The state trooper who led the investigation into Karen Read, the Massachusetts woman whose murder trial in the death of her police officer boyfriend ended with a hung jury last week, was suspended without pay Monday, an agency spokesman said.
Trooper Michael Proctor was suspended, effective immediately, nearly a month after he testified that he made derogatory comments about Read in text messages to friends, relatives and supervisors.
A three-member panel recommended the suspension after a duty status hearing, the spokesman said, adding that the interim superintendent, Col. John Mawn, accepted the recommendation.
The spokesman would not comment further.
Defense lawyers for Read, who was charged with second-degree murder, motor vehicle manslaughter while driving under the influence and leaving the scene of a collision causing death, had accused Proctor of manipulating evidence and conducting a biased investigation into the death of Boston Police Officer John O’Keefe on Jan. 29, 2022.
During the trial, which lasted nine weeks and included dozens of witnesses, Proctor denied the allegations and described his comments as unprofessional and regrettable but said they didn’t compromise the investigation.
Hours after the judge declared a mistrial, Proctor was relieved of duty from his post at a state police unit within the Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office.
Mawn, the interim state police superintendent, said the agency had opened an internal affairs investigation into allegations of “serious misconduct” raised at trial. The investigation is ongoing, the agency spokesman said Monday.
The state police union did not respond to a request for comment.
O’Keefe was found unresponsive in the front yard of another Boston police officer’s home the morning of Jan. 29. He was pronounced dead shortly afterward. A medical examiner said the cause of death was blunt force trauma and hypothermia.
The prosecution described a deteriorating relationship between Read and O’Keefe and accused Read of backing her Lexus SUV into her boyfriend outside the home of the other Boston police officer, Brian Albert.
Her defense lawyers argued that O’Keefe was most likely assaulted and killed during a party at Albert’s home the night before he was found in his front yard. The lawyers accused Albert and other law enforcement officers of covering up the killing and blaming Read for O’Keefe’s death.
The assistant district attorney who tried the case called the theory “rampant speculation.” Albert has said O’Keefe never entered his home that night.
Norfolk Superior Court Judge Beverly Cannone declared a mistrial on July 1, the fifth day of jury deliberations. Prosecutors have said they intend to retry the case.