Prosecutors and defense attorneys in the Karen Read case have submitted their witness lists. Here's who's on them.
Karen Read listens during closing arguments in her trial at Norfolk Superior Court on Tuesday, June 25, 2024, in Dedham. Nancy Lane / The Boston Herald via AP, Pool
Prosecutors and defense attorneys in the Karen Read murder case have submitted their lists of potential witnesses for her upcoming retrial, featuring a number of returning key players, as well as some new names.
Jury selection is set to begin next week in Norfolk Superior Court, where Read has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder, manslaughter while operating a motor vehicle under the influence, and leaving the scene of a fatal accident in the 2022 death of her boyfriend, Boston Police Officer John O’Keefe. Read’s lawyers maintain she was framed in a coverup, and her first trial ended in a hung jury last July.
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See the full lists of potential witnesses below. If Boston.com has previously reported on a witness’s prior testimony or ties to the case, past coverage will be linked next to their name.
Gretchen Voss (Read about her past coverage of the case)
Natalie Wiweke-Bershneider (Read about her alleged role as an intermediary for Read and Kearney)
What to know: Kearney is new to the witness list, as is Wiweke-Bershneider, a college friend of Read’s who allegedly served as a go-between for Read and the Turtleboy blogger. Read’s father, William, and brother, Nathan, are also notable additions. So is Scanlon, a private investigator who told authorities he reached out to defense attorney David Yannetti in early 2022 to suggest O’Keefe had died after a beating, not a vehicle collision.
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Missing from prosecutors’ list is Allison McCabe, who testified about giving Colin Albert a ride home on Jan. 29, 2022, and Karina and Nicholas Kolokithas, who testified Read and O’Keefe were affectionate and “lovey-dovey” before he died.
Retired Sgt. Paul DiGiampietro, Canton Police Department
Retired Lt. Paul Gallagher, Canton Police Department (Read his prior testimony)
Sgt. Sean Goode, Canton Police Department (Read his prior testimony)
Lt. Michael Lank, Canton Police Department (Read Part 1 and Part 2 of his prior testimony)
Officer Stephen Mullaney, Canton Police Department (Read his prior testimony)
Chief Helena Rafferty, Canton Police Department
Lt. Charles Rae, Canton Police Department (Read Part 1 and Part 2 of his prior testimony)
Officer Steven Saraf, Canton Police Department (Read Part 1 and Part 2 of his prior testimony)
Retired Officer Brian Wanless, Canton Police Department
Sgt. Brian Gallerani, Needham Police Department (Read his prior testimony)
Trooper Evan Brent, Massachusetts State Police
Sgt. Yuriy Bukhenik, Massachusetts State Police (Read Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 of his prior testimony)
Sgt. Zachary Clark, Massachusetts State Police
Trooper Nicholas Guarino, Massachusetts State Police (Read Part 1 and Part 2 of his prior testimony)
Lt. Kevin O’Hara, Massachusetts State Police (Read his prior testimony)
Trooper Joseph Paul, Massachusetts State Police (Read Part 1 and Part 2 of his prior testimony)
Former Trooper Michael Proctor, Massachusetts State Police (Read Part 1 and Part 2 of his prior testimony)
Lt. Brian Tully, Massachusetts State Police (Read his prior testimony)
What to know: A new addition to the list, Rafferty was not in charge of the Canton Police Department when O’Keefe died. Her predecessor, Kenneth Berkowitz, died late last year.
Notably, State Police recently fired Proctor in light of his conduct during the Read investigation, particularly his vulgar texts about the defendant. Tully and Bukhenik, two of Proctor’s superiors, were previously disciplined after internal probes determined they failed to reprimand Proctor for his texts.
Teri Kun, University of California, Davis Veterinary Genetics Laboratory (Read her prior testimony)
Christina Hanley, Massachusetts State Police Crime Laboratory (Read her prior testimony)
Maureen Hartnett, Massachusetts State Police Crime Laboratory (Read her prior testimony)
Sophie Hryzan, Massachusetts State Police Crime Laboratory
Hannah Knowles, Massachusetts State Police Crime Laboratory
Andre Porto, Massachusetts State Police Crime Laboratory (Read his prior testimony)
Ashley Vallier, Massachusetts State Police Crime Laboratory (Read Part 1 and Part 2 of Vallier’s prior testimony)
What to know: One notable absence is Nicholas Roberts, a former state forensic scientist who performed a retrograde analysis that purportedly put Read’s blood alcohol content between 0.135% and 0.292% around the time prosecutors allege she struck O’Keefe with her SUV.
Experts
Shanon Burgess, Aperture LLC
Coleen Crawford, Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office
What to know: There are several new experts on prosecutors’ list this time around, including Crosby, Gilman, and Wolf. Prosecutors have also indicated they plan to bolster their theory of the alleged collision with help from experts at Aperture, a company that deals in accident reconstruction and biomechanics.
Defense attorneys
Alan Jackson
Elizabeth Little
David Yannetti
What to know: Prosecutors made the eyebrow-raising decision to list three of Read’s attorneys as potential witnesses because they say the lawyers may be needed to “authenticate” Read’s public statements.
Defense’s witness list
Read also reserves the right to call any witnesses included on the commonwealth’s witness list or witnesses necessary for rebuttal.
Brian Albert, Norwood, MA (Read Part 1 and Part 2 of his prior testimony)
Caitlin Albert, Easton, MA (Read Part 1 and Part 2 of her prior testimony)
Lt. John Fanning, Massachusetts State Police (Read more about his connection to the case)
Matthew Kelsch, Federal Bureau of Investigations
Thomas Keleher, Canton, MA
Annie Cheung, Canton, MA
Chief Helena Rafferty, Canton Police Department
Dr. Irini Scordi-Bello, Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (Read Part 1 and Part 2 of her prior testimony)
Trooper Jeffrey Kostkowski, Massachusetts State Police
Trooper Joseph Paul, Massachusetts State Police (Read Part 1 and Part 2 of his prior testimony)
Retired Sgt Paul J. DiGiampietro, Canton Police Department
Retired Lt. Paul Gallagher, Canton Police Department (Read his prior testimony)
What to know: Notable additions include Fanning, whom the defense has previously accused of tampering with the jury in Read’s first trial. Prosecutors disputed those allegations and said Fanning, who was part of the team coordinating security at Norfolk Superior Court, had no contact with jurors.
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Read’s team has once again named the Lopilatos as potential witnesses, though the brothers were not called to testify during the first trial. They were involved in a 2002 incident in which Canton Police Lt. Michael Lank — one of the first officers to interview some of the Alberts after O’Keefe died — allegedly intervened in a fight on Chris Albert’s behalf.
Experts
Chris Van Ee, Novi, MI
Richard Green, St. Pete Beach, FL (Read his prior testimony)
Andrew Rentschler, Pittsburgh, PA (Read his prior testimony)
Maggie Gaffney, Bonita Springs, FL (Read about her connection to the case via The Boston Globe)
Derek Ellington, Wake Forest, NC
Michael Easter, Los Angeles, CA
Matthew Erickson, Gross Pointe Farms, MI
Matthew DiSogra, Charlotte, NC
Dr. Elizabeth Laposata, Providence, RI
Dr. Marie Russell, Los Angeles, CA (Read her prior testimony)
Garret Wing, Green Cove Springs, FL
What to know: Absent from the defense team’s witness list is Dr. Frank Sheridan, a retired forensic pathologist from California who previously testified that O’Keefe’s injuries could be consistent with a fight or physical altercation. However, Read’s team has added a number of new experts to the roster, including Laposata, a forensic pathologist from Rhode Island; Easter, a retired FBI agent; and Wing, a police dog handler and trainer.
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