Obituary: Frank Bender, 70, 'recomposer' of the dead

July 28, 2011|By Robert Moran, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
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  • Frank Bender with a skull that he will turn into a face using clay. Law enforcement authorities can then try to identify the victim.
  • Frank Bender with a skull that he will turn into a face using clay. Law enforcement authorities can then try to identify the victim. (MICHAEL S. WIRTZ / Staff…)
  • Sculptor Frank Bender, with bust he created based on remains of unidentified victim, an Asian male. (JESSICA GRIFFIN / Staff…)
  • The infamous "Boy in the Bag" was identified because of this bust created by sculptor Frank Bender. The childs body was found in a bag under the Ben Franklin Bridge in 1994. In 2005, a relative saw this bust on a website and called police. Lawrence Robinson was arrested for the murder of Jerell Willis, but has not yet come to trial. Robinson was not the father but was married to the boys mother, who was convicted of helping dispose of the body. (Peter Mucha / Inquirer Staff )
  • Forensic artist Frank Bender and his wife, Jan. He is terminally ill. Nevertheless, Philadelphia refuses to let him close up shop. (MICHAEL S. WIRTZ / Staff…)

Frank Bender, 70, the world-renowned forensic sculptor whose hand-molded busts of unidentified murder victims and aging killers helped to crack cold cases, died Thursday at his home in Southwest Center City.

His most famous case involved John List, a New Jersey man who killed his family in 1971 and then disappeared. The producers of Fox's America's Most Wanted asked Mr. Bender to create a bust of List showing what he might look like 18 years later. A Virginia woman watching the show recognized the bust as her neighbor. List, who was living as Bob Clark, was arrested and convicted of the murders.

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"In many ways, Frank's bust of John List really launched America's Most Wanted into a national force for catching fugitives," host John Walsh said in 2009. "Whenever I get the tough cases, I call Frank."

Mr. Bender was diagnosed that year with pleural mesothelioma, a cancer of the chest that he believed resulted from his exposure to asbestos in the engine room of a Navy ship. He was told he had only months to live.

"He had a whole extra year than anyone had anticipated. And he had a pretty good year," said his daughter Vanessa, who was in New York when her father died Thursday afternoon.

In recent weeks, with his days numbered, he was the subject of profiles in the New York Times and People magazine.

"He was thrilled," said Joan Crescenz, Mr. Bender's longtime business manager. "He felt really good about the Times article, and the People article took him over the top."

He initially ignored People's request for an interview, said his daughter Lisa Brawner. "He wasn't in it for the fame or fortune," she said. "He was in it to do good."

He had just finished one of his favorite meals, chicken and cranberry sauce, when Crescenz found him slumped at the kitchen table having a hard time breathing. He was dead a short time later.

"His life ended the way he wanted it to," Crescenz said. "He was at home."

His home was a former butcher shop on South Street that he converted into a studio. His last case and his final months were being documented by Karen Mintz, a New Jersey filmmaker. The forthcoming film is titled The Recomposer of the Decomposed, which is what he long called himself.

Mr. Bender was born in Philadelphia and grew up in North Philadelphia. He graduated from Thomas Edison High School in 1959 and then joined the Naval Reserves, said childhood friends Dennis Binsfeld and Rich Hettich. He always had an interest in art, they said.

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