Still Missing MA - Ana Walshe, 39, allegedly left home, may have been dismembered, Cohasset, Jan 2023 *husband indicted* #4

  • #1,481
The hurdle for the Defense, let's say there jury reserves an iota of doubt (more like a boatload of suspended reason) about the mechanism of Ana's death -- because fairly, there can't be one, as she wasn't recovered -- there's still a monumental chasm, from Ana being dead, by whatever unknown means, and a panic that goes straight to hacksaw.

That is not a normal leap in any universe.

And the jury isn't tasked to determine guilt based on any single piece of evidence but from the totality, and the totality includes IMO what's reasonable panic, the credibility and self-preservation of the defendant, the facts of an affair which suggest the marriage wasn't so rock solid, and his Google searches work together to eliminate iotas.

JMO
 
  • #1,482
So, his defense is that he found her suddenly dead, didn't bother to call 911 or make any attempt to save her, but instead panicked, which led him to the most logical next step, dismemberment.

I can't wait until the judge allows/introduces the concept of consciousness of guilt.

The Defense, attempting to bend interpretation and declare his subsequent actions as a result of panic, Durban wasn't to be blamed, presumably for something he didn't do...

When actually his panic isn't in question. He was probably panicked, suddenly having a dead wife to deal with, with no plan.

So the question before the jury IMO will be: why was he panicked? Because he felt he'd be blamed. Because he didn't do it. Or because he did.

Question of the hour: does Brian need to take the stand to answer to that panic? Disastrous if he does. But I can see him thinking he can be believable...

He did not roll her up in a rug, bury her wrapped in a blanket in a shallow grave, if we were to grant him any latitude. What would a reasonable person do, who found his spouse suddenly deceased AND felt he'd be blamed... you'd have to suspend reason to grant him even that. Any reasonable person would hope against hope she could be resuscitate, that would be the panic.

Worse than all that, he dismembered her and disposed of her in the trash. The jury gets to weigh that.

What is not being said: it is true that no one knows how Ana died. Could Brian be acquitted because the jury came say for certain he killed her? It's a fair question. But the thing nor being said, if Ana had died of sudden, unexplained death, Brian himself wouldn't have known what caused it (unless he is going to make one up, in the stand. Fell in the shower, hit her head on a lamp, overdosed, etc, etc), why would he OBLITERATE the very evidence that could now exonerate him? Recover her remains, perform a proper autopsy, show the natural cause of death, no trauma, no homicide.

He destroyed her body. He did not want any part of her found. Because he panicked? (Yes, he panicked all right, but not because he found her suddenly dead and feared he'd somehow be blamed -- huh? Who would blame him if she died of a heart attack, of an embolism, of a stroke? He was already afraid he'd be blamed for her death of unexplained sudden death???? Nah. He was panicked because he just killed her. Probably a pretty charged, panicked moment.) IMO he had to cover up, not just her death, but the MANNER of death. I don't know what it was but here's HIS brain leakage -- something he didn't to her made calling 911 not an option, because it would have been obvious she didn't die naturally.

Like broken teeth.

Cover up, consciousness of guilt, hacksaw, murder.

JMO
 
  • #1,483
Do we have a sense how long this trial is expected to take?

I thought on day 1 of the trial they said they estimated 2 to 3 weeks. But I may have misheard that.
 
  • #1,484
I thought on day 1 of the trial they said they estimated 2 to 3 weeks. But I may have misheard that.

I recall that too - 2 to 3 weeks
 
  • #1,485
Court has begun for the day. Continuing with testimony about a collection of text messages between Brian Walshe and Ana Walshe.

Seems he was sending texts to her phone after she was dead to lay a trail that he was attempting to contact her and didn't know where she was.
 
  • #1,486
I think the defense may surprise us all, with resting way ahead of schedule.

We can hope.

The sooner this gets to the deliberation room, the sooner he can get started on his LWOP.

JMO
 
  • #1,487
Reviewing texts between Brian and Ana's phone.

"I still love you."

Even if intended to be joke-y, it's a weird thing to say when he's staging texts.
 
  • #1,488
Defense is going to cross examine. He shouldn't.

Let's see how badly this goes.
 
  • #1,489
Already badly.

Counselor is out of his line, asking the expert about apps and location data as if counselor knows more about it.

Forgive me for snickering.
 
  • #1,490
Defense attorney is asking about the internet searches...

I wonder which actress will be blamed for the search "Ana Walsh ... plane crash".

SHM
 
  • #1,491
Defense: Ana's Christmas flight, was it delayed, was it because of snow...

He's trying to suggest the context matters.

Expert concedes he knows the content of searches, not the intent.

Pretty macabre, no? Her flight is delayed and presumably he doesn't check the weather, he thinks, not only might there have a plan crash, but passengers have already been identified and publicly named?

Is his brain made of rubber bands and hamster wheels?

JMO
 
  • #1,492
Defense attorney is asking about the internet searches...

I wonder which actress will be blamed for the search "Ana Walsh ... plane crash".

SHM
I'm still confused as to what his purpose was on searching on Christmas Day, "Ana Walshe found dead". Any thoughts?
 
  • #1,493
Here we go again:

Search: "I'm good"

Movie title, says Defense attorney.

Regular trivia buff.

JMO
 
  • #1,494
Defense: Ana's Christmas flight, was it delayed, was it because of snow...

He's trying to suggest the context matters.

Expert concedes he knows the content of searches, not the intent.

Pretty macabre, no? Her flight is delayed and presumably he doesn't check the weather, he thinks, not only might there have a plan crash, but passengers have already been identified and publicly named?

Is his brain made of rubber bands and hamster wheels?

JMO
I missed that. Just got here.

It's pretty obvious to me the defense is trying to make a point that this murder was not premeditated.
 
  • #1,495
I'm still confused as to what his purpose was on searching on Christmas Day, "Ana Walshe found dead". Any thoughts?

Maybe his frame of mind? Neurotic, histrionic, assumes the worst (hopes for the worst)...

But geeze, EVEN IF there was a place crash, she wouldn't be a headline already! Family is notified long before the internet starts serving up the passenger lists.

JMO
 
  • #1,496
I'm still confused as to what his purpose was on searching on Christmas Day, "Ana Walshe found dead". Any thoughts?
Wishful thinking?
 
  • #1,497
Defense:

You don't know who made these searches.

There's nothing nefarious about someone searching for wine and movie titles, correct?

Correct.
 
  • #1,498
I'm still confused as to what his purpose was on searching on Christmas Day, "Ana Walshe found dead". Any thoughts?
That one is weird. I mean, on Christmas but we have to remember that AW spent Xmas eve with WF and then the next day her flight was canceled and I believe she drove home and was late in arriving. Perhaps he was pretty ticked and hoping to read that AW was indeed found dead.
 
  • #1,499
That one is weird. I mean, on Christmas but we have to remember that AW spent Xmas eve with WF and then the next day her flight was canceled and I believe she drove home and was late in arriving. Perhaps he was pretty ticked and hoping to read that AW was indeed found dead.

Like "Planes, Trains and Automobiles".....with a twist
( One of my favorite movies )
 
  • #1,500
Even if he is successful in showing that there's no internet evidence showing premeditation, premeditation doesn't means months, weeks, days.

IMO Brian might not have planned to murder Ana until moments before her murdered her.

It's entirely possible that Ana told him about her established affair, wanting to be honest with him and wanting to claim her relationship publicly, entering into her new year.

And that interfered wildly with his plan to take her to a dinner on NYD.

And that's why she's dead. Dead, she was worth more to him than alive.

JMO
 

Guardians Monthly Goal

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
61
Guests online
1,449
Total visitors
1,510

Forum statistics

Threads
635,561
Messages
18,678,967
Members
243,291
Latest member
reya
Back
Top