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End of the road for inmate in Helen Brach case | abc7chicago.com
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Helen Voorhees Brach (born November 10, 1911 - disappeared February 17, 1977) is a multimillionaire American widow whose wealth comes from being married to E. J. Brach & Luck Sons Candy Company; he blessed the Helen V. Brach Foundation to promote animal welfare in 1974. Brach disappeared on February 17, 1977 and was declared law dead in May 1984. Investigation of the case reveals serious criminal activity associated with stable Chicago owners including Silas Jayne and Richard Gardens palace. More than a decade later, Bailey was accused, but unpunished, conspiring to kill Brach; he finally received a long sentence after being found guilty of deceiving himself.


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Helen Brach was born on November 10, 1911 at a small farm in Unionport, Ohio. Helen married her boyfriend in high school in 1928; the couple divorced when he was 21 years old. Brach found work at a village club in Palm Beach, where he met and married a millionaire, Frank Brach. The couple built a house in Fisher Island, Florida, shortly after. The couple bought another house in Glenview, Illinois closer to their Chicago plant. Helen and Frank spend most of their time in southern Florida.

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Disappearance

After a routine medical examination at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, Brach left for a return trip by air to a Chicago mansion on the northern outskirts on February 17, 1977. A souvenir shop assistant near the clinic insisted that Brach had said, "I'm in a hurry, my host is waiting. "This is Brach's last sighting by an independent witness.

The crew on a commercial airplane he was supposed to return did not report seeing him on the flight. The driver of the house/driver, Jack Matlick, said that he picked her up at O'Hare Airport, further confirming that Brach spent four days without calling before he was deployed at O'Hare for a flight to Florida.

Matlick was the focus of police attention during the investigation. Matlick always pleaded not guilty and angrily denied to reporters that he knew what had happened to Brach, but the former federal agent working on the case said after Matlick's death that he was indeed responsible. Brach's brother argues that Matlick is responsible for the murder of his sister without the involvement of Bailey or horseman. On February 14, 2011, Matlick died in a Pennsylvania nursing home at the age of 79.

Lincoln Park Zoo 02 18 2017 Helen Brach Primate House - YouTube
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Richard Bailey and horse racket connections

Brach was declared dead in 1984. Nobody was ever convicted of Brach's disappearance, although Bailey was sentenced to 30 years in prison for deceiving himself.

According to a case filed in the US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, Bailey, the owner of Bailey Stables and Country Club Stables is targeting a rich or older middle-aged woman with little knowledge of the horse-ridden business that has just been widowed or divorced.. In 1975, Bailey's brother, Paul, sold his three horses for $ 98,000; Unknown Brach, Bailey also participated in the sale, and the horses were worth less than $ 20,000. Brach also bought a bunch of expensive stallions. Beginning in 1977, Bailey set up an extensive show for Brach, hoping to persuade him to invest $ 150,000 in more horses. An appraiser employed by Brach recommends that he invest nothing in training one of his original three purchases, contrary to the $ 50,000 estimate of a coach recommended by Bailey.

In 1989 the investigation reopened and evidence of criminal activity by Bailey's partners like Silas Jayne, Bailey was charged with conspiracy with several others (named but not prosecuted) to kill Brach, but some (including his brother) questioned whether Bailey had actually been guilty on this. Bailey was not punished for Brach's murder, but was sentenced to life in prison for tricking the heirs of the candy empire; The judge made it clear that the sentence reflects evidence that Bailey was involved in a conspiracy to kill him. On March 21, 2005, in a short two-paragraph opinion, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals rejected Bailey's request for a new court hearing on fraud charges to consider new evidence showing that he was innocent of a murderous conspiracy, saying that "New evidence is not established by the evidence clear and convincing that the defendant was in fact not guilty of conspiring to kill Helen Brach and ask for her murder. "

Brach's parents and husband are buried in Unionport, Ohio, near his birthplace of Hopedale. The marble monument includes an empty tomb with its name on it. In addition, two Helen dogs, Candy and Sugar, are buried there as well.

Chicago's most famous missing person case began 40 years ago ...
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External links

  • "Helen Brach". Find Grave . Retrieved June 11, 2013 . < span> Ã,

End of the road for inmate in Helen Brach case | abc7chicago.com
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See also

  • List of people who mysteriously disappear
  • Silas Jayne

Chicago's most famous missing person case began 40 years ago ...
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References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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