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Karen Read’s defense team has long argued that it was framed for John O’keefe’s death. Jennifer McCabe’s testimony is of central importance in the event.

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An important witness in Karen Read’s second murder process because of the death of her friend, the Boston police officer John O’keefe, faces a third day after he had previously arrived with lawyers about a bombing.

Jennifer McCabe, a star wit in this case against Massachusetts, which was accused of having beaten O’keefe with her SUV and letting him die, told the prosecutors on April 29 that she was reading.

Defender Alan Jackson tried to sow doubts about McCabe’s testimony during the cross -question on May 2 by pointing out a series of texts that he showed an agreement between McCabe, her husband, sister and sister of the police in the days after O’keeefe’s death.

Read, 45, has long argued that she was framed for O’keefes murder by law enforcement officers, of whom she claims to have killed O’keefe during an argument. Her first trial ended in a hunger jury in 2024.

In this case, McCabe’s continued statement marks a climax and is expected to play a crucial role, since prosecutors and defenders continue to explain their arguments in Read’s process.

It is also expected that the jury will soon hear from other witnesses, including two experts for crash resistration with the ArcCA company, which during the first process of Read said they did not believe that O’Keefes agreed with an SUV.

Judge Beverly Cannone rejected an application from the special prosecutor Hank Brennan to relieve the witnesses due to concerns that they have deleted more than 100 text messages in connection with the process.

During the forwarding of the public prosecutor, Brennan McCabe asked whether she remembered to hear sirens as a first aider on January 29, 2022 at the scene. She said she didn’t do it.

He also asked if someone came out of their houses in the densely packed neighborhood this morning to help. McCabe said again that they hadn’t done it.

The questions seemed to be aimed at counteracting doubts that were raised by Read’s defense as to why McCabe’s sister and brother -in -law, who were found in the house near O’Keefe’s body, did not immediately wake up as first aiders.

Read’s defender pushed McCabe on her actions when she arrived at the address where O’keefe was found. She said that she called in 911 before making two unanswered calls to her sister Nicole Albert.

Jackson asked McCabe why she asked her brother-in-law, Brian Albert, a police officer, for help because he had had first aid training and lived in the house. McCabe said she didn’t think they were going to get Brian Albert, find warm blankets or to check whether the Alberts were also in danger, and they focused on helping O’keefe.

“The reason why they didn’t go into the house is that they knew better,” Jackson called out. “You knew what really happened, right?”

“At that moment I did not know that (O’keefe) was hit by a vehicle and that was found next to him,” McCabe replied.

Jackson asked McCabe when she was looking for Google on Google when she returned in the early morning hours a day, where O’keefe was found dead. She said when she came home after about 2 a.m., she was looking for a sports website.

Jackson presented data records that show McCabe’s phone, a browser search for “Hos (sic) long to die in cold, at 2:27 a.m.

The survey appeared to be combative at times when Jackson McCabe pushed for the time of searching. McCabe denied the search at that time, but later said that after O’keeefe’s body was found, and she made a similar search because Read asked her to do so.

“I never did this search at 2:27,” said McCabe.

Jackson asked her about data that showed that the search was later deleted, while others were not the case.

“I never deleted a Google search from my phone,” said McCabe. “I deny it. I have never done the search.”

Iian Whiffin, an expert in digital intelligence by Cellebrite, previously stated that forensic data showed

Jackson interviewed McCabe on the night of O’keefe after the death of her call history. Telephone records show that McCabe made at least seven calls to O’keefe from 12:41 p.m., in addition to the several calls that she used to do that night.

McCabe said she thinks they were random “butt” while she wrote O’keefe an SMS.

Jackson presented McCabe a number of news that she had sent her husband Matt McCabe, sister Nicole Albert and brother -in -law Brian Albert in the days after O’keeefe’s death. He claimed that the texts showed that in the case of “collapsing with other witnesses”.

In the first row of texts that were entered in evidence, McCabe wrote her sister: “Kerry spoke to the bulls and held on January 29, 2022, the day on which O’keefes body was found by O’keefes body. Her sister replied:” We will get more information so as not to write it. ”

Another sentence of news that was sent on February 1, 2022 between the Alberts and McCabes

“Do you listen?” Jennifer McCabe wrote in the group text. Her husband later replied: “This girl was able to write a book. Nonstop.”

McCabe shared lively details about the discovery of the body part of “one of their closest friends” and reads “crazy” and “unpredictable” behavior this morning after a night of drinking with the couple.

The public prosecutor also played McCabes eerie 911 call in the morning when they read, and O’keefe’s girlfriend Kerry Roberts, found him in front of the 34 Fairview Road in Canton, Massachusetts.

“There is a man in the snow,” she said, she told a first aid. “I think he’s dead.”

According to the cross -life, the defense continued to memory of witnesses against reading by pointing out inconsistencies between the testimony of the Grand Jury, in the first legal proceedings and at the stand in the current processes.

Jackson pushed McCabe why she didn’t tell the first Grand jury that she heard Read: “I beat him, I beat him, I beat him” when the memory in her memory was as deeply rooted as she said.

McCabe is one of the most important witnesses to the public prosecutor. She is the sister of Nicole Albert, who is married to Brian Albert. One of the men’s defense team supposedly killed O’keefe. The couple lived in the 34 Fairview Road.

McCabe and the Alberts drank with Read and O’Keefe the night before the dead of the police officers in Boston. McCabe said that the couple should join a post -game in the Alberts house but never arrived. She claims that she saw the Read car in front of the house in several places that night in several places.

In the first legal proceedings, Read’s defense team suggested that McCabe knew that something happened to O’keefe and later helped to read.

CourtTV covers the case against reading and the criminal investigation since the beginning of 2022 when O’keefe’s body was found outside a house in the canton.

You can see CourtTVS Live -Feed of Read procedure from the Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham, Massachusetts. The procedure begins at 9 a.m.

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