- She was gone from home for 3 days before husband reported her missing. Her employer reported her missing at same time (3 days later).
- "Cohasset Police Chief William Quigley said it was common for Walshe to work long hours without contacting her family," but her friend says she wouldn't go a day without speaking to her family.
- No digital footprint (turned off phone, didn't use credit cards, no evidence a rideshare actually picked her up).
- Lives in Cohasset but owns or has access to townhouse in DC.
In addition to the above, but ostensibly unrelated, her husband, Brian Walshe, "pleaded guilty in federal court to selling two fake Andy Warhol paintings to a South Korean buyer for $80,000." And a fire broke out in her prior residence (move out 3 months ago).
And she is beautiful and speaks with an eastern European accent.;-)
not being able to verify if the rideshare picked her up sounds like legal-speak.
Review of airport departing flights designated drop-off area videos for a specific time frame would show her being dropped off. She’d have luggage either from a car trunk or coming off a shuttle with it. Most will take a minute or two to situate, adjust coat, doublecheck they’ve got everything, etc. before walking away from the vehicle and entering the terminal
The police chief is reporting what the husband told him, while Mrs. Walshe’s friend is reporting what either what Mrs. Walshe told her or simply what she imagines to be true. Neither should be believed without objective evidence.
When my husband was doing a lot of business travel, in pre cellphone days, we rarely talked while he was gone. He would say, “When I get there, I’ll give you a number where you can reach me if there’s an emergency,” and I would say, “Why? You can’t do anything from there if I have an emergency. I’ll call 911, the Knights of Columbus, or my dad, depending on the urgency.”
Nowadays we text from time to time, if one of us is away.