Read Murder Trial: Analysis by Georgia PI & Trial Attny Ted Spaulding CourtTV | Spaulding Injury Law

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  • Опубліковано 27 чер 2024
  • Georgia Personal Injury and Trial Attorney Ted Spaulding discusses the murder trial of Karen Read for the murder of her boyfriend Boston Police Officer John O'KeefeCourtTV. While the 4th day of deliberations is ongoing, Attorney Spaulding explains what this could mean and explains some legal aspects of the case as well as public opinions on this highly publicized case.
    The trial has received a lot of publicity because Read is accused of hitting her Boston police officer boyfriend with her Lexus SUV and leaving him for dead outside in a snowstorm, and a potential coverup by the police.
    • What is the impact because the jury is not sequestered?
    • Does what the public thinks reflect what the jury thinks?
    • What happens if there's a hung jury?
    • What can the family do if there's an acquittal?
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 4

  • @ninajefferson4018
    @ninajefferson4018 Місяць тому +1

    Because shes being railroaded!!

  • @Greatgadgetsgear
    @Greatgadgetsgear Місяць тому

    I think they’re hung up on her behavior towards him and the fact she kept asking if she hit him. The cops investigating and the cop family were clearly the suspicious people and bungled the entire investigation but it won’t offset her own comments. Think they’ll convict her for the lessor on just her comment about hitting him. Even though the evidence was clear from experts but they’ll want to hold someone accountable. Juries can be unpredictable

  • @evelynmahoney3569
    @evelynmahoney3569 Місяць тому

    Saying we have a divided public is misleading, implying an inaccurate version of the truth.
    Divided implies somewhere in the range of 50 - 50. Not so. You just shared poll results, but glossed over them very quickly.
    My estimate: 98% believe Karen is Not Guilty and 2% want her to be found guilty.
    Of that 2%, half know she's not guilty but want her to be found guilty anyway. That leaves only 1% who actually believe she is guilty