MISTRIAL MA - Professor Karen Read, 43, charged with murdering police officer boyfriend John O'Keefe by hitting him with car, Canton, 14 Apr 2023 #17

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While I agree it isn't the defense responsibility to prove her innocence, the defense proposed a very specific alternate theory for which there is very strong evidence that refutes that story. Unless they provide some explanation, the absence of dog DNA most likely means that JO never entered 34F at all.

It is virtually impossible to enter a person's home who has a pet and not be contaminated by detectable DNA in the form of hairs, even if you never interact with the animal (citations below). If you live with a cat it is even worse because they cover their hair with DNA from their saliva, so even non rooted hairs have DNA on them.

I will extend that published finding with a reasonable inference that it is less possible to get knocked onto the floor and/or dragged out of the house of a dog owner and not have dog hairs all over you and even less probable than that to also have been bitten by the dog and not have hairs and saliva all over you.

The case you cited is interesting in that they found pig DNA, possibly from the rawhide, but most importantly they found canine DNA as well. You will never find DNA from an animals mouth that contains the DNA from its food, but not that animal's own DNA.

And if anybody is in doubt they could have the entire shirt privately swabbed for Chloe's DNA. If they did find DNA then it would be case-closed a conspiracy, he entered that house and everybody is lying and Karen Read would not only be free, she would sue the MSP and Canton police and her lawyers would be rich. Think how powerful that would be- but they never asked to do it....Why? Because think how powerful it would be if they didn't find any.




The handling of evidence in this case was so bad, that it could not be reasonably relied on.
 
While I agree it isn't the defense responsibility to prove her innocence, the defense proposed a very specific alternate theory for which there is very strong evidence that refutes that story. Unless they provide some explanation, the absence of dog DNA most likely means that JO never entered 34F at all.

It is virtually impossible to enter a person's home who has a pet and not be contaminated by detectable DNA in the form of hairs, even if you never interact with the animal (citations below). If you live with a cat it is even worse because they cover their hair with DNA from their saliva, so even non rooted hairs have DNA on them.

I will extend that published finding with a reasonable inference that it is less possible to get knocked onto the floor and/or dragged out of the house of a dog owner and not have dog hairs all over you and even less probable than that to also have been bitten by the dog and not have hairs and saliva all over you.

The case you cited is interesting in that they found pig DNA, possibly from the rawhide, but most importantly they found canine DNA as well. You will never find DNA from an animals mouth that contains the DNA from its food, but not that animal's own DNA.

And if anybody is in doubt they could have the entire shirt privately swabbed for Chloe's DNA. If they did find DNA then it would be case-closed a conspiracy, he entered that house and everybody is lying and Karen Read would not only be free, she would sue the MSP and Canton police and her lawyers would be rich. Think how powerful that would be- but they never asked to do it....Why? Because think how powerful it would be if they didn't find any.


interesting articles- the second contains this statement as well: Dogs typically drag prey to the ground and then maul it, attempting to ‘disarm’ the victim by striking its limbs. Once the victim has been knocked down, the animal usually begins to bite its throat, the back of its head, and the cranium; if the attack continues, the victim will die from asphyxia, hemorrhaging, or cranial fracture and its complications [103]."
and:
"the collection of saliva samples from the victim’s wound could take place in a variable time interval and, since the first action carried out on the victim is an aid, the use of disinfectants on tissues can drastically ‘erase’ most of the biological traces produced by the attacker." Tough to tell if the shirt was splashed with disinfectants; it was cut off the deceased in the hospital; it was in the snow and it was tested literally years later.
 
Interesting -- A good read on the jurors vote here by Attorney Peter Tragos. Maybe not so good for KR.

Thank you for posting that video. It was interesting and informative.

It didn't really give us anything new - he reviewed and responded to the motions filed today (one from each side). His take on the situation, expressed strongly and repeatedly, was that the state (both DA's and judge) have a legal obligation to provide justice, and that if counts 1 and 3 were unanimously voted to acquit, they should all work to see those counts are dismissed, because that is what the law requires.

He was unsure if they would do the right thing willingly, or whether the DA's and judge would try to make her be retried any way they can. He explained there are MANY ways for all parties to get accurate info on whether there were indeed unanimous decision to acquit on counts 1 and 3, if they want to pursue justice, in ways that preserve anonymity for the members of the jury, so "we aren't sure if it was really 12-0 and decided" is not a legit excuse.

I do think that if the judge has any legal skills and any integrity, she will work to get to the bottom of it and abide by any acquittals that may have occurred. Her reputation and judicial future (or lack thereof) is really going to be on display.

And even if she doesn't opt to seek justice and honor it willingly, I believe the defense has multiple workarounds that should get the job done and some of which would also put her head in a noose. One thing holding her feet to the fire is the double jeopardy prohibition clause which is a bedrock of our criminal legal system, embedded in the constitution itself, and the feds can also hold public officials at state and local levels personally and criminally responsible for violations of a person's rights under the law. IMO every one of the participants for the state in this trial, DA's and judge alike, should be very wary of the fact that the FBI has already taken an interest in these proceedings.
 
interesting articles- the second contains this statement as well: Dogs typically drag prey to the ground and then maul it, attempting to ‘disarm’ the victim by striking its limbs. Once the victim has been knocked down, the animal usually begins to bite its throat, the back of its head, and the cranium; if the attack continues, the victim will die from asphyxia, hemorrhaging, or cranial fracture and its complications [103]."
and:
"the collection of saliva samples from the victim’s wound could take place in a variable time interval and, since the first action carried out on the victim is an aid, the use of disinfectants on tissues can drastically ‘erase’ most of the biological traces produced by the attacker." Tough to tell if the shirt was splashed with disinfectants; it was cut off the deceased in the hospital; it was in the snow and it was tested literally years later.
This is another extraordinary set of events that needed to have happened to explain why its a conspiracy to kill someone who nobody had any motive to kill and not just a very common drunk driving accident.

JO's shirt was like a collection sponge we use to collect DNA samples on people. It is extremely unlikely that that treatment of those wounds would have even started given the description of his emergency and ultimately futile medical treatment (he was brought in with a core temperature of 80F and no measured pulse). They attempted to re-warm him and gave him external circulatory support in the form of CPR and AED but he never warmed, never sustained a pulse, and was pronounced dead. Nobody was washing in clothes with disinfectant.

There was no dog attack.

But her defense attorney's obviously don't need to take my word for it- they can go get the entire shirt tested, I triple dog dare them.
 
This is another extraordinary set of events that needed to have happened to explain why its a conspiracy to kill someone who nobody had any motive to kill and not just a very common drunk driving accident.

JO's shirt was like a collection sponge we use to collect DNA samples on people. It is extremely unlikely that that treatment of those wounds would have even started given the description of his emergency and ultimately futile medical treatment (he was brought in with a core temperature of 80F and no measured pulse). They attempted to re-warm him and gave him external circulatory support in the form of CPR and AED but he never warmed, never sustained a pulse, and was pronounced dead. Nobody was washing in clothes with disinfectant.

There was no dog attack.

But her defense attorney's obviously don't need to take my word for it- they can go get the entire shirt tested, I triple dog dare them.
The commonwealth could've called the FBI witnesses who determined that John wasn't struck by a vehicle, but they didn't. They chose state troopers who had no grasp of physics over verified scientists. One must ask why.
 
Regarding JOK's clothes. It was testified to by two or three MSP detectives during trial, that the clothing gathered was wet and stuffed in a bag. Then " someone" took the clothes and spread them out to dry....In an unsecured room on the floor in 'the office' , or was it a table? ...for 5 days. ( Is that a reasonable amount of time and opportunity for tampering? ) There was never an official evidence log documenting any of this. THIS creates serious doubt. IMO, the clothing should not have been allowed in as evidence at all. Same as the fabricated fairy tale tail light pieces. Documenting proof was never there.
 
Regarding JOK's clothes. It was testified to by two or three MSP detectives during trial, that the clothing gathered was wet and stuffed in a bag. Then " someone" took the clothes and spread them out to dry....In an unsecured room on the floor in 'the office' , or was it a table? ...for 5 days. ( Is that a reasonable amount of time and opportunity for tampering? ) There was never an official evidence log documenting any of this. THIS creates serious doubt. IMO, the clothing should not have been allowed in as evidence at all. Same as the fabricated fairy tale tail light pieces. Documenting proof was never there.
Right, NO documented proof. This handling would never of happened anywhere or allowed to stand as evidence. It was horribly laughable. The State Police person, good friends of Alberts and McCabe's, took care of allllllll of this from the get go. Look where he is now. Gone for good any day. No pieces of RED plastic, NOT tiny or small, not seen in the bright white snow. The light snow at the time. Not worth discussing as it has been discounted in different ways by professionals, that JO'K was hit by a car. Have to REMEMBER, the vague and false information were from people all working for the STATE. Untrained and or wanting to keep their jobs and benefits. FBI knows all. Coming down soon. Big clue is that FBI advised not to bring the case to trial due to what they do know.
 
Regarding JOK's clothes. It was testified to by two or three MSP detectives during trial, that the clothing gathered was wet and stuffed in a bag. Then " someone" took the clothes and spread them out to dry....In an unsecured room on the floor in 'the office' , or was it a table? ...for 5 days. ( Is that a reasonable amount of time and opportunity for tampering? ) There was never an official evidence log documenting any of this. THIS creates serious doubt. IMO, the clothing should not have been allowed in as evidence at all. Same as the fabricated fairy tale tail light pieces. Documenting proof was never there.
I agree. The proper collection of evidence, preservation of evidence, and chain of custody must be clearly documented if it is to be used in a trial.
 
I recall this case from way back when it first happened. Can anyone point me towards the affidavit please so that I can refresh? I recall when it first happened, thinking that the Cops were involved in his death and something nefarious happened other than the car striking him only. RIP - your shift is finished and you can now police heavens streets .Thanks for your service, from one Cop across the pond to another.
 
interesting articles- the second contains this statement as well: Dogs typically drag prey to the ground and then maul it, attempting to ‘disarm’ the victim by striking its limbs. Once the victim has been knocked down, the animal usually begins to bite its throat, the back of its head, and the cranium; if the attack continues, the victim will die from asphyxia, hemorrhaging, or cranial fracture and its complications [103]."
and:
"the collection of saliva samples from the victim’s wound could take place in a variable time interval and, since the first action carried out on the victim is an aid, the use of disinfectants on tissues can drastically ‘erase’ most of the biological traces produced by the attacker." Tough to tell if the shirt was splashed with disinfectants; it was cut off the deceased in the hospital; it was in the snow and it was tested literally years later.

Police dogs (which Chloe was or was trained for??) are trained to go for the arm.
 
I agree. The proper collection of evidence, preservation of evidence, and chain of custody must be clearly documented if it is to be used in a trial.
That's one thing that has long baffled me about this case. I've seen or heard of many cases where evidence was not properly collected or there was some issue with the evidence somehow, but it resulted in them not being able to even use that evidence in court. At all. It's thrown out. They just have to pretend it didn't exist or that it never happened. This includes problems with chain of custody, or with illegal search and seizure (a Constitutional issue), improper collection/handling/testing of evidence, problematic police interviews (usually too rough treatment or lasting far too long, withholding basic necessities like water etc.), and even false confessions (coerced, under duress, delusional, lying, many reasons why confessions end up having to be thrown out). Sometimes it's a major problem with one individual officer or one agency or even a particular lab or medical examiner. But if there's a problem, ALL the evidence related to that problematic entity is deemed unusable, and they are forced to throw it out. It can't be used in court.

So imo, a number of these kinds of issues plagued the evidence in this case. I don't think anyone on either side would argue that evidence was properly collected on scene (Solo cups) for example. I know I'm not the only one who sees problems in chain of custody of items like his clothing and even her vehicle. I see problems with the testing done at labs for DNA etc. And of course, the lead detective in the case has now been implicated in problems we don't even know the extent of, but that were bad enough to have caught the feds' attention and is now the subject of a federal investigation, and if I'm correct, along with that entire police department.

So I can't understand why there has to be all this debate and speculation over these evidentiary items, when it should just be deemed inadmissable and thrown out. Jury for SURE never should have seen some of it. IMO, the whole case was so tainted and had so many of these various problems with evidence and the investigation, that there should have been no choice but to dismiss it altogether. Instead, here we are about to re-try the case all over again?? That will just compound those problems and indeed, I foresee new ones popping up even. Just a waste of time. If KR were truly believed to be a threat to the community, I would feel differently, but NO ONE is saying that. This is all being done in the name of revenge which they will call justice, but it's all messed up.
 
I agree. The proper collection of evidence, preservation of evidence, and chain of custody must be clearly documented if it is to be used in a trial.
Yes OldCop!^^^….. agree 100%….. and not a question to you or anyone else….. just an observation.

Maybe there is an exception in the courtroom that presided over the KR case? /sarc

After watching the Ashley Benefield case in FL, Michelle Troconis case in CT, and the Alex Murdaugh case in SC and evidence collection and presentation of it in those cases - compare and contrast to this judge in KR case courtroom. Stark contrast. Wide differences. Still SMH.

And IMO it is unsettling and disturbing. Will be very interested in the update and release of the FBI / internal affairs investigation now that testimony in the KR case is complete. When exactly is to be released one has to wonder? MOO
 

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