DEDHAM, Mass. — Jurors in the murder trial of Karen Read began deliberations without a verdict Friday after weeks of testimony in a highly divisive case in which the prosecution's theory of jaded love turned deadly was countered by a defense claim that a cast of tight-knit Boston-area law enforcement killed a fellow police officer.
Read, 45, is accused of fatally striking her boyfriend, Boston police officer John O'Keefe, 46, with her SUV and leaving him to die in the snow outside a house party where other local police and a federal agent were closing out a night of drinking in 2022. She's charged with second-degree murder, manslaughter and leaving the scene. If convicted on the most serious charge, she faces life in prison.
Jurors went home for the weekend and will resume on Monday.
Read's defense said O'Keefe was beaten, bitten by a dog, then left outside a home in the Boston suburb of Canton in a conspiracy orchestrated by the police that included planting evidence.
The first Read trial ended July 1 in a mistrial due to a hung jury.
Prosecution has focused on the scene of death
The state's case was led by special prosecutor Hank Brennan, who called fewer witnesses than prosecutor Adam Lally, who ran the first trial against Read.
Describing O'Keefe as a ''good man'' who ''helped people,'' Brennan on Friday said O'Keefe needed help that night and the only person who could lend a hand — call 911 or knock on a door — was Read. Instead, she drove away in her SUV.