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All The Mass Corruption
The Breakdown Of Law And Order In Canton (Karen Read Tree Story)
Author: Roberts R. Kevin
Narrator: Virginia Tisa
Unabridged: 2 hr 36 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Roberts R. Kevin
Published: 04/15/2026
Categories: Nonfiction, True Crime, White Collar Crime, Murder
Synopsis
All the Mass Corruption examines a criminal case that raised serious concerns about policing, prosecution, and political influence in a small Massachusetts town.For decades, allegations of police misconduct in Massachusetts have surfaced and faded, often without consequence. In recent years, however, these issues have intensified, revealing patterns that can no longer be dismissed as isolated mistakes.At the center of this book is the case of a woman prosecuted for a crime she consistently denied committing. Despite major inconsistencies, conflicting evidence, and unanswered questions, the case moved forward aggressively—raising concerns about how conclusions were reached and why alternative explanations were ignored.This story is not unique.In the same community, the death of a pregnant woman was ruled a suicide under troubling circumstances. Evidence suggesting otherwise was overlooked until federal authorities intervened, exposing broader failures and reinforcing concerns about how power can distort justice.These cases reflect a larger issue.Across Massachusetts, law enforcement has faced repeated scandals involving evidence tampering, corruption, abuse of authority, and oversight failures. Thousands of convictions were later overturned after compromised forensic evidence was uncovered—problems known but left unresolved for years.Using documented cases, public records, and analysis, All the Mass Corruption reveals patterns of institutional self-protection, showing how investigations lose objectivity, accountability stalls, and official narratives persist even when facts remain uncertain.This is not a sensational account, but a factual examination of what happens when justice systems stop questioning themselves—and why restoring trust requires more than authority.