A Massachusetts police log from the days following Ana Walshe’s disappearance sheds new light — and raises more questions — about when the real estate executive vanished and how her concerned inner circle responded.
A Cohasset Police Department log, dated Dec. 26, 2022, through Jan. 8, 2023, provides a glimpse into the early moments into the investigation, beginning with the missing persons report. Cohasset Police confirmed the legitimacy of the log, which was obtained through a dedicated webpage on local news site The Cohasset Anchor.
According to the log, police received a call for a well-being check Jan. 4, 2023, for Ana Walshe, whose name is misspelled in the document. According to the document, the caller “states he is the head security person for the company party works for, Tishman Speyer.”
The caller went on to describe how Walshe works in Washington, D.C., but lives in Cohasset. He described more details of the disappearance, then noted, “Company has contacted the husband … he has not filed a missing person report.”
Police had previously said the company and loved ones “simultaneously” reported her missing. Walshe’s husband, Brian Walshe, was arrested days later and charged with misleading investigators.
But when Brian Walshe, 46, was arraigned Monday, his attorney, Tracy Miner, told the court her client contacted the company about Ana missing, directly contradicting what the Tishman Speyer representative told police.
“It is true that her employer contacted police on Jan. 4. However, that was as a result of Mr. Walshe, Brian Walshe, contacting the employer to say, ‘I haven’t heard from my wife,’” Miner said in court. “The employer suggested that their security team, who is a former law enforcement officer, contact both the Cohasset Police and the D.C. Metro Police, which he did.”
Miner declined to comment when contacted by Fox News Digital’s by email for clarification Friday. A spokesperson for Tishman Speyer referred all inquiries to the Cohasset Police Department.
During his arraignment, Brian Walshe was ordered held on $500,000 cash bail over $5 million surety bond. Prior to his arrest, Walshe was being held on pre-sentencing home confinement after he was convicted of selling bogus Andy Warhol paintings.
Miner also noted in court that her client had cooperated through “several interviews” and searches of his home, his property and his cellphone.
Commonwealth attorney Lynn Beland previously revealed that Ana Walshe’s cellphone “pinged in the area of” the family’s Chief Justice Cushing Highway home on Jan. 1 and Jan. 2, “which is after the defendant had said she had left.”
The Cohasset Police Department logs show that, as of Jan. 4, Ana’s cellphone was off, but had last “hit a tower” around 3:14 a.m. on Jan. 2, just shy of 24 hours after she was reportedly last seen.
The log further describes how Ana’s cellphone “hit the tower” on Reservoir Road in Cohasset, approximately 0.7 miles from her home.
Four residents who live in or around Reservoir Road told Fox News Digital Thursday night that investigators combed through the area Jan. 6. Investigators asked neighbors if they saw or heard anything during the early morning of Jan. 2, according to a couple who live in a nearby home and asked to remain anonymous out of concern for their safety.
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