
Karen Read lands lucrative book deal while witnesses face continued harassment after acquittal
O'Keefe's niece and nephew, who he took in after their parents died, are orphaned for a second time.
Read has a book deal – and a TV series about her saga in the works. But she's also facing a wrongful death lawsuit, which requires a lesser standard of guilt to hold her liable. Her civil team filed a motion to dismiss earlier this week.
An outside investigation by the FBI found no alternate suspects and dispelled allegations of corruption leveled at local and state police. But prosecutors and investigators who led the case are facing a reckoning.
The Albert family, former owners of the property where Read and two other women found O'Keefe dead under a sheet of snow, just celebrated a wedding.
Jennifer McCabe, a key witness in both of Read's trials and one of the women with Read that morning, is the new bride's aunt.
At the wedding, attendees pitched in to hire private security after Read's supporters allegedly circulated the venue online. Local police made their presence known, too. A marked SUV was parked at the foot of the church steps.
Kerry Roberts, a friend of O'Keefe's who was also present with McCabe and Read when they found his body, told Fox News Digital she is among the witnesses facing an ongoing harassment campaign, along with the Alberts, the McCabes and O'Keefe's immediate family.
"I don't know why they're making Jen McCabe a villain," she said in a phone interview. "All she did was answer the same phone call I did. Karen called her. She didn't call Karen. It's so stupid and bizarre."
The victim's mother, Peggy O'Keefe, is dealing with harassment of her own, including a woman seen dancing on video at the foot of her driveway after Read's acquittal.
Roberts said the Norfolk District Attorney's Office told her to stop contacting their witness advocate after the trial, even as strangers continue to throw things at her house, call her family "murderers" in the supermarket and mock her children.
"We put our a--es on the line for three and a half years, two trials, to help the state of Massachusetts, and you're not going to help us when we're being harassed?" she said. "It's not worth it to put my family through ever again, and not be protected at all. It's sick. It's absolutely sick."
There's an ongoing witness intimidation case against Aidan Kearney, a Canton blogger who goes by the name Turtleboy, but while Roberts is not one of his alleged victims, she says she faces rude comments and other harassment from random members of the community.
After baseball games, kids on the team opposing her son might tell him "Free Karen Read" while lining up to shake hands, she said. She filed a complaint against her mailman, who allegedly muttered a vulgarity into her doorbell camera when he saw a "Justice for John O'Keefe" sign at her house. Now someone else delivers her letters.
"My message to people is don't ever be a witness," she said. "If this happens to you, you're not gonna be protected at all."
Read's lead defense lawyer Alan Jackson returned to Los Angeles in time for the Fourth of July holiday, where he was seen cruising in a Shelby Cobra replica – powered by a 351 Stroker he described as "a fire-breathing dragon."
"[It's] taking a while to come down," he told Fox News Digital. "But I'm slowly getting back into my rhythm."
He already has another deadly crash case lined up – the defense of Fraser Bohm, a 22-year-old from Malibu facing four counts of murder in a high-speed wreck that killed four sorority girls from Pepperdine University in October 2023.
SIGN UP TO GET TRUE CRIME NEWSLETTER
Bohm is due back in court next month after Jackson asked for more time to prep a defense for his new client.
Michael Proctor, a former homicide detective with the Massachusetts State Police, lost his job but may still resurface in the upcoming murder trial of Brian Walshe – who is accused of killing his wife Ana outside Boston.
Her remains have not been found. Proctor worked that case, too, and Walshe's lawyers have argued his presence tainted the investigation. That trial is scheduled to kick off in October.
State police fired Proctor after he sent lewd texts about Read to his friends – officially faulting him for sharing law enforcement sensitive information with civilians – and for drinking on the job.
His former supervisor, Yuri Bukhenik, was also reassigned in the wake of Read's second trial out of the homicide unit in Norfolk County and to an administrative post in Boston, according to Boston 25.
Read's defense alleged a cover-up by state and local police, alternately insinuating they got lazy in the investigation and failed to do a thorough job or outright framed her.
Hank Brennan, the high-powered defense attorney hired as a special prosecutor to lead Read's second trial, reportedly raked in more than $550,000 for his work, according to the Boston Herald.
That's a reasonable sum for a private lawyer, said retired Massachusetts judge and Boston College law professor Jack Lu, but also much more than a deputy district attorney on the state payroll would have made: "Probably $130,000 annually."
Brennan put in long days and likely worked through weekends, while keeping his private practice open at the same time, he added.
And while in a rare public statement he slammed the prevalence of witness intimidation and apologized for not securing a conviction, O'Keefe's supporters indicated they appreciate his work on the case.
"The jury pool was completely tainted is all I can say," Roberts told Fox News Digital. "Hank did so much work. He was a genius. He really was. Nobody could've gotten it done. Which is wicked sad."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Surrey gangster led transnational drug operation with infamous Irish gang
A Surrey gangster linked to the Brothers Keepers allegedly worked with the notorious Irish Kinahan gang as well as Turkish and American criminals to smuggle methamphetamine and fentanyl precursors around the globe. Opinder Singh Sian, who survived two Surrey shootings in 2008 and 2011, was arrested last month in Nevada, according to U.S. court documents obtained by Postmedia. He was charged in California with smuggling large shipments of methamphetamine out of the port of Long Beach to Australia in the summer of 2023. At one point during the three-year-long investigation by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Sian allegedly told a confidential source that he worked with 'Irish organized crime, specifically, the Kinahan family, Italian organized crime, and other Canadian organized crime groups.' 'Sian also explained that he obtained drugs through contacts with drug cartels in Mexico and South America. Sian again stated that he worked with a known drug kingpin based out of Turkey,' the 29-page criminal complaint said. The Kinahan gang started in Dublin in the 1990s, but is now headquartered in Dubai. It has close ties to Mexico's Sinaloa Cartel. The U.S. State Department announced $5-million US rewards for the arrest of leader Christy Kinahan and his sons Daniel and Christopher Jr. in April 2022. All three are also subject to U.S. Treasury sanctions. The investigation that led to Sian's arrest began in June 2022 when the DEA's office in Ankara, Turkey saw an opportunity to 'insert a confidential source (CS-1) playing the role of an international transportation coordinator into an international drug trafficking organization that needed help transporting drugs from Southern California to Australia and other destinations.' A gang member in Turkey gave the source Sian's phone number, identifying him as the North American leader of the drug trafficking organizations, the court document filed against Sian said. 'Sian and CS-1 subsequently held several in-person meetings and communicated via phone calls and the Threema messaging application in order to coordinate multiple deliveries of methamphetamine from co-conspirators to CS-1 in Southern California for shipment to Australia,' said the complaint, signed by DEA special agent Albert Polito. Sian unwittingly met the confidential source in both Vancouver and California in early 2023, arranging four drop-offs of methamphetamine totalling more than 240 kilograms throughout the summer of 2023. The complaint said Sian believed that CS-1 was arranging to ship the meth to Australia through his purported cousin who posed as a port worker, but was really an undercover DEA agent. During a February 2023 Vancouver meeting, Sian introduced CS-1 to two male associates. 'They explained that they had about 500 kilograms of cocaine and needed help getting it through Los Angeles ports and then on to Australia. CS-1 claimed that he/she could arrange for the drugs to be offloaded in Los Angeles, repackaged, and put on a container ship to Australia,' the document said. 'CS-1 also claimed that he/she could arrange for someone to offload the drugs in Australia and transfer them to the ultimate buyers.' The following month, Sian went to L.A. to meet the source at a Manhattan Beach restaurant. The undercover DEA agent also attended. 'At the beginning of the meeting, Sian said they could get in trouble just for meeting like this.' CS-1 convinced Sian that the meth was being consolidated into a single load being sent in August 2023. 'When the purported arrival date came, DEA and Australian law enforcement packaged sham methamphetamine and placed a tracking device inside,' the document said. Undercover Australian officers gave the sham drugs to gang members in Sydney who drove to a stash house. 'The Australians then raided the stash house and soon thereafter arrested the receiving couriers.' At the urging of the DEA handlers, CS-1 asked Sian if he could get fentanyl precursor chemicals into the U.S. 'Sian informed CS-1 that he could get the chemicals directly from China. He then asked CS-1 if they could receive a shipping container in the Port of Long Beach containing those chemicals,' the complaint said, adding that Sian sent sample chemicals through the mail to the source. CS-1 visited Vancouver again in August 2023 for a meeting with Sian and an associate named Peter Peng Zhou. Zhou said 'he would be getting the precursors from China in Vancouver and send them to Los Angeles, via his trucking company.' So far, other B.C. suspects named in the U.S. case have not been charged. A Nevada judge ordered Sian, 37, held in custody pending his transfer to California. She said in her June 30 decision that Sian's criminal gang 'is alleged to have ties to international hitmen.' Sian has been on police radar in B.C. since at least 2008. He was wounded in a shooting in August 2008 that left his friend Gurpreet Sidhu dead. He was targeted again in May 2011, but survived. He was convicted in July 2017 of careless use of a firearm and sentenced to 18 months probation. kbolan@ . Bluesky: @ Hundreds of Hells Angels, affiliates attend memorial for original B.C. member BMW seized from Montreal gangster in Kamloops linked to sex trafficking


CBS News
34 minutes ago
- CBS News
City of Chicago has 275 cases are coming up for settlement, City Council committee learns
The City of Chicago has been paying out record-breaking number of legal settlements — many of them police-involved. Before the halfway point of the calendar year 2025, the city blew past the $90 million budgeted for settlements. And on Monday alone, five new settlements appeared to be ready to be paid out — totaling more than $35 million. Those settlements are not the only ones coming with hefty price tags. The city's Law Department said the cases have been coming through drip by drip are about to see a gusher, with many cases — some with possible settlement figures of up to $20 million — now in the pipeline. How many? On Monday, it was revealed that there are 275 such cases in all. The Mendez family of Chicago is just one step away from a massive payout for a wrong raid in 2017. Police broke down the door to the home of settlement with Gilbert and Hester Mendez in McKinley Park on Nov. 7 of that year, and shouted profanities. The family also accused officers of pointing assault rifles and handguns at them and their children, Peter and Jack. CBS News Chicago Investigator Dave Savini was the first to report on the raid, which was the result of a bad informant's tip. The Mendez family is now nearly guaranteed a $2.5 million settlement with the city. Meanwhile, it will likely be $17 million for Roberto Almodovar, who was wrongfully put away for 23 years. He was framed by disgraced former Chicago police Detective Reynaldo Guevara for a double murder. Another wrongful convict, Jackie Wilson, is on the verge of a nearly $13 million settlement with the city. He was wrongfully put away for more than 30 years on a double murder charge, after he said his confession was forced out of him by Chicago police Cmdr. Jon Burge by using Russian roulette tactics. The City Council Finance Committee approved the Mendez, Almodovar, and Wilson settlements Monday, along with two others. But there are a lot more coming. "There's 275 more settlements that are on the horizon — 275 was reported today by the legal counsel," said Ald. Marty Quinn (13th). Alders learned this news for the first time Monday. The city has an insurance policy that covers most massive payouts. But with a tidal wave of new cases looming, can the city afford coverage? "You can only imagine, with that sort of liability, what the premium is going to look like," Quinn said. Some on the City Council said they have been left in the dark, and understand a lack of clarity on past payouts and plans for future ones gives taxpayers pause. "One of the things that the people need to be concerned about is, where exactly this money is coming from?" said Ald. Anthony Beale (9th). "You know, we always play hide-the-ball when it comes down to how we're paying for these settlements." Beale said if the city can't be transparent and accountable about spending, taxpayers are right to be resentful. "If we can't get our answers, they should not have the appetite to pay more property taxes if we can't get the answers of how we're spending their money," he said. The five cases approved by the City Council Finance Committee on Monday need full City Council approval, which almost always happens. Why this backlog of cases all of a sudden? Alders say two factors are likely at play — one of them a backlog of cases from COVID that are coming due, the other a signal to the legal community that the city is eager to settle, which invites more litigation. Also involved is police misconduct gong back decades.


Forbes
39 minutes ago
- Forbes
Beyoncé's Unreleased Music Stolen In Atlanta
Hard drives containing unreleased music by Beyoncé and plans for her Cowboy Carter tour were stolen in Atlanta earlier this month, according to local police, who say an unnamed suspect remains missing. An arrest warrant has been issued for an unnamed suspect. CBS via Getty Images Christopher Grant and Diandre Blue, who claimed to be a choreographer and dancer for Beyoncé, respectively, said hard drives for Beyoncé's 'Cowboy Carter' tour were stolen from their vehicle on July 8, which contained unreleased music, footage plans for the show and set lists, according to an incident report filed by the Atlanta Police Department. Other items taken from their vehicle include two suitcases, laptops and a pair of AirPods police said were tracked to a nearby area where a 'suspicious person stop' was conducted, according to the report. Police found two 'very light' fingerprints on the scene and said cameras in the area near the vehicle captured the incident. The Atlanta Police Department said in a statement an arrest warrant was issued for an unnamed suspect. Forbes this year ranked Beyoncé the 45th-wealthiest self-made American woman, with an estimated net worth of $780 million. She's expected to bring in $325 million from her Cowboy Carter tour across 31 shows. Her husband, rapper Jay-Z, has a fortune estimated at $2.5 billion. Key Background Beyoncé, 43, holds the record for most Grammy Award wins with 35 after winning her first Album of the Year award for 'Cowboy Carter' earlier this year. The album also won best country and her song 'II Most Wanted' won best country duo/group performance. 'Cowboy Carter' was billed as the second act to Beyoncé's 'Renaissance' album, and in the lead-up to the album's release, 'Texas Hold 'Em'' went No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Forbes Here's How Much Beyoncé's Cowboy Carter Tour Will Really Cost You By David Hochman