Heart Starts Pounding: Horrors, Hauntings, and Mysteries - Who Killed John O'Keefe? : The Karen Read Trial
Episode Date: January 2, 2025When John O'Keefe's boy was found in the snow in January of 2022, there were more questions than answers. Eventually his girlfriend, Karen Read, was charged with his death. But as the case unraveled i...n court, dark secrets, illicit affairs, and police coverups came to light, proving that the truth would be hard to find. Subscribe on Patreon for bonus content and to become a member of our Rogue Detecting Society. Patrons have access to bonus content as well as other perks. And members of our High Council on Patreon have access to our after-show called Footnotes, where I share my case file with our producer, Matt. Apple subscriptions are now live! Get access to bonus episodes and more when you subscribe on Apple Podcasts. Follow on Tik Tok and Instagram for a daily dose of horror. 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
Transcript
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Today I want to tell you a story about a woman who found a body lying in the snow
But it was what was found around the body that would leave us with more questions than answers
If you're the type of person who has a dark curiosity
Then you're one of us and make sure to like this video subscribe to this channel and hit that notification bell
So you never miss a video of my dark creation
never miss a video of my dark creation. On January 9th, 2022, an ambulance cut through the icy streets of Canton, Massachusetts,
a suburb of Boston.
They were speeding despite the whiteout conditions from the horrible blizzard blanketing the
town.
Earlier, they had gotten a concerning call from a woman.
She sounded out of breath on the phone, but like she was trying to stay calm.
And she told the 911 operator, quote, there's a man passed out in the snow.
I think he's dead.
You guys got to get here.
In the background, another woman can be heard
panicking. It's hard to hear exactly what she's saying, but the words dead and no
can sort of be made out. EMTs pulled up to the scene unfolding outside of a
two-story suburban home on 34 Fairview Road just before 7 a.m. There was a car
parked on the curb
and three women panicking near the home,
all dressed in winter coats.
There, lying on the snowy lawn was a body of a man.
Around mid-40s, with two black eyes
amongst other head injuries and scratches
all up and down his arm. He was lying motionless in the snow.
Everyone at the scene was zipped up in heavy winter coats, gloves, and hats to stay warm
in the below freezing temperature, but the man was just wearing a long sleeve t-shirt.
One of his shoes was at the scene but not on his foot,
and there was a smashed cocktail
glass scattered around.
One of the women at the scene had a frightening ring of blood around her mouth and she was
running around screaming and crying completely inconsolable.
And it's this woman who would become the centerpiece of this entire investigation. Because this was the man's girlfriend, Karen Reed.
Karen had awoken in the early hours of the morning to find that her boyfriend, John O'Keefe,
was not in bed with her. She called his friends who had no idea where he was, so she and two of her
friends that she called to help her jumped in a car and started retracing their steps from that night. Karen and
John had been out drinking and John wanted to stay out drinking at his
friend's house while Karen chose to go home. One of the EMTs reached down to
take the man's pulse, but they couldn't get a read. At that point, John's body temperature
was just 80 degrees Fahrenheit.
That's 18 degrees lower than a healthy living person's.
But just looking at the scene,
at the battered body of the man in the snow,
it wasn't clear if the cold was actually what killed him.
What were those black eyes
from? The answer to that question was not so simple and would lead investigators
down the rabbit hole into rumors of vengeful girlfriends, police corruption,
cover-ups, and many, many lies. This is Heart Starts Pounding.
I'm your host, Kaylen Moore,
and I want to tell you the wintry mystery
of what happened to John O'Keefe.
Because now, almost three years later,
people are still left with many questions.
As I go through this story with you today,
it's important to remember that someone,
and probably multiple people, are lying.
I'm going to share with you eyewitness testimony, arguments from both the prosecution and the
defense and what the people directly involved in this case had to say about it.
It's going to paint a really big picture and a really conflicting one at that.
And it's up to you to decide what you believe.
And as always, if you're listening
on the ad supported version of this show,
wherever you get your podcasts, like on the Odyssey app,
thank you so much.
This show is made in part because of our sponsors.
So I really appreciate you guys.
If you'd
like to listen over on Patreon or Apple subscriptions, you'll also have access to bonus content
as well as other perks like stickers and a Heart Starts Pounding mug if you're listening
on the High Council tier on Patreon. And no matter where you're listening, you'll be
getting a special bonus episode next Monday where I sit down with Tank and Investigator
Slater from the Psychopedia podcast. We chat about cases that keep us up at night and Slater
talks about her experience investigating abuse cases against the church and the Boy Scouts.
So you definitely want to check that out. Okay, like I said, this story is massive.
So let's start at the beginning.
What happened in the few hours leading up to John O'Keefe's death?
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By all accounts, the snowy evening of January 28th, 2022 started as a normal evening for
John O'Keefe and his girlfriend Karen Reed.
The two had known each other since 2004,
but didn't start dating until 2020
when they reconnected over Facebook Messenger.
John, a Boston cop, had become the legal guardian
of his sister's two children after her tragic passing.
And after they started dating,
Karen, a 32-year-old adjunct professor,
moved in with the family and that
particular night they were meeting their friends at a local bar. The group first
got drinks at a local Canton pub called C.F. McCarthy's and then made their way
over to another local spot called the waterfall. Inside the waterfall there were
a few more of their friends including the Alberts, that is,
Chris Albert, his brother Brian Albert, who was a Boston police officer alongside John and
actually worked on the Boston Strangler case. Brian's wife was there, Nicole, and so was Nicole's
sister, Jennifer McCabe, who was also one of Karen's best friends. And also at the bar was Brian Higgins, an ATF agent.
Surveillance video from the bar shows the group drinking
and laughing with each other
and the couples cuddling up with one another.
It also shows three of the guys,
John, Brian Albert, and Brian Higgins roughhousing.
Just after midnight, footage from the waterfall's security system shows John O'Keefe leaving
in the same long-sleeved t-shirt that his body would be discovered in.
In his hand is a cocktail glass, and he gets into Karen's car.
The plan was that the group was going to go to Brian and Nicole Albert's house to keep hanging out,
but Karen didn't want to join.
She claimed to have dropped John off at the Albert's
as the blizzard raged on while she went home
and went to bed.
After that is when she awoke in John's house
just before 5 a.m. and realized
that John hadn't made it home that night.
She started calling the people who she had been at the bars with and those who answered didn't know
where John was either. Karen also called John's friend Carrie Roberts who wasn't out with the
group that night and hadn't been contacted by John at all. Carrie, in turn, was so concerned, she started calling local hospitals and then the police
to see if he had been admitted or picked up by an officer,
but he hadn't.
Karen said her first thought was that John may have gotten
hit by a snow plow.
So she jumped back in her car and went to the bars
to see if John was still there or had gotten hit
walking back from them, but they were all closed. Then she picked up Carrie and Jennifer McCabe
and they went back to John's around 5.30 in the morning, though they knew that he wasn't there.
That's when they decided to go to the Alberts house where Karen said she had dropped him off and it was there that they found him laying in the snow about 12 feet from the curb.
Karen left out of the car and immediately started giving him CPR and shortly thereafter
EMTs and officers were all over the scene.
Lights, sirens, everything.
But while John had been found, there was something noticeably missing from the scene.
The homeowner. Boston cop Brian Albert.
With all of the chaos unfolding outside of his home, the screaming, the sirens, Karen wondered
why he hadn't come out to see what was going on or to offer care.
That was one of the many questions that would remain unanswered for some time.
Along with, if there was a party happening at the house the night before and people were
coming in and out of the home, how was Karen the first person to find the body?
Since John was a Boston police officer, the Massachusetts State Police were actually assigned
to the case to avoid a conflict of interest, and the lead investigator was a state trooper
named Michael Proctor. When officers arrived at the scene after the EMTs, they faced a huge challenge.
John was found outside with the blizzard continuing on
and the crime scene was quickly filling up with snow.
The footprints that had led to John's body
were rapidly disappearing.
So they needed to rely on witness testimony.
And one of the first people they talked to was Karen,
who told police that she had been drinking all night
and chose to drive regardless,
and that she had a stomach ache
and didn't feel like staying at the Alberts with John,
which is why she dropped him off and went home.
She said she watched him walk up to the side door,
looked at her phone for about 10 minutes
to check some texts, and then she drove home.
We know that at least one of these things is true,
the drinking and driving,
because after Karen found John's body,
she was so inconsolable,
she was actually transported to the hospital,
where her blood alcohol content came back at around 0.08.
That's the legal limit.
And mind you, she was tested around nine hours
after she stopped drinking that night.
So investigators believed her blood alcohol level
was much higher when she dropped John off at the party.
Later that day, lead investigator Proctor went to Karen's parents' home where her
car was being kept.
And that's when he noticed something else that didn't bode well for Karen.
Her rear right taillight was cracked, and pieces of the red and white plastic were missing. He made a
note of it and then he had the car towed and brought in for testing. And this was
all happening as the autopsy report was being released and the medical examiner
ruled that John's cause of death was blunt force trauma to the head combined with hypothermia.
To investigators, the head trauma and the missing tail light were enough evidence to
make an arrest.
And on February 2nd, just five days after John's death, Karen Reed was arrested for
manslaughter, negligent homicide, and leaving the scene of an
accident involving injury. Police figured that she had killed John with her car
being drunk and at the wheel and then fled. But here's an issue.
Manslaughter implies criminal intent. If Karen did hit him, did she intend to do it?
Well, according to her, not only did she not hit him, but it would have been impossible
for her to hit him, and she pled not guilty to this charge.
Karen insisted that she could not have been responsible for John's death.
She watched him go to the side door of the house.
There was no way she could have backed into him.
Sure, she didn't know how she broke her taillight or even that it was broken at all,
but it couldn't have been from hitting John.
She made the decision that she was not going down for this crime and she was going to put
up a fight. So she hired one of the most aggressive defense attorneys in the game.
A man named Alan Jackson.
Jackson was the managing partner of the firm Worksman Jackson and Quinn,
who successfully prosecuted Phil Spector for murder in 2003
and had actually more recently gotten Kevin Spacey acquitted of his groping
charges.
Jackson said he gets a lot of emails asking for help with cases, but there was something
about Karen's case that really affected him.
He said that he knew she was innocent just from reading her email.
Which didn't come as a surprise to people, he's her
attorney, that's what of course they expected him to say. But no one expected his next argument,
one that would send shockwaves through the entire community in Canton. He said that what everyone's been hearing is true. John O'Keefe was murdered,
but it wasn't by his client, Karen.
No, it was by the people who were at the party that night,
including an officer that John worked with,
and that this was all part of a huge coverup.
And he told the people of Canton with, and that this was all part of a huge cover-up.
And he told the people of Canton that he had everything he needed to prove it.
Pre-trials for Karen's case started in May of 2023, but they didn't wrap up until April
of this year, and that's when the jury selection started. The trial of Karen Reed began on April 29th of 2024,
over two years after John's death.
And while the pre-trials were happening,
Jackson continued to find evidence
strengthening his bombshell of a claim.
He said that he came to the conclusion
after looking at the facts of the case,
specifically the autopsy report.
And he decided that there was no way
that John had been hit by a car.
It just didn't look like it.
Specifically, he thought that the scratches on John's arm
were a smoking gun.
There were six deep lacerations
that just didn't look to Jackson like they came from a car.
Plus, he saw Karen's phone records,
how she called John 49 times
after she dropped him off at the house party.
Now, the voicemails she left John are vulgar
and they're very angry.
She tells John in those messages that she hates him
multiple times. She even calls him a loser and a pervert. But these voicemails start
almost immediately after she dropped him off at Brian Albert's house. And remember,
according to Karen, she watched him get out of the car and walk up to the side door. She
looked down at her phone for about 10 minutes before she drove off.
If that wasn't the case, and in fact, she did hit John before leaving, Alan Jackson
asked, why would she call a man 50 times if she knew he might be dead?
Instead, he had another theory as to what happened that night.
His theory was that John died during the afterparty, inside of the house, where he was attacked
by someone inside, and the scratches on his arm were potentially from the German shepherd
that the Alberts owned.
And he said that he could prove this theory with something that he found
on one of the partygoers' phones.
So one of the people inside of the house party that night
was Jennifer McCabe, and for clarity,
she's Karen's friend who helped her look for John.
She, along with everyone else at the party,
claimed that John never made it into the party that night.
But then why?
At 2.27 a.m., Jackson asked,
did Jennifer Google on her phone, quote,
"'How long to die in cold?'
That Google search stunned everyone.
The prosecution tried to counter that point
and say that the search actually happened closer to 6.30am.
And Jennifer herself swore that she made that internet search because Karen asked her to when they found John's body.
Her side argued that Jennifer must have opened a tab on her phone at 2.27am, but then completed the search at 6 30 a.m.
But a digital expert that was brought to the trial testified under oath that that's not really how it works.
The timestamp from the Google search would have been from when the search occurred, not from when the tab was opened,
meaning that the Google search most likely occurred while the party was happening
inside at 2.27am.
And this was just the start of Alan Jackson unraveling the real identities of the people
John was with the last night of his life.
Though they all swore that they were colleagues and friends and old cop buddies, whatever, there was a lot
bubbling under the surface. And one of the first people called to the stand was homeowner and Boston
police officer Brian Albert, the one who stayed inside the morning that John's body was found.
On the stand, Brian claimed that he knew John from work
and didn't have any problems with him
and that he had only met Karen once or so.
He made it seem like they weren't really friends.
He kind of casually knew the couple.
Well, Jackson, Karen's defense attorney,
wanted to bring some photos and videos
to the jury's attention.
In one photo shown, Karen and Brian are standing together
in a group smiling.
Clearly they had met more than a few times
and were somewhat familiar with each other.
And then he showed the jury the security footage
from the waterfall on the night of January 28th,
where Karen and Brian are seen chatting with
each other.
If they had been cordial with each other and Brian had nothing to do with John's death,
then why was he lying about something as obvious as whether or not he was friends with Karen?
And to lie on the witness stand as a police officer is not a good look, and that's just
putting it lightly.
But strangest of all to me,
at least as I was going through this research,
was how Ryan erased the contents of his phone
despite receiving a preservation order he was given.
According to Brian, he didn't receive orders
to preserve the contents of his phone
until September 23rd,
2022, and he erased his phone the day before. So technically, he did not violate the order.
And just to underscore this because I think this is important, September 23rd was nine months after John's death, and he happened to erase everything on his phone
just one day before he got the preservation order.
The defense told the jury
that Brian intentionally destroyed evidence.
Another person that was called to the stand
was Brian Higgins.
He was the ATF agent that was out with the group that night. Alan
Jackson wasted no time before he asked him about the inappropriate relationship that
he had with Karen. Yeah, that's right. For weeks before the murder, Higgins and Karen
had exchanged flirty texts. They both called each other hot, and Karen complained about John
to him. And then, one night after they watched the Patriots play, Higgins and Karen kissed
at John's house. But then after that, Karen ghosted him. And security footage from the
waterfall shows Karen almost avoiding Higgins and hanging on John. That same security footage from the waterfall shows Karen almost avoiding Higgins and hanging on John.
That same security footage shows Higgins
and John roughhousing.
He said it was just play fighting,
but Karen described it as like sparring,
like it had an angry undertone to it.
Higgins also admitted on the stand
that he was the first person to leave Brian
Albert's house party in the early morning of January 29th, around 2am. Now, if Karen
had hit John with her car, he would have been lying in the snow as Higgins walked out of
the house and down the driveway. But Higgins swore he didn't see anything. It was
snowing at this point, but John's body wasn't even buried in the snow when he was found,
so he in theory would have been even more visible at 2am. And this was all part of
Jackson's argument. To make the jury wonder, how did a Boston cop and an ATF agent not know that there was a dead body just a
few yards away from them, especially when one of them walked right past it on his way
out of the house?
And what Jackson really wanted to know was what was the phone call that Higgins made
to Brian Albert immediately after leaving his house. Higgins' phone record
shows that he had a 22-second phone call with the homeowner, Brian Albert, right when he left the
party, potentially as he was walking down the driveway past John O'Keefe's body. What could be discussed in 22 seconds?
A plan?
Alan Jackson wanted to know,
but Higgins said that this must have just been a butt dial.
As if Higgins' behavior the night of John's death
wasn't strange enough,
his behavior afterwards was even stranger,
Jackson pointed out.
Because after John's death, Higgins got rid of his phone,
the one that he used to make that 22 second phone call. Yes, you heard that right. A second person
at the party that night got rid of their phone and all of the evidence on it. Higgins insisted
there was no specific reason
why he had thrown his phone away,
but Alan Jackson wondered aloud
if he had also done this to destroy evidence intentionally.
What was on the phone of those two men?
And was it something that would have revealed
what happened to John O'Keefe that night?
The defense tried to build a case that, yes, it was.
They said that Brian Albert and Brian Higgins
were both suspects in this case,
but were not treated as such
because they worked for law enforcement.
They said that Brian Albert was maybe jealous of John at work.
After all, John was granted special allowances
after his sister's death, something a seasoned
officer like Brian might look down on.
And as for Higgins, well maybe he wanted to get the thing he felt was keeping Karen from
him out of the way.
The group had a few too many drinks that night, and something happened in the home of Brian
Albert.
And then he and Higgins worked together to cover it up, and everyone who was in the home of Brian Albert, and then he and Higgins worked together to
cover it up, and everyone who was in the house that night has stayed quiet, according to
Alan Jackson.
So at this point in the trial, the story had exploded and become really the story of the
summer.
Each morning when Karen arrived at the courthouse, she was greeted by a sea of people wearing pink,
which was her favorite color,
and sporting signs that read,
"'Free Karen Reed,' stop canton cover-up,'
and even, "'We love you Karen,'
as if they were at a rock concert.
It really seemed like most of the general public
thought she was innocent.
And this is largely because of a YouTuber
that went by the alias Turtleboy.
So Turtleboy is a self-proclaimed investigative journalist
who started covering the Karen Reed case
way before it even made it to trial.
By the time the news of the case started picking up steam,
he already had multiple YouTube videos on it,
many of which included
footage of him standing outside of the Alberts house to illustrate where John's body was
found.
So he started being known as the go-to guy for information on the trial outside of the
mainstream media.
But Turtle Boy wanted to be even more involved than that.
He wanted to be treated like an actual investigative journalist by the media.
And he started coming to the trial with a bullhorn and he would shout rallying
cries to the people who had traveled to be there.
He also started contacting witnesses and showing up to their homes and places of business.
And he was eventually arrested and charged
with multiple counts of witness intimidation.
Even though the outside of the trial
looked like Karen had lots of support,
there were photos that were taken of her
inside the courthouse
that kind of started tarnishing her image.
In the courtroom, Karen would often smile to herself
and she was sometimes caught on camera
laughing with her defense team. At one point, the judge even dismissed everyone early for the day
because they found it disrespectful that Karen was laughing. Now, maybe you're not the type of
person who would show up to a courthouse with a sign and scream at witnesses as they walked in. But perhaps you
can see why so many people were this passionate about the trial. They really started feeling
like there was a cover up happening. And even though everyone at the party that stood trial
still insisted that John never made it into the house. Their behavior was all seeming stranger and stranger.
It was starting to feel like there wasn't going to be a way to convict Karen.
There just wasn't enough evidence, especially now that her manslaughter charge had been
upgraded to second degree murder.
It just didn't feel like that was possible.
At least that's what it felt like. But the prosecution
held firm in their faith that they had everything they needed to convict Karen, and it hinged on a
few pieces of plastic, they said. So the day that John's body was found,
Trooper Proctor noticed that Karen's rear right tail light was cracked,
and a few pieces of the red and white plastic were missing,
but no one saw the plastic at the crime scene.
Well, eventually, the blizzard stopped,
and temperatures rose just enough so that a few days later,
all of the snow had melted in the Alberts' yard.
The prosecution showed a photo to the jury
that included, laying in the dead grass,
pieces of red and white plastic.
Those pieces were collected and brought in for testing,
and they were reconstructed to fit
exactly into Karen's tail light. Every
piece of the light that was collected at the crime scene. And not only that, but
John was found near pieces of a shattered cocktail glass that was
confirmed to be from the waterfall. And pieces of that glass, along with John's
hair, were found in Karen's bumper.
The prosecution brought forward multiple witnesses
who reported hearing Karen screaming at the scene,
I hit him, I hit him, I hit him,
including EMTs who were there
and her friend, Carrie Roberts, who helped search for John.
But that wasn't really what she meant,
Karen insisted in this 2020 interview that she did.
She said, quote, I hit him was preceded by did
and ended with a question mark.
She said she was concerned that she maybe hit him.
She was asking, did I hit him, did I hit him?
But she wasn't admitting to guilt at the scene.
It's hard to deny though that it's pretty damning evidence that they had against her.
John's hair and a cocktail glass in her bumper, her light at the scene.
The one person who should have been there to talk about this evidence though was lead
investigator Trooper Proctor.
He was after all the one who saw that the tail light was broken in the first place.
But Trooper Proctor couldn't be at the trial because he was under investigation himself.
The truth of the matter is not long after Trooper Proctor was put on the case, he was
taken off.
Originally, the reason given was conflict of interest after it was revealed that his
relationship with the people involved, like Jennifer McCabe and Nicole Albert, was much
closer than previously thought.
But the fact is, Trooper Proctor seemed to have a bias in the case.
Texts he sent to other officers shortly after he started working on this case called Karen
a whack job.
One even read, quote, I hope she kills herself.
Other texts joked about finding nudes or rejected the notion that Brian Albert
would ever get in trouble.
He wrote in one text when asked
if Brian would get in trouble, quote,
"'Nope, homeowner's a Boston cop too.'"
Proctor insisted that these texts
and his personal feelings did not impact
his ability to do his job.
But an FBI probe felt differently
and he was pulled from the case.
But this brings up an interesting theory.
If Trooper Proctor was the one
who found the cracked tail light
and the pieces weren't found at the crime scene
until days later, is there a chance
that he broke the tail light and then transferred all the pieces?
On June 25th of this year, the prosecution and defense rested their cases and the jury went to
deliberate. By June 28th, the jurors slipped the judge a note saying they were deadlocked.
slipped the judge a note saying they were deadlocked. On July 1st, Trooper Proctor was relieved
of his duties as a state trooper.
And on July 9th, Brian Albert's brother, Kevin,
is put on leave from his job as a cop.
And then it was up to the jury
to take everything they had heard
and to try and come to an agreement.
On one hand, multiple people at the scene heard Karen say,
I hit him that night and John's hair was found on her car.
And on the other hand, could they look past the chance
that Karen was being framed?
On July 10th, they decided they couldn't
and they alerted the judge that they were still hung.
The judge then declared a mistrial.
And as of now, Karen lives a free life, but a retrial is set to start at the end of January
2025.
That's just a few weeks away.
In the meantime, John's family has sued Karen for wrongful death, and they've also sued
the two bars that the group was at the night of John's family has sued Karen for wrongful death, and they've also sued the two bars that the group was at the night of John's death.
They claimed that they over-served Karen that night.
We may never know what happened to John O'Keefe the night he died.
There's a chance that he was the only person who witnessed what happened and took that secret with him.
But on the chance that a group of people are culpable,
can they keep a secret?
And if so, for how long?
There is one piece of evidence that I see people online
go back to over and over and over again,
and it's a piece of testimony that was given
by an expert witness called by Karen's attorney.
An expert reconstructionist who was hired by the FBI
had evaluated John O'Keefe's injuries
in relation to Karen's car.
And that expert concluded that the damage on the car
was inconsistent with having made contact
with John O'Keefe's body.
Karen is set for a retrial and we'll see if anything changes, but before we go I just want to note that this is a real trial with
real people involved. No one has been found guilty and even though you may feel with every fiber of
your being that you know who did it, Do not contact any witnesses. Do not be
like Turtle Boy. Don't contact jurors or anyone else involved in this case. Especially not jurors.
I mean, if you've gotten jury duty before, you know it's hard enough as it is. And in the meantime,
we'll follow Karen's second trial and see if any of us can finally get to the bottom of what happened
to John O'Keefe. But for now, that's all we have on this case. And until next time, stay curious.
Heart Starts Pounding is written and produced by Kaylen Moore. Heart Starts Pounding is also
produced by Matt Brown. Additional research and writing by Marissa Dow. Sound design and mix by
Peachtree Sound. Special thanks to Travis Dunlap, Grayson Jernigan, the team at WME, and Ben Jaffe.
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