![]() |
Dr. Lee |
At our New York Chapter of Mystery Writers of America, we
have monthly dinner meetings, many of which feature guest speakers with special
expertise. Years ago, when the story I am about to tell was recent history, our
lecturer was Dr. Henry Chang-yu Lee, then Chief Forensic Pathologist for the
State of Connecticut, now a renowned consultant and superhero in his
field. Dr. Lee’s presentation was
unforgettable, and not just because he described a gory crime while were
finishing our dessert of vanilla ice cream with blood-red raspberry sauce. What sticks in my mind is the brilliance of
how Dr. Lee developed his evidence, and the fact that he had us laughing out
loud as he told us about it.
The case is generally known as the Wood-chipper murder. My husband David came along to that meeting,
interested because he had spent part of his childhood in Connecticut, not far from
the scene of this crime. David nicknamed
the perpetrator “Dick the Chipper,” and so I have always thought of him since.
Here is the case Dr. Lee solved and proved, even though no
body was ever found.
Richard Crafts was an airline pilot married to a Danish-born
former flight attendant—Helle Crafts, nee’ Lorck Nielsen. They
had three children. Richard served as a
volunteer special constable on the local police force in Newtown, Connecticut
where they lived. In the fall of 1986,
when Helle had it up to her neck with Richard’s extramarital affairs and
overbearing control of her and the children, she hired a private detective and
told her husband that she was going to sue him for divorce.
Helle disappeared on November 19th of that year.
Richard variously told people that she had gone to Denmark
to visit her family or that she was vacationing in the Canary Islands with a
friend. Her close friends didn’t buy it. They knew she had been unhappy, as did the
PI. Richard’s own sister told the police how
devoted Helle was to her children and that she doubted Helle would have abandoned them. On top of which, Helle had said to her
closest friend, “If something happens to me, don’t think it was an accident.” They all, including the PI, entreated the
police to investigate, but as usual with missing persons cases, the cops waited
a while.
It wasn’t until December 25th that the police got
a search warrant and went into the Crafts’ house. They found many clues. Pieces of the carpet were missing from the
master bedroom, including from a spot where the nanny testified she had seen a
grapefruit-sized blood stain. Richard’s
credit card statements, recovered from the premises showed that, at the time his wife disappeared, he had bought new bed sheets and a comforter, a freezer that was nowhere on the property, and had paid $900 to rent a wood-chipper. The PI
found the receipt for a chain saw among Helle’s papers.
The ensuing investigation turned up more damning
evidence. There had been a terrible snow
and sleet storm the night of Helle’s disappearance. Yet during that blizzard, a rented truck
pulling a wood-chipper was seen beside a local road overlooking a river and again
a little later that night, near the shore of a local lake. The lake, according to Dr. Lee’s presentation
to MWA-NY, was a favorite place for the county’s criminals to stash
evidence. Police dragged the lake and found the
chainsaw. Dr. Lee explained to us how
they identified it as Richard Crafts’.
The receipt had the serial number, which had been filed off the saw itself. But the FBI was able to retrieve the number with
their advanced imaging methods. Near the
place where the chipper was seen, they found human remains: a tooth that
belonged to Helle and also blonde hairs and fingernails that matched her
blood-type. A toenail was covered in
pink nail polished that matched what she had used.
But they still had no actual corpse.
A first trial ended with a deadlocked jury, thanks to one
hold out. The defense could claim that any
of the pieces of Helle that had been recovered could have been removed from her
person and still have left her alive.
Dr. Lee and his team went back to work on the physical
evidence. As I recall, he told us there
were more than 100,000 tiny bits. And
then EUREKA! One miniscule bone
fragment, seen under a microscope, was identifiable as coming from the inside
of a human skull. He showed a slide of
it and pointed out the telltale markings.
One could not remove such a part from a living person. Bingo!
The state issued a death certificate based on this evidence
and retried Richard Crafts. He was found
guilty of first-degree murder. During
sentencing, his sister asked the court to give him the maximum punishment. He was sentenced to 50 years in state prison.
He’s still there.
![]() |
The movie "Fargo" was inspired by the Wood-chipper murder. |
Annamaria - Monday