Karen Read, Alan Jackson
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Boston 25 News reporter Ted Daniel and Peter Tragos, also known as the “Lawyer You Know,” reacted to a recent letter submitted by Karen Read's defense attorney, Alan Jackson, demanding that a Boston Police officer who testified in the trial be put on the 'Brady List.
Karen Read's lead attorney Alan Jackson is back with a new high-profile murder case, and it involves an alleged pedestrian collision.
Alan Jackson takes VF behind-the-scenes of the trial, from the not-guilty verdict to his withering cross-examinations, to what comes next for his client.
Alan Jackson told the magazine that his firm would’ve billed a combined $10 million for both trials. Read's financial arrangement with her legal team hasn’t been disclosed.
The letter, addressed to Boston Police Commissioner Michael Cox and obtained exclusively by 25 Investigates, alleges Officer Kelly Dever’s credibility is “irreparably compromised”.
For $566,000, the taxpayers might have expected a little more effort from Hammered Hank Brennan. For that kind of money couldn’t he have worked a little more competently at trying to railroad
Karen Read and her prominent defense attorney Alan Jackson are teaming up again following her acquittal on charges in the death of Boston police officer John O'Keefe, this time for a book and scripted film project.
Invoices show Brennan’s firm, Brennan & Associates, billed the Norfolk district attorney’s office $566,000 between September 2024 and the trial's conclusion last month.
Boston Police Commissioner Michael Cox says he “didn’t know” that one of his officers was associated with the Karen Read case, contradicting his subordinate, who testified in the retrial that he
Read’s defense attorneys argued that O’Keefe, who allegedly had a long-standing disagreement with someone at the party, was severely injured during an argument at the party and may have been attacked by a dog given the deep wounds on his arm.
A Mass. State Police sergeant involved in the investigation of Karen Read has been reassigned from his position at the Norfolk District Attorney’s Office. Sergeant Yuri Bukhenik was moved to the state police’s Division of Standards and Training effective Sunday, July 6, a Massachusetts State Police spokesperson told Boston 25 News on Monday.