After nearly two weeks of testimony that detailed the dismemberment and disposal of his missing wife’s body, along with lurid details of her love affair with a D.C. luxury real estate broker, Brian Walshe told the court today he would not be testifying in his murder trial. His defense subsequently rested without calling any witnesses.
During opening statements, defense attorneys had intimated they would put forward a theory of the case suggesting Brian Walshe found his wife, real estate executive Ana Walshe, dead in bed on the morning of Jan. 1, 2023. The defense said Brian had subsequently dismembered and disposed of Ana’s body in the days following the discovery.
Prosecutors presented evidence for eight days, which included testimony from friends and colleagues of Ana Walshe, including her boyfriend, William Fastow, a broker at TTR Sotheby’s International Realty in Washington, D.C., along with an array of physical and DNA evidence from the Walshe home and from locations near his mother’s home.
On Wednesday afternoon, defense attorney Larry Tipton argued that the commonwealth had failed to present sufficient evidence to make a case for first-degree murder and moved to have the murder charge against Brian dismissed.
The defense has argued that the prosecution has overstated a financial motive in the case, despite the fact that Ana had $2.7 million in life insurance coverage that named Brian as the sole beneficiary, in addition to a life insurance policy through her employer. They have also argued that Brian did not know about his wife’s affair with Fastow and that Ana had no intention of divorcing Brian.
Judge Diane Frenier denied the motion.
Frenier intimated that Walshe had planned to testify when the trial began, but his defense strategy had apparently changed overnight following the completion of the Commonwealth’s case.
Brian was indicted in March 2023 on three counts: first-degree murder, misleading a police investigation/obstruction of justice and improper conveyance of a human body. He pled guilty to the lesser charges on Nov. 18, 2025, prior to the start of his murder trial, but has not yet been sentenced on those counts.
Closing arguments are expected to take place tomorrow, after which the jury will receive its charge from Judge Frenier.
At the time of Ana’s disappearance, Brian Walshe was awaiting sentencing for an art fraud case involving the sale of fake paintings falsely attributed to Andy Warhol. He has since been sentenced to more than three years in prison and $475,000 in restitution. That sentence is set to run concurrently with any sentence he receives in the cases related to Ana’s disappearance.