Karen Read’s Trial Judge Expands Buffer Zone for Fairness As Trial Nears

Judge Beverly Cannone has made a bold move in the Karen Read case—she’s expanding the courthouse buffer zone, and not by a little. The new zone now blankets a much wider radius, roping in entire streets like Bates Court, Bullard Street, Ames Street, and Court Street. Why? Because the courtroom isn’t the only battleground in this case—there’s a full-blown war being fought on the sidewalks.
With the first trial turning into a circus of protesters, chants, and public pressure, this new order is meant to keep the noise out and the facts in. The Commonwealth pushed for even tighter controls, and while they didn’t get the most extreme version they were after, they did get this: a dramatically larger buffer zone, aiming to build a wall between justice and chaos.
Let’s back up and look at what led us here. Karen Read is facing charges in the death of her boyfriend, Boston Police Officer John O’Keefe. The allegation? That she hit him with her SUV in January 2022 and left him to die in the snow. But her defense says this isn’t just a tragic accident—it’s a cover-up. A cover-up involving law enforcement itself.
The claims have ignited a firestorm. Protesters have become a daily feature outside the courthouse—complete with signs, chants, bullhorns, and heated confrontations. During her first trial, these demonstrations weren’t just noisy—they were disruptive, with allegations that they intimidated jurors and may have influenced proceedings. And in a case where the defense is accusing police of corruption, the optics of off-duty officers mingling with the crowd didn’t help.
So now, the court is stepping in hard. This new buffer zone isn’t just a circle drawn on a map—it’s a tactical move to stop the trial from turning into a street performance.
But the restrictions don’t end at the courthouse steps. Judge Cannone is laying down the law inside, too. No case-related apparel, no buttons, no slogans. Even law enforcement officers won’t be allowed to testify in uniform. The idea is to strip away the visual politics, the unspoken signals, and the chance that a badge or a T-shirt could subconsciously nudge a juror in one direction.
It’s not just about fairness—it’s about the appearance of fairness. And with jury selection scheduled to begin April 1, the pressure is on to make sure that 12 people can sit in that box without being nudged by anything other than the evidence.
Because this trial is already on a national stage. Every move, every ruling, every protest sign is being photographed, posted, dissected, and argued about online. The court isn’t just fighting for control inside the courtroom—they’re trying to keep the courtroom from being swallowed by the court of public opinion.
Karen Read’s defense continues to claim she’s a scapegoat. Prosecutors insist she’s responsible for O’Keefe’s death. And in the middle of all this, a judge is trying to make sure that a jury can hear a case—not a crowd.
With April 1 looming and public tensions boiling, this expanded buffer zone is more than just geography—it’s a last-ditch effort to carve out a space where justice can breathe.
#KarenRead #JohnOKeefe #BufferZone #TrueCrime
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