ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: THURSDAY, July 28, 1994                   TAG: 9407280082
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL                    PAGE: A11   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: Associated Press
DATELINE: CHICAGO                                 LENGTH: Medium


MAN CHARGED WITH ARRANGING MURDER OF BRACH HEIRESS

The case of the vanished Brach candy heiress missing since the 1970s broke with charges that a horse-trading suitor arranged her slaying to silence her after a big-money equestrian swindle.

Helen Vorhees Brach was last seen checking out of the Mayo Clinic in 1977. Her body never was found.

Richard Bailey, a stable owner prosecutors described as a con man preying on older women, was arraigned Wednesday on federal charges and ordered held without bail.

In court awaiting his hearing, a pale, nervous-looking Bailey had to be escorted outside to vomit.

U.S. Attorney James Burns said Brach was killed after threatening to go to authorities after discovering Bailey had duped her into paying hundreds of thousands of dollars for worthless horses.

Bailey also duped other elderly women in a similar horse-trading scheme, Burns said.

``He broke his way into lives and hearts by telling them that he loved them and wanted to marry them,'' Burns said.

Brach, 65, became the sole heiress of the Brach Candy Co. fortune in 1970 after her husband, Frank, died. Most of her $30 million estate, which included a stable of thoroughbreds, went to charity when she was declared dead in 1984.

The investigation also led to charges against 22 others in an equestrian insurance fraud scheme, which allegedly involved prominent horse owners killing their animals to collect benefits.

``This is the dirty little secret of the [showhorse] industry,'' said Steve Miller, an assistant U.S. attorney.

Bailey, 65, was charged under federal murder-conspiracy statutes. Bailey arranged Brach's killing but did not commit the crime, Burns said, declining to say whether investigators know who killed her.

If convicted on all charges, which include numerous fraud counts, Bailey could be sentenced to 245 years in prison.

Keywords:
FATALITY



 by CNB