American Homicide - S1: E6 – The Toy Box Killer, Part 1
Episode Date: November 14, 2024In the small tourist town of Elephant Butte, New Mexico, a terrifying 911 call describes a woman running naked with a chain around her neck. This episode delves into the gruesome crimes of David Parke...r Ray, known as the Toy Box Killer, whose horrifying acts left investigators and the community in shock. To reach out to the American Homicide team, please email us at AmericanHomicidePod@gmail.com. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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From audio up, the creators of Stephen King's Strawberry Spring comes The Unborn, a shocking true story.
My babies please, my babies.
One woman, two lives and a secret she would kill to protect.
She went crazy, shot and killed all her farm animals, slaughtered them in front of the kids, tried to burn her house down.
Listen to The Unborn on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi listeners, I'm Sloane Glass,
host of the American Homicide podcast.
And I'm excited to share this riveting story with you.
I'm also excited to tell you that you can now get access
to all episodes of season one of American Homicide, 100% ad free,
and one week early through the I Heart True Crime Plus
subscription, available exclusively on Apple podcasts.
Plus, you'll get access to other chart-topping true crime
shows you'll love, like The Girlfriends, Betrayal,
There and Gone South Street, Creating a Con,
The Story of Bicont, Paper Ghosts,
Piked in Massacre, Murder Homes, and more.
So don't wait.
Head to Apple Podcasts, search for iHeartTrueCrime Plus, and subscribe today.
There was a 911 call that came in indicating that there was a woman running with no clothes
on and had a chain wrapped around her neck.
It was a 911 call that made the New Mexico State Police think they were listening to
some kind of prank.
The victim had been kidnapped and tortured for several days.
They found what essentially was a torture chamber with a placard on it that indicated
Satan's den.
You know right away that everything that happened in there was awful.
It just got awful. And surprisingly, it all happened in the tiny tourist town of Elephant Butte, New Mexico.
This is something we never would have expected.
It was something they never would have suspected because it went from a case about sexual assault
to something even darker.
The FBI has estimated he's responsible
for between 45 and 60 homicides.
It would be the most sick and twisted case
that any of us would be involved in.
My name is Sloane Glass, and this is American Homicide,
a show where we take you across the country
to investigate some of America's deadliest crimes.
We'll explore how these murders are shaped
by their unique landscapes, and in turn,
how these tragedies have shaped the fabric
of these American communities forever.
Today, we're in Elephant Butte, New Mexico, for part one of The Toy Box Killer.
A note for our listeners, this episode includes detailed accounts of sexual violence and contains
subject matter which may not be suitable for all audiences.
Discretion is advised.
From the towering peaks of the Rocky Mountains to the wide open desert,
New Mexico is a combination of natural beauty
and manmade wonders.
Ironically, for a state known
for its wide open desert landscape,
one of New Mexico's top tourist destinations is a lake
located in Elephant Butte.
Elephant Butte is a state park and there is this
man-made lake that's about 23 miles long. Darren White worked for New Mexico's Department of Public
Safety. Well, New Mexico is the desert and it does get hot and so people like to cool off and
there's not many places to do that and Elephant Butte is one of them. Known as the Diamond in the Desert, the crown jewel of Elephant Butte is Elephant Butte
Dam. That huge, man-made lake is a result of the dam's construction in the early 1900s.
Locals once joked that the rock formation in the area resembled an elephant lying down,
which led to the name Elephant Butte.
It's the playground for New Mexico in the summer.
Every year from Memorial Day to Labor Day,
the sleepy town of Elephant Butte
transforms into one of the state's
biggest tourist attractions.
This tiny little town of maybe a few thousand people
grows to over 100,000 people that come down every year
to use the lake, to fish, to camp.
But outside of tourist season, the area is fairly desolate.
The thousand or so full-time residents are mainly retirees.
They love the area, they love the lake year-round, but many of them will tell you too that they
just want to be left to themselves and enjoy their quiet little piece of the state.
The State Park is part of the city of Elephant Butte, a tiny desert community with one stoplight.
It didn't even become an incorporated city until 1998.
Prior to that, it was considered part of the neighboring community of Truth or Consequences.
Strange name for a town, truth or
consequences. It conjures up images of the old West and lawlessness, but that
wasn't the case. They came by the name in a very whimsical way. The town got its
name from a popular radio game show in the 1950s called, you guessed it, truth or
consequences. They had a contest.
Name your city after the show, and you'd win a parade
and a visit from the show's host.
Mr. Senator, I hereby christen the city of some 8,000 people.
Truth or Consequences, New Mexico.
Let it out!
Sounds kind of crazy, but I guess in those days,
that's what you had to do to have a great parade.
Outside of that, the town was pretty quiet.
150 miles north of Elephant Butte is Albuquerque, and that's where a 22-year-old sex worker named
Cynthia V. Hill lived in the 1990s. Here's Cynthia.
I didn't have the best childhood.
Cynthia was abused and molested as a child and later turned to the streets where she
used drugs and sold her body.
When I was out there, the homelessness, the in and out of motels, the prostitution, being
on drugs, I'd been there and I've done that.
Central Avenue, which is part of the famous Old Route 66, cuts through downtown Albuquerque.
But there's a dangerous stretch of Central Avenue known for high levels of crime.
And that's where Cynthia was working on March 20, 1999.
That day, she learned that a man wanted to meet her in his RV.
That was a no-no for Cynthia.
She made it a rule to never meet customers in their RVs.
That day she'd break that rule and it would change Cynthia's life forever.
As Cynthia opened the front door and entered the RV, she found herself standing in front of a tall,
thin man with a mustache and slick back hair. He offered her $30 for oral sex,
but in her gut, she had a very bad feeling.
I just knew something wasn't right at that moment.
The man then flashed a silver badge
and told Cynthia she was under arrest for solicitation.
At first, I was a little in shock.
I had never seen a badge like his.
The badge seemed small and didn't look legit.
But then I was like, I've never known the cops to do that kind of undercover work.
The man started to handcuff her, and that's when Cynthia decided to run away.
So after one handcuff was on my wrist, I tried getting away.
Cynthia spun around and used her free hand to reach for the door.
I was almost at the door when he yelled, Cindy, and I stopped.
And then, out of nowhere, another woman named Cindy
emerged from a door in the back of the arpey.
She came out of the closet and shocked me with a cattle prod.
It knocked me over and they pulled me back and handcuffed me to the cabinets.
That's right.
He was a cattle prod, literally shocked and stunned.
Cynthia's handcuffed to a cabinet
in the back of the RV that's now headed to God knows where.
The man with the badge drove while his accomplice, Cindy,
sat in the passenger seat.
Cindy appeared much younger than the man.
She was thin, with long blonde hair and blue eyes.
What did these two want from Cynthia?
And where were they taking her?
I never had a chance to think,
like, what was gonna happen long term.
And Cynthia decided she was not going to stick around
to find out.
She knew if she could free herself from the cabinet,
she'd a chance to escape.
After 10 minutes of trying,
Cynthia managed to unscrew a bolt on the cabinet
and get her hands free.
They were still handcuffed,
but she was no longer bound to the cabinet.
And I knew I had to get away.
Now she waited for the RV to slow down so she could jump out.
But things didn't go as planned.
At one point, he had to slam on the brakes and I tumbled forward.
The driver and his accomplice noticed that Cynthia was loose.
They jumped to the back of the RV.
Cindy pointed a gun at Cynthia, while the driver removed her clothes,
placed a leather mask over her head and tied her up.
And I couldn't see nothing.
Desperate and afraid, Cynthia tried her luck with Cindy.
I was begging her to let me go.
I was using every excuse that I could think of.
She was trying to talk to her woman to woman.
So she was shocked by Cindy's response. All she told me was that they were gonna take me
and rape me and let me go.
I should warn you that things from here get more graphic.
Naked and tied up in the back of an RV,
Cynthia had nothing but time to think about
what awaited her.
The drive seemed like forever.
Two hours would pass before the RV pulled into an unpaved road and came to a stop.
Seconds later, the door to the RV opened.
That's when panic rushed over her body.
When they finally took me out of the RV, I had no clothes on.
I had handcuffs and shackles on.
It was eerily quiet.
But then they put duct tape around my face.
Cynthia couldn't see a thing, as the two led her to a 22-foot cargo trailer that sat beside
a small white house in the middle of the desert. And I couldn't figure out why nobody was seeing me naked walking from the RV into the trailer.
A handful of prefabricated homes donned the area surrounded by Elephant Butte Lake in
the distance.
They took me inside and they sat me on the bed and they put a metal collar on my neck that padlocked.
I shackled my feet to the bed and my hands to the bed.
Cynthia didn't know it at the time, but she sat inside a room that the man with the badge
called the Toy Box.
But don't let that innocent name fool you.
The Toy Box was actually a torture chamber that belonged to the man who kidnapped her,
David Parker Ray.
During the day, the 59-year-old was a maintenance man
with the New Mexico Parks Department.
At night, he lived out his dark sexual fantasies
in an old white metal storage container
that he converted into a soundproof torture chamber.
An old video camera fixed to the wall And he converted into a soundproof torture chamber.
An old video camera fixed to the wall pointed right at the chair that sat in the middle
of the room.
His partner in crime, Cindy Hendy, wasn't just his accomplice in the kidnappings and
sexual assault, but was his girlfriend.
They went about their business like it was normal life. Incredibly, the two watched movies and carried on as though there wasn't a naked woman strapped to a chair in their house.
At some point, Cynthia believed she was drugged and blacked out.
And when she woke up, there was a cassette tape player next to her playing a tape.
It was the voice of the man from the RV explaining what would happen in his toy box.
It started off saying, hello bitch.
Okay bitch, we both know what you've been brought here for.
A lot of f***ing and s***ing.
Telling me why I was there.
I'm into bondage and S&M.
It's kind of hard to find a bulletin partner as it goes for that
s***. So when I get the urge, I go out, buy me some good looking little b**** that turns me on,
kidnapper, and keeper in my playroom for a while, and this time it's your turn. That's really hard
to listen to. In the recordings, David calmly and matter-of-factly outlined all the disturbing things he intended to do to Cynthia.
I'm going to experiment on you. I've done it to a lot of women over the years.
The voice said that once he got tired of his victims, he drugged them, and they wouldn't remember a thing about what happened.
If you knew enough to cause serious problems, you would not be turned loose. You would simply disappear.
Just before the 45-minute long terrifying tape ended, David Parker Ray presented an
offer.
As soon as I turn this tape off, you will have an excellent opportunity to try to beg
for me to turn you loose.
I may or may not be able to understand you through the gag, but if you want to, feel free to try.
I love to listen to a b---- bag and plead.
And this is the end of the tape.
But not surprisingly, Cynthia was unable to persuade her captors to free her.
Instead, she was subjected to three days of unthinkable abuse.
He shocked me with a device he made.
He connected it to my breast and shocked me for hours.
And then they watched a movie and went to bed.
The next morning, they ate breakfast and then they took me into another room and they put
me on a massage table and he shocked me.
The pain was excruciating.
That went on for about an hour, hour and a half.
Eventually the pain became too much and Cynthia passed out.
I kind of realized I might not go home, that I might die.
Cynthia woke up shackled to a chair
and across from her was a long wooden coffin.
Can you imagine waking up and seeing a coffin?
The top was open and a pillow and white sheet sat inside.
And on the walls of his toy box were graphic pictures
of women being tortured, along with some rules.
Rules like never trust a chain captive.
When they had me laying on the bed
and they were going about their business,
they were talking about a little girl
that they were gonna make their sex slave.
And they already knew who she was.
They already had it planned out.
For Cynthia, that was confirmation
of the enormity of the crimes
that took place in that trailer.
I never thought for one minute
that I was the only girl that that ever happened to.
By this point, Cynthia's body was covered
with bruises and burns.
Cynthia was smart. She had a strategy.
She tried her best to play by David Parker Ray's rules
in the hopes that he'd eventually get tired of her and let her go.
The next day, he comes and he sits on the bed
and he takes the handcuffs and shackles off me and he went to work.
It was now Monday morning, and David left the trailer wearing his green Parks Department
uniform.
Before he returned from work that day, everything would change.
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In the quiet town of Avella, Pennsylvania, Jared and Christy Akron seemed to have it
all. A whirlwind romance, a new home and twins on the way. What no one knew was that Christy
was hiding a secret so shocking it would tear their world apart.
911 response, what's your emergency?
My babies please, my babies!
One woman, two lives and the truth more terrifying than anyone could imagine.
They had her as one of the suspects but they could never prove it.
You're going to go to jail if you don't come with us right now.
Throughout this whole thing I kept telling myself, nobody's that crazy.
Uncover the chilling mystery
that will leave you questioning everything.
A story of the lengths we go
to protect our darkest secrets.
She went bat shit crazy,
shot and killed all her farm animals,
slaughtered them in front of the kids,
tried to burn their house down.
Audio Web presents The Unborn
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi listeners, I'm Sloane Glass,
host of the American Homicide podcast,
and I'm excited to share this riveting story with you.
I'm also excited to tell you that you can now get access
to all episodes of season one of American Homicide,
100% ad free and one week early
through the iHeart True Crime Plus subscription,
available exclusively on Apple podcasts.
Plus, you'll get access to other chart-topping
true crime shows you'll love, like The Girlfriends,
Betrayal, There and Gone South Street,
Creating a Cont, The Story of Biccont, Paper Ghosts, Pigten Massacre,
Murder Homes and more.
So don't wait.
Head to Apple podcasts, search for iHeartTrueCrime Plus and subscribe today.
In March 1999, Cynthia Vigil was abducted by a man soliciting sex from her.
David Parker Ray and his girlfriend Cindy Hendy took Cynthia to their soundproof trailer in the desert town of Elephant Butte, New Mexico.
There, they sexually assaulted and tortured her.
It was something totally different than any other situation I had been in. Cynthia had lost track of time,
but it was now Monday, March 22nd, 1999,
the third day she was held captive.
That morning, David Parker Ray chained Cynthia to a pole,
and then he went to work.
This meant his girlfriend Cindy Hendy was in charge.
She got left with me during the day.
That afternoon, Cynthia noticed her key to freedom
sat on a coffee table just a few feet away,
where David Parker Ray left his key ring.
She'd seen her abductor use one of those keys
to unlock the padlock that currently connected
the chain around her neck to the pole.
Cynthia was determined to get those keys,
but with Cindy Hendy standing guard,
she couldn't make her move.
Instead, she waited as Cindy spent the day cooking
and watching soap operas on an old TV.
Never once did she speak until that afternoon
when she got a phone call.
She went to the back of the trailer
and I had the opportunity to get the keys.
The collar around Cynthia's neck had her chained to a pole,
but her hands and feet were free.
So she stretched her legs as far as they would go
and then wrapped her feet around the base of the table.
She slowly and carefully pulled the coffee table closer to her while trying to not make any noise.
With the keys within reach, Cynthia scooped them up with her right hand.
She tried the first key. It didn't fit. By the time she put the second key in, Cindy Hendy was standing in front of her. When she came back in the living room
and seen I had the keys,
she started beating me with a glass lamp.
The glass broke into a million tiny pieces
as Cynthia defensively curled her body into a ball.
I finally got the lock open.
In a fight for her life,
Cynthia ran towards a nearby ice pick.
I got the ice pick and I stabbed her with it.
The ice pick slashed Cindy Hendy's face,
causing her to fall back in pain.
And that's when Cynthia grabbed the landline phone.
I dialed 911.
But Cindy Hendy snatched the phone back from her.
Blood was running down her face
as Cindy quickly told the 911 operator
that everything was fine and hung up the phone.
When she turned around, Cynthia was gone.
Cynthia had jumped through a window
and was now running as fast as she could
to get away from David Parker Ray's house.
I had no clothes on, I had a metal collar around my neck
and I was bleeding from head to toe.
And I was bleeding from head to toe. Her eyes burned from the sunlight as she tried to find somebody, anybody.
But there was no one around.
As she ran down the dirt road, all she saw were a handful of prefabricated homes and
RVs.
The collar was still around her neck and the chain clanked as
it dragged on the dirt road. After two blocks of running in a dead sprint,
Cynthia got to an intersection. She stopped. The street was paved and a blue
car was headed right towards her. The driver saw her and slowed down.
I tried getting in a car of a lady that was driving by me. When the driver saw her and slowed down. I tried getting in a car, the lady that was driving by me.
When the driver saw the bloodied and wild-eyed Cynthia,
they screamed, rolled up their windows, and sped off.
Remember, this is a small town.
There were no other cars in sight.
Cynthia continued running down the road.
She passed an intersection and noticed a street sign.
It read Bass Road.
Ahead was a double wide mobile home,
and Cynthia ran straight towards the front door.
Much to her surprise, it was unlocked.
So she went inside and double locked the door behind her.
I ran into some lady's house and she was doing dishes.
I asked her for help, and her husband came in and like was in shock.
He stopped in his tracks and couldn't talk.
He was just looking at me.
And she called 911 and they put a robe on me.
I was at the sheriff's office and a 911 call came into the dispatch center. Dave Elston was a sergeant with the Sierra County Police Department.
At first I thought it could have been a joke.
A short time after that there was another 911 call that came in
indicating that there was a woman running down Bass Road with no clothes on
and had a chain wrapped around her neck.
And then moments later another 911 call came in that there was a woman with no clothes on with a chain around her neck inside a woman's living room asking for help.
As two deputies responded to the home where Cynthia Vieja was, Sergeant Elston went to the origin of the first 911 call, David Parker Ray's home.
But David Parker Ray wasn't just some ordinary suspect to Sergeant Elston.
I knew David Parker Ray personally. He was a friend of mine.
Imagine knowing this horrible crime had occurred in the small town you were sworn to protect,
only to show up to the house and it's someone you know, a person you call a friend. In this small
town, David Parker Ray was well known and likable.
He was a mechanic at the New Mexico State Parks
at Elephant Butte.
That's how I got to know him.
I worked a case once where there was individuals
that broke into their police cars
and stole their police radios
and ended up catching that individual
and I had David Parker Ray testify in my case
and he testified and presented himself very well during his testimony on the stand.
Now Sergeant Elston and two other officers were standing outside Parker Ray's home in Elephant Butte.
It was a mobile home. I've never been inside of it but I've been there before and knew where he lived.
When no one answered the door, the three officers gained entry through a sliding glass door
on the side of the home.
And when I walked in, I noticed that there was what appeared to be a hospital bed in
the center of the room with a system of chains attached to the ceiling.
As Sergeant Alston navigated through the room, he heard shards of glass breaking under his
shoes.
There was a 1970s style lamp that had the green glass bulb on the bottom and it was
broken all over the ground.
He continued and took inventory of all the bizarre things that surrounded him in his
friend's home.
I entered into a room that had a coffin inside of it, and then there was a dresser drawer
style with a mirror in there that had various types of tools.
It had a scalpel, ice pick, a small torch.
There was also a candelabra that was in there that was approximately three feet high, maybe,
which had a sexual device on top and then a...
In the quiet town of Avella, Pennsylvania,
Jared and Christy Akron seemed to have it all.
A whirlwind romance, a new home and twins on the way.
What no one knew was that Christy was hiding a secret,
so shocking it would tear their world apart.
911 response, what's your emergency?
My babies, please, my babies!
One woman, two lives, and the truth more terrifying than anyone could imagine.
They had her as one of the suspects, but they could never prove it.
You're going to go to jail if you don't come with us right now.
Throughout this whole thing, I kept telling myself, nobody's that crazy, crazy.
Uncover the chilling mystery that will leave you questioning everything.
A story of the lengths we go
to protect our darkest secrets.
She went bat shit crazy,
shot and killed all her farm animals.
Slaughtered them in front of the kids,
tried to burn their house down.
Audio Up presents the Unborn
on the iHeartRadio Apple Podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi listeners, I'm Sloane Glass,
host of the American Homicide podcast,
and I'm excited to share this riveting story with you.
I'm also excited to tell you that you can now get access
to all episodes of season one of American Homicide,
100% ad free and one week early through the iHeart True Crime
Plus subscription, available exclusively on Apple podcasts.
Plus, you'll get access to other chart-topping true crime shows you'll love, like The Girlfriends,
Betrayal, There and Gone South Street, Creating a Con, The Story of Biccont, Paper Ghosts, Pigten Massacre, Murder Homes, and more.
So don't wait.
Head to Apple Podcasts, search for iHeartTrueCrime Plus, and subscribe today.
It also had spikes sticking out from the bottom of it upwards.
And then I also noticed on the walls that there were drawings of bondage type situations. Essentially it was a torture chamber with a placard on it that indicated Satan's Den.
Satan's Den was the place that David Parker Ray referred to as the Toy Box.
So we determined that we actually had a crime scene, but we didn't know exactly what we
had at the time.
Sergeant Alston then got in touch with the deputies who were with Cynthia Vigil.
While talking with him on the telephone,
he was telling me that the victim there,
who was Cynthia Vigil, had been kidnapped
and had been tortured for several days
at David Parker's residence.
He took a pair of bolt cutters
and removed a metal collar that was on her.
As deputies transported Cynthia to a local hospital,
Sergeant Elston began his hunt for the man no one in Elephant Butte suspected
would have a torture chamber.
David Parker was always friendly with me.
It was kind of shocking just knowing that this individual that I'd known for that long
was into what he was doing. Later that afternoon, Sergeant Elston was in his squad car,
headed back to the police station,
when he drove past a familiar vehicle.
I noticed David Parker Ray's RV, him driving it.
So I turned around, did a traffic stop with him.
Neighbours looked on as police drew their weapons
and ordered David Parker Ray and
Cindy Hendy to exit the vehicle.
He was very calm. He was wearing a state parks uniform.
The two then walked backwards towards the police with their hands in the air.
And he asked if he could take the uniform off. And I told him no.
I was just taking him into investigative custody.
With David Parker Ray and Cindy Hendy now in custody
for the kidnapping and torture of Cynthia Vigil,
what happened next would shake the quiet town
of Elephant Butte to its roots.
Police charged David Parker-Ray and Cindy Hendy
with 25 counts, including kidnapping, sexual assault, and
aggravated battery of Cynthia Vigil.
What they didn't know yet was that Cynthia would also be the key in unlocking even more
crimes.
This was just the beginning, and Cynthia was lucky to make it out alive.
People were shocked.
Darren White was the Public safety director for the New Mexico
State Police. The chief who was this very large, very stoic, and very serious man,
I could see the look in his eye before he even uttered a word. What he was about to tell me was
about to tell me was dark and disturbing. And he started to tell me about a woman
who escaped in elephant-fute from a trailer.
That the reports were that she was running down the street
and that she was naked and that she had a dog collar around her neck and that
there were two people in custody. It's a hundred times worse when you actually go
to the scene of where everything happened and especially once you open
the door to the toy box and you see what's in there. And you know right away
that everything that happened in there was awful. It just got awful. And
designed with pure evil. It didn't take much more to realize it would be the
most sick and twisted case that any of us would be involved in.
Talking to Cynthia Vigil, the police admired her heroism.
This was a woman that was unthinkably tortured, terrorized,
and obviously incredibly shaken. But she was able to tell them exactly
what happened to her and who was responsible for it and where.
Where did it happen?
The detectives that were working that case knew right away that that was not the first case.
He didn't wake up two days prior and decide, oh my God, I'm going to abduct and torture this woman.
David Parker Ray and Cindy Hendy sat in jail awaiting trial.
The two maintained their innocence and said they weren't torturing Cynthia, they were
helping her.
Helping her to detox from heroin.
And they maintained any sex between David and Cynthia Vigil was consensual.
As she was being transported to jail, TV cameras captured Cindy Hendy.
Were you involved in any way?
No. Kind of, but...
Kind of?
Yeah.
Did you just hear that? Cindy Hendy said, no, kind of.
What does kind of mean?
She was involved in the abductions. She was involved in the torture. Police learned that Cindy Hendy had been convicted
of theft and drug possession in Washington, but fled to New Mexico. She took up residence near
Elephant Butte and landed a job with the State Park Department. That's where she met David Parker
Ray. Cindy had said that they both had a preference for this kind of violent sexual activity.
And so that's what brought them together.
It's hard to imagine that a human being is capable of treating someone like that.
And inflicting that type of pain on them and doing it for their pleasure.
David Parker Ray was the man known for fixing things.
He worked at the New Mexico Parks Department
and was well known and well liked by those in town.
There was not an ill word.
People didn't say bad things about him.
People described him as quiet, neat,
and somebody who would never raise his voice.
One coworker said David Parker Ray
was the nicest, cleanest, politest person
and called his arrest mind boggling.
And if you think about it,
if that is really how people thought of him,
it certainly was mind boggling.
It just seemed like a, almost like a, you know,
a grandfatherly figure
that you would go fishing with on the weekend.
He even won an award at work for his efforts
in a cost savings program.
Along with a cash prize,
he received a certificate of appreciation
for his quote, exemplary work and dedication.
The thing that I remember the most is just people saying
is that this is something we never would have expected of David Parker Ray.
But his reputation didn't cloud police judgment.
It became obvious that David Parker Ray led two very different lives.
The one thing about David Parker Ray kept journals, videos, recordings.
Parker Ray kept meticulous records
of what he did to his victims.
He even had dozens of videotapes
that showed him torturing women, including Cynthia Vigil.
With all this new information,
police took another look
at previous missing persons cases in the area.
The FBI sent a pair of psychological profilers
to try to get into the mind of David Parker Ray.
And then there was the toy box.
The FBI towed it to their Albuquerque office
where one FBI agent had the unfortunate task
of sketching and making detailed drawings of its contents.
You're talking about dozens of criminal investigators
that were there trying to investigate every aspect
of David Parker, right?
All of this was going down weeks
before Elephant Butte's high season began.
Sleepy hotels suddenly turned on their no vacancy signs.
Journalists and law enforcement flooded into town.
Here you have this quiet little town that likes to keep to themselves.
That wasn't going to be the case anymore. Especially after this news became public.
One of Cindy Hendy's friends told a local TV station David Parker Ray was
more than a rapist. He was a murderer. This friend claimed he dumped four to six victims
in Elephant Butte Lake and that more bodies were buried in the desert.
And there was immediately rumors that the lake was probably a graveyard to dozens of his victims.
The two were no longer just being looked at as sexual predators, but serial killers.
Sergeant Dave Elston was one of the investigators.
When I was inside of the residence,
I saw a map of Elephant Butte Lake
that had several red Xs on it in the center of the lake.
What could that mean?
Xs on a lake?
It's an ominous discovery,
and you would think that somebody hiding such a huge secret
would be more discreet. It was speculated that David Parker Ray would take them out on a boat
and cut their bodies open, remove the internal organs, fill the cavity with rocks, bricks,
whatever it may be, wrap them in chicken wire and dumped them into Elephant Butte Lake
and the fish and other creatures
would take care of the decomposition of the body.
So Elephant Butte Lake is approximately 40 miles long.
Police and news helicopters took to the sky
over Elephant Butte looking for bodies,
but none turned up.
I did a town hall meeting with the community to try to give as much information as I could.
That evening, residents of Elephant Butte filled a local school gymnasium as Darren White of the
New Mexico State Police tried to ease their concerns.
Speculation was running wild in this tiny little community.
Officer White told them
that the state was pouring all of its
resources into the investigation.
He also expressed concern for
investigators' mental health, given
the chilling evidence they encountered.
And in the coming weeks, police would
learn about two more victims.
Angelica Montano was a victim of David Parker Ray.
Angelica lived in Albuquerque and claimed
that David Parker Ray held her in the toy box
a few weeks before Cynthia.
Then he dropped her off on the interstate.
She was picked up by an off-duty deputy sheriff.
She explained to him that she had been kidnapped,
raped, and tortured, and then she didn't even know how she even
got out of the interstate.
But at the time, the police didn't believe her story, and they let her go.
He just dropped her off at a gas station in the middle of the night and continued on.
With this information, police added additional charges to David Parker Ray and Cindy Hendy.
That's now two victims that came forward.
And Deputy District Attorney Jim Yance
would soon locate a third, but there's a problem.
She was able to remember bits and pieces,
not the entire experience.
With three victims, prosecutors worked to make sure
they kept these monsters behind bars.
The victims, what they encountered
and what they encountered
and what they endured is just, it's unbelievable.
And so unbelievable that there were so many people
when they were first told didn't believe it was true.
Now, it was up to prosecutors to convince a jury.
We had jurors that were just shaking their heads no.
We actually had jurors sobbing.
But would those jurors believe what happened?
Some people like it rough.
It was one of the jurors that said that.
Even with three witnesses, a pile of tapes,
detailed recordings and physical evidence,
prosecutors would struggle to keep David Parker Ray
behind bars.
And wait until you hear why.
That's on part two of The Toy Box Killer, next time on American Homicide.
You can contact the American Homicide team by emailing us at americanhomicidepodatgmail.com.
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That's americanhomicidepod.gmail.com.
American Homicide is hosted and written by me, Sloan Glass, and is a production of Glass Podcasts,
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My babies, please, my babies!
One woman, two lives, and a secret she would kill to protect. She went crazy. She shot and killed all her farm animals. Hi, listeners.
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