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Legal experts suggest that Karen Read’s defense team scored a significant point with their intense cross-examination of Massachusetts State Police Sgt. Yuri Bukhenik on Friday. This was his second appearance on the stand as prosecutors attempt to demonstrate that Read was responsible for fatally striking her boyfriend, Boston officer John O’Keefe, and leaving him to perish in a snowstorm in January 2022.
Defense lawyer Alan Jackson spent hours questioning the homicide investigator, focusing on a series of text messages exchanged between Read and Brian Higgins, an ATF agent based in Canton, with whom she was surreptitiously communicating without O’Keefe’s knowledge.
Having Bukhenik read these messages allows the defense to introduce hearsay elements into the proceedings, notes Grace Edwards, a Massachusetts defense attorney keenly observing the case. This move also casts doubt on the investigation’s credibility, aligning with the defense’s strategy to challenge and undermine the investigation thoroughly.
Local police also testified that they used red Solo cups and a grocery bag to collect evidence, removed snow with a leafblower and continued to be involved on the outskirts of the case despite a conflict of interest – one of their detectives is Brian Albert’s brother.
“The prosecution is going to go home this weekend and reevaluate things, because this week couldn’t have been worse,” said David Gelman, a former prosecutor and Philadelphia-area defense attorney who is following the case.

Massachusetts State Trooper Michael Proctor faces a tough cross-examination by lawyer Alan Jackson. The Karen Read murder trial in Norfolk Superior Court, Dedham, Massachusetts, on Wednesday, June 12, 2024 (© Greg Derr/The Patriot Ledger/IMAGN)
He previously told Fox News Digital he was surprised the commonwealth even moved forward with a new trial after the first case fell apart.
On the other hand, digital evidence has not supported defense claims.
Two experts have testified that Albert’s sister-in-law, Jennifer McCabe, made a key Google search about hypothermia shortly after Read and two other women found O’Keefe unresponsive in the snow – not hours earlier, before anyone should have known he was dead, as the defense has claimed.
And reading the texts in court could be a “double-edged sword,” said Paul Mauro, a former NYPD inspector. Did Higgins have a reason to get into an altercation with O’Keefe? Or do they paint Read as manipulative and untruthful?