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MA ANA WALSHE: Missing from Cohasset, MA- 1 Jan 2023 - Age 39 *ARREST* (3 Viewers)

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Missing Cohasset woman Ana Walshe last seen on New Year's Day​

Cohasset police are looking for Ana Walshe, a missing woman who was last seen early in the morning on New Year's Day.


Walshe lives in Cohasset with her family, but she spends the workweeks in Washington DC. Her husband was not able to speak with WBZ-TV as he cares for their three young children, but family and friends near and far are growing desperate for her safe return.

"We're doing anything and everything, turning the world over to find her," said Alissa Kirby, Ana's friend in Washington DC.

Concern is growing, from Cohasset to the nation's capital, over her whereabouts and well-being. She works as a commercial real estate executive in DC, but her greatest passion and priority - her young sons in Massachusetts.

Police say the 39-year-old was last seen at her home in Cohasset shortly after midnight Sunday. Happy New Year messages were never returned.
 
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Murder suspect Brian Walshe wants Google searches on body disposal suppressed from trial​

Brian Walshe, a man charged with killing and dismembering his wife in Cohasset, wants to bar evidence of Google searches about the “best ways to dispose of a body” at his trial on the basis that investigators did not use a search warrant to obtain it, according to court filings.

Investigators found the Google searches on his son’s iPad, but his lawyers argue that they obtained this evidence improperly and without his consent.

In the initial days of the police investigation, when Brian Walshe’s wife — 39-year-old Ana Walshe — was merely a missing person, he agreed to let law enforcement review his family’s electronic devices for messages, according to court filings. He did not consent to allowing police access to internet search histories on the devices, his lawyers argue.

Walshe’s attorneys now assert the Google searches and any subsequent searches, including some with warrants, were “fruits of the illegal and unauthorized searches,” and are impermissible in court.

In Norfolk County Superior Court on Monday, prosecutors countered that since Ana Walshe was a missing person at the time and her husband turned over the devices voluntarily, the evidence was obtained properly, the Boston Globe reported.



The internet searches, which were made between Jan. 1 and 3, 2023, include questions such as “How long before a body starts to smell,” “How long for someone to be missing to inherit,” “Can you be charged with murder without a body,” “Can identification be made on partial remains” and “How to clean blood from wooden floor.”

Walshe’s lawyers wrote in new court filings that detectives violated his constitutional rights by obtaining this evidence improperly.

The defense team also questions the validity of the subsequent search warrants investigators used to obtain evidence against Walshe. One was prepared by disgraced former state police Trooper Michael Proctor, who was the lead investigator in the Karen Read murder case.

It is unclear when Norfolk Superior Court Judge Diane Freniere, who is presiding over the case, will rule on this issue. Trial hearings are set to take place over the course of two days this week.
 

Murder suspect Brian Walshe wants Google searches on body disposal suppressed from trial​

Brian Walshe, a man charged with killing and dismembering his wife in Cohasset, wants to bar evidence of Google searches about the “best ways to dispose of a body” at his trial on the basis that investigators did not use a search warrant to obtain it, according to court filings.

Investigators found the Google searches on his son’s iPad, but his lawyers argue that they obtained this evidence improperly and without his consent.

In the initial days of the police investigation, when Brian Walshe’s wife — 39-year-old Ana Walshe — was merely a missing person, he agreed to let law enforcement review his family’s electronic devices for messages, according to court filings. He did not consent to allowing police access to internet search histories on the devices, his lawyers argue.

Walshe’s attorneys now assert the Google searches and any subsequent searches, including some with warrants, were “fruits of the illegal and unauthorized searches,” and are impermissible in court.

In Norfolk County Superior Court on Monday, prosecutors countered that since Ana Walshe was a missing person at the time and her husband turned over the devices voluntarily, the evidence was obtained properly, the Boston Globe reported.



The internet searches, which were made between Jan. 1 and 3, 2023, include questions such as “How long before a body starts to smell,” “How long for someone to be missing to inherit,” “Can you be charged with murder without a body,” “Can identification be made on partial remains” and “How to clean blood from wooden floor.”

Walshe’s lawyers wrote in new court filings that detectives violated his constitutional rights by obtaining this evidence improperly.

The defense team also questions the validity of the subsequent search warrants investigators used to obtain evidence against Walshe. One was prepared by disgraced former state police Trooper Michael Proctor, who was the lead investigator in the Karen Read murder case.

It is unclear when Norfolk Superior Court Judge Diane Freniere, who is presiding over the case, will rule on this issue. Trial hearings are set to take place over the course of two days this week.
I bet he does
Season 9 Lol GIF by The Office
 

Could Brian Walshe's alleged Google searches be thrown out ahead of his trial?​

With a little more than 90 days to go before Brian Walshe is scheduled to go to trial for the alleged murder of his wife, Ana, the legal battle between his defense team and Norfolk County prosecutors has intensified.

Walshe's attorneys are trying to get the digital data that state troopers gathered from his Cohasset household's devices thrown out — namely, the infamous Google searches he allegedly made on his child's iPad and location data from his cell phone.

The center of the defense's argument is whether or not investigators went beyond the scope of what Walshe gave them consent to search on the devices.

The devices were downloaded and examined before a search warrant was issued in January of 2023, when the case was still a missing person case. Prosecutors are relying on the fact that Walshe willingly turned over his devices during their investigation to find Ana.

But the defense team is alleging that Walshe was mislead by investigators about what they would be looking for, and that they went beyond the scope of what was agreed upon, which the defense says was mainly communications between Brian and Ana.

The state has fired back at the allegations that the search was illegal — saying that Walshe "freely and voluntarily consented to searches of three digital devices," adding that the "the searches were conducted within the scope of that consent."

Prosecutors have maintained that the "incriminating" searches on the iPad were in plain view, and that discovery of the material was inevitable.
 

Brian Walshe's lawyers argue prosecutors lack evidence to show premeditated murder​

Brian Walshe, the Cohasset, Massachusetts, man accused in the alleged murder of his wife, Ana Walshe, appeared in court for a hearing Thursday morning.

Walshe, who was due in court for a hearing last Friday that ended up not taking place, was present in person at Plymouth Superior Court.

Much of the hearing was about the defense's motion to dismiss, as Walshe's attorneys argued that the commonwealth did not produce sufficient evidence to a grand jury to support their first degree murder indictment.

Larry Tipton, Walshe's primary defense attorney, spent much of the hearing attacking the evidence presented by the Commonwealth to the grand jury. He argued that much of their evidence dealing with alleged premeditation of the murder relied on inference and not trustworthy fact.

Tipton clashed with Norfolk County prosecutors on their interpretations of various pieces of evidence and testimony in the case, and what they mean for Walshe's mindset preceding the alleged murder.

A big issue was whether or not Walshe was aware of an affair it seems that Ana was having before her death. Walshe's team denied that he knew about it — something that Judge Freniere pushed back on, referencing an interview that Walshe gave police on Jan. 4, 2023, when he stated he had access to her iMessage and Instagram accounts.

Freniere noted that there were messages between Ana and a man from Washington D.C., where she traveled to and from Cohasset for work, that "leave little doubt there was an affair going on."

Tipton said that just because Walshe had access to the accounts doesn't necessarily mean he saw the messages.

The Commonwealth brought up a number of other motives they allege are possible — primarily centering around the art fraud case he was dealing with at the time. Prosecutors pointed to the significant life insurance plan on Ana and the high restitution costs related to the art fraud case. They also speculated that Walshe may have thought he had a better chance at avoiding prison time at his sentencing if he were a single parent.

Then, there's the issue of the alleged Google searches about getting rid of a body. One of the Commonwealth's theories is that they could have been made while Ana was still alive, which would support their claims of premeditation.

Tipton pointed out, though, that prosecutors have shown a double standard for the timeline of New Year's Day 2023 — that their claims of the Google searches being made while Ana was still alive rely on Brian's statements about the timing of that morning — which prosecutors had cast doubt on in other arguments.

In his latest filings, Tipton seeks Freniere to remove the extreme atrocity or cruelty theory from the indictment.

Premeditation and extreme atrocity or cruelty are key parts of the qualifications to be charged with first degree murder in Massachusetts.

State law here defines first degree murder as "murder committed with deliberately premeditated malice aforethought, or with extreme atrocity or cruelty, or in the commission or attempted commission of a crime punishable with death or imprisonment for life."

If the crime is not this, the charge falls to murder in the second degree.

Walshe has pleaded not guilty to the charges he's facing in connection to his wife's disappearance.

There will be another hearing in the case on Aug. 1 at 2 p.m.
 

Brian Walshe prosecutors want to call PI, wife’s coworkers as witnesses in upcoming murder trial​

Prosecutors in the Brian Walshe murder case are seeking to have a private investigator and some of his missing wife’s coworkers testify as witnesses in his upcoming trial.

Monday court filings revealed that prosecutors have requested the certification of five material witnesses from outside Massachusetts to testify when Walshe’s case goes to trial later this year, The Boston Globe reported.

One of the witnesses is the private investigator hired by Walshe’s mother to investigate Ana Walshe’s alleged infidelity.

As the trial approaches, the inclusion of these witnesses could play a significant role in the proceedings, shedding light on the circumstances surrounding Ana Walshe’s disappearance.


Brian Walshe’s case is due back in court on Aug. 1.
 

Brian Walshe prosecutors want to call PI, wife’s coworkers as witnesses in upcoming murder trial​

Prosecutors in the Brian Walshe murder case are seeking to have a private investigator and some of his missing wife’s coworkers testify as witnesses in his upcoming trial.

Monday court filings revealed that prosecutors have requested the certification of five material witnesses from outside Massachusetts to testify when Walshe’s case goes to trial later this year, The Boston Globe reported.

One of the witnesses is the private investigator hired by Walshe’s mother to investigate Ana Walshe’s alleged infidelity.

As the trial approaches, the inclusion of these witnesses could play a significant role in the proceedings, shedding light on the circumstances surrounding Ana Walshe’s disappearance.


Brian Walshe’s case is due back in court on Aug. 1.
Mommy had to hire the PI for him!
:rofl:
 

The Searches for Ana Walshe podcast: New episodes out now and how to stream​

With the Brian Walshe murder trial approaching in the fall, NBC10 Boston's podcast, The Searches for Ana Walshe, is releasing new episodes frequently with in-depth reporting and analysis on a case that has gripped the Bay State and beyond.

The podcast show gives a look at the twists and turns in the case of the presumed murder of Ana Walshe, a mother of three from Cohasset, Massachusetts, allegedly at the hands of her husband.

Listeners will start on Massachusetts' South Shore, where Walshe was last seen on New Year's Day 2023, and then dive deep into the lives of the Walshe couple, the frantic search for the missing mom and the gruesome allegations against he husband.

Drawing on NBC10 Boston’s extensive reporting, including jaw-dropping moments that have gone viral and reporters’ recollections, we'll bring you inside the unfolding case and understand what's at stake.

The podcast is available on popular online streaming platforms. Listen and subscribe to get caught on the case, and stay up to date on every development as the trial nears.
 

Brian Walshe murder case: Judge denies another defense motion ahead of trial​

Another key ruling was made Tuesday in the case against Brian Walshe, the Cohasset man accused of dismembering his wife, Ana Walshe, with a hacksaw and disposing of her remains after using his son’s iPad to Google the best ways to get rid of a body.

Judge Diane Freniere denied a defense motion to dismiss an indictment charging Walshe with first-degree murder on the ground that the grand jury heard insufficient evidence to sustain an indictment.

In the motion filed last week, lawyers claimed that prosecutors violated Walshe’s rights by not reviewing “confidential materials” that could aid his defense. Prosecutors, however, argued that they are unable to review these materials due to federal regulations, as they are reportedly tied to the Karen Read murder case.

The specifics of these materials and their connection to the Read case remain unclear.

In denying the motion, Freniere stated that evidence presented to the grand jury was “sufficient to meet the probable cause standard to believe that he intended to kill Ana and that he decided to do so after a period of reflection.”


His murder trial is scheduled to begin on Monday, October 20.
 

Brian Walshe murder case: Judge denies another defense motion ahead of trial​

Another key ruling was made Tuesday in the case against Brian Walshe, the Cohasset man accused of dismembering his wife, Ana Walshe, with a hacksaw and disposing of her remains after using his son’s iPad to Google the best ways to get rid of a body.

Judge Diane Freniere denied a defense motion to dismiss an indictment charging Walshe with first-degree murder on the ground that the grand jury heard insufficient evidence to sustain an indictment.

In the motion filed last week, lawyers claimed that prosecutors violated Walshe’s rights by not reviewing “confidential materials” that could aid his defense. Prosecutors, however, argued that they are unable to review these materials due to federal regulations, as they are reportedly tied to the Karen Read murder case.

The specifics of these materials and their connection to the Read case remain unclear.

In denying the motion, Freniere stated that evidence presented to the grand jury was “sufficient to meet the probable cause standard to believe that he intended to kill Ana and that he decided to do so after a period of reflection.”


His murder trial is scheduled to begin on Monday, October 20.
So they are arguing that there was not enough evidence to reach an indictment, yet they indicted. Seems like enough to me and evidently to them, too.
 

Brian Walshe, charged in wife's murder, stabbed in Norfolk County Jail: source​

Brian Walshe, scheduled to stand trial next month for the murder of his wife, Ana Walshe, was reportedly stabbed in Norfolk County Jail in Dedham, Massachusetts, on Thursday night.

He was taken to a Boston hospital for treatment of a superficial injury, where he was treated and released, according to a law enforcement source close to the investigation. He is now back at the jail.

Though they didn't name Walshe, the Norfolk County Sheriff's Office released a statement saying that "an individual in custody" at the Norfolk County Jail was treated for non-life-threatening injuries after being assaulted inside one of the facility's housing units around 9:55 p.m. Thursday.

"Officers acted immediately to intervene and to render first aid. None of the officers was injured. The individual who was assaulted was conscious and alert and taken to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston for treatment. He was returned to our facility overnight," the statement said. "The other individual involved was subdued by officers, and a makeshift blunt instrument was recovered."
 

Brian Walshe, charged in wife's murder, stabbed in Norfolk County Jail: source​

Brian Walshe, scheduled to stand trial next month for the murder of his wife, Ana Walshe, was reportedly stabbed in Norfolk County Jail in Dedham, Massachusetts, on Thursday night.

He was taken to a Boston hospital for treatment of a superficial injury, where he was treated and released, according to a law enforcement source close to the investigation. He is now back at the jail.

Though they didn't name Walshe, the Norfolk County Sheriff's Office released a statement saying that "an individual in custody" at the Norfolk County Jail was treated for non-life-threatening injuries after being assaulted inside one of the facility's housing units around 9:55 p.m. Thursday.

"Officers acted immediately to intervene and to render first aid. None of the officers was injured. The individual who was assaulted was conscious and alert and taken to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston for treatment. He was returned to our facility overnight," the statement said. "The other individual involved was subdued by officers, and a makeshift blunt instrument was recovered."
Stabbed with a blunt instrument???😳
 

Brian Walshe, charged in wife's murder, stabbed in Norfolk County Jail: source​

Brian Walshe, scheduled to stand trial next month for the murder of his wife, Ana Walshe, was reportedly stabbed in Norfolk County Jail in Dedham, Massachusetts, on Thursday night.

He was taken to a Boston hospital for treatment of a superficial injury, where he was treated and released, according to a law enforcement source close to the investigation. He is now back at the jail.

Though they didn't name Walshe, the Norfolk County Sheriff's Office released a statement saying that "an individual in custody" at the Norfolk County Jail was treated for non-life-threatening injuries after being assaulted inside one of the facility's housing units around 9:55 p.m. Thursday.

"Officers acted immediately to intervene and to render first aid. None of the officers was injured. The individual who was assaulted was conscious and alert and taken to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston for treatment. He was returned to our facility overnight," the statement said. "The other individual involved was subdued by officers, and a makeshift blunt instrument was recovered."

Oh no!!
Oh No Omg GIF by GritTV


It was only superficial. Maaannnn...
 
Judge denies appeal to suppress key evidence in Brian Walshe case

Supreme Judicial Court Justice Elizabeth Dewar denied an appeal made by Walshe’s attorneys to suppress key Google searches found on his phone and two tablets belonging to his children. The searches include, “How long before a body starts to smell,” “How long for someone to be missing to inheritance?” and “Dismemberment and best ways to dispose of a body.”
Walshe’s attorneys claim police went beyond the terms of a consent agreement when searching the phone and tablet, but the justice said allowing the appeal would not facilitate the administration of justice.
 

Attorneys for Brian Walshe, other defendants get update on Proctor evidence​

Attorneys for Brian Walshe and other Norfolk County murder defendants are still trying to get evidence materials related to former Massachusetts State Police Trooper Michael Proctor's phones used in the Karen Read trial.

The Read trial evidence was given to the Norfolk District Attorney's Office with the condition that it would only be used in the Read trial and then destroyed.

But Walshe's attorneys are trying to get the materials to see if there is any exculpatory evidence in their case, which was also investigated in Norfolk County where Proctor worked.

Prosecutors told a judge Thursday that they believe they have a potential way of providing the materials, but still need at least a couple more weeks to finalize the plan with the U.S. Attorney's office.

Walshe is scheduled to go on trial for the alleged murder of his wife, Ana Walshe, on Oct. 20.
 

Brian Walshe hospitalized for competence check, murder trial pushed back​

Brian Walshe's murder trial has been delayed as the Cohasset, Massachusetts, man accused of killing his wife was ordered hospitalized for evaluation of whether he's competent to stand trial, court records show.

After a hearing Monday, Judge Diane Freniere ordered that Walshe be evaluated at Bridgewater State Hospital for 20 days to determine if he's competent to stand trial, according to the court docket. He'd been set for a final pre-conference hearing on Tuesday morning, ahead of a trial beginning on Oct. 20, but both have been rescheduled, the record shows.

In their request to push back the trial, Walshe's lawyers cited three factors: Walshe being stabbed in prison last month, prosecutors unilaterally deciding to conduct new DNA testing right before trial and the possibility that prosecutors found evidence favorable to him but haven't disclosed it.

Prosecutors opposed the motion to move the trial date back, saying Walshe was returned the jail a few hours after he was stabbed without needing to be admitted and that there were no medical records backing up what defense lawyers said were "grave concerns about the defendant's ability to intelligently and meaningfully participate in the trial." They also said the matters involving evidence were set to be resolved before trial started.

"It's somewhat unusual to see the defendant's own lawyers ask questions about his competency to stand trial," noted NBC10 Boston legal analyst Michael Coyne. "In view of his recent stabbing and the injuries he suffered in the Norfolk County House of Correction, it's wise, under the circumstances, to postpone this, have him evaluated."

Coyne believes the results of the mental evaluation could reshape the case moving forward, especially if Walshe is found not to be competent to continue.

"Then the case would be postponed until such time as he's evaluated again and the experts determine that he can, in fact, adequately assist with his defense," said Coyne.

Walshe is due back in court Oct. 27 for a competency hearing.
 

Brian Walshe hospitalized for competence check, murder trial pushed back​

Brian Walshe's murder trial has been delayed as the Cohasset, Massachusetts, man accused of killing his wife was ordered hospitalized for evaluation of whether he's competent to stand trial, court records show.

After a hearing Monday, Judge Diane Freniere ordered that Walshe be evaluated at Bridgewater State Hospital for 20 days to determine if he's competent to stand trial, according to the court docket. He'd been set for a final pre-conference hearing on Tuesday morning, ahead of a trial beginning on Oct. 20, but both have been rescheduled, the record shows.

In their request to push back the trial, Walshe's lawyers cited three factors: Walshe being stabbed in prison last month, prosecutors unilaterally deciding to conduct new DNA testing right before trial and the possibility that prosecutors found evidence favorable to him but haven't disclosed it.

Prosecutors opposed the motion to move the trial date back, saying Walshe was returned the jail a few hours after he was stabbed without needing to be admitted and that there were no medical records backing up what defense lawyers said were "grave concerns about the defendant's ability to intelligently and meaningfully participate in the trial." They also said the matters involving evidence were set to be resolved before trial started.

"It's somewhat unusual to see the defendant's own lawyers ask questions about his competency to stand trial," noted NBC10 Boston legal analyst Michael Coyne. "In view of his recent stabbing and the injuries he suffered in the Norfolk County House of Correction, it's wise, under the circumstances, to postpone this, have him evaluated."

Coyne believes the results of the mental evaluation could reshape the case moving forward, especially if Walshe is found not to be competent to continue.

"Then the case would be postponed until such time as he's evaluated again and the experts determine that he can, in fact, adequately assist with his defense," said Coyne.

Walshe is due back in court Oct. 27 for a competency hearing.
"Stabbed" is more like it. Did he do it to himself? That's what it's suggesting like to me. No records and no real treatment for any real stab wound.
 

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