Attorneys for a woman accused of striking her Boston police officer boyfriend with her SUV and leaving him for dead in a snowbank outside another officer's home began presenting their case Friday that she was framed by police, with a snowplow driver who said he didn't see a body.
Snowplow driver Brian Loughran, who was on his regular route during a storm early on Jan. 29, 2022, was the first witness called by defense attorneys for Karen Read after prosecutors rested.
Read has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder and other charges in the January 2022 death of Officer John O'Keefe. The 16-year Boston police veteran was found unresponsive outside Brian Albert's home in Canton and was later pronounced dead at a hospital. An autopsy found O'Keefe died of hypothermia and blunt force trauma.
Prosecutors allege Read and O'Keefe had been drinking and fighting before she dropped him off at Albert's home shortly before 12:30 a.m. They say she hit him with her SUV while making a three-point turn and then drove away.
Read's lawyers say O'Keefe was beaten up in the house and was bitten by Albert's dog, then brought outside. They say investigators focused on Read because she was a ''convenient outsider'' who saved them from having to consider other suspects, including Albert and other law enforcement officers who were at the party.
The judge said Friday that the jury is on track to begin deliberations next week.
Loughran testified that he passed by the house around 2:45 a.m. and that he could see ''a very large portion, almost to the front steps" of the lawn and ''saw nothing.'' When he drove by again about 30 minutes later, he said, he again he saw nothing on the lawn but did see a car parked in the road in front of the house. He said he knew Albert and his family, so he was ''being courteous'' and decided not to report the car for violating snowstorm parking restrictions.
When Loughran returned around 5:30 a.m, the street was blocked and first responders were there, he said.