Home » World » Boston ‘cop killer’ poses for glamorous Vanity Fair photo shoot as he insists he was framed for lover’s murder

Boston ‘cop killer’ poses for glamorous Vanity Fair photo shoot as he insists he was framed for lover’s murder

After a hung jury verdict, Boston ‘cop killer’ Karen Reed explains in a no-holds-barred interview that ‘there’s nothing I’m not afraid of’ as she awaits a new trial.

In January 2022, a 44-year-old Boston woman made national headlines after allegedly crashing her boyfriend into her truck, killing him in a snowstorm.

Reid’s account with glamorous photos and details in popular entertainment magazines. vanity fairHe shares his vision of what happened and his belief in the alleged corruption surrounding the case.

“I’m not backing down now,” Reid told the publication. ‘No matter how terrifying the possible sentence is, I will go to jail for something I didn’t do before I came forward.

“I will never give them that victory.”

Karen Reed, 44, made national headlines after she slammed her truck into her boyfriend and killed him in a snowstorm in January 2022.

Her boyfriend, John O’Keefe, 46, was a Boston police officer who, on the night of her death, stopped by another police officer’s house for more drinking and partying.

Her boyfriend, John O’Keefe, 46, was a Boston police officer who had been abandoned to continue drinking and partying at another police officer’s house the night of his death.

Worried that she couldn’t return home, Reid said she returned to Officer Brian Albert’s house and found her boyfriend bloodied and covered in snow in the front yard. He was later pronounced dead from blunt force trauma to the head and hypothermia.

In an interview with Vanity Fair, Reed shared his expensive legal team’s belief that “O’Keefe was not only murdered, but was also the victim of a corrupt district attorney, jury tampering, and corrupt law enforcement.”

Four different law enforcement agencies are involved in Reed’s case, including the Massachusetts State Police, Canton Police, Boston Police and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Reed’s legal team claims police acted too quickly to prove Reed’s alleged crime, less than 12 hours after O’Keefe was pronounced dead while seizing Reed’s car and phone, they told VF.

Reed was taken into police custody just three days later.

In an interview with Vanity Fair, Reed shared his expensive legal team’s belief that “O’Keefe was not only murdered, but was also the victim of a corrupt district attorney, jury tampering, and corrupt law enforcement.” Photo: Reed’s attorney, David Iannetti, in court.

Surveillance photos from McCarthy’s bar show the couple kissing on January 29.

Also read about the “unprofessional and pathetic” texts exchanged between Massachusetts State Trooper Michael Proctor and his friends after his arrest.

The text read: “The girl will face serious charges… she is a piece of shit.” He has no chance of skating. he fucked

Later in the chain, another text message asked if the owner would also “get some money,” to which Proctor responded, “No. The owner of the house is also a Boston police officer.

Then, on February 2, Reed’s famed attorney, David Iannetti, received an incriminating call from a gravelly man claiming that Albert and his nephew had beaten O’Keefe on January 29.

The mysterious caller goes on to explain to Yanetti that when O’Keefe didn’t wake up after the fight, Albert and an unnamed “federal agent” left O’Keefe’s body on the front lawn.

However, when Iannetti called the mysterious informant back for a more in-depth interview, he backtracked, saying he was just speculating based on photos of O’Keefe in the news, and eventually recanted completely.

After the explosive claim, Iannetti noted that O’Keefe’s photo was not posted during the first call.

The couple reconnected during the pandemic, and O’Keefe’s niece and nephew adopted two children together after the deaths of her sister and father-in-law.

Following his mistrial, due to a hung jury, Reed’s second trial will be set for January 27.

Iannetti also described how other details of the tip, including how ATF agents had been drinking at Albert’s house that morning, as had Albert’s nephew Collin, also lined up with the facts of the case.

Until the informant’s call, Reed and Iannetti did not know Collin was home, as he later testified, because he was not listed in the police report, VF reported.

The accusations of corruption deepen when Reed recalls feeling awkward the night he dropped her off at Albert’s house, someone O’Keefe admired but never had a good time with before receiving a “second-hand invitation.”

Reid’s legal team also suggested that evidence had been tampered with; Despite his car’s broken right taillight, a daytime search on Jan. 29, after clearing snow from the yard, found no part of Reid’s car or taillight.

Reed said the broken light occurred when he returned from O’Keefe’s garage to look for him and crashed into his SUV, which was caught on O’Keefe’s security camera.

The broken taillight on Reed’s SUV is central evidence in the case.

However, a week later, after a series of investigations by authorities, a Canton police officer apparently randomly found more taillight fragments from his moving car in the yard while driving, VF reported.

“This is the only solid evidence connecting me to the crime scene,” Reed said. “There is no proof until they have it.”

Following his mistrial, due to a deadlocked jury, Reed’s second trial is scheduled for January 27.

Since the mistrial, Reed, who has been the subject of intense media scrutiny, has been accused by the family of his alleged victims of attempting to flee the state of Massachusetts.

Relatives of the late police officer filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Reed, saying in court that “he has a Massachusetts leg,” according to a Boston Herald report.

Read for selling his three-bedroom Mansfield home for $849,900, just two weeks after his case was declared mistrial.

He also lost his position as a financial analyst and adjunct professor at Bentley College.

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