thank you guys and stay safe. Well there you have it. So we are officially on
VerdictWatch. We will see what the jury comes back with. I am curious to know
how you would vote and we'll see what happens. We'll see where we go from here.
And we need to figure out what the next trial is we're covering. I know we're
covering Idaho but I feel like I you know I'm not ready to say goodbye to
Elena. I love having her on here every week.
All right, thank you guys so much for tuning in
to today's Karen Reed Recap.
All right, guys, thank you so much for tuning in
to another episode of Serialously.
Please don't forget to take five seconds out of your day
if you would be so kind to leave a rating and review
of this podcast in the review.
If you would just let me know what content you want
to hear more about, if you want me to do more deep dives
on cults, on family vlogging, on anything, let me know in that review section because I really do
want to cater the content to what you guys want to hear about. So please, that is a perfect place
to let me know and I really appreciate you guys tuning in to today's episode. Thank you so much.
I will be seeing you back bright and early on Thursday for headline highlights and then of
course every Monday morning with a deep dive on a brand new case.
All right, guys, thank you so much for tuning in and I will talk with you very soon.
Signing off.
Bye.
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