BOMBSHELL LAWSUIT EXPLODES: ‘Women-Hating’ Cops’ Vile Racist & Sexist Texts Exposed — Did They Frame Karen Read in Cop Boyfriend’s Shocking Death?

BOMBSHELL LAWSUIT EXPLODES: ‘Women-Hating’ Cops’ Vile Racist & Sexist Texts Exposed — Did They Frame Karen Read in Cop Boyfriend’s Shocking Death?

In a jaw-dropping twist that’s ripping the lid off alleged police corruption in Massachusetts, acquitted murder suspect Karen Read has unleashed a ferocious counterattack — suing the very cops she claims railroaded her while unleashing a torrent of their own disgusting, decade-long text messages filled with hatred toward women, minorities, Jews, and more.

The 45-year-old Read, who walked free last year after a high-profile trial for allegedly mowing down her Boston police officer boyfriend with her SUV, is now painting a damning picture of “virulent bigots” obsessed with pinning the crime on “the girl.” This new civil suit is pure tabloid dynamite, revealing hundreds of stomach-churning messages that could torpedo the reputations of entire police departments.

Decade of Disgusting Texts: The Shocking Evidence

Filed Thursday against the Town of Canton and Massachusetts State Police, the lawsuit spotlights lead investigator ex-Trooper Michael Proctor and former Canton Police Sgt. Sean Goode as the ringleaders of a toxic boys’ club.

Court documents allege the pair — and their circle of like-minded buddies — spent years firing off messages packed with slurs like “fat c—ts,” “sluts,” “dirty n—-ers,” “n-glets,” “stupid ugly g–ks,” “c—k tards,” and “jew chicks.” The hatred allegedly ran so deep it wasn’t occasional venting — it was their everyday language.

One particularly vile exchange targeted Anne Frank, the tragic teenage Holocaust victim. Goode allegedly texted: “Anne Franks a lying c-nt.” Meanwhile, Proctor reportedly unleashed on his female boss in horrifying fashion: “My new VP is a giant malignant c-nt. I pray to the heavens that some f-cked up insect from the amazon crawls up her vagina, hatches eggs and the litter kills her by eating her from the inside out.”

These aren’t isolated rants. The lawsuit claims they reveal “entrenched and unrepentant hatred” for women, Black Americans, Asian Americans, Jews, Hispanics, Arabs, and gay people.

“Pin It on the Girl”: The Alleged Setup

According to Read’s legal team, the investigation into John O’Keefe’s 2022 death was tainted from the start. The goal? “To pin it on the girl.” O’Keefe, a beloved cop, was found dead in a snowbank after a night of drinking during a blizzard. Prosecutors claimed Read hit him with her Lexus and left him to die. She insisted she was framed in a massive cover-up.

Read was acquitted in June 2025 after a dramatic retrial. Now she’s arguing the departments “unleashed these two misogynist bigots” on her case, knowing — or should have known — they were unfit for duty. The suit claims this exposed a rotten culture of bigotry, misogyny, and institutional failure at the heart of local and state police.

Additional bombshells in the texts include Goode allegedly calling a woman “borderline retarded” while discussing the Sandra Birchmore case, labeling Boston Mayor Michelle Wu a “little c-nt,” and referring to Patriots owner Robert Kraft as a “terrible c-nty Jew.” Proctor allegedly replied to one thread: “America sucks …. Hitler was really on to something then the f—king US had to step in and ruin it.”

In another disturbing message, Goode reportedly detailed attempts to have anal sex with his sleeping girlfriend, complaining he couldn’t “get f–king near that [anus]” despite trying when she was drunk or asleep.

Karen Read Fights Back: From Accused to Accuser

Read has maintained her innocence throughout, positioning herself as the ultimate patsy in a corrupt system. Her acquittal was a major victory, but the scars remain. This lawsuit seeks to hold the Town of Canton and State Police accountable, arguing they allowed bigoted officers to lead a “conflicted and corrupt” investigation.

The filing in Bristol Superior Court doesn’t just demand justice for Read — it aims to expose systemic problems that allegedly protected these officers for years. “Their unfitness for any position of public trust was not subtle,” the suit declares.

Police Departments Push Back: “We’ve Changed”

The Town of Canton quickly responded, emphasizing new leadership under Chief Michael Daniels and rejecting broad-brush characterizations of its officers. “The Town of Canton has the utmost faith and confidence in the new leadership,” officials said, praising the “brave and dedicated men and women” who serve.

Massachusetts State Police Col. Geoffrey Noble condemned the texts as “disturbing” and “entirely inconsistent with any basic standard of decency.” He noted they supported his decision to terminate Proctor and highlighted reforms underway to modernize the department.

Still, the damage from these revelations could be lasting. The case has already shone a harsh light on law enforcement practices in the Boston area, fueling public distrust and raising questions about how such officers remained in power for so long.

The Karen Read Saga: A Case That Refuses to Die

This isn’t just another lawsuit — it’s the latest chapter in one of the most polarizing true-crime stories in recent memory. The original trial gripped the nation with its mix of alleged police misconduct, a snowstorm death, and a passionate defense claiming a frame job. Read’s supporters see her as a victim of a broken system; critics still believe she got away with murder.

With these explosive texts now public, the narrative shifts heavily toward allegations of deep-seated prejudice driving the case against her. Whether the courts will agree remains to be seen, but the public relations nightmare for Massachusetts law enforcement is already underway.

What This Means for Justice and Accountability

Cases like this force uncomfortable conversations about who polices the police. If even a fraction of the allegations hold up, it points to a toxic culture where personal hatreds influenced official investigations — potentially endangering innocent lives and undermining public safety.

For Karen Read, the fight isn’t over. Having beaten murder charges, she’s now on the offensive, demanding accountability and, presumably, damages for what she endured. The lawsuit could drag on for years, but the text messages alone have already delivered a powerful blow to the officers and departments involved.

In an era where bodycams and digital trails make everything traceable, this story serves as a stark warning: hateful words in private can have very public — and expensive — consequences.

As more details emerge from this bombshell filing, one thing is crystal clear: the Karen Read case continues to deliver shocks, exposing cracks in the system that many would prefer stayed hidden.

The question now isn’t just who killed John O’Keefe — but whether the real scandal was the investigation itself.