MA MA - Ana Walshe, 39, Cohasset, 1 Jan 2023 *MEDIA, MAPS, & TIMELINES - NO DISCUSSION*

MAR 5, 2024
[...]

On Feb. 20, U.S. District Judge William G. Young sentenced Walshe to three years and a month in prison — which would run concurrent to any state-imposed sentence should Walshe be convicted in his upcoming murder trial. Walshe is in state custody in Norfolk County.

On Monday, Tracy Miner, Walshe’s attorney for the federal fraud case and former attorney for the murder case, filed a notice that Walshe was appealing his conviction to the First Circuit Court of Appeals, based in the same federal courthouse in Boston’s Seaport district.

[...]

There was no entry late Tuesday afternoon under Walshe’s name in the First Circuit. Miner did not immediately return a request for comment.

[...]
 
APR 16, 2024
[...]

But who was Ana the person — not the tragic news story?

That's what we're diving into with the latest episode of "The Searches for Ana Walshe" podcast. This episode will conclude our first season.

You'll hear from some of those who knew Ana best. They describe her as a hardworking corporate leader, loving mom and radiant person — "a bright light," as her friend Pamela Bardhi put it.

[...]

We're now four episodes into our podcast on the Ana Walshe case.

Listen here ⬇️
The Searches for Ana Walshe
 
JUN 11, 2024
[...]

Former Massachusetts State Trooper Todd McGhee explained Tuesday that the bombshell testimony could taint other cases, too, saying it was possible the situation could potentially put Proctor at risk for being included on what's called a Brady list, referring to a Supreme Court case.

[...]

"Once that officer has been deemed as compromised, their integrity has been compromised, their name ends up on the list," McGhee said. "Once your name was on the Brady list, anytime you testify in a court of law, the opposing attorney is going to challenge your veracity.

"Effectively, you are of no real use in the court of law based on any investigative work you’ve conducted," McGhee continued.

Proctor, who works out of the Norfolk District Attorney's Office, is also the designated case officer for the Brian Walshe murder case.

[...]
 
JUN 12, updated JUN 13, 2024
[...]

The attorney representing Brian Walshe — the Cohasset man accused of killing his wife, Ana, in early 2023 — has told NBC10 Boston he plans to file a motion over possible questionable conduct that names Proctor.

Proctor has been on the stand testifying in the Read trial this week. He is the case officer, the same role he had in the Walshe murder investigation. ...

[...]

Walshe's defense attorney, Larry Tipton, told NBC10 Boston that he has not yet concluded there is any investigator bias involving his client, but what he’s heard in the Read case has raised his suspicions. His motion will name Proctor, Tipton said, as well as any other investigator implicated in the Read case.

[...]

NBC10 Boston legal analyst Michael Coyne reacted to the news in Wednesday's episode of "Canton Confidential": "If you are sitting in prison right now and Proctor was one of the key witnesses against you, haven't you already made your trip to the law library and haven't you already talked to your lawyer – or a new lawyer – to say I want a new trial. We're not going to see the end of this. It's very similar to what we saw with the drug lab cases."

[...]
 
JUN 24, 2024
During Monday's hearing, attorneys provided the judge with an update on their discovery process. The prosecution said the state DNA lab expects to finish testing on about a dozen items by the end of the month.

Walshe's defense said they expect to be ready to begin filing motions in the late summer. A new hearing was set for Oct. 2. Attorneys said Walshe is expected to attend that hearing.

The judge overseeing Walshe's case is also handling the high-profile trial of Karen Read.

The hearing was very short, with prosecutor Greg Connor and defense attorney Larry Tipton providing basic updates on where the case stands. In the end, a fresh discovery hearing was scheduled for Oct. 2 at 2 p.m. Walshe was not present Monday but he is scheduled to be present at that hearing.

[...]

In the year since, the case has been mainly dormant. ... The last substantive hearing was held last August, which was a similar update to Monday’s hearing.
 
JUN 24, 2024
Norfolk County Assistant District Attorney Greg Connor told the court that he's received all the crime lab materials, and plans to file a notice of discovery, with the exception of the state DNA lab testing. He said the DNA lab expects to finish testing on their items at the end of this month, and he will file another notice of discovery afterwards.

Bode, a private crime lab in Virginia, has items that are exhaustive, Connor said, adding that "decisions may need to be made" about an expert perhaps being sent there or possibly a waiver.

A spokesperson for the Norfolk District Attorney's Office that the term "exhaustive" essentially means that there is such a small amount of the sample, that there will only be one opportunity to test it. In these cases, the testing must be done jointly by the state and defense.
 
JUL 3, 2024
Within hours of a mistrial being declared in the Karen Read murder trial, Massachusetts State Police announced that Trooper Michael Proctor, the lead investigator in the case, had been relieved of duty and reassigned from his role as an investigator with the Norfolk District Attorney's Office.

[...]

The trooper's fate with the department will be determined by an internal investigation and the state's POST Commission, which handles allegations of police misconduct. ...

Security expert Todd McGhee, a former state police trooper, said on Tuesday night's "Canton Confidential" that if the POST Commission submits Proctor's name for inclusion on the Brady List, which includes all known issues of police misconduct, it could make any future testimony by him extremely problematic.

[...]

"We can see where the impact was specifically with the Karen Read trial, but we don't know about the other trials he's been a part of in the investigation," McGhee said. "The other high profile case of course is the Brian Walshe trial. Trials like that we will have to wait to see what the outcome will be. Each and every case has different factors, different evidence. We can only hope there was the utmost of integrity performed with his other investigations, but right now that remains to be seen."
 
JUL 2, 2024
McGhee, a former state trooper, said Proctor’s malfeasance in the Read case is cause for concern in the Walshe case. Every form he signed and every piece of evidence he touched will be subject to scrutiny.
  • Proctor signed the criminal complaint when Brian Walshe was charged with Ana's murder.
  • Proctor served the search warrant on the Walshe home, where several dozen pieces of possible evidence were collected.
 
SEP 10, 2024
The Norfolk District Attorney’s Office stated in a filing Friday that, at this time, the Commonwealth doesn't plan to call Proctor, the lead investigator in both cases, to the stand in Walshe's trial. They said "dozens of additional officers," including Cohasset Police Sgt. Harrison Schmidt, also investigated the case.

Prosecutors preparing for the murder trial of Brian Walshe, who is accused of killing and dismembering his wife, informed the court on Tuesday that they do not plan to call disgraced Massachusetts State Police Trooper Michael Proctor as a witness.

The version of the notice filed in the Walshe case indicated that prosecutors have no intention of calling Proctor — the “case officer,” or officer who organizes the investigation — to the stand. He served in this capacity alongside Cohasset PD Sgt. Harrison Schmidt, whose own participation in a future Walshe trial was not commented on in the disclosure, but who does not have known controversy surrounding him.
 
OCT 2, 2024
At the last hearing in the case back in June, prosecutors gave an update on the discovery process, which they said was still ongoing.

Norfolk County Assistant District Attorney Greg Connor told the court that he had received all of the crime lab materials, and planned to file a notice of discovery, with the exception of the state DNA lab testing. He said the DNA lab expected to finish testing on their items at the end of this month, and he will file another notice of discovery afterwards.

It's unclear if those DNA results will be discussed in court Wednesday.
 
OCT 2, 2024
  • Tipton is seeking Proctor's cell phone records and records from other detectives who worked the case.
  • He already has some letters regarding the investigation into the Read case and the defense is asking for more than 3,000 pages of documents provided by the DOJ.
  • The DA asked for a protective order which would allow them to redact sections of text messages (from the Read case) including photos of children, an autopsy, and cell phone numbers.
  • Tipton didn't object to the protective order or the redactions, will share info with BW, but will not provide him with hard copies just yet.
  • Judge Beverly Cannone approved the prosecution’s request for a protective order.
 
OCT 2, 2024
In addition to seeking “all of the information” from the extraction of data from Proctor’s work cell phone and cloud account, court documents indicate Walshe’s legal team wants a “complete copy” of 3,000 pages of Department of Justice materials linked to the investigation into the death of Boston Police Officer John O’Keefe, who Read is accused of fatally striking with her SUV in Canton during a snowstorm.

The documents show that Walshe’s team also wants “any and all notes, reports, memoranda or other local documents” related to the “death of Officer John O’Keefe and the whereabouts of Ana Walshe.”

PDF
  • Pg 1 - 3: Commonweath's Notice Regarding State Trooper Michael Proctor's Work Phone Data
  • Pg 4 - 8: MOTION FOR DISCOVERY OF DOCUMENTS RELATED TO THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY AND LAW ENFORCEMENT
  • Pg 9 - 14: AFFIDAVIT IN SUPPORT OF DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR PRODUCTION OF INFORMATION CONCERNING DISTRICT ATTORNEY AND LAW ENFORCEMENT
  • Pg 15 - 36: MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF MOTION FOR DISCOVERY OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY AND LAW ENFORCEMENT
 

Attachments

NOV 7, 2024
Cannone had been presiding over the murder case against Brian Walshe, a Cohasset man accused of killing his wife, Ana, as well as the controversial Karen Read case, which is slated for retrial next year.

A court spokesman confirmed Thursday that Judge Diane Freniere is now presiding over the Walshe case, Commonwealth v. Brian Walshe. The Boston Globe reported that Superior Court Chief Justice Michael Ricciuti assigned Freniere the case.
 
NOV 7, 2024
Court records show Judge Diane Freniere was assigned to the Walshe case on Wednesday. Records show the next scheduled event in the case is a motion hearing on Dec. 2.
 
NOV 14, 2024
A landlord is suing the mother of Brian Walshe — a Cohasset man authorities say killed his wife in January 2023 — over damages to a Cohasset home, including some the landlord believes resulted from the alleged murder and the police investigation into her husband.

Diana Walshe signed a six-month lease on the home at 516 Chief Justice Cushing Highway on March 9, 2022, and told Capozzoli that she intended to live there with her son Brian, daughter-in-law Ana, and their three children while she recuperated from an illness, according to the documents.

In the lawsuit, Capozzoli alleges that the Walshe family “damaged, defaced, misused, and abused the property in numerous ways,” while also using the home for “improper and unlawful purposes.”

NOV 13, 2024
From cleaning costs to loss of rent, the lawsuit also claimed that "the property has now been psychologically impacted, which has substantially decreased its potential rental and sale values."

"The immediate rental value of the home is likely very, very low, simply because until this case is resolved, you don't know whether law enforcement will have to come back in, the house will be in the media every other day, virtually, and so their use of the home will be affected over the course of the next few years," Coyne said.
 
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NOV 13, 2024
According to the complaint, Diana Walshe signed a lease on the house in 2022 — later extending it to February 2023 — and allegedly told Capozzoli that she intended to live there with her son and his family while recovering from an illness.

Also according to published reports, Diana Walsh denies ever living there, along with other claims.

Capozzli said his property was damaged by the crime scene investigation and that he had to hire a specialty cleaning service to decontaminate the home. Additionally, he said the alleged murder there has made the house unrentable and lowered the property value. Capozzoli also said the Walshe family punched holes in the walls and he claimed that Brian Walshe went into the attic and put his foot through the ceiling of his wife's bedroom.

NOV 12, 2024
The alleged murder “caused blood and other human remains to contaminate the home, including the Walshes’ bedroom, [(]where the murder apparently took place) and the basement (where apparently the dismemberment and disposal took place),” Capozzoli’s lawsuit claims.

The homeowner said he had to bring in a company that specializes in murder and crime scene decontamination, “at substantial expense.” He also claims the criminal investigation further damaged the property, with investigators’ use of the blood-detecting chemical luminol allegedly staining the walls, mattresses, furniture, toilets, sinks, and showers.
 
DEC 2, 2024
A new judge will preside at Monday's hearing. Judge Diane Freniere was assigned to the case ...

In addition to Tipton's expansive discovery motion, Freniere said parties to Monday's hearing will discuss "a reasonable scheduling order in light of the age of this case," according to the docket.

His defense team filed a motion requesting a large amount of documents pertaining to Norfolk County law enforcement in response to the scandals that have rocked the county recently: the Karen Read murder trial and the alleged killing of Sandra Birchmore by a Stoughton detective.

The October hearing was continued until this week to give the parties time to review a large amount of discovery, including cellphone data from Trooper Michael Proctor...
 
DEC 2, 2024
https://www.wpri.com/new-england/ma...ocialflow&utm_source=t.co&utm_medium=referral
A judge has set a date of Oct. 20, 2025, for the trial of a Massachusetts man charged with killing his wife.

Walshe’s defense team is seeking documents related to the handling of two other cases by Norfolk County investigators ...

Freniere didn’t rule Monday.

Walshe entered in a suit, in handcuffs, for the motion hearing in Norfolk Superior Court, where Judge Diane Freniere, newly assigned to oversee the proceedings, offered some introductory remarks about her approach to the case — she said she sees it going to trial in 2025, not 2026, with the process moving along more efficiently than it had.
 
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