BOSTON — A Boston-area man was sentenced Thursday to life in prison for the grisly murder of his wife, who disappeared nearly three years ago and whose body has never been found.
Brian Walshe was convicted Monday of first-degree murder in the killing of Ana Walshe. The sentence carries no possibility of parole.
He pleaded guilty in November to misleading police and illegally disposing of a body after admitting he had dismembered her body and disposed of it in dumpster. He said he did so only after panicking when he found she had died in bed.
Judge Diane Freniere called Walshe's crimes ''barbaric and incomprehensible'' and she chastised him for ''deceitful and manipulative behavior.'' Walshe showed no emotion as the sentence was read.
Before the sentencing, Ana Walshe's sister Aleksandra Dimitrijevic told the court about how the death has devastated her family, especially because they cannot have a proper burial without a body.
''I struggle with the grief that comes without warning, hoping every morning that this is just a terrible dream,'' she said. ''The most painful part of this loss is knowing her children must now grow up without their mother's hand to hold. They now face a lifetime of milestones, big and small, where her absence will be deeply and painfully felt.''
The couple's three young children are in state custody.
Walshe was also sentenced to 19 to 25 years for witness intimidation and two to three years for improper disposal of a body. Those sentences are to run consecutive to his life sentence, the judge ruled.