David Parker Ray
David Parker Ray | |
---|---|
Born | Belen, New Mexico, U.S. | November 6, 1939
Died | May 28, 2002 | (aged 62)
Other names | The Toy-Box Killer |
Children | 2 daughters |
Criminal penalty | 224 years' imprisonment |
Details | |
Victims | 0 confirmed 3 survived up to 60-100+ murders suspected |
Span of crimes | 1957–1999 |
Country | United States |
State(s) | New Mexico Arizona |
Date apprehended | March 22, 1999 |
David Parker Ray (November 6, 1939 – May 28, 2002), also known as the Toy-Box Killer,[1] was an American kidnapper, torturer, serial rapist and suspected serial killer. Though no bodies were found, Ray was accused by his accomplices of killing several women, and was suspected by the police to have murdered as many as sixty women from Arizona and New Mexico while living in Elephant Butte, New Mexico.[2] Ray was convicted of kidnapping and torture in 2001, for which he received a lengthy sentence, but he was never convicted of murder. He died of a heart attack about one year after his convictions in two cases, the second of which resulted in a plea deal.
Ray used soundproofing methods on a semi-trailer, which he called his "Toy Box", and equipped it with items used for sexual torture. He would kidnap about four or five women a year, holding each of them captive for around two to three months. During this period he would sexually abuse his victims and often torture them with surgical instruments, sometimes involving his friends, wife or even his dog. Then Ray would drug them with barbiturates in an attempt to erase their memories of what had happened before abandoning them by the side of the road.[3][4][5]
Biography
David Parker Ray was born on November 6, 1939, in Belen, New Mexico to father Cecil Leland Ray (August 14, 1913 – September 23, 2009), a mechanic and native of Oregon, and mother Nettie Opal Parker (November 12, 1920 – March 19, 2002), who had been born in Texas. During his childhood, Ray and his younger sister, Peggie Pearl Ray (March 18, 1942 – December 13, 2009), lived with his mother's disciplinarian parents, Russell and Dolly Parker, on a small ranch due to their poor financial condition.[6] He was sporadically visited by his violent, alcoholic father, who would supply him with magazines depicting sadomasochistic pornography.[7][8] At Mountainair High School, in Mountainair, New Mexico, he was bullied by his peers for his shyness around girls,[2] which resulted in his abusing alcohol and other drugs.
Ray's sexual fantasies of raping, torturing, and even murdering women developed during his teenage years.[9] When Ray was 14 years old, his sister saw his sadomasochistic drawings and pornographic pictures of bondage practices. As a result, Ray and his sister became estranged. Based on statements made by Ray, he is believed to have begun assaulting women as an adolescent. In an advisory message that was tape recorded by Ray on July 23, 1993, he claimed: "I've been rapin' bitches ever since I was old enough to jerk off, and tie little girls' hands behind their back."[10] He even alleged to his first wife that he had committed his first homicide sometime in 1957 when he kidnapped a woman, tied her to a tree, and tortured and murdered her. However, authorities were unable to verify his account. After completing high school, Ray received an honorable discharge from the United States Army, where his service included work as a general mechanic.[2] Ray then worked as a maintenance man for the New Mexico Parks Department in Truth or Consequences, New Mexico for the entirety of his adulthood until his arrest. The resort town, located approximately 5 miles from Elephant Butte, New Mexico, contained several local bars, which Ray frequented for victims.
Ray met 37-year-old Cindy Hendy who worked at a state park in Truth or Consequences, New Mexico, and who was fleeing convictions on grand theft and drug charges in Washington State. They became romantically involved and bonded over their shared violent sexual fantasies. In a 1993 recorded message, Ray told his captives that they would be forced to sexually service Hendy as well. Ray was divorced four times and had two children, including his accomplice, daughter Glenda "Jesse" Jean Ray.[11] Glenda had tried to warn the FBI about her father's criminal activity in 1986. FBI Agent Doug Beldon recalled Jesse Ray's claims: "She alleged that David Parker Ray was abducting and torturing women and selling them to buyers in Mexico." However, the allegations were so non-specific that the FBI were unable to arrest Ray.[12]
Criminal history
Ray sexually tortured and presumably killed his victims using whips, chains, pulleys, straps, clamps, leg spreader bars, surgical blades, electric shock machines, and saws.[13] It is thought that he terrorized many women with these tools for many years with the help of accomplices, some of whom are alleged to have been several of the women he was dating. Inside Ray's torture room which was a re-purposed, soundproofed cargo trailer located immediately outside his Elephant Butte, New Mexico property and was called the "Toy Box" by Ray, along with numerous sex toys, torture implements, syringes, and detailed diagrams showing ways of inflicting pain, there was a homemade electrical generator to electrocute his victims.[1]: 3 In total, Ray is believed to have spent $100,000 on the trailer, fitting it with sex toys and torture devices.
Reportedly, Ray constructed elaborate contraptions to confine his victims, such as a fur-lined coffin and a makeshift pillory. In addition, there were also elaborate locks and pulleys to prevent his captives from escaping. A mirror was mounted in the ceiling, above the obstetric table to which he strapped his victims, so that they would be able to see themselves be raped and tortured. He has been said to have wanted his victims to see everything he was doing to them.[1]: 3 Ray also put his victims in wooden contraptions that bent them over and immobilized them while he had his dogs and sometimes other friends rape them. Ray often had an audio tape recording of his voice played for his victims whenever they regained consciousness.[1]: 2
In the transcripts of his tapes, Ray detailed how he would occasionally release his captives, abandoning them by the side of a country road after severely drugging them with barbiturates to induce amnesia, which would prevent them from reporting the assaults:
I get off on mind games. After we get completely through with you, you're gonna be drugged up real heavy, with a combination of sodium pentothal and phenobarbital. They are both hypnotic drugs that will make you extremely susceptible to hypnosis, autohypnosis, and hypnotic suggestion. You're gonna be kept drugged a couple of days, while I play with your mind. By the time I get through brainwashing you, you're not gonna remember a fuckin' thing about this little adventure.[10][14]
He would kidnap about four or five women a year, holding each of them captive for around two to three months.[4][10] Exactly how many murder victims Ray claimed over the years is uncertain; investigators believe that he raped, tortured, and killed up to sixty individuals over the course of his life but they have not been able to locate any of their remains. A diary that Ray kept detailed what he did to each victim, but it did not disclose where he buried their bodies. According to accomplice Cindy Hendy, Ray's fatal victims were dismembered and buried, dumped in the Elephant Butte Lake or in nearby ravines. After his arrest, Ray agreed to show authorities where he had buried his victims, but he died before he could do so and Hendy was unable to assist investigators in recovering any possible bodies.
The Albuquerque FBI in 2011 released hundreds of images of items that were collected during the investigation of Ray. The FBI believes some of the items, which included jewelry and clothes, may have been taken from victims.[15] "The FBI, along with its law enforcement partners in New Mexico, is aggressively pursuing several leads in the search for remains of any possible victims of David Parker Ray," said Frank Fisher of the Albuquerque Field Office. "We are asking family and friends of missing people to look over these photographs and contact us if they recognize any of these items."
Suspected victims
- Billy Ray Bowers, 53, disappeared from Phoenix, Arizona on September 25, 1988. On September 28, 1989, the body of an unknown man wrapped in a blue tarp was found by a fisherman at McCrea Cove at Elephant Butte Lake in Elephant Butte, New Mexico. No identification was found on him, and it was determined that he had been shot in the back of the head. The unidentified decedent was ultimately identified as Bowers in March 1999 when authorities made dental record comparisons. In 1986, Bowers was a co-owner of Canal Motors, a used car business that was on North Van Buren Street in Phoenix, Arizona. The owners employed Ray, who worked as a mechanic and was described as "very talented," but was also often in conflict with Bowers. While incarcerated, Hendy stated that Ray told her he had killed Bowers and dumped his body in the Elephant Butte River.[16]
- 22-year-old Jill Suzanne Troia was last seen at the Frontier Restaurant in the 2400 block of east Central in Albuquerque, New Mexico during the late evening of September 30, 1995.[17] She had gone to a bar with friends earlier, then went with her girlfriend Glenda Jean "Jesse" Ray when they left to go to the restaurant. Witnesses reported Glenda and Troia had an argument. Glenda later told police she left Troia at the Frontier Restaurant and left with her father, Ray, and that she and David went to the Elephant Butte Reservoir in southern New Mexico. Troia has never been heard from again. Ray wrote detailed accounts of sexual tortures and burials of victims, including one in which he described an Asian woman who fitted Troia's description.[18]
- Among the possessions associated with victims was a two-page letter dated June 1990 to a young woman named Connie from an Australian man named Mark. According to Ray's journal, Connie was a white woman that he abducted and murdered in December 1995. She was 18-years-old, had long blonde hair, a birthmark on her chest, and was 160 cm tall. The Australian Federal Police and FBI conducted an investigation, hoping to locate Mark so that he would be able to identify Connie and her family and friends, but were unable to do so. Her remains have not been located or linked to an existing unidentified or missing person case.[19]
- Sylvia Marie Parker, 22, was a homeless woman living on the shores of Elephant Butte Lake who was an acquaintance of Ray's via his daughter, who supplied her with methamphetamine and cocaine. Parker was also the mother of two children and was living with them in a tent she had borrowed from David. The police later discovered that Parker's boyfriend at the time was Dennis Yancy — one of Ray's "playmates." Parker disappeared on July 5, 1997, when she was abducted and subjected to several days of torture before accomplice Yancy strangled her to death under orders by Ray. Yancy took police to where he disposed of the body with David Parker Ray and Jesse Ray, but the body had been moved. Yancy suspected and the police support the theory that Ray came back to move the body later in case Yancy ever had a softening of his conscience and confessed.[20][14][21][22]
- At 10:30 a.m. on June 30, 1999, Ralph Tutor, a 61-year-old El Paso resident, was fishing in the Elephant Butte Lake. Caught on Tutor's fishing line was an 80-pound "gunnysack" filled with what he thought was "animal flesh". The sack was "split along its seam". He then suspected it was human body parts and alerted the authorities.[23] The gunnysack was determined to contain human flesh, but no organs or bones. This meant that the unidentified victim was mutilated and dismembered before being dumped in the lake. Allegedly, Ray said, "The thing to do is cut them down the belly, scoop out their guts, fill the chest cavity with cement weights and then use bailing wire to wrap them up."[24] Furthermore, state police found bone fragments in Elephant Butte Lake belonging to a human leg in 2011. The DNA identified the victim as a female but she was not linked to any reported missing women.
Arrest and investigation
Cynthia Vigil was abducted from an Albuquerque parking lot by Ray and his girlfriend, Cindy Hendy.[25] She was taken to Elephant Butte, confined to the trailer and tortured. After three days of captivity, Vigil escaped from the trailer on March 22, 1999.[26][27] To escape, she waited until Ray had gone to work, and then unlocked her chains with keys that Hendy had left on a nearby table. Hendy noticed Vigil's attempt to escape and a fight ensued. During the struggle, Hendy broke a lamp on the captive's head, but Vigil unlocked her chains and stabbed Hendy in the neck with an icepick.[20] Vigil fled while wearing only an iron slave collar and padlocked chains. She ran down the road seeking help, which she got from a nearby homeowner who took her in, comforted her, and called the police. Her escape led officials to the trailer and instigated the capture of Ray and his accomplices.[27] Police detained Ray and Hendy.
Another victim, Angelica Montano, came forward with a similar story to that of Vigil. She said she had been held captive by Ray after Hendy invited her to the house to pick up a cake mix. After being raped and tortured, Montano convinced the pair to release her along the highway. She was picked up by an off-duty law enforcement officer and told him what happened, but he did not believe her and left her at a bus stop. She also later called police about the incident, but there had been no follow-up.[1] Police identified another victim, Kelli Garrett, from a videotape which dated from 1996.[28]
Garrett was found alive in Colorado after police identified her from a tattoo on her ankle.[1] She testified that she had gotten in a fight with her husband and decided to spend the night playing pool with friends. Ray's daughter, Jesse, who knew Garrett, took her to the Blu-Water Saloon in Truth Or Consequences, New Mexico, and may have drugged the beer she was drinking. She offered Garrett a ride home but instead took Garrett to her father's house.[29] Garrett said she endured two days of torture before Ray drove her back to her home. Ray told her husband that he had found the woman incoherent on a beach. Her husband did not believe that she could not remember where she had been and Garrett said she did not know what to tell police and so did not contact them. Her husband sued for divorce and Garrett moved to Colorado. She was later interviewed on Cold Case Files about her ordeal.[30]
The Federal Bureau of Investigation sent one hundred agents to examine Ray's property and surroundings, but no identifiable human remains were found.[1] While awaiting trial, Ray spoke to FBI profilers and said that he was fascinated by the kidnapping of Colleen Stan and other sexually motivated kidnappings. The FBI had spoken to Ray as early as 1989 in connection with his business manufacturing and selling bondage-related sexual devices.[31]
Trials and aftermath
A judge ruled that the cases for crimes against Cynthia Vigil, Angelica Montano, and Kelli Garrett would be severed, meaning that Ray would be tried for each separately. Prosecutors said this damaged their case as each woman's story would otherwise have corroborated and bolstered the others' accounts. The judge also ruled much of the evidence found in the trailer during the 1999 raid could not be admitted in the Garrett or Montano cases, including Ray's audio tape in which he gave detailed descriptions of his abudcting and torturing habits. The first trial, for crimes against Kelli Garrett, resulted in a mistrial after two jurors said they found her story unbelievable. Ray's defense was that the sex trailer was part of Ray's fantasy life and any sex was consensual.[32] After a retrial, Ray was convicted on all 12 counts.[1]: 12
A week into his trial for crimes against Vigil, Ray agreed to a plea bargain and was sentenced in 2001 to 224 years in prison for numerous offenses in the abduction and sexual torture of three young women at his Elephant Butte home.[1]: 13 The plea deal was to obtain leniency for his daughter. Prosecutors stated that the surviving victims had approved of the deal.[33] Ray's daughter, Glenda Jean "Jesse" Ray, was charged with kidnapping and criminal sexual penetration. She pled no contest and received a 30-month sentence with an additional five years to be served on probation.[34]
In 1999, 27-year-old accomplice Dennis Roy Yancy pleaded guilty to the 1997 murder of 22-year-old Marie Parker in Elephant Butte. Yancy confessed to helping Jesse Ray lure Parker into captivity in her father's trailer. Yancy said that Parker was tortured and that Ray forced him to strangle the woman to death. Prosecutors noted that no forensic evidence was found to tie Parker to the Rays.[35] Yancy was also charged with kidnapping, two counts of conspiracy to commit a crime, and tampering with evidence. He was sentenced to 30 years. The Rays were not charged in Parker's murder.[20][14][21][22] In 2010, Yancy was paroled after serving 11 years in prison, but the release was delayed by difficulties in negotiating a plan for residence. Three months after his release in 2011, Yancy was charged with violating his parole. He was remanded to custody, where he remained until 2021, serving the rest of his original sentence.[20][14][21][22]
In 2000, Cindy Hendy, an accomplice who testified against Ray, received a sentence of 36 years for her role in the crimes. She was scheduled to receive parole in 2017.[36] She was released on July 15, 2019, after serving the two years of her parole in prison.[37] On May 28, 2002, Ray was taken to the Lea County Correctional Facility, in Hobbs, New Mexico, to be questioned by state police. He died of a heart attack before the interrogation took place.[38][39] Cynthia Vigil later founded Street Safe New Mexico, a volunteer harm reduction nonprofit that works with sex workers and other vulnerable people living on the street, with Christine Barber.[40]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Ramsland, Katherine. "David Parker Ray: The Toy Box Killer". TruTV. Archived from the original on June 4, 2008.
- ^ a b c Glatt, John (June 17, 2002). Cries in the Desert. St. Martin's True Crime Library. ISBN 0312977565.
- ^ "Case 96: The Toy Box (Part 1) - Casefile: True Crime Podcast". Casefile: True Crime Podcast. September 22, 2018. Retrieved November 7, 2018.
- ^ a b Geberth, Vernon J. (2010). "Chapter 12". Sex-Related Homicide and Death Investigation: Practical and Clinical Perspectives (2nd ed.). Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. pp. 557–598. ISBN 9781439826553.
- ^ Stone, Michael H.; Brucato, Gary (2019). The New Evil: Understanding the Emergence of Modern Violent Crime. Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books. pp. 203–211. ISBN 9781633885325.
- ^ Glatt, John (April 2007). Cries in the Desert. Macmillan. ISBN 9781429904711. Retrieved November 26, 2017.
- ^ Greig, Charlotte (July 11, 2017). Serial Killers. Arcturus Publishing. p. 75. ISBN 978-1-78828-464-6. Retrieved January 26, 2018.
- ^ "Profile of Serial Rapist David Parker Ray". ThoughtCo. Archived from the original on December 1, 2017. Retrieved November 26, 2017.
- ^ "David Parker Ray CV" (PDF). Maamodt.asp.radford.edu. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 29, 2017. Retrieved December 30, 2016.
- ^ a b c "Transcript of David Parker Ray's Audio Tape – Toy Box Killer". Parkaman.com. January 12, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
- ^ "David Parker Ray" (PDF). Maamodt.asp.radford.edu. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 31, 2017. Retrieved November 26, 2017.
- ^ "Suspect's Daughter Is Arrested in Sex And Torture Case". The New York Times. April 27, 1999. Retrieved December 30, 2020.
- ^ Fielder, Jim (2003). Slow Death. New York: Pinnacle Books. pp. 10, 11 and 28. ISBN 0-7860-1199-8.
- ^ a b c d Toy Box: Where The Evil Lurks. MSNBC. May 13, 2012.
- ^ "Items and Artifacts in David Parker Ray Case". FBI.
- ^ Stahlhut, Leslie (October 13, 2019). "Billy Ray Bowers". Medium. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
- ^ Contreras, Russell (October 11, 2011). "Missing Albuquerque woman in sex torture search". NBC News. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
- ^ Good, Meaghan (September 13, 2020). "The Charley Project: Jill Suzanne Troia". The Charley Project. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
- ^ "Australian Federal Police Assist FBI in David Parker Ray Missing Person Case". FBI. February 22, 2012. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
- ^ a b c d I Escaped Death (Season 1, Episode 8). Discovery Channel.
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ignored (help) - ^ a b c Kim Holland. "Murderer paroled in sex torture case". krqe.com. Archived from the original on May 21, 2010.
- ^ a b c "NM Court Lookup Case # D-721-CR-199900040". Archived from the original on September 15, 2019. Retrieved October 9, 2019.
- ^ Harker, Jonathan (December 14, 2021). "David Parker Ray Used A Cattle Prod On His Victims, But That's Not The Worst Of It". Talk Murder. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
- ^ "Evidence of Toy Box Killer's Killings Elusive". KRQE. December 14, 2021. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
- ^ "Episode 5 - Survivor Story: Cynthia Vigil". True Consequences Podcast. Archived from the original on November 16, 2019. Retrieved November 16, 2019.
- ^ Proctor, Jeff (November 19, 2011). "Updated: Victim Tells of Captivity". www.abqjournal.com. Albuquerque, N.M.: Albuquerque Journal. Journal Staff. Archived from the original on January 9, 2017. Retrieved January 9, 2017.
- ^ a b McMahan, Elysia (May 5, 2015). "The Horrifying True Story of a Woman Who Escaped the 'Toy Box Killer'". firsttoknow.com. Archived from the original on January 9, 2017. Retrieved January 9, 2017.
- ^ "Ray Gets 223-Plus Years For Sex Torture". amarillo.com. Archived from the original on February 1, 2017. Retrieved January 21, 2017.
- ^ "Cold Case Files | "Toy-Box Killer" David Parker Ray - Crime Documentaries". youtube.com. Archived from the original on February 3, 2017. Retrieved January 21, 2017.
- ^ "Cold Case Files | "Toy-Box Killer" David Parker Ray - Crime Documentaries". youtube.com. Archived from the original on February 3, 2017. Retrieved January 21, 2017.
- ^ "David Parker Ray Part 01 of 01".
- ^ "Judge Rules Mistrial in Sex-Torture Case". Las Cruces Sun News. July 14, 2000.
- ^ "Ray pleads guilty to kidnap, rape". Las Cruces Sun News. July 3, 2001.
- ^ "Missing Albuquerque woman in NM sex torture search: the San Diego Union-Tribune". October 10, 2011. Archived from the original on March 26, 2018. Retrieved March 25, 2018.
- ^ "Man tied to sex-torture case implicates father, daughter". Las Cruces Sun-News.
- ^ Lysee Mitri (September 29, 2017). "Suspected killer David Parker Ray's girlfriend readies for release". krqe.com. Archived from the original on October 5, 2017. Retrieved October 5, 2017.
- ^ "Suspected killer David Parker Ray's girlfriend released from prison". krqe.com. July 15, 2019. Archived from the original on September 30, 2019. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
- ^ Glatt, John (2002). Cries in the Desert. Macmillan. p. 276. ISBN 9780312977566. OCLC 49937160.
- ^ Fielder, Jim (2003). Slow Death. Kensington Pub. p. 315. ISBN 9780786011995. OCLC 51455524.
- ^ "Street Safe New Mexico: Women on the Street Defy Stereotypes". Retrieved February 26, 2023.
External links
- "David Parker Ray (profile)" (PDF). Radford University.
- Denise Schrock; Justin Reese; Ashlie Poindexter. "Serial Killer Information Center Project". Retrieved May 22, 2012.
- Transcripts of David Parker Ray's audiotapes to his victims
- Videotape shown in David Parker Ray retrial Associated Press
- The Toy Box Killer Criminal Minds
- Famous Serial Killer Profiles Archived April 3, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Roy Whyte
- The Toy Box (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3) - Casefile True Crime Podcast
- True Consequences interview with Cynthia Vigil Jaramillo (Episode 5) Archived November 16, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
- 1939 births
- 2002 deaths
- 20th-century American criminals
- American kidnappers
- American male criminals
- American people convicted of torture
- American people who died in prison custody
- American rapists
- American Satanists
- Filmed killings
- People from Belen, New Mexico
- People from Sierra County, New Mexico
- Prisoners who died in New Mexico detention
- Suspected serial killers
- Torture in the United States
- Violence against women in the United States