DEDHAM, Mass. — Michael Proctor, a fired Massachusetts State Police trooper who served as the lead investigator in the Karen Read murder case, is fighting to get his job back.
Proctor will make a remote court appearance for a status conference on Monday as both sides work out issues ahead of five scheduled civil service hearings later this month.
Colonel Geoffrey Noble accepted the Massachusetts State Police Trial Board’s recommendation to terminate Proctor from his position as a trooper back in March.
The Trial Board found Proctor guilty of two charges, unsatisfactory performance and alcoholic beverages, which were presented over three disciplinary hearings.
Proctor’s firing came months after he came under fire for a series of disparaging texts he sent about Read, which he read aloud in court during witness testimony at her first trial. Proctor admitted on the stand that the texts were “unprofessional.”
He called Read things like a “whack job” and other derogatory words. He also talked about her medical issues and wrote, “No nudes so far,” while going through her phone.
Proctor was assigned to investigate the death of Read’s Boston police officer boyfriend, John O’Keefe. He was relieved of his duty without pay this past summer after a mistrial was declared in Read’s murder case and his last day with the Norfolk District Attorney’s Office followed soon thereafter.
Read was acquitted of murder and manslaughter in O’Keefe’s death in June. Proctor wasn’t called to testify in the second trial.
Proctor also served as the lead investigator in the case against Brian Walshe, who is accused of killing and dismembering his wife Ana Walshe.
The first hearing regarding Proctor’s push to get reinstated is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. on Aug. 19.
Subsequent hearings are slated for Aug. 20, 21, 26, and 27.
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