Judge rules Boston fraudster Brian Walshe competent to stand trial in wife's murder
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A Massachusetts judge has declared that Brian Walshe, a convicted fraudster from the Boston area who is accused of murdering his wife Ana, is mentally fit to face trial.

Walshe, who survived an attack in jail last month, attended the court session dressed in a dark suit, with his hands restrained in front of him.

Judge Diane Freniere delivered the ruling at the conclusion of a one-hour hearing on Friday and set the trial to commence on December 1.

The trial was initially slated to start in October, but Judge Freniere delayed the proceedings just before jury selection to address concerns about Walshe’s mental state, sending him to Bridgewater State Hospital for evaluation.

A split image showing Ana Walshe posing for a selfie and her husband and accused killer, Brian Walshe, wearing gray sweats in court

Brian Walshe was pictured at Quincy District Court on January 18, 2023, charged with the murder of his wife, Ana Walshe, in Quincy, Massachusetts. (Photo credit: Ana Walshe, Craig F. Walker/Pool via REUTERS)

Freniere indicated she received a comprehensive report from Bridgewater — concluding the defendant is competent and ready to stand trial. Defense attorneys did not contest the findings.  

Separately, she denied Walshe’s motion for a change of venue. Jury selection is expected to be completed by the end of next week.

Ana Walshe’s remains have not been recovered. She was last seen on New Year’s Day in 2023, and prosecutors allege her husband dismembered her in their Cohasset, Massachusetts, home before hiding her remains.

Ana Walshe and Brian Walshe on their wedding day

Brian and Ana Walshe raise a toast on their wedding day in the lounge of L’Espalier in Boston, Massachusetts, on Monday, December 21, 2015. (Obtained by Fox News Digital)

They floated two potential motives at a hearing in July.

The first is that Brian Walshe discovered an affair between his wife and another man, whose name he allegedly searched on Google a half-dozen times. The second, prosecutors said, was that Walshe hoped his wife’s disappearance might help him avoid prison in his art fraud case, where he owes nearly $500,000 in restitution.

Ana reportedly confided in a friend shortly before her disappearance that Walshe was convinced having custody of their children would help him evade incarceration in the federal case, according to prosecutors. And he was the beneficiary of her $2.7 million life insurance policy.

Headshot of Ana Walshe

Ana Walshe commuted from Massachusetts to Washington, D.C., each week to work at a real estate job, her friends told WCVB. (Cohasset Police Department)

Investigators say they found digital evidence showing Walshe allegedly searched Google more than a dozen times for instructions on how to dispose of human remains. Then they say they found video of him at Home Depot, buying mops, goggles and a knife. They also allegedly recovered a hacksaw and a “small bone fragment” in a dumpster outside Walshe’s mother’s house.

But one of the detectives on the case was former Massachusetts State Trooper Michael Proctor, who was fired in the fallout of his handling of the investigation into Karen Read, who was acquitted on murder charges earlier this year in the death of her boyfriend, Boston cop John O’Keefe.

Brian Walshe of Cohasset is arraigned

Brian Walshe, accused of killing wife Ana, who disappeared on New Year’s Day 2023, enters the courtroom for his arraignment. (Greg Derr/The Patriot Ledger via AP, Pool)

Brian Walshe has pleaded not guilty.

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