A Massachusetts judge ruled Monday that prosecutors in the murder trial of Brian Walshe can show jurors a still image from a home video of his wife, Ana Walshe, playing with their children on a rug. The decision came after defense attorneys argued the full video was too inflammatory.
The prosecution sought to introduce the evidence to connect Ana Walshe to a rug identical to one later found in a dumpster 40 miles from the family’s Cohasset home. A saw and a bone fragment were also recovered from the location near the home of Brian Walshe’s mother.
Prosecutors allege that Brian Walshe, a 50-year-old convicted art fraudster, killed his wife after learning she was having an affair and planned to move to Washington, D.C., with their children. They also claim Walshe believed he could avoid a federal prison sentence for his fraud conviction by becoming the sole caretaker of their three children. According to court records, Walshe was the beneficiary of his wife’s $2.7 million life insurance policy and owed nearly $500,000 in restitution from his federal case. The man Ana Walshe was allegedly having an affair with is on the witness list and is expected to testify.
During the final pretrial hearing, Judge Diane Freniere also ruled that prosecutors can introduce some evidence of Walshe’s federal conviction to establish motive. Additionally, the judge will likely allow testimony from a friend of Ana Walshe regarding a conversation just days before her disappearance, in which she allegedly discussed giving her husband an “ultimatum.” The judge deemed this conversation relevant to establishing motive and Ana Walshe’s state of mind before she vanished.
Walshe has pleaded not guilty to the murder. Although Ana Walshe’s remains have not been located, investigators allege her husband killed and dismembered her, citing digital evidence of his online searches on how to dispose of human remains.
A former lead detective on the case, Michael Proctor, was later terminated from the Massachusetts State Police for his handling of the separate high-profile Karen Read investigation.
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