Over three years after becoming a suspect in her boyfriend John O'Keefe's death, Karen Read has been acquitted of the murder charges.
In January 2022, the Boston police officer was found unresponsive in the snow outside a late-night house party in Canton, Mass. After Read discovered him dead in his former colleague's front yard, she was subsequently accused of hitting him with her SUV, sparking not one, but two lengthy and high-profile trials.
In July 2024, Read's first trial was declared a mistrial after the jury remained deadlocked after five days of deliberations. She continued maintaining her innocence, and that October, she told Vanity Fair that she wasn't "backing down now."
"As scary as a potential conviction is, I will go to jail for something I didn't do before I plea out. I will never give them that win."
The second trial began in April 2025, over three years after O'Keefe's death. Read's defense continued to argue that she was the target of a police cover-up and that O'Keefe was fatally injured inside the house during a fight. On the fourth day of deliberations on June 18, the jury finally reached a verdict.
So where is Karen Read now? Here's everything to know about her life nearly three years after being accused of her boyfriend's murder -- and what verdict was reached during her second trial.
Karen Read was formerly a financial analyst and adjunct professor of finance at Bentley University, who resided in Mansfield, Mass., according to Vanity Fair.
She first dated John O'Keefe in their 20s, but they went their separate ways because of her job responsibilities, Inside Edition reported.
During an appearance on Nightline in August 2023, Read revealed that O'Keefe reached out to her in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, and they rekindled their relationship.
"He had reached out to me on Facebook. He said, 'Hey, blast from the past. How's things,' " she recalled.
By that point, O'Keefe had been an officer with Boston Police for about 14 years. They dated for two years before his death.
On Jan. 28, 2022, Read dropped off her boyfriend O’Keefe at retired Boston officer Brian Albert’s home for a late-night gathering in Canton, Mass., after they ran into him earlier that evening at a bar. She reportedly waited 10 minutes to hear whether or not she should join him inside, and when there was no word, she drove off.
Speaking to Nightline, Read recounted it was snowing and windy when she last saw O’Keefe, who wasn’t wearing a coat. The evening prior, 20 inches of snow fell, and the temperature dropped to 12 degrees, per the National Weather Service.
Hours later, after O’Keefe didn’t come home, Read and two mutual friends went searching for him, only to discover him unconscious and covered in snow in Albert’s front yard. O’Keefe was taken to a local hospital and pronounced dead at age 46 on Jan. 29, 2022.
According to CNN, the medical examination revealed severe injuries, including skull fractures, two black eyes and arm abrasions. Blood was also around his nose and mouth, and claw-like wounds. NBC News reported the cause of death was listed as "blunt force trauma to the head and hypothermia." The medical examiner reportedly couldn't determine if it was accidental or a homicide.
Three days after O’Keefe’s death, Read was arrested as a suspect on several charges, including manslaughter, motor vehicle homicide and leaving the scene of a personal injury or crime, per The Boston Globe. The manslaughter charge was later upgraded to second-degree murder, and she pleaded not guilty to all counts.
Prosecutors allege Read, intoxicated after a night of bar hopping, hit O’Keefe with her SUV while dropping him off and left him for dead, PEOPLE previously reported. During Read’s first trial, Assistant District Attorney Adam Lally presented a voicemail where a reportedly drunken Read yelled, “John, I f------ hate you!” as she left Albert’s driveway.
Additionally, witnesses testified that when Read and two friends found O’Keefe unconscious, she allegedly said, “I hit him,” per documents cited by Boston magazine.
The defense, however, argues that O’Keefe’s injuries occurred during a fight with someone inside the house with whom he had a longtime conflict. They allege he was then attacked by the homeowners’ German shepherd, dragged outside and left to die.
Read’s lawyers further claim that she was framed by local law enforcement protecting their colleagues, asserting that she did not say, “I hit him,” but rather, “Did I hit him?” The defense also stated that O’Keefe’s injuries weren’t consistent with being hit by a vehicle.
Read’s murder trial related to O’Keefe’s death began in April 2024.
After three months of hearing testimonies and the jury’s deliberation, though, the jury foreperson informed Judge Beverly Cannone that, despite thoroughly reviewing the evidence, they were unable to come to a unanimous verdict on June 28, per several outlets.
While Cannone sent the jury back to deliberate further, the trial ultimately ended with a deadlock, leading the Norfolk County Superior Court judge to declare a mistrial on July 1.
That same day, Massachusetts State Police announced that Trooper Michael Proctor, the lead investigator in the case, had been removed from his position "effective immediately." He was set to be transferred out of Norfolk County District Attorney's Office State Police Detective's Unit. Proctor was reportedly suspended without pay, per Vanity Fair.
During his testimony, Proctor was forced to read vulgar and derogatory texts he had sent about Read, including offensive language and a wish for her to take her own life. The former professor’s attorneys argued that Proctor was biased due to his personal ties to the Alberts and others involved that night, alleging that he had planted evidence of a broken taillight at the scene.
Additionally, reports surfaced that five jurors have since come forward contesting the hung jury, claiming that the jury had unanimously voted to acquit Read on two of the three charges, according to a motion published by WHDH and reviewed by PEOPLE. They were deadlocked on the manslaughter charge.
Immediately following the mistrial, Norfolk County District Attorney Michael Morrissey said in a statement that "The Commonwealth intends to re-try the case."
Read's new trial began in January 2025, during which Morrissey's office once again prosecuted Read on all three charges: second-degree murder, manslaughter while operating under the influence and leaving the scene of a fatal crash.
On Nov. 6, Read and her lawyers appeared in Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court to appeal Cannone's decision to deny Read's request to dismiss two of three charges against her, the Associated Press reported. Her lawyers claimed that trying her again amounts to double jeopardy.
The Boston Globe reported that Martin G. Weinberg, an appellate lawyer for Read, said that their appeal amounts to a fight for "protections that safeguard defendants, in this case Ms. Read, from re-prosecution for the very same offenses from which a prior jury was discharged without manifest necessity [for a mistrial declaration], without her consent]."
The trial went on for months and included some new testimonies, including that of O'Keefe's mother, Peggy. She took the stand for nearly 20 minutes on April 23, 2025, and recalled the moment she found out about her son's death via a phone call from one of his friends.
"She said, 'John was found in a snowbank,' " Peggy recalled. "I didn't understand. I said, 'What do you mean?' She's like, 'Found him in the snow. They don't know what happened.' "
Peggy also tearfully described her brief encounter with Read when they both arrived at the hospital shortly after.
"I hear Karen Read yell, 'Peg, is he dead? Is he dead, Peg? Peg, is he dead?' And I just kept walking,"
Peggy said, describing Read as being "loud."
On June 18, Read was ultimately found not guilty of killing O'Keefe, but was found guilty of operating under the influence of liquor. They also found her not guilty of manslaughter, and not guilty of leaving the scene of a crash resulting in death, per NBC Boston..
Following O’Keefe’s death, Read spent the first few months mourning and reminiscing about her relationship and trying to distract herself by wallpapering the house, cooking with her mother, and reading, Vanity Fair reported. At the time, she was still in shock from the death, leading her to question whether she had accidentally killed him.
She recalled telling her parents,“If I did anything in any way,
I’ll pay my dues.
That’s how this should work.
I want to know the truth—good,
bad,
ugly.”
After two years of replaying the events,
uncovering evidence
and being put on the stand,
Read maintains her side of the story.
“I did not kill John O’Keefe.
I’ve never harmed a hair on John O’Keefe’s head,”
she told Nightline.
Since being charged with three counts in February 2022,
Read has lost both of her jobs,
health insurance,
car and life savings,
according to Vanity Fair.
Additionally,
her privacy has been compromised—police visited her home three times,
took her phones twice (and shared her private text messages)
and subpoenaed her family’s financial records,
per the outlet.
“Other than feeling wrongfully persecuted
and prosecuted,
I feel incredibly violated,”
Read told the magazine.
According to the outlet,
the former professor is relying on what is left of her 401(k)
as she faces over $5 million in deferred fees for her defense team.
While she awaited her second trial,
Read reportedly sold her Mansfield home to cover legal expenses
and stayed with friends and family.
“This is no life.
I’m not in prison,
but this is no life.
I’m stressed every day.
I’m waiting for the next shoe to drop,”
Read told 20/20 in September 2024.
“It just feels like a kind of purgatory.”
Now that she is acquitted on the most serious charges,
Read still must face a civil case over O’Keefe’s death,
per The Patriot Ledger.
According to the outlet,
O’Keefe’s brother Paul filed a civil lawsuit in August 2024 against Read and two bars in Canton that the former couple visited before his death.
The suit is seeking at least $50,000 in damages including “reasonably expected society,
companionship,
comfort,
guidance,
counsel,
net income,
services,
assistance,
protection,
care,
and advice to next of kin,”
per the outlet.