Edmonton Journal

April 28, 1962: City police conduct search for missing Riverside golf pro

- edmontonjo­urnal.com To read more stories from the series This Day in Journal History, go to edmontonjo­urnal.com/history CHRIS ZDEB czdeb@edmontonjo­urnal. com

Edmonton police were investigat­ing the disappeara­nce of a well-known golfer who had not been seen or heard from for more than a week.

Frank Willey was the first profession­al at the Riverside Municipal Golf Course where he had worked since the day it opened in 1952. He was also regarded as one of the top putters among Canadian pros, and at one time had ranked high in national competitio­ns.

On this day, Willey’s car was found abandoned in southeast Edmonton with a set of golf clubs inside. Police were told the 48-yearold, married father of two was last seen going to deliver golf clubs to a friend.

Willey’s disappeara­nce was front page news for weeks with the growing suspicion that he had been murdered.

On May 4, police arrested and charged Daniel Workman — alias Gene Ray Bain, a 44-year-old bookkeeper — with killing the golf pro.

“It is somewhat unusual to charge a man with murder without a body,” police Chief M.F.E. Anthony said, “but it has been done.”

A second man, 39-year-old William (Headball) Huculak was arrested the next day in Orillia, Ont., on an eastbound CNR train.

The men were charged after an informant told police about two men who had asked him to participat­e in a killing. The men later told the informant they had disposed of a body in the Looma district, 30 kilometres southeast of Edmonton, after their vehicle became stuck in a muddy field.

During the murder trial police introduced photograph­s taken in the living room of a partially constructe­d house on 75th Street near 99th Avenue.

The pictures showed a large stain of what appeared to be blood on the floor, partially covered with sawdust. The walls and a floor of a hallway leading from the living room were also covered with the same stains. Blood stains in the basement of the house matched Willey’s blood type.

A building contractor reported blood spattered about the house on April 20, the day after the golf pro was last seen leaving his home. Police believed he had been bludgeoned to death at that location.

Although Willey had been living in the same house as his wife, Paris, and their two children, there was strong evidence that Workman and Willey’s wife were having an affair. In February 1961, 14 months before Willey disappeare­d, Workman asked a lawyer whether it was possible for someone guilty of an affair getting a substantia­l part of their spouse’s property. When told that wasn’t likely, Workman said to the solicitor, “we’ll just have to kill him.”

The day Willey disappeare­d he received a telephone call for the delivery of a set of women’s golf clubs, not to exceed $225 in value, as a present for the caller’s wife. He accepted the order and agreed to deliver them at 9 p.m. Earlier, Workman had been at the house where the killing is alleged to have taken place and spoke to the painters, asking them how late they would be working. The builder employed Workman as a bookkeeper.

The evidence was all circumstan­tial, but the trial ended with the conviction of the two men. They were sentenced to hang, but their sentences were commuted to life in prison.

The whereabout­s of Willey’s body remains a mystery. It was first believed to be in a shallow grave in the Loomis district. The search later shifted to Leduc and the Rolly View area.

But the golf pro’s body was never found.

 ?? EDMONTON JOURNAL/FILE ?? Frank Willey, the first profession­al at the Riverside Municipal Golf Course, disappeare­d in 1962. Two men were later convicted of his murder and sentenced to life in prison. Willey’s body has never been found.
EDMONTON JOURNAL/FILE Frank Willey, the first profession­al at the Riverside Municipal Golf Course, disappeare­d in 1962. Two men were later convicted of his murder and sentenced to life in prison. Willey’s body has never been found.

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