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Dec. 2, 2025, 10:12 PM ESTBy Tim StellohProsecutors trying a Massachusetts man in the murder and dismemberment of his wife traced his gruesome online tracks in court Tuesday through dozens of internet searches conducted after Ana Walshe disappeared three years ago.The searches, which authorities extracted from Brian Walshe’s laptop, are key pieces of evidence in a case with no body. Ana Walshe has never been found.The searches began just before 5 a.m. Jan. 1, 2023, hours after the couple celebrated the holiday with a friend at their home south of Boston.According to testimony presented by a state trooper who examined the data, at 4:52 a.m. this term was typed into Google on Brian Walshe’s computer: “best ways to dispose of a body.”What followed was a litany of queries that lasted three days and sought information about dead bodies and dismemberment, crime scene cleanup and computer disposal. Brian Walshe, 50, pleaded guilty last month to misleading a police investigation and improper conveyance of a body. He is charged with first-degree murder.In his opening statement Monday, Brian Walshe’s attorney said that Ana Walshe died a sudden, unexpected death. He described his client’s internet search for grim information as a frantic and tragic response as he “wrestled with the fact that Ana was dead.”The lawyer, Larry Tipton, acknowledged that Brian Walshe lied to authorities about what happened to Ana Walshe — he told police that she’d disappeared after she traveled to Washington, D.C., for a work emergency on the morning of Jan. 1 — but he said Brian Walshe “never thought about killing Ana.” He said his client concluded that no one would believe that his wife was “alive one minute and dead the next.”Prosecutors contend that the murder was motivated by money — Brian Walshe was the sole beneficiary of his wife’s $2.7 million life insurance policy — and that he believed she was having an affair.According to the testimony of Massachusetts State Police Trooper Nicholas Guarino, most of the internet searches extracted from Brian Walshe’s computer were done via Google and Yahoo. Among them:4:55 a.m. Jan. 1: “How long before body starts to smell.”9:35 a.m. Jan. 1: “Can identification be made on partial human remains.” 11:50 a.m. Jan. 1: “Can I use bleach to clean my wood floors from blood stains.” 12:10 p.m. Jan. 1: “What does bleach to do dead bodies.”1:43 p.m. Jan. 1: “Can the FBI tell when you accessed your phone.”12:27 p.m. Jan. 2: “How to saw a body.”1:12 p.m. Jan. 2: “Can you identify a body with broken teeth.”1:12 p.m. Jan. 3: “Can a body decompose in a plastic bag.”7:30 p.m. Jan. 3: “Can police get your search history without your computer.”Two videos on the same topic were viewed on YouTube, Guarino said. A webpage viewed on Jan. 1 called “6 ways to dispose of a body” came from a website called “murdermurdermurder.com,” Guarino said.Tim StellohTim Stelloh is a breaking news reporter for NBC News Digital.

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Prosecutors trying a Massachusetts man in the murder and dismemberment of his wife traced his gruesome online tracks in court Tuesday through dozens of internet searches conducted after Ana Walshe disappeared three years ago



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Dec. 2, 2025, 10:50 PM ESTBy Zoë RichardsThe Trump administration on Tuesday halted immigration applications submitted by nationals from 19 countries that already faced restrictions on travel to the United States, according to a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services memo.”USCIS has considered that this direction may result in delay to the adjudication of some pending applications and has weighed that consequence against the urgent need for the agency to ensure that applicants are vetted and screened to the maximum degree possible,” the agency said in a four-page policy memo.”Ultimately, USCIS has determined that the burden of processing delays that will fall on some applicants is necessary and appropriate in this instance, when weighed against the agency’s obligation to protect and preserve national security,” it added.The New York Times first reported the immigration pause, which applies to both green card and citizenship applicants.A spokesperson for the USCIS office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the new policy Tuesday night.Trump talks strikes on alleged drug boats and immigration at Cabinet meeting06:22The move comes less than week after two National Guard members were shot on patrol in Washington, D.C., leaving one dead and the other critically wounded. The suspect, who pleaded not guilty to murder Tuesday, is an Afghan national who entered the United States legally during the Biden administration and was granted asylum after President Donald Trump took office for a second time.According to USCIS, more than 1.4 million people have pending asylum applications that could be affected by the new pause.The application hold pertains to people from 19 countries the Trump administration designated as high risk who are trying to get their immigration statuses processed by the agency. The list primarily targets African and Asian countries.Trump signed a proclamation in June fully banning nationals from 12 countries — among them Afghanistan, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen — from entering the United States and partially restricting the entry of nationals from seven others: Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela.USCIS Director Joseph Edlow said in a Newsmax interview Monday that following the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021, he does not believe the Afghan nationals who came to the United States “were properly vetted.”His office said Monday on X, “Nothing is off the table until every alien is vetted and screened to the maximum degree possible.”Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Monday on X that she met with Trump and recommended “a full travel ban on every damn country that’s been flooding our nation with killers, leeches, and entitlement junkies.”Zoë RichardsZoë Richards is a politics reporter for NBC News.
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