The husband of mom Ana Walshe appeared in court via Zoom today for a brief status hearing ahead of his murder trial. 

Brian Walshe is to death, dismembering her body and disposing of it in a dumpster in January. 

Police have not been able to recover her remains – they say they were taken from the dumpster by trash services and before they could catch up to them. 

Walshe, 47, denies murder, and claims he doesn’t know what happened to his wife, who has not been seen alive since the early hours of January 1. 

Today, his attorneys complained that they are yet to receive any discovery from the state that would help them prepare a defense. If you loved this short article and you would like to acquire more data about EVdEN eve NAKLiyAt kindly take a look at our own web site.   

Brian Walshe is accused of beating Ana to death, dismembering her body and disposing of it in a dumpster in January.

Ana went missing in the early hours of January 1.

Prosecutors say her remains were ‘shredded and incinerated’ 

‘We’ve received very little discovery.

We’ve received basically nothing. We haven’t even received the search warrants – the basic stuff we should have had immediately,’ Walshe’s lawyer Tracy Miner said. 

The judge ordered the state to ‘cooperate’ and turn over their evidence. 

The case has been continued until March 1st, when Walshe will return to court via Zoom again for a second status hearing. 

After that, the next step is a probable cause hearing, where it will be determined whether there is enough evidence against him to proceed to a murder trial.  

Prosecutors previously said Brian and Ana were headed for a divorce, EVdEn EvE nAKliyaT but that Brian chose instead to kill her.

They pointed to a mountain of evidence including grim Google searches carried out on their son’s iPad that included research for disposing of a body and how long it takes for corpses to decompose.

Blood traces were found on items of Ana’s clothing that were discovered in a different dumpster, along with Brian’s DNA. 

Ana, who was a real estate agent, had built a $2million property portfolio before she died. 

She lived in Massachusetts with her husband and their kids, but traveled frequently to Washington DC for work. 

Her colleagues asked for a welfare check after she failed to show up to her job in January, three days after she was last seen alive. 

Brian had also researched whether a person could inherit money from a missing person. 

He has pleaded not guilty to murder and disposing of a body, but is yet to submit a formal defense. 

Ana’s mother in Serbia is incredulous that her once-loving son-in-law might be capable of such violence. 

She wants ‘official information’ from the authorities that will explain their suspicion of Brian. 

THE EVIDENCE AGAINST BRIAN WALSHE 

On December 27th, days before she vanished, prosecutors say he Googled: ‘What’s the best state to divorce for a man?’ 

Ana was last seen alive at 1.30am on January 1st by friends who had been in their home for a New Year’s EvdeN eve naKliYAt party. 

Shortly before 5am on January 1st, using his son’s iPad, he searched;  

January 2nd 

After purchasing rugs from a Home Goods store while wearing rubber gloves and a face mask, he returned to the iPad for more research. 

He also spent $450 on cleaning supplies from a Home Depot including mops, buckets, tarps, drop cloths and various kinds of tape.  

This time, prosecutors say he searched; 

January 3rd

Police say he visited a dumpster in Abingdon, where he was seen carrying a heavy-looking garbage bag. 

‘He had to heft it into the dumpster,’ according to police. 

Prosecutors tried to track down those trash bags, but by the time they got to them they had been destroyed in an incinerator at a trash transfer center. 

Walshe did more research, allegedly searching; 

January 4th 

Walshe bought bath mats, men’s clothing and towels at TJ Maxx and Home Goods.

He then visited Loewes. 

That same day, a colleague of Ana’s in Washington DC called police in Cohasset to report her missing and request a welfare check at her home. 

Police visited the family house, where they noticed the seats in Brian’s Volvo were down, and a large, plastic liner was in the backseat.  

January 5th

Police returned to the Walshe family home, where they noticed Brian’s Volvo had been freshly cleaned. 

When questioned, he said he’d thrown out the plastic liner they saw the previous day. 

That same day, he visited the dumpster near his mother’s home. 

January 8th

Walshe is arrested for misleading police.

A search warrant for the house is obtained, and police discover blood stains in the basement. They also found a knife with traces of blood on it. 

Police then searched the dumpster near his mother’s home and found 10 trash bag that were stained with blood.
Inside, they discovered; 

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