Telegraf's reporter at the site where Brian threw bags with evidence: He deliberately chose these 2 dumpsters
Telegraf.rs journalist Zorica Radulovic went to the Peabody trash facility where Brian Walshe is suspected to have thrown the bags containing hard evidence
A day after the indictment raised against Brian Walshe for the murder of his wife Ana, Telegraf's journalist went to a trash facility in Peabody where, as stated in the indictment, some key evidence in this case had been found.
It was not possible to enter the complex belonging to a private company that processes and recycles waste.
But one of the workers who wished to remain anonymous told our reporter some details about this site.
Namely, he claims that Brian was not seen on the recordings of the complex's security cameras facing inwards. There, the video is completely empty, no one entered, not even Brian.
It is suspected, however, that he threw the bags containing evidence of Ana Walshe's murder into two dumpsters that are not covered by surveillance cameras and are located in front.
He chose those the two dumpsters precisely because there are no cameras covering them.
As previously announced, it was at the Peabody trash facility, located near Brian's mother Diana's house, that the investigators found bloody bags, an ax, a saw, a carpet, an empty container of a cleaning product and some other items suspected to have originated in the Walshe home.
The distance from Peabody to Swampscott, where Brian's mother lives, is about eight kilometers.
The trash facility complex is huge and located on the outskirts of Peabody. Trucks bring garbage in dumpsters, which is then shipped to waste processing areas.
Take a look at the pictures taken at the eerie dump:
Walshe is accused of beating his wife Ana to death in the basement of their home in Cohasset, Massachusetts in the early morning hours of January 1, dismembering her body, and getting rid of it. Ana's employer reported her missing on January 4.
The prosecutor's office stated that 10 bags containing items with blood had been found. DNA testing linked blood and tissue to Ana.
"Some of the bags that Walshe threw away were burned before they were found, but the bags at the Peabody trash facility contained a hacksaw, an ax, a stained carpet, a suit," the prosecutor said.
Brian Walshe pleaded not guilty to all of the charges. The next hearing is scheduled for February 9.
A Telegraf.rs portal journalist is in Boston to report from the field on the latest developments regarding the search for Ana Walshe from Belgrade, whose husband has been accused of murdering her. None of the material from Boston published here can be reprinted without the permission of the editors of the Telegraf.rs portal
(Telegraf.rs)