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- <text id=94TT1117>
- <title>
- Aug. 08, 1994: Investigations:All the Pretty Horses
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 08, 1994 Everybody's Hip (And That's Not Cool)
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- INVESTIGATIONS, Page 30
- All the Pretty Horses
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> After 17 years, authorities come up with a solution to the disappearance
- of candy heiress Helen Brach
- </p>
- <p>By Gregory Jaynes--With reporting by Mark Shuman/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> The lonely women who had been made foolish and poorer by the
- gigolo and his lieutenants were listed, sensitively, on the
- federal indictment only as Victim A, Victim B and so forth.
- But Victim L was identified there on the page: Helen Brach,
- the candy heiress who vanished 17 years ago. Where had she gone?
- Her name was on the ledger with Rub the Lamp, Belgium Waffle,
- Rainman, Roseau Platiere and Empire--Thoroughbred horses that
- had been murdered for the insurance. Brach's body has never
- been found.
- </p>
- <p> Investigators said last week that Brach had been romanced by
- a horse trader who defrauded her of hundreds of thousands of
- dollars and had her killed when she threatened to expose him.
- The long inquiry into her disappearance broadened when one contact
- led to another in the silky world of expensive horseflesh, and
- stories began to emerge of heavily insured animals that were
- clubbed, electrocuted and burned alive. The man responsible
- for the death of Brach, according to authorities, was just one
- part of a big, sorry picture involving prominent horse owners,
- trainers, riders and veterinarians. In all, 23 people were indicted
- and 19 charged with killing horses. But it was the Brach angle
- that snared the most attention.
- </p>
- <p> The case of Helen Brach was legend in Chicago. She had $20 million,
- and the last time anyone saw her was Feb. 17, 1977. She was
- 65 and had been a widow since 1970, when her husband, Frank,
- co-founder of the candy company E.J. Brach & Sons, died at the
- age of 79. They met in Miami in 1950 at a country club where
- she ran the hat-check concession. She wasn't very social. She
- was obsessively attached to her pets; she once chartered a plane
- home from the Bahamas to tend a mongrel with a bad kidney. She
- favored wigs. Chicago fed off such stuff as the mystery remained
- unsolved and theories proliferated. One was that the handyman
- did it and put the corpse through a meat grinder. Another: that
- she was an amnesiac living in the South Seas. There were sightings
- of her everywhere (she disappeared six months before Elvis Presley).
- A year after she went missing, a spray-painted sign appeared
- near her 18-room house: RICHARD BAILEY KNOWS WHERE MRS. BRACH'S
- BODY IS! STOP HIM!
- </p>
- <p> Bailey, a Chicago stable owner, was questioned and released
- in the 1970s. Last week, Bailey, now 62, was charged with soliciting
- Brach's murder. An unnamed accomplice was reported to be cooperating
- with the authorities, who did not say how the widow died or
- where the body was hidden. The Brach case occupied only a page
- and a quarter of a lengthy indictment that listed 12 other women
- whom Bailey allegedly defrauded of half a million dollars over
- the past 20 years. According to a lawyer for the Brach estate,
- the widow was seduced into spending at least $300,000 for "virtually
- worthless" race and show horses.
- </p>
- <p> The thread running through the list of victims in the indictment
- was loneliness. Brach wasn't reported missing for two weeks,
- so little did she get around. Bailey, who denied all charges,
- was described in uncharacteristically soft language by the U.S.
- Attorney's office as a man who "told each of them he cared for
- her." He had an eighth-grade education, a tan and rhythm. He
- met the women through the introduction of an accomplice in horse
- circles and through ads he took out in personals columns--26 since 1989, the latest of them last week. "He was still trolling,"
- said an investigator. Earlier this year, he met and married
- a 52-year-old Chicago cosmetic surgeon named Annette Hoffman,
- who had the union annulled nine days later after she grew suspicious.
- A private detective she hired identified Bailey as a creditless
- con man. Hoffman told TIME that while Bailey was "exceptionally
- street smart, very slick," she didn't think he had the intellectual
- wattage to orchestrate Brach's death. She said she married him
- in a "weak moment." He never asked for money, but the FBI told
- her he probably would have. "He got sad and lonely women to
- pay attention to him," said special agent Bob Long. "It's a
- story that's thousands of years old."
- </p>
- <p> As the Bailey investigation moved through the horse-show industry,
- picking up evidence of misrepresentation of pedigrees, hidden
- impairments, extravagantly inflated prices, the track led to
- what a prosecutor called the sport's "dirty little secret."
- Horses were being insured to the forelock, then killed. At some
- point the probe embraced a ninth-grade dropout, Tim Ray, commonly
- known as Tommy Burns, who confessed to killing as many as 15
- horses at their owners' behest, for a price that averaged $5,000
- a hit. The most he ever earned for a killing, he said, was $40,000.
- </p>
- <p> Burns said "these millionaires" he dealt with "threw the horses
- away like broken toys" when they tired of them. "My motive for
- killing horses was to make money. For the owners, it was just
- rotten cheapness at its worst." Of his fee, Burns said, "People
- get paid less for killing people."
- </p>
- <p> The indictment did not say how much was paid to have Brach murdered.
- She was declared dead in 1984, and her will was probated. She
- left the bulk of her millions to causes for the protection of
- animals.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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