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Ana and Brian Walshe "seemed like regular people," their landlord told Fox News Digital on Tuesday, saying he didn't have any issues with the family since they moved into their Cohasset, Massachusetts, home in March.

Peter Capozzoli, who owns the Walshes' home at 516 Chief Justice Cushing Highway and the business at the foot of the long, rocky driveway, said he doesn't know the Walshe family well but has never had a problem with them.

Capozzoli said his business, Cohasset Imports, was closed, so no one was around on New Year's Day when Ana Walshe seemingly vanished, and he doesn't have exterior cameras.

The 39-year-old mother of three and real estate executive hasn't been seen since, and her husband was arrested Sunday and charged with misleading investigators.

Brian Walshe pleaded not guilty at Monday's arraignment.

BLOOD, KNIFE FOUND IN HOME OF MISSING MASSACHUSETTS REAL ESTATE EXEC: PROSECUTORS 

Brian and Ana Walshe seen in September 2016.

Brian and Ana Walshe seen in September 2016. (Ana Walshe/Facebook)

Capozzoli milled around inside his business Tuesday afternoon while police maintained a visible presence at the Walshes' home as nearly a dozen news trucks and photographers were parked across the street.

Police finished searching and processing the home late Tuesday afternoon, the Norfolk County District Attorney's Office said.

Capozzoli said he doesn't want to get involved in the case, and when asked if he's been inside the home since then, he said, "No, and I don't want to."

Blood was found in the basement and a damaged knife was found in the home, prosecutors said during Brian Walshe's arraignment.

Brian Walshe also allegedly went on a shopping spree at Home Depot on Jan. 2 and paid $450 in cash for cleaning supplies, according to prosecutors, which violated conditions of his house arrest in connection with an art fraud case.

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Missing MA woman Ana Walshe smiles in selfie photo

Ana Walshe is pictured in a December 2022 Instagram post. (Ana Walshe/Instagram)

In April 2021, he pleaded guilty to selling a pair of fake 1978 Andy Warhol paintings to a dealer in California for $80,000, court records show.

Ana Walshe hasn't been seen since New Year's Day, but she wasn't reported missing until Jan. 4 after she didn't show up to her job at real estate development firm Tishman Speyer in Washington, D.C.

The missing-person investigation led law enforcement to a waste facility about an hour away from their home in Swampscott, where investigators reportedly found trash bags with blood, a hatchet and a hacksaw, sources told WBZ-TV.

MISSING COHASSET WOMAN: TIMELINE OF ANA WALSHE'S MOVEMENTS BEFORE DISAPPEARANCE

Business building painted gray and a red car parked out front

Cohasset Imports is shown near the Walshe home on Jan. 10, 2023, after Ana Walshe's disappearance. (Chris Eberhart/Fox News Digital)

White house with cars parked up the driveway

A view of the Walshe home on Jan. 10, 2023, after Ana Walshe's disappearance. (Chris Eberhart/Fox News Digital)

The local TV station reported that investigators wearing protective suits and police officers with dogs were spotted searching the facility Monday.

The Norfolk District Attorney's Office issued a press release Tuesday about evidence that had been collected.

"Search activity conducted north of Boston yesterday resulted in a number of items being collected, which will now be subject to processing and testing to determine if they are of evidentiary value to this investigation," the release says.

A spokesman for the prosecutor's office, David Traub, would not confirm the items obtained from the trash or disclose the location where they were found.

Brian Walshe is behind held on $500,000 bond.

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His attorney, Tracy Miner, isn't commenting on the case.

"I am not doing press interviews or even responding to inquiries, as right now my focus is on defending my client in court," she told Fox News on Monday.