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Accused wife killer jailed for Art-swindler -Massachusetts husband Brian Walshe, accused of murdering DC realtor wife, is sentenced to three years in prison for selling two fake Andy Warhol paintings

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Brian Walshe of Cohasset, MA, is jailed for selling two fake Andy Warhol paintings for $80,000 in an art swindle scam

Walshe, 49, was sentenced Tuesday to 37 months for selling the counterfeit Andy Warhol paintings for $80,000 in 2016

In court on Tuesday, Walshe was given the over-three-year sentence and ordered to pay $475,000 in restitution. 

The art swindler is suspected of killing his wife, 39-yer-old Ana Walshe, 14 months ago

The Washington DC realtor was last seen on January 1, 2023 and his murder case is still pending Walshe

Walshe in Jan 2023, plead not guilty to first-degree murder, misleading police, obstruction of justice and improper conveyance of a human body

Brian Walshe, sentenced to 37 months in prison for selling two fake Andy Warhol paintings for $80,000

    A Massachusetts man on trial for the of murder of his wife in 2023. has been sentenced for selling fake Andy Warhol paintings, in an unconnected art swindle that happened five years prior in 2018. 
    Brian Walshe, 49, was sentenced to 37 months in prison for selling two fake Andy Warhol paintings for $80,000.
    In court on Tuesday, Walshe was given the over-three-year sentence and ordered to pay $475,000 in restitution. 
    The charges came about after a buyer found Walshe’s advertisement for two paintings from Andy Warhol’s famous ‘Shadows’ series and purchased them from the crook in 2016. 
    However, after paying Walshe a staggering amount for the artwork, the buyer realized there were no Warhol Foundation authentication stamps on the paintings, as the seller promised there would be. 
    The buyer also noticed that the paintings looked very different than how they were advertised on eBay, prompting them to realize the art was probably fake. 
    The art swindle case was pending when Walshe allegedly killed Ana, 39, a DC based realtor working blue chip properties at their family home, before dismembering and disposing her body. Ana was last seen January 1, 2023, at the home in Cohasset, Massachusetts. 
    He is also accused of misleading a police investigation in connection with the death of his wife.
    Walshe was initially indicted in 2018, before pleading guilty to wire fraud, interstate transportation for a scheme to defraud, possession of converted goods, and unlawful monetary transaction in 2021.

    Initially indicted in 2018, Walshe ultimately pled guilty to the art swindle, involving the sale of two counterfeit paintings three years later, in 2021

    Walshe was convicted for wire fraud, interstate transportation for a scheme to defraud, possession of converted goods, and unlawful monetary transaction

      The convicted art swindler is is still facing charges of killing his wife Ana, [photo], before dismembering and disposing her body inside the family’s home on the first day of 2023. He’s also accused of misleading a police investigation

      Walshe’s murder case is still pending and he is expected back in Norfolk Superior Court on March 4. 
      ‘These crimes were dangerous, bold, and harmful, both to the victims and the public as a whole,’ prosecutors said in court filings.
      ‘A sentence of imprisonment is necessary to punish the defendant for his crimes and to deter others from engaging in art fraud, an especially difficult crime to detect, investigate and prosecute.’
      Walshe’s attorney, Tracy A. Miner, argued that Walshe should be sentenced to time served, due to a brief time he spent in prison when the case was initially filed.
      Ron Rivlin, the owner of Revolver Gallery in Los Angeles – was the buyer who found Walshe selling two Andy Warhol paintings for $100,000 each in November, 2016.
      On the listing, Walshe also included a photo of an invoice from the Warhol Foundation, where he claimed he bought the paintings, and which allegedly showed he paid $240,000 for them.

        Walshe got the fake Warhol paintings from his friend, who had recently bought them, and convinced him that he could sell them for a good price. He then disappeared and his friend never received any of the proceeds

        Walshe allegedly told Rivlin he was selling the works at a great loss in order to pay for home renovations.
        Rivlin believed they were authentic and contacted Walshe in early November, arranging to purchase both paintings outside of eBay for $80,000.
        The pair signed a contract, which explicitly stated that Rivlin had three days to get a full refund, according to the Massachusetts DA’s office.
        On November 7, Rivlin’s assistant flew to Boston to collect the paintings and gave Walshe an $80,000 cashier’s check, which was deposited that day.
        The next day, Rivlin unwrapped the paintings and found there were no authentication stamps on the back from the Warhol Foundation and that the canvasses looked new.

        Brian Walshe is led out of the Norfolk County Superior Court after being charged with the murder of his wife, Ana Walshe in January 2023

        Ana and Brian Walshe [photo, at the start of their romance, when he showered her with designer bags and cars. He’s been accused of making making many unfulfilled promises

            Romance in the marriage allegedly had waned overtime however, as mother-of-three Ana, [photo], had grown to become independent, working in Washington, DC, away from her family 

            Next, he compared the paintings to the photographs on eBay and determined they were different.
            After concluding the paintings in his possession were inauthentic, he made repeated attempts to contact Walshe.
            The Herald reported that phone records show Rivlin called and texted Walshe from November 8 to 12, all of which went unanswered.
            According to the Norfolk DA’s office, when Walshe did reply, he made several excuses for not refunding the money immediately.
            After Walshe refunded Rivlin just $30,000 of the $80,000, the gallery owner contacted the FBI.

              Ana Walshe, [photo], 39, relished life as a busy working mother, splitting time between the family’s home in Cohasset, MA, and Washington DC, where she worked for a blue chip real estate firm 

                Ana and Brian on their wedding day in 2015. The couple met while Ana who had emigrated from Serbia for studies, was working in a hotel

                Prosecutors say Walshe got hold of the paintings while visiting his friend in South Korea and convinced the man he could sell several pieces of art, including the works by Warhol, for a good price.
                The victim agreed but then Walshe disappeared and the friend was unable to contact him. Eventually, a mutual friend retrieved some of the art.
                Walshe is accused of murdering Ana in the basement of their home in Cohasset, Massachusetts, on January 1 in the early hours of the morning, then discarding her body in a dumpster. 
                Walshe appeared in Norfolk County Superior Court in January 2023 where he plead not guilty to first-degree murder, misleading police, obstruction of justice and improper conveyance of a human body. 
                Walshe’s extensive Google searches about divorce, murder, dismemberment and decomposing bodies were revealed in court. 
                He uttered just two words his 14-minute court appearance, saying ‘I do’ when asked by Judge Mark Coven if he understood the charges against him.
                Ana’s remains have not been found, however, investigators revealed that they found a ‘small bone fragment’ on the hacksaw that Brian had allegedly dumped near Ana’s mother’s home in Swampscott, Massachusetts.

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