Read was asked while leaving court on Thursday if she plans to testify.
"TBD," Read said, adding that the defense expects its case to last 1.5 to 2 weeks. Read did not testify during her first trial.
Read said Matthew DiSogra, a digital forensic expert, will be the defense's first witness to take the stand.
When asked how she would sum up the prosecution's case, Read responded, "Unjust."
The prosecution rested its case Thursday after dozens of witnesses in the Karen Read trial as her defense attorneys will now begin calling witnesses.
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Judson Welcher, an accident reconstruction expert, testifies, during the murder retrial of Karen Read in Norfolk Superior Court, Thursday, May 29, 2025, in Dedham, Mass. AP Photo/Mark Stockwell, Pool
There were several tense exchanges between Alessi and Welcher early on Thursday. At one point in the middle of an answer, Welcher said "I'm sorry, let me…" and held up his hand in Alessi's direction.
"Sir, please don't interrupt," Alessi said to Welcher, prompting the judge to intervene.
"Your honor, he keeps referencing my hand and saying I'm doing something when I'm not and I think that's distracting to the jury. I'm not interrupting him," Alessi said to the judge.
"Let the witness answer the question," Cannone replied.
"I am. I'm just holding my hand like this, your honor. He keeps saying I'm doing something," Alessi said
The Karen Read trial was back in a Massachusetts courtroom as the prosecution called its final witness then rested its case.
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