arielilane
Justice for Liz Barraza
The theory of pinning this on KR as part of a cover-up does not make sense. Anxious for trial to start and evidence to unfold. It’s exhausting to see so much focus on KR rather than on the victim Officer John O’Keefe, who was not only a Boston police officer, but raising his niece and nephew.
-- She has lied and changed her story too many times. Admittedly said she hit him, and asked did I hit him - which speaks volumes.
-- Appears she knew she hit him as stated to her friend.
-- Allegedly, she was over-served that night. The snowstorm hindered visibility and on top of that the drinking and it appears arguing (in addition, to disagreements prior to that night) may have contributed to a disaster waiting to happen.
-- Sometimes it does not end well getting behind the wheel of a vehicle while under the influence… That’s why there are laws about drinking and driving.
(Honestly, think it was an accident) Curious why she is not charged with motor vehicle homicide, imo.
All of this is speculation, at this time.
5:30 a.m. - Read and the friend arrive at the home of the sister of the Fairview Road resident, where she is described as "hysterical." One of the women drove Read back to O'Keefe's house while the other followed in her own vehicle. During that drive, she told investigators that Read said, "Could I have hit him?" "Did I hit him?" and told her about a cracked taillight on the black SUV.
At O'Keefe's house, Read showed the other women the cracked taillight. All three women then got into the same car and went to look for O'Keefe. The friend who was driving said it was snowing heavily with poor visibility when they arrived but she noted that Read "immediately" said she saw the victim when the other women could not see it lying in the snow.
6:04 a.m. - 911 call from a woman reporting a man, later identified as O'Keefe, was found in the snow. The first Canton police officer to arrive saw three women waving at him from the front yard, near a flagpole and fire hydrant. Two of the women were performing CPR on the victim. The officer observed the victim was cold to the touch and was not breathing. Footage from a camera attached to the officer's cruiser shows dark, blizzard conditions.
A Canton firefighter who responded to the 911 call said she witnessed Read telling her friend repeatedly, "I hit him, I hit him, I hit him."
-- She has lied and changed her story too many times. Admittedly said she hit him, and asked did I hit him - which speaks volumes.
-- Appears she knew she hit him as stated to her friend.
-- Allegedly, she was over-served that night. The snowstorm hindered visibility and on top of that the drinking and it appears arguing (in addition, to disagreements prior to that night) may have contributed to a disaster waiting to happen.
-- Sometimes it does not end well getting behind the wheel of a vehicle while under the influence… That’s why there are laws about drinking and driving.
(Honestly, think it was an accident) Curious why she is not charged with motor vehicle homicide, imo.
All of this is speculation, at this time.
Prosecution reveals alleged timeline in death of police officer
Karen Read, the officer's girlfriend, is accused of hitting him with a car and leaving him to die in a blizzard after a night of drinking in 2022.
www.wcvb.com
5:30 a.m. - Read and the friend arrive at the home of the sister of the Fairview Road resident, where she is described as "hysterical." One of the women drove Read back to O'Keefe's house while the other followed in her own vehicle. During that drive, she told investigators that Read said, "Could I have hit him?" "Did I hit him?" and told her about a cracked taillight on the black SUV.
At O'Keefe's house, Read showed the other women the cracked taillight. All three women then got into the same car and went to look for O'Keefe. The friend who was driving said it was snowing heavily with poor visibility when they arrived but she noted that Read "immediately" said she saw the victim when the other women could not see it lying in the snow.
6:04 a.m. - 911 call from a woman reporting a man, later identified as O'Keefe, was found in the snow. The first Canton police officer to arrive saw three women waving at him from the front yard, near a flagpole and fire hydrant. Two of the women were performing CPR on the victim. The officer observed the victim was cold to the touch and was not breathing. Footage from a camera attached to the officer's cruiser shows dark, blizzard conditions.
A Canton firefighter who responded to the 911 call said she witnessed Read telling her friend repeatedly, "I hit him, I hit him, I hit him."