Crime Junkie - MISSING: Rico Harris
Episode Date: July 20, 2020In 2014 Rico Harris left Los Angeles to drive north for a new life in Seattle, only to vanish somewhere along the way. For current Fan Club membership options and policies, please visit https://crim...ejunkieapp.com/library/. Sources for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources please visit https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/missing-rico-harrisÂ
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Hi, crime junkies. I'm Ashley Flowers and I'm Britt, but today I am actually not your
host. It's been a little while, but we have gotten a lot of requests. People want to hear
you, Britt. Yeah. And today I want to tell you about a man who went from the very edge
of basketball superstar to the depths of rock bottom and back again. A man who from the
outside looked like he was finally on a solid path towards a happy future, when suddenly
in the blink of an eye, everything fell apart. This is a story of Rigo Harris.
In October of 2014, Jennifer Song is right in the middle of making some big changes in
her life. After a couple of years of doing the long distance relationship thing, her
fiance Rigo Harris is finally moving from his hometown of Alhambra in Los Angeles County
up to Seattle to live with her. Jennifer and Rigo fell in love a couple of years ago back
in 2012 during a vacation in Southern California, but they've never lived in the same place.
So she's excited that they're finally going to start building their future together in
the same city. Plus, on top of it all, Rigo has an interview coming up for a job with
a real estate company and it's just the opportunity that he's been waiting for. So Rigo is a
big guy. He's six foot nine inches and weighs almost 300 pounds and he is built and honestly
he should be. He was a super talented basketball player growing up and even through college.
And because of that, a lot of the jobs he's been able to get recently have kind of been
dependent on his body instead of his intellect. Like when Jennifer met him, he was working
as a security card and she knows just how much he wants to be respected for his mind
and not just as like hired muscle. Right. Yeah, that makes sense. So the future is looking
bright for the couple. They'll finally be together in location. Rigo has this great
job opportunity, but even with all these big plans and big changes, their relationship
isn't perfect, which I mean, who's everyone? Yeah, there are still growing pains from
this big move, finally living together and just adjusting to all of that. So on October
8th, Jennifer and Rigo have a bit of a disagreement, not like a knockdown drag out fight, just
one of those spats that kind of boils over into everything else. Yeah. I've had one or
two of those. Right. And there's been tension between them all day because Rigo wants Jennifer
to go explore Seattle with him, but Jennifer just needs some time to herself and she wants
to go to the gym to unwind. Which is legit because again, like you guys just moved in
together, you're figuring out your own space, your own schedules, this is new, like you
need some alone time. And you're used to not being with this person all the time, right?
Right. Yeah, you kind of have to just like renegotiate your living space almost, right?
Like, I mean, especially, you know, not only is it just like a brand new relationship, but
they went from being long distance to being like in the same house together. Exactly.
And it's that kind of challenges that I'm talking about, totally normal, totally expected
in the situation. So Jennifer goes to the gym and when she gets home that night around
eight, Rigo isn't there. At first she thinks he must still be out exploring Seattle. Right.
Cause that's what he said he was going to do anyways. Exactly. But when she finally
gets ahold of him, he says he's on his way back to Alhambra to pick up some stuff from
his mom's house. And don't worry, he'll be back in time for his interview. Wait, you
said Alhambra is, it's in LA County, right? Yeah. And they're in Seattle. That's like
not like a day trip. That's a long drive. Right. It's actually over 1,100 miles. So
that's at least 18 hours each way without stopping. Like that's not any bathroom breaks.
That's not any meals. Gas like stopping to sleep or get gas. It's a super long trip.
And not really the kind of thing you would do, you know, on a whim spur of the moment,
even if you were, you know, disagreeing with your partner. So Jennifer is kind of confused
and unsettled by this last minute trip. But Rico says, you know, don't worry about it.
I'll be back Friday night. She's not thrilled, but she understands he's still been making
trips back and forth to get all of his stuff. So she figures, you know what, this is what
that is. And he's going to grab some stuff and be right back. Plus he's been calling
and texting her just like normal staying in touch and constantly assuring her that he
would be back by 7pm on Friday and well ahead of the interview he had the following day.
So in keeping with his plan, Rico gets to Alhambra after a day, meets up with his family,
packs up the last of his things, then turns right back around to drive back to Seattle.
He doesn't tell his mom Margaret when he leaves. He just calls her around 1am from
the road. And she's obviously kind of worried about this super quick turnaround. I mean,
honestly, I am too because what you're saying is so he drives this 1100 miles, 18 hours,
he literally stops long enough to get his stuff and then just turns right back around
to do the 18 hours all over again. Yeah, pretty much. No sleeping. No, like that's it to meet
that strange. That's not normal. Right. And according to a Fox Sports article titled The
Vanishing Man by Flindor Boyd, Rico had dinner with his brother, only stayed at his parents
place long enough to have a beer with his stepdad and he didn't get any sleep. He was
talking to his family about how he was adjusting and he even admitted that he had some doubts
about whether this move to Seattle was really the right choice for him. But ultimately,
he decided that it was that he needed a fresh start and that one needed to be far away from
his past in California. So I guess I was under the impression that he made this move to Seattle
specifically for his relationship, but you're making it sound like, I mean, I guess what
is his past in California mean? Was there something to get away from? Yeah, it actually
turns out that Rico had been struggling with alcohol and substance abuse for years at this
point, even dating back to his college days. So when he went away to college to begin what
should have been a promising basketball career, one that had every potential to earn him a
position in the NBA, he really struggled with that transition socially, academically, especially
without his family nearby. He bounced around from Arizona State to LA City College to Cal
State Northridge for a few years. And it was during this time that his alcohol use started
and just progressively took over all aspects of his life. And Rico wasn't like a rowdy
or violent drunk. He would kind of just sit alone with his bottle. And he even got to
a point where he started drinking beer in the morning just to get rid of his hangovers.
And within a few years, his NBA dreams were completely dashed. Even after he spent a month
touring with the Harlem Globetrotters, he still ended up walking away from basketball
for good. And it didn't get better from there. He ended up back at his mom's house at 24
years old. And, you know, it had to have been hard for him to go from being this basketball
phenomenon and potential NBA draft pick to go all the way back to square one. And that
year, he was out one night in LA when he got into a spat with a group of guys and was
hit in the back of the head with a baseball bat. He walked away from that fight, but the
impact of the concussion was immediate. And some even said that the damage was permanent
and that he was never the same after that. He basically moved from alcohol to drugs to
harder drugs and was eventually using crack and heroin and meth. One of Rico's friends
was quoted in that Fox Sports article I mentioned saying that Rico was, quote, a local tragedy.
He was the best ballplayer the city ever saw. And then you'd see him in the street drunk
and asking for quarters. It was despair. It was down there. It was the darkest of dark.
End quote.
So I guess, you know, one question I have is, was he like this when he met Jennifer or
had something like changed along the way for him? Like, did she really know what she was
getting into?
I think she had an idea. But by the time Rico met Jennifer, he had been sober for several
years and again, was working in security, doing really well. But he had had a slip up
in the fall of 2014 and had started drinking again, which actually led to him getting fired
from his job. And his confidence took a huge hit. You can see why the beer he shared with
his stepfather that night in Alhambra could have been more than just a casual drink and
why his parents were worried about Rico and his move to Seattle. So Rico leaves his parents'
place shortly after midnight on what is now Friday, October 10th to begin the long trek
back to Seattle. He calls Jennifer on the way and just like Rico's mom, she's worried
about him too, especially since he hasn't slept at all. She ends up talking to him
while he drives to help keep him awake. And finally, around 3.30 a.m., she gets him to
agree to stop at a rest area with people around and catch a few hours of rest. At that point,
she breathes a huge sigh of relief because she can go to sleep now and my mom says it
all the time, if you're not home, I don't sleep.
Yeah, like, she's not worried. He's finally good.
Exactly. And when she calls Rico again around eight in the morning, he says he's near Sacramento,
which is still about 12 hours south of Seattle, but he hadn't pulled over for the rest like
he had planned to. He still hasn't slept.
And at this point, he's been awake for like 36 hours.
I mean, how is he? I don't understand how he's coherent at this point, not having slept
that long. And there's something even too about like not sleeping, but just like being
on the road that like, at least for me, makes me exhausted. Like there's no way I could
do this.
No, I completely agree. And according to an episode of Disappeared called California Leaving,
Jennifer got one final text message from Rico at 1044 a.m. on the morning of October 10th.
And Ash, will you read it to me?
Sure. So the text says, sorry, I missed your call, doing well, thinking about you. So to
me, that sounds pretty normal. I mean, again, he sounds better than I would in his situation.
Right. And honestly, I agree. But to Jennifer, something feels off, not like 911 emergency,
what's going on off, but just a check in her gut. And that gut feeling turns out to be
right.
Jennifer tries to call Rico about an hour after that message, but he doesn't pick up.
And he also doesn't pick up later that afternoon. And when she gets really worried is when he
doesn't come home at seven o'clock, like he had said.
So Jennifer calls Rico's mom, Margaret, back in Alhambra to see if she's heard from
him at all. But Margaret says no, she hasn't talked to Rico either. Not since about 9 30
in the morning on October 10th. Margaret tries to talk Jennifer down a little. She tells her,
you know, it's probably nothing. Rico is one of those people who actually really enjoys
driving for long periods of time. And sometimes he'll take off for a few days so he can just
drive and clear his head. But Jennifer, knowing how long Rico has been awake, can't shake
the instinct that something isn't right.
Well, and I kind of agree with her because again, even though to me, like the message
sounded fine, I mean, we are literally talking about missing two nights of sleep at this
point. And that's super dangerous. And I mean, I remember reading on the CDC's website that
just going 24 hours without sleep is basically equal to having the blood alcohol content
of like 0.1%, which is well above the like legal limit.
Yeah. And I think that's part of why Jennifer is still so worried, even though Margaret
is trying to assure her that, you know, Rico just does this sometimes. Plus, even if they'd
had a disagreement, there's no way he'd miss this huge interview. He had promised that he'd
be back for it. So with the panic digging in, Jennifer keeps checking her phone to see
if he's texted or tried to call or leave a voicemail, but there's nothing. And when
she tries to call him, her calls go straight to voicemail. And by 7.30, 8, still nothing
from Rico. Jennifer starts thinking about calling the place to file a missing persons
report. But Margaret tells her she has to wait 48 hours and he'll probably turn up
by then anyway. So she waits and worries. And then three days after Rico's last text
to Jennifer, a law enforcement officer in Northern California makes a discovery that
will change everything. On Monday, October 13th, a Yolo County Sheriff's deputy spots
a car at a rest stop at this place called Cache Creek Regional Park. It's about an hour
northwest of Sacramento. Cache Creek is right near Rumsey Canyon, so this rest stop is on
what they call the canyon's lower site. The car is in the parking lot, but it's not actually
in a parking space. It's sort of pulled off to the side, basically right up against the
bushes. And since they're in a park, the deputy figures, no problem. Maybe the owner
is just hiking around the area and they'll be back to get their car here in a little
while. Except when the officer comes back the next day, the car is still there. It hasn't
moved an inch. And the deputy walks over to find that the car is locked, but the inside
is a disaster. CDs, papers, credit cards strewn all over the inside. And the deputy runs the
plates and learns that the car belongs to Rico Harris. There are no outstanding tickets
or warrants. It hasn't been reported stolen. There's nothing on file to indicate any sort
of problem. Well, I mean, you said this is like three days later. Has Rico's family
at least reported a missing by this time? So like, is that something that would pop up?
So here's the thing, they hadn't disappearing for several days at a time was sadly not super
out of the ordinary for Rico. And even though both Margaret and Jennifer were worried sick
about Rico, they also didn't want to overreact. But when two Alhambra police officers walk
up the steps to Margaret's house, she realizes that something is terribly wrong. Right away,
nothing about what police are saying makes sense to Rico's family. The Cache Creek
Park is located off of California State Road 16. And that's a good 50 mile or so off
the main highway interstate five that Rico should have been on to drive back to Seattle.
And I got on Google Maps to check it out. And Alhambra to Seattle is literally a straight
shot on this one road. As Nancy Dillon reported for the New York Daily News, there's no reason
why Rico would have taken a detour anywhere near Cache Creek, especially not when he was
on such a tight schedule to get back home. Like, even if he just wanted to pull over
somewhere and take a nap, there are little towns all along interstate five, and he could
have easily found someplace to rest. It just doesn't make any sense. And for Rico's family,
it's like their worst fears started coming true.
I have a question. So what about the car? I mean, I know you said it was a mess, but
like, are they thinking it was like ransacked through? Did they find anything in the car
that would maybe tell them where Rico is? No, not at all. There's nothing to indicate
a struggle and really no sign of Rico either. His phone is missing and the car is out of
gas with a dead battery. So officers initially wondered maybe Rico's car died and he set
off to look for help. He would have had to leave the area to even call a tow truck because
there's no cell service in the area when this happened.
So the lead investigator on the case, Detective Dean Nyland, pulls Rico's phone records
to try to see if he can figure out where Rico might have gone and where he might be while
his phone still had service. And in these records, he stumbles across another mystery
because Rico's phone was pinging even further off the road to Seattle over 70 miles west
of Cache Creek out in Redwood Valley before the signal went dead.
Wait, so I mean, just so I'm understanding, like his car is already like well off the
beaten path of where he should have been. And then we're talking another 70 miles away
from that? Exactly. And police are wondering why in the world would he go so far when there
are gas stations way closer to Cache Creek? His family said he had no business out in
Redwood Valley either. And it's definitely not on the way to Seattle. And since his
car is parked in Cache Creek, the other question is how did he even get there?
So we have these mysterious pings with no logical explanation and law enforcement realizes
that their search area is actually much wider than just the Cache Creek lower site. They
have to broaden their investigation to include a 27 mile stretch of state road 16. The Yolo
County Sheriff's Department puts out an emergency text alert to about 4000 residents in and
around the area just hoping for a tip. Well, and I have to figure that they're going to
get some tips like this plan makes sense to me because I mean, when you're talking about
someone like Rico, like, again, I know you said he doesn't want to be known for, you
know, his physical stature, he wants to be known for his mental stuff. But I mean, you
can't miss a guy that size. As I say, you can't help who you are. You're like 69. I
mean, how many hundreds of pounds? No one's going to forget seeing this guy. Exactly. And
Fox Sports reported that one person says they saw someone matching Rico's again, kind
of unique description at about 5 30 in the morning on October 11 sitting on this guardrail
that overlooked the creek. So is the guardrail by where the car was found? Yeah. And police
actually get another call from a person who says they saw him a couple hours later around
eight in the morning, walking along the side of state road 16. And I wasn't able to find
out how far away from the car this sighting was. But a quick look at Google maps shows
that 16 runs all the way along the park. And given the information they have at this point,
the yellow county sheriffs figure the first place they should search is in a five mile
area in and around the lower site where Rico's car was found. Now, this is a pretty rugged
area. And there's a lot of wildlife like mountain lions out there. It wouldn't be impossible
for someone to slip and fall or otherwise get injured and potentially run into a lot
of trouble, especially someone who had been awake for, you know, more than 30 hours, right?
Enforcement is searching with ATVs and cars on foot with tracking dogs. And they even
use highway patrol airplanes that have heat seeking cameras to do some flyovers, but
they can't find Rico. What they do find, though, are some footprints, big footprints
down by the creek, along with an insole that could have only come from a big shoe like
the size 18 shoes Rico wore 18. I know. Wow. So even though it seems likely that Rico had
been there, they don't know why or where he is now. But at least they feel like they're
in the right area when they get a call from this family, two grandparents and their little
grandson who were driving home from Sacramento when the boy looked out the window and saw
a backpack and a cell phone sitting on the side of the road right near the place where
the first caller said they might have seen Rico sitting on the guardrail overlooking
Cache Creek. So the family pulled over, grabbed the backpack and cell phone thinking maybe
once they got back home, they could find out who it belonged to and get it back to its
owner. So they drove home and their home was in Redwood Valley. Oh, so is that why Rico's
phone peemed so far away? Like it's not necessarily that he was there, but like this family took
his phone to where they live so far away. And they do call Detective Dean as soon as
they hear that the police are looking for a phone in Redwood Valley and say, hey, you
know, we have this phone and this backpack, and we have no idea who they belong to. And
they tell police exactly where they found it just two miles away from Rico's car and
500 yards away from where police think he was sitting on the guardrail. And the theory
that's emerging for police now is that he left his car when it ran out of gas or the
battery died or even both, I guess, grabbed his phone, gathered up what he needed in his
backpack and headed out along stay road 16 to get help. Okay, but I mean, but then what?
Like because obviously, like he hasn't shown up anywhere. What do they think he happened?
Well, and that's a thing. That's the huge question. And law enforcement is really hoping
that whatever is in that backpack or on Rico's phone might help them paint a clearer picture
of where he went that night, when he went there and why. But when they look inside Rico's
backpack, they don't find answers. What they find poses even more questions.
In Rico's backpack, police find a phone charger, jumper cables, some clothes, and two bottles
filled with what police think is a mix of an energy drink and alcohol. Oh, no. Yeah.
So there's no question. Rico has been in a lot of stress at this point, the move to
the new state, homesickness, relationship challenges, and, you know, the self esteem
hit from getting fired back in Alhambra nerves about this huge interview for a job that would
really catapult him forward. Well, yeah, I mean, I totally get it. Like, I mean, literally
any one of those things on its own would be stressful enough. So I mean, I understand,
you know, all at once, that's a lot for a person to deal with. So I mean, if what we're
assuming is that maybe he relapsed, like I kind of understand why, right? And stress
is one of the biggest relapse triggers of all of them. But as I read in the LA Times,
Rico wasn't just struggling with alcohol and substance use disorders at some point in his
adult life, and it didn't actually say when. But Rico had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder,
but he didn't take the medication that he needed to control his mood, because he didn't
like how it made him feel. And I know someone with bipolar disorder, and this is apparently
not an uncommon situation. One of the key treatments for bipolar is a type of medication
called a mood stabilizer. The one we hear about most often is lithium, but there are
a lot of others. And the side effects like fatigue and weight gain can be difficult for
some people to, you know, grapple with or deal with. So it's also not uncommon for people
with bipolar disorder to self medicate, which could at least partly explain Rico's drug
and alcohol use.
Yeah, like why he's doing that now. I mean, I know I've heard it a ton of times, like,
you know, meth is a stimulant, alcohol is a depressant. So depending on like how they're
feeling, people who again, who aren't properly medicated or their medication isn't working,
like they try and regulate them themselves. So I mean, it makes sense to me.
Yeah, except a stimulant as heavy as like crystal meth can cause mania. And as I was
looking more into this on the International Bipolar Foundation's website, instead of
that euphoric on top of the world, let's do all the things high, a bipolar person using
math could get paranoid and super anxious instead. The substance makes something counter productive
to what they're trying to feel, leading to more use and things can really spiral. Yeah.
No one can say for sure, of course, whether Rico was using drugs at the time of his disappearance,
but the context I think is really important for sure. Yeah. When the police look at Rico's
phone, there's nothing on there that gives them any more insight into why he decided
to drive so off of interstate five. Like there's no text about meeting anyone anywhere near
Cache Creek. And a lot of it is just pretty normal, you know, texts and calls to Jennifer
and to his mom, some stuff about his job interview with this real estate company, some photos
of the landscape, a couple happy selfies, nothing to be alarmed about. And there's also
no sign of any damage to Rico's phone or his backpack and really no sign at all of
any foul play. What they do find on Rico's phone is a video. And it kind of looked like
the type of video you would take by accident. Like it didn't seem intentional to Detective
Dean Nyland, at least the camera is pointing up to the dome light of a car. Rico is sitting
in his car and singing along with his music and kind of tearing through his glove box,
throwing his CDs and papers around and his wallet actually lands in the back seat. So
is like him throwing the stuff around? Is that what made his car look like such a mess
when police found it? Like initially when you said that I was thinking like, Oh, someone
like rifled through it was like taking something or looking for something. But if Rico was
the one that made this mess himself, right, but it's still weird, right? Like I've gone
through the contents of my glove box in a hurry sometimes. But even if someone is asking for
like your license and registration, it's usually not like a panic to like throw everything
everywhere in a situation. Yeah. But I mean, if you if you think about what we just talked
about though, like if we are to presume just for a moment that Rico has relapsed and maybe
there's some kind of drug use involved, like that could explain this kind of like manic
searching for something that might not even have been there. Well, and that's where Detective
Dean's thought process goes next. He's thinking first of all, that would explain how Rico
was able to stay awake for so long between the trips between Seattle and Alhambra and
potentially back. But thinking back to the statements Rico made to both his mom and Jennifer
about, you know, trying to find a quiet place to rest. What if what he really wanted was
a secluded place to use drugs? And the more Detective Dean learns about Rico as he searches
for him, the more he sees how likely that possibility is. Rico is a troubled man with
a complicated past. He went from a star forward with NBA dreams to begging for quarters on
the side of the road all before he turned 30. You know, when his basketball career sputtered
out, Rico felt like a failure. Like this big chunk of his identity was just gone. All he'd
ever wanted to do was provide for his mom and instead he wound up back under her roof
with her providing for him. And not only that, but the LA Times reported that between 2001
and 2007, Rico was in and out of jail and facing 16 different cases in the LA Superior
Court for things like burglary, trespassing and public intoxication. It took a life threatening
overdose to finally set Rico on the path to sobriety, a path he'd been walking for years
at this point. But Rico was still carrying so much shame around from his most recent
relapse. Not only did it set his sobriety back zero, it also cost him his job. And all
of this, it was really eating at him. This is one of the many, many reasons why the stigma
around addiction is so harmful. Substance use doesn't make a person weak. Just like
relapsing doesn't mean they've somehow failed. It means they're showing symptoms
of this chronic condition.
I couldn't agree more. I mean, I think it's why it's so important that we, I mean, talk
about these stories, but almost like reframe the narrative because mental health and substance
abuse issues, like addiction is a public health issue. It's not some kind of moral failing,
but somehow, I mean, in our society, it's gotten so stigmatized. But the more and more
it's stigmatized and the more people treat it like that, like these people who need our
help the most are often being pushed to the margins of society. I mean, I personally
know people like very close to me in my family who suffer from mental health issues. And
it's amazing the amount of like shame that comes with it. And you see the memes all the
time, right? Where it's like, Oh, it's not, you know, people will openly talk about going
to a doctor for their physical health, but like going to psychiatrists is somehow shameful.
And I think it's important that we talk about mental health and specifically addiction issues
because I read on psychology today that something like, I think it was like 70 to 90% of patients
with substance use disorders relapse. So even for Rico to relapse, I mean, honestly, this
is like the norm for someone with his condition, not the exception.
Exactly. And with all these things going on in Rico's life, they're kind of piling
up on him, the likelihood of a relapse into methamphetamines as well as alcohol just keep
getting higher and higher. So Detective Dean decides to go back to the last place they know
for sure that Rico was before he disappeared, his car. And during that first week after Rico
vanishes, Detective Dean goes back to the impound lot and does a full inventory of everything
in the vehicle. And he finds something new, something that may give a new insight into
Rico's state of mind that fateful night, a little plastic spindle. I feel like I'm supposed
to be surprised, but I'm sorry, I don't know what, what is a spindle? Great question because
I didn't know what that was either. Okay. But as Detective Dean explained on disappeared,
it's this little twisted up piece of plastic that's often used to store drugs, like a DIY
baggie, you could put a twisty tie on or make a knot in basically. But get this, there's no other
drug paraphernalia in Rico's car, no pipes, no needles, nothing. And also, there are no drugs
either. And once the spindles tested, there's no drug residue on it. Wait, I don't, what?
Like, so we know for sure he had alcohol. I mean, they found that and we had talked about him,
you know, maybe wanting to find a place to go drug. So I mean, I can understand them like,
in my mind, I guess I thought they were going to find this spindle. And it's not surprising to me
that there's no needles or pipes or anything like that. Because again, if he left his car and was
going somewhere else, but if it was tested and there was no residue on that, is drugs not even
a factor anymore? Like, could it have been something else? Like, we're calling it a spindle,
but again, I haven't seen it. Like, is there any chance it was not that?
Well, and that's what I wonder too, it honestly would almost be easier if they had found drugs
on this spindle, because- Yeah, I would like explain it, right?
Yeah, that would at least give police more of a starting point than they have right now. And
as they're all too aware, you know, every minute a person is missing is important. Even
when that person is as big and as strong as Rico. And at this point, there's nothing to prove Rico
is using drugs or not using drugs. There's also nothing to suggest he's not alive out there
somewhere, but also nothing to prove otherwise either. It's this strange sort of purgatory that
so many families and loved ones of missing people find themselves in, you know, sometimes for days
or months and unfortunately a lot for years. And then a week after searching all through
Northern California for Rico, a new sign of hope emerges.
On October 19th, another call comes into law enforcement with a tip. A large man,
matching Rico's description, has been spotted walking along the side of State Road 16
on the cattle guard near the lower site. Once officers head back out to the area to search
again on that same day, they find even more compelling evidence to support this call.
New footprints, big footprints that were not there a week ago. And they were near where
the caller said they had seen this large man walking. Wait, so that this is like after they've
already searched the area, right? So is the assumption that he went missing, they did their
search and then he came back to the same area? Like maybe he was looking for the stuff that he
left there but that the police had taken? Well, and that's the question because it seems almost
impossible that, you know, this really focused search in this area could have missed Rico.
Like it's not a vast wide open space or anything, but again, he's a pretty big guy. He's not
folding himself into like a rabbit burrow or, you know, holding up in the side of a tree.
It seems like your first idea is the best one that he left and came back. Yeah, I mean,
I have to go with that idea. But even to me, like that doesn't answer everything. I'm still
left with so many questions. Like where has he been for the last week and how did he
leave this area and then get back without nobody seeing him? Well, and that's the thing about
this case. Instead of every new clue pointing investigators towards a conclusion, they all
point them in two or three different directions. At this point, please are pretty sure that Rico
had to have gotten a ride out of the Cache Creek area because the nearest gas station is about 30
miles away from the lower site. It's not an impossible distance to walk, but it would take
the better part of a day. And it's not like Rico was training for this sort of height.
Well, and not even more than not training. I mean, it's kind of even the complete opposite.
I mean, this guy had been awake for days. He hasn't slept. He's barely eaten. He's barely
rest. So I mean, to me, he's almost like in like the worst possible condition to then go out into
the wild like this. Right. So driving seemed like a more likely scenario. Maybe he hitchhiked or
something. But on October 23rd, 2014, almost two weeks after Rico went missing, the Yolo County
Sheriff's Department announces that they're scaling back their search efforts. And according to
Kathy Locke's article in the Sacramento Bee, detectives are confident there is no foul play
involved, but they aren't giving up their quest for information or for answers. Detective Dean
in particular is determined to bring Rico home safely, but he can't deny that it becomes less
and less likely with each passing day. Hoping for the best, but planning for the worst,
police organize a team of cadaver dogs to go back out to the lower site area in November of that
year. The dogs don't find a body or Rico's clothes or any blood or anything, but they keep
coming back to this very specific spot along Cache Creek, a spot that has sinkholes. So that same
weekend, a dive team comes out to scour all up and down Cache Creek. The result is as heartbreaking
as it is familiar. There's no sign of Rico in the creek. Detective Dean keeps retracing his steps,
trying to put himself in Rico's shoes, driving up and down the road, hoping for any answer,
but it never comes. I mean, if they're searching sinkholes, I have to assume that they also already
checked like hospitals and homeless shelters and stuff like that. Because I mean, if by some chance,
Rico is still alive and in the area, like that would be the first place to look. And I mean,
if we're assuming he might be on foot, might have hitchhiked, you're still not going to go very far.
And if he did, you know, relapse in some way, again, we at least probably know he's using alcohol.
I mean, is it possible that he could have just been hungered down somewhere on like
a bit of a bender for a couple of weeks? I mean, maybe, except there's no one in
any of the places that you described, a hospital, homeless shelter, any of those matching Rico's
description, no John Doe's that could even possibly be him. But the Fox Sports article I read
mentioned something that I think is very telling and maybe a clue about what happened to Rico.
So the author, Flindor Boyd wrote about how he goes to the Sacramento area in the middle of
November 2014 after the divers searched Cache Creek to do some interviews and follow up on
Rico's story. And that's when Detective Dean tells him his theory that Rico left his car
in his backpack and set out to try to buy meth. Being a journalist and curious, Flindor decides
to drive through some of these little towns in that part of California that are kind of known for
being drug dealing hotspots. And he drives to a town called Clear Lake and talks to an anonymous
person who says, yes, they saw Rico Harris the day he disappeared. This person goes on to tell
Flindor that not only did he see Rico that day, but that one of his friends actually sold Rico
some meth in the parking lot at the lower site of Cache Creek Park. None of this has been confirmed
by police. So it might be true. It might not be. But with Rico's history of using drugs,
it's certainly not impossible. Well, yeah, but I'm you're saying this happened in 2014.
Did anyone like follow up? I mean, I know this like author went out there. But if he got this
lead, did police go check it out? Obviously, we're not any closer to finding Rico.
So I couldn't find that there was any police follow up on that lead. And let's just say
for argument's sake, this story is true, that someone sold drugs to Rico that day in the parking
lot of the lower site. Then what? Wherever Rico went next, what he did, who he talked to,
nobody knows, he completely dropped off the grid. And what could have happened next? What did happen
next remains totally unanswered. I just I don't mean to say the obvious, but like,
what I can't get over is how someone like Rico goes missing with almost nobody spotting that.
Like this case reminds me so much of the briceless piece of case, because I remember
one of the things we kept talking about over and over is like,
his distinctive appearance. Exactly. He had that bright red hair. I'm like, how if, how does
anyone miss him, even if he was homeless, even if he grew out of beard and his hair, like,
you still see the guy, like there are certain things you can't change when your hair is that
bright red, you're not going to change it. With someone like Rico, when he like this dude is big,
no one is going to miss this dude. How does he just disappear into thin air? And that's the most
baffling part of Rico's case. To me, too, it's hard to disappear on purpose. But if that's what
Rico did, he did it really well. There's been no activity on his bank accounts, no contact with
his family or friends this entire time. He has really truly vanished. And, you know, the disease
of addiction and its symptoms can turn anyone's life upside down. But adding chronic mental illness
into the mix, like bipolar disorder, things can go topsy-turvy pretty quick. You know, Rico's
story is full of highs and lows, from the cusp of basketball stardom to the depths of despair and
back again. At the time he went missing, he had a girlfriend who loved him, a family who supported
him, a new career opportunity on the horizon, and seven years of sobriety to come back to.
His girlfriend, Jennifer, his mother, Margaret, and everyone in Rico's life,
they've never given up hope that one day they'll see Rico again.
If you have any information on the disappearance of Rico Harris, please contact the Yolo County
Sheriff's Department tip hotline at 530-668-5248 or YoloCountySheriff.com.
If you want to see pictures from this case or our source materials, you can find those at our
website, crimejunkiepodcast.com. And don't forget to follow us on social at Crime Junkie Podcast
and at Audio Check. And we will be back next week with a brand new episode.
Crime Junkie is an audio check production. What do you think, Chuck? Do you approve?