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Judge cites ‘barbaric’ acts in sentencing Brian Walshe to life in prison without parole for wife’s murder

Kraig Pakulski 0 83 Article rating: No rating
Brian Walshe appears in court for sentencing in his murder trial on Thursday in Dedham


CNN

By Lauren del Valle, CNN

(CNN) — A judge in Dedham, Massachusetts, called the acts of Brian Walshe “barbaric and incomprehensible” before sentencing him Thursday to life in prison without parole for killing his wife, dismembering her body and discarding her remains in dumpsters.

The sentencing comes after a jury on Monday convicted Walshe of first-degree murder, finding he planned to kill Ana Walshe, the mother of their three children, just hours after ringing in the new year in 2023.

“The seriousness of your acts cannot be overstated. Your acts in dismembering your wife’s body and disposing of her remains in multiple area dumpsters can only be described as barbaric and incomprehensible,” Judge Diane Freniere said, addressing Walshe directly in court. “You had no regard for the lifelong mental harm that your criminal acts inflicted on your then two-, four- and six-year-old sons.”

The situation has had a “devastating impact on her children,” the judge noted, referencing a sealed letter from the state Department of Children and Families. Ana Walshe’s sister also spoke briefly on behalf of her family, telling the judge how Ana’s death “left us with an unbearable emptiness.”

The sentence of life without parole for a first-degree murder conviction is required by law. Freniere also ordered Walshe to serve consecutive prison sentences for two other convictions he pleaded guilty to ahead of the trial.

She ordered him to serve the statutory maximum on both of those lesser charges – up to 20 years for the count of misleading police and up to three years for the improper conveyance of a body.

The sentencing represents the culmination of a case that captured national attention almost three years ago, first with the initial search for 39-year-old Ana Walshe, and then with the grisly evidence that her husband googled topics like “how to dispose of a body” and other inquiries on cleaning up blood.

Before the judge imposed Walshe’s sentence, defense attorney Kelli Porges said consecutive prison sentences would be inhumane and, despite what’s been said in court, “He is a human. He is a father. He is a son, and he has been a friend to many. The life sentence is mandatory, but to do consecutive sentences, I think, is inappropriate and inhumane.”

Brian Walshe did not address the court and showed no visible emotion during the proceeding.

Walshe’s mother submitted a letter to the judge on her son’s behalf ahead of the sentencing.

“Although I consider the letter of Diana Walshe, I simply cannot reconcile the person Diana Walshe descri

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