Massachusetts man unknowingly hires undercover fed to kill wife

A Massachusetts man who attempted to hire a contract killer to murder his wife had unknowingly asked an undercover federal agent to carry out the hit, authorities say.

Massimo Marenghi, 56, now faces up to a decade behind bars after pleading guilty Thursday to the murder-for-hire, the US Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts said in a release.

The Malden man “complained about his wife seeking a restraining order against him” during a January 2021 meeting with an undercover FBI agent posing as a contract killer, officials said.

Marenghi later met with the undercover agent and asked him to help “eliminate” his problem as the pair “discussed a price of $10,000,” the feds said.

The hubby provided the agent with a photograph of his wife’s home and detailed how to evade surveillance cameras while carrying out the crime, they said.


Marenghi “complained about his wife seeking a restraining order against him” during a meeting.
Facebook/Massimo Marenghi

During a second meeting, Marenghi gave the federal agent a $1,500 cash deposit for the murder and urged him to carry out the killing soon, authorities said.

Marenghi told the agent that the sooner the “demolition job” occurs, the quicker the hired gun would be able to pay the rest of what he owed, officials said.

While attempting to set up the murder, Marenghi gave the undercover agent various details about his soon-to-be ex-wife, authorities said.

He provided a photograph of his wife, the color, model, and license plate number on her car and the hours of operation of her work, the feds said.


Marenghi
Marenghi gave the federal agent a $1,500 cash deposit for the murder.
Facebook/Massimo Marenghi

Marenghi also provided a schedule that indicated when he would have custody of their children, which he said would be the “best time for the construction work to start,” authorities said.

In addition to a sentence of up to 10 years, the charge of murder-for-hire includes three years of supervised release and a fine of up to $250,000.

Marenghi is scheduled to be sentenced June 8. 

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Ana Walshe told judge husband Brian Walshe was ‘taught to lie’

Less than two years before she went missing, missing Massachusetts mom Ana Walshe told a judge that her husband Brian Walshe suffered from an “ever-present” trauma and had been “taught to lie and hide” in his childhood.

The admission was buried in a glowing September 2021 letter she wrote a judge asking to consider giving her husband a lenient prison sentence for committing art fraud.

Brian, who was arrested this week in connection to his wife’s disappearance, admitted that year to selling two fake Andy Warhol paintings to an eBay buyer for $80,000. He is still awaiting sentencing for that crime.

While praising Brian for supporting their family of five and participating in charity work, Ana claimed that he suffered a traumatic childhood at the hands of his abusive parents that affected him through his adult life.

“He was taught to lie and hide. He was told that he was a loser, that his parents should not have had him, that he had no chances of making anything of himself in life, and that he was a lost cause. A deep sense of shame governed his life,” Ana wrote.

Ana wrote that Brian had a difficult time allowing others to get close to him, including his wife, because he was “afraid of relationships.”

In the years before writing the admiring letter about her husband, Ana told Washington, DC police that he had threatened to kill her and her friends. Brian was never charged with the threats.

Ana Walshe said her husband had a traumatic childhood.
anawalshe/Instagram
Brian Walshe was arrested earlier in the week for misleading cops.
ana.ljubicic/Facebook

Brian, who Ana claimed had a “big heart” and was the “love of her life,” was arrested Sunday and charged with misleading police during their investigation into his missing wife.

Ana had vanished on New Year’s Day. She never boarded a flight to Washington, DC that Sunday, but Brian didn’t report the mother of his three children missing for three days.

Ana Walshe was last seen at her house in the early mornings of Jan. 1, 2023.
Daniel McKnight for NY Post

Police found blood in the family’s basement and a blood-stained, damaged knife. They also discovered a hacksaw, a hatchet, blood, used cleaning supplies and a rug at a trash transfer station in Peabody, a little more than an hour away from the couple’s home.

Brian had also reportedly searched for “how to dispose of a 115-pound woman’s body” online.

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Vanessa Mark ID’d as Brandeis University student killed in bus crash that injured 27 others

An undergraduate student at Brandeis University was identified Sunday as the person killed in a shuttle bus crash near the college that left 27 other students injured.

Vanessa Mark, 25, died after the bus taking the group back to campus from a hockey game at Northeastern University crashed into a tree Saturday night and rolled over several times, the Waltham Police Department said.

“While Vanessa was currently on leave, she was living in Waltham and was an active and cherished member of the Brandeis community,” university president Ron Liebowitz said in a letter to the school community.

Brandeis canceled classes for Monday and Tuesday, allowing students to process the incident with loved ones ahead of Thanksgiving.

Additional support for students remaining on campus will be made available throughout the week, the university said.

Officials have not shared what caused the bus to crash in Waltham, or the severity of the injuries sustained.

Police have identified Vanessa Mark as the Brandeis University student killed in a shuttle bus crash near the college on November 19, 2022.
@MassFireChaser via Storyful

The university said in a statement that 17 of the injured students had been released from the hospital while the rest remained for further treatment.

Video from the scene showed the mangled bus upright in a residential neighborhood with debris scattered around it. The roof of the bus appeared to be heavily damaged and several windows were smashed, the video showed.

Other video showed victims being treated for their injuries, some being carted off in stretchers.

The crash injured 27 other students on the way back to campus after a hockey game at Northeastern University.
@MassFireChaser via Storyful

The bus was towed away from the scene around 6 a.m. – over seven hours after the crash took place.

The cause of the crash is under investigation. No charges have been filed.

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