Murder of Helle Crafts


Helle Crafts was a Danish flight attendant who was murdered by her husband, Eastern airline pilot Richard Crafts. Her death led to the state of Connecticut's first murder conviction without the victim's body.

Disappearance

Helle Nielsen married Richard Crafts in 1979 and settled with him in Newtown, Connecticut, United States. Helle continued working as a flight attendant while raising their three children. By 1985, she had learned that Crafts had engaged in several affairs. In September 1986, Helle met with a divorce attorney and hired a private investigator, Keith Mayo, who snapped photos of Crafts kissing another flight attendant outside her New Jersey home.
On November 18, 1986, friends dropped Helle off at the couple's Newtown residence after she had worked a long flight from Frankfurt, West Germany. She was never seen again. That night, a snowstorm hit the area. The next morning, Crafts said he was taking Helle and their children to his sister's house in Westport. When he arrived, Helle was not with him. Over the next few weeks, Crafts gave Helle's friends a variety of stories as to why they were unable to reach her: that she was visiting her mother in Denmark, that she was visiting the Canary Islands with a friend, or that he simply did not know her whereabouts. Helle's friends were aware that Crafts had a volatile temper and grew concerned; Helle had told some of them, "If something happens to me, don't think it was an accident." She was not reported missing until December 1.

Investigation

Mayo became convinced that Crafts was involved in Helle's disappearance. However, because Crafts had been a volunteer constable in Newtown and was a part-time police officer in neighboring Southbury, Mayo was unable to persuade local police to investigate him for murder. The county prosecutor eventually referred the case to the Connecticut State Police. On December 26, while Crafts was vacationing with his children in Florida, troopers searched his home. Inside, they found pieces of carpet taken from the master bedroom floor. The family's nanny recalled that a dark, grapefruit-sized stain had appeared in an area of the carpet, which was later missing. There was also a blood smear on the side of the bed. The forensic investigation was led by Henry Lee, who at the time was an investigator for the state police.
Crafts' credit card records showed several unusual purchases around the time Helle vanished, including a freezer that was not found in the house, bed sheets, and a comforter, as well as the rental of a woodchipper. Among papers provided to a private investigator by Crafts was a receipt for a chainsaw, which was later found in Lake Zoar covered in hair and blood which matched Helle's DNA. The key piece of evidence was provided by Joseph Hine, a local man who worked for the town of Southbury and drove a town snowplow in the winter. On the night of November 18, hours after Helle had been last seen, Hine was plowing the roads during the snowstorm when he noticed a rental truck, with a woodchipper attached, parked close to the shore of Lake Zoar.
It was only after the search of Crafts' house that Hine reported what he had seen. He led detectives to the location, where they examined the water's edge and found many small pieces of metal and some of human tissue, including the crown of a tooth, a fingernail covered in pink nail polish, bone chips, 2,660 bleached-blonde human hairs, and O type blood, which was the same type as that of Helle Crafts. This led the police to conclude the remains had likely been fed through the woodchipper Crafts had been seen towing. Investigators concluded that Crafts struck Helle in the head with something blunt at least twice, staining the carpet with blood, then kept her body in the freezer for hours until she was frozen solid. He then cut her apart with the chainsaw, and then put the pieces through the woodchipper, probably projecting her fragmented remains into the truck and then shoveling them out onto the shore.
A prosecution for homicide requires an official determination of the death of the alleged victim; typically this is done by identification of a bodywhich was not available in this case. With the help of a forensic dentist, the tooth crown found on the water's edge was positively matched to Helle's dental records. On this evidence, the Connecticut State Medical Examiner's Office issued a death certificate on January 13, 1987; Crafts was immediately arrested. In preparation for trial, state medical examiner H. Wayne Carver obtained a pig carcass that was fed through a woodchipper. The shape of, and marks on, the pig's bone chips after this process were similar to the shape of Helle's bone fragments, strengthening the hypothesis that Crafts had used a woodchipper to dispose of his wife's body.
Crafts' trial began in May 1988 in New London, where it was moved due to extensive local publicity, and ended in July with a hung jury when a single juror voted in favor of not guilty before walking out of deliberations and refusing to return. A second trial in Norwalk ended in a guilty verdict on November 21, 1989. Crafts was sentenced to serve 50 years in prison. Crafts, as of January 2020, has been released from prison and is at a halfway house in New Haven.

In popular culture

The special edition DVD of the 1996 film Fargo contains a statement that the film was inspired by the Crafts case.
In "The Good Doctor |The Good Doctor", an episode of , the investigation into the missing wife of a plastic surgeon leads to a successful conviction without a corpse, under the theory that the body was dissolved in sulfuric acid in the bathtub, and the bones dumped out of the husband's single-engine aircraft.
The opening episode of Forensic Files was about Helle's murder.