Crime Junkie - MYSTERIOUS DEATH OF: Rey Rivera
Episode Date: June 29, 2020In 2006 Rey Rivera was found dead at the Belvedere Hotel in Baltimore. Did he die by suicide, or was something more sinister at play?Following the release of this episode, representatives of Porter ...Stansberry contacted Crime Junkie to inform us of information regarding Rey Rivera’s case that had not yet been made public, and we want to alert our listeners to that information for the sake of being exhaustive. Not only did Porter Stansberry offer a reward to find Rey, he also hired a private detective to lead the search for Rey. Although previously reported accounts suggested that Porter did not cooperate with police, this appears not to have been correct. Porter did urge all of his employees and even all of his company’s clients to contact the police with any information about Rey’s whereabouts. After Rey’s body was found, Porter never issued a gag order telling employees not to help the police. Porter in fact fully cooperated with the Police after Rey’s body was found, including being interviewed by the lead detective in the case on June 23rd 2006. For current Fan Club membership options and policies, please visit https://crimejunkieapp.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/mysterious-death-rey-rivera/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi Crime Junkies, I'm your host Ashley Flowers.
And I'm Brett.
And the story I have for you today is truly a head scratcher.
A happily married man with a great career and a loving family went missing from his
home only to turn up over a week later in a way that no one ever dared to imagine, leaving
behind deep, dark questions that linger to this very day.
This is the story of Ray Rivera.
Following the release of this episode, representatives of Porter Stansbury contacted Crime Junkie to
inform us of information regarding Ray Rivera's case that had not yet been made public.
And we want to alert our listeners to that information for the sake of being exhaustive.
Not only did Porter Stansbury offer a reward to find Ray, he also hired a private detective
to lead the search for Ray.
Although previously reported accounts suggested that Porter did not cooperate with police,
this appears not to have been correct.
Porter did urge all of his employees and even all of his company's clients to contact the
police with any information about Ray's whereabouts.
After Ray's body was found, Porter never issued a gag order telling employees not to help
the police.
Porter in fact fully cooperated with the police after Ray's body was found, including being
interviewed by the lead detective in the case on June 23rd, 2006.
In May of 2006, Ray Rivera and his wife Allison have been living in Baltimore, Maryland for
almost two years.
Allison is in sales and Ray is a writer who just finished working for this finance company
called Stansbury & Associates.
Usually he wrote their financial newsletter for investors all about stocks and where they
should put their money next, stuff like that.
He's also doing some freelance video work for another finance firm called the Oxford
Club under the same parent company as Stansbury & Associates.
But this is all just temporary, the writing, the freelance work, even living in Baltimore.
Ray and Allison had just put their house on the market and had plans to move to Los Angeles
so Ray could pursue a career in filmmaking.
But in the meantime, this was a good gig.
The freelancing paid him well, they had a nice life and money wasn't a problem for them.
On the morning of May 16th, 2006, which is a Tuesday, Allison gets up early to drive
to Richmond, Virginia for business.
Now, Ray's staying back in Baltimore with a colleague of hers named Claudia who's actually
staying at their house for a few days and everything's totally normal on this morning.
Allison lets Ray carry her little suitcase to the car, they load it up in the trunk,
and she kisses him goodbye, tells him she loves him, and drives off.
Allison gets to her hotel in Virginia around 6.30 that evening and she decides to give
Ray a call, but he doesn't answer.
And it's a little bit weird, I mean they talk so much, but a missed phone call isn't
anything to freak out about and she figures he's going to call back any minute, except
Ray never calls back.
So at around 9.30 p.m., when she still hasn't heard from Ray, Allison decides to call Claudia,
that woman that's staying with him and see if maybe she knows what's going on.
Well, Claudia tells her, you know, Ray isn't here.
She says I haven't seen him in a few hours, not since he got a phone call and just left.
Now Allison obviously pries a little bit and Claudia says, you know, I heard Ray's phone
ring, you know, he's in the other room, I hear him pick up and then a couple of seconds
later Ray says, oh, and then he ran out of the house in a hurry.
So does she know who had called or overhear anything?
No, but she might not have been like actively listening.
I mean, again, this is not super out of the ordinary to get the call and sometimes you
overhear things without meaning to like that kind of thing.
All she heard was that last part, what he said and then him leaving.
So what time was that?
So I found a couple of different things.
There's a episode of the new unsolved mysteries on this case, which by the way, you guys,
the new season comes out on July 1st and starts with this case.
So you have to go watch it on Netflix.
Yeah, seriously.
In that episode, Allison said that Ray got this call around 6.30 PM, but according to
Makita Brotman's book called an unexplained death, the true story of a body at the Belvedere,
she says he gets this call around 5.30.
So the timelines differ a little bit from source to source in this case, but the progression
of events is always the same.
So this call comes in sometime, let's say between 5.30 and 6.30, Claudia heard what
she heard.
She hears that last part of the conversation.
She hears him rushing out of the house.
And then she said that he came back in a couple of minutes later, almost like he forgot something.
And then he left again, this time driving away in Allison's black SUV.
And now, several hours later, she says he still hasn't come back.
Allison starts thinking to herself, you know, maybe this isn't so weird.
Ray was on a hard deadline at work with a video that was due that day.
So maybe he finished it up, maybe he went out for a drink or something came up when
he finished, but then she keeps going back to the idea that it is odd that he's not
picking up his cell phone or taking her calls, even if he was busy, even if he had gone out
for that drink.
It's weird.
Yeah, right?
It's weird that he's not taking her calls.
I mean, they've only been married for six months, and they usually talk on the phone
several times a day when one of them goes out of town.
And it's not like when she went on a town, things were bad, like it was a really normal
day.
Oh, yeah.
Things were great.
Again, they were a couple months into their marriage.
They're still in that newlywed phase.
So it's not like they were, they were fighting and he'd have a reason not to talk to her.
But ultimately, she's again, in Richmond, and if he's not picking up her calls, there's
really nothing she can do about it tonight.
So she heads to bed hopeful, but a bit anxious.
As soon as she wakes up the next morning, Allison sees that Ray hasn't returned her calls the
entire night.
So she connects with Claudia again to see if Ray is home yet.
And Claudia's answer makes Allison's stomach drop.
Ray never came home last night.
At this point, Allison knows in her gut something is wrong, and she has to find her husband.
She cancels the rest of her business trip and heads back to Baltimore to start searching
for Ray.
The whole way there, she's calling all around to everyone she can think of, his family,
friends, coworkers, asking any of them that they've spoken to him recently.
And person after person, call after call, they all say no.
No one has talked to Ray for the last two days at all.
When Allison gets back home, it's like the whole house is frozen in time.
All the lights are on upstairs.
In the kitchen, there's an open like soda can, a bag of chips, and Ray's clear retainers
are sitting right there on the table, almost like he popped them out for a minute to have
a snack and then just disappeared.
There was nothing in the house to indicate that he wasn't coming back or that he even
thought he wasn't coming back.
I mean, he even left his computer powered on up in the office.
Okay.
Am I the only one who thinks it might be a little bit weird that Claudia is just staying
there?
I have a really good relationship with my husband.
And if you were to stay here and I wasn't there, it would be fine.
But I don't know.
I just get a weird feeling about it.
If you look at this case, she comes up a lot.
But as far as I can tell, like there's nothing going on there.
I mean, I understand it's really easy to instantly think like, okay, maybe there was something
between them, but it really does not seem like that.
And honestly, she kind of fades out of the whole story once Allison gets back.
So anyways, that same day, we're still talking May 16th, the whole extended family.
Again, this is like Ray's parents, siblings, Allison's parents too.
They all start gathering in Baltimore.
Basically they all drop their lives in Florida, Colorado, Puerto Rico, wherever they're living
at the time to come together and help Allison look for Ray.
Wait, has anybody called the police to report Ray missing?
So not yet.
And I think Allison is maybe sort of running on autopilot at this point, like hoping this
is all just some misunderstanding.
Right.
Maybe like even in denial a little bit.
Right.
But to do an unexplained death, Allison and the family spend that whole Tuesday canvassing
around Baltimore.
So it's not like they're just sitting at home.
I mean, they're calling hospitals, they're calling to see if there's any John Doe's
matching Ray's description that have turned up, all while trying to manage their growing
sense of panic.
But by Wednesday, the reality does start to set in.
And Allison calls Baltimore police to officially report her husband missing.
Police ask her and Ray's family all the usual questions like was Ray depressed or having
trouble in his personal life, but they all say no.
They all describe him as this really happy family oriented guy with big goals for his
future who they say wasn't giving off any kind of warning signs.
I mean, they reiterate not depressed, not distraught, nothing.
I mean, on the unsolved mystery show, we even hear from Ray's brother, Angel, who says that
this was super out of character for Ray, like he would never just go MIA on his family without
saying a word.
But there is something that Allison does tell police.
She tells them that some weird things have been happening around their house recently,
like just within the last couple of days, things that she think could be related.
Like again, you know, she's trying to convince herself probably that this isn't happening
and she says, you know, probably not, but it's worth mentioning just in case.
She tells them that the day before Ray vanished at about one o'clock in the morning, their
home alarm system went off.
And Allison said that Ray was straight up terrified, like out of his mind scared, which
scared her even more because in all the time that they know each other, she had never seen
him scared of anything like this.
And I mean, Ray is a big guy, we're talking six foot five, 260 pounds.
He was an athlete, nothing phased him.
So this was just way, way out of character.
And I mean, granted, anything in the middle of the night, like scaring you, the alarm
going off, I think anyone would be a little bit frightened.
But she said, she said it was like at a whole nother level, but she said that police did
respond that very night to the alarm that went off and they say it's nothing.
They say, you know, it's probably just a squirrel.
There's no one here.
There's no big deal, which, okay, that's pretty reasonable on the surface, except the next
night at about one o'clock in the morning, again, the same thing happens.
The alarm goes off again, and I couldn't find if the police came out again to check it out
or if they just assumed it was a squirrel again.
But Allison says that she found that one of the downstairs windows looked like it had
been messed with, like someone was trying to get in their house.
Okay, I'm not buying the squirrel story for a second.
Maybe once, but twice, back to back at the same exact time.
And we have this tampered with window that sets off literal alarm bells for me.
Same.
And Allison wasn't buying it either.
In a 2009 article from Baltimore Magazine, Allison said that you had to basically push
the screen back in order to trip the alarm, so it didn't make sense to her that a squirrel
would do that.
A squirrel with a crowbar.
Right.
I mean, that's not going to happen once, much less twice.
But that same article said that police dusted for prints on the window, but didn't find
anything.
Okay, but the person could be wearing gloves.
That means nothing.
Listen, I totally agree.
And I think at this point, there's got to be a little bit of frustration on Allison's
part, right?
Like these two things happen right in a row.
Now her husband is missing.
So probably a lot of confusion feel like she's not getting a lot of support from the police,
but luckily she has a great support system around her in these early days of Ray's disappearance.
Because not only does she have her family and Ray's family, but Ray's good friend Porter
Stansbury gets involved to help and he actually puts up a thousand dollar reward for anyone
who can give police information that leads to bringing Ray home.
Porter Stansbury, like Stansbury and Associates where Ray was working?
Yes, that's him.
Okay.
So he founded the company and Ray's been working there ever since he got to Baltimore.
He's known Porter, I mean literally since they were teenagers, like these guys went
to prom together with their dates, that's how far back they go.
So Allison trusts Porter to help and she truly believes that he wants to get Ray back just
as much as they all do.
Even with the reward money and now with the police involvement, there's really no movement
on Ray's case.
Like he basically just got up from the table halfway through a bag of chips and vanished
into thin air.
I mean, here's this guy, again, great marriage, nice job, big plans for the future who suddenly,
I mean, what are they supposed to expect?
He just ran away.
Like nothing about this is making sense and it makes even less sense when police access
his bank accounts and his credit cards and see that there's been no activity like none,
zip, zilch, wherever Ray is, he's not making any ATM withdrawals.
He's not touching his credit cards and not only that, but he's also not using his cell
phone, which is gone and they're presuming is with him.
So because he's not using money, because he's not using his phone, everyone's kind
of thinking he can't have gone far.
So they doubled down on their search in Baltimore, hitting every street and every neighborhood,
looking for even the smallest sign of Ray.
But it's not until six days after Ray went missing that they finally catch the break
they've been waiting for.
So Alison's parents who are in town to help search are driving around the Mount Vernon
area of downtown Baltimore looking for Ray.
And again, they've been doing this for a while.
They've actually been in this exact area before over the last couple of days.
And so have police, friends, family, everyone has been driving, walking all over Baltimore
in all different kinds of areas that Ray may have gone looking for him, looking for his
car, looking for anything that might point them in the right direction.
So as they're driving along the 1000 block of St. Paul Street in downtown Baltimore,
that is when they spot what looks like Alison's black SUV, the one that Ray had been driving
the night he disappeared and it's parked in a lot near the old Belvedere hotel.
So hearts pounding, they pull over to check it out and sure enough, it is Alison's vehicle.
Now there's no sign of Ray inside the car as far as they can see and no trace of him
outside either.
But according to an unexplained death, there is a ticket on the windshield dated May 17th,
the day after Ray was last seen.
So it's been there ever since.
That's what everyone is assuming that it's been in this lot for at least six days by
the time it's discovered.
They know for sure that it wasn't there any earlier than that because when police talked
to the parking lot attendant who was working on the evening of the 16th, they say that
the car wasn't there and they left work at six o'clock that night.
But it was there when they got in the next morning.
What's interesting though is that Ray's friends and family had driven through this neighborhood,
like I said, several times already looking for Ray and looking for the car.
But somehow in all their trips before, they never saw it and that might mean absolutely
nothing.
Like how many of us have looked everywhere for our keys, like only to find them in the
same place we already looked.
Don't get me started.
Right.
But it's still strange.
I just imagine like you're on kind of a heightened alert.
This is more important than something like that.
And it's bizarre that it wasn't noticed before.
Now this area called Mount Vernon is near the office building Ray used to work at.
So he's again, still with the company, but Ray now worked from home and only from home.
Like he never went to those offices anymore.
And like I mentioned, he was on a tight deadline.
So it didn't make sense that he would be going into the office again, like he never
went in anymore.
There was no reason for him to go in and he was working on a project at home.
So while it might have made a little bit of sense that he was close to it, it actually
kind of didn't make any sense at all.
But Allison doesn't even really have much time to come up with theories on why Ray had
been in that part of town unexpectedly because just two days later on May 24th, Allison gets
the one call that she has been praying would never come.
It is the police and they tell her that they've found Ray's body at the old Belvedere hotel
in downtown Baltimore.
Just tell Allison that on May 24th, three of Ray's coworkers from the Oxford club decided
to spend their lunch hour looking for him.
So when his friends from work learn that his car was found downtown, they keep thinking
like he has to be somewhere in the area or there has to be some kind of answers somewhere
in the area.
So these three guys are walking around looking for clues, a phone, a wallet, a watch, anything.
And one of them gets the idea to check out the top of this parking garage that's near
the Belvedere building.
From up there, he's like, you know what, we'll be able to see all of the roofs of smaller
buildings around.
It's like a better vantage point.
Now when they first look around, they just see the kind of stuff you would expect to
see on a roof, the middle of the city, rocks, cans, bits of trash, but then something else
catches one of their eyes.
And one of the Belvedere's lower roofs is a flip flop, a man's flip flop.
Then one of the other guys points out a second sandal and then a phone and then what might
be a wallet and then a set of keys and then their eyes catch on something else, a hole
in the roof.
Sick with worry, these guys call 911 and police hurry down to the Belvedere.
When the police arrive, the building manager takes them upstairs and opens the door to
the conference room underneath this particular section of roof, the one with a hole in it.
And it's the smell that hits them first.
According to lead detective Michael Bayer on Unsolved Mysteries, it is here in the old
conference room that they find Ray's body lying face up.
They're not sure how long it had been there because the decomposition is already pretty
extreme, probably due to the summer heat and humidity.
What happened?
Well, that's what Ray's whole family wants to know.
Pretty much right from the start, police are thinking that Ray died by suicide, but not
everyone feels that way.
The Rivera's are adamant that Ray had no reason to want to kill himself, no history
of depression or mental illness, nothing that would suggest he might be contemplating suicide.
In fact, Ray had plans for the following weekend, he had a video editing suite for his freelance
work booked for like May 20th, the Saturday after he died.
His big brother Angel told the Washington Examiner that Ray and Allison were even getting ready
to move back to Southern California, like I said, so Ray could pursue his dream of getting
into filmmaking, and he already had several clients lined up.
On top of that, Allison knows how badly Ray wanted to have kids and start a family.
I mean, she keeps saying like, if this isn't making plans for the future, I don't know
what is.
I mean, but to look at it from another side, just because you don't know that there was
a reason doesn't mean that a reason didn't exist in that person's mind.
Totally.
And I think that that's why police were so willing to treat Ray's death as a suicide
right from the start, even though they were getting all that feedback from his family.
It just seemed like the most obvious scenario.
Now, the scene in the room where Ray's body was found doesn't tell them much of anything.
There's nothing to indicate foul play or a struggle.
And most obviously, there's this giant hole in the roof above where he was found, a hole
that they think he must have come through.
According to this article from the Baltimore Sun, they believe in the early days that Ray
must have jumped from the highest roof point on the Belvedere, which is like 118 feet above
the ground.
And then it was just his trajectory that like plummeted him through the ceiling into that
conference room.
And the medical examiner's report seems to confirm this theory.
Unfortunately, it's impossible though for them to pin down the exact time of death because
of how decomposed his body was when it was found.
But the medical examiner estimates that Ray had been dead for at least a week, which fits
right in with the timeline of his disappearance and the fact that there was no activity on
like we talked about his phone or any of his accounts.
When they get the toxicology screen back, it's clean.
So Ray had no drugs in his system when he died.
It's worth noting there was just a little bit of alcohol, but the medical examiner can't
determine if that would be actually from drinking or if it naturally occurred during decomposition
while Ray was lying in that conference room.
Now the report also goes into detail about the injuries that Ray sustained.
And I mean, as you can imagine, they are severe.
And Britt here, why don't you read actually some of the report for us?
The autopsy report mentions 24 broken ribs, two punctured lungs, damaged the heart and
liver, multiple skull fractures, torn neck muscles, a broken pelvis, a ruptured testicle,
and cuts and bruises on his arms, legs, and torso.
The cuts on his torso are on either side, like his rib cage.
And one of them is nine inches by seven inches.
And the other is nine inches by four inches.
And it says his legs are broken and cut to the point where the bones and muscles and
tendons were visible.
So these injuries are consistent with a fall off a roof, I assume.
So yes, the medical examiner concludes that it is indeed consistent with a fall like the
one police assume Ray would have made from almost like 120 feet up in the air.
And you know, I'm not a physics person, but I do know that the higher you fall, the nastier
it gets.
Right.
Human beings get broken from that height, but here's the thing, for how mangled and
broken Ray's body was, not everything at the scene is broken.
What do you mean?
Well, remember again, how Ray's coworkers were up on that roof.
They saw those flip flops.
Well near that hole on the lower roof, police also find Ray's cell phone and his glasses.
And get this, both of those are perfectly fine.
What?
I can't drop my phone from like the kitchen counter without the screen shattering.
Like I know, I don't know how that is physically possible.
Like the phone is a little scuffed up, but the screen isn't even correct and it still
turns on.
I mean, granted, we aren't talking about an iPhone, which is made out of glass.
I don't know why Apple insists on making phones out of glass.
It's like my biggest issue, but I digress.
This was one of those like older phones, Brett, that you and I would have had like in high
school kind of boxy, mostly plastic, but even then going back to the glasses, I wear glasses
and have since I was like 11 or 12, they're pretty fragile.
Exactly.
The glasses were fine.
I cannot imagine a scenario where the glasses are completely fine, like 24 broken ribs,
but the glasses scratch free.
I don't believe it.
It is weird, right?
And here's even something stranger or maybe stranger.
I don't know.
But Ray's flip flops are more damaged than his glasses and even his phone.
They're those like thong type of sandals with the Y shape, like kind of you'd get like
old Navy or whatever.
And one sandal has a broken strap and the other one looks like the toe had been almost
dragged or maybe like folded under as he ran.
You can't tell exactly what happened.
Like scuffed up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So the shoes are damaged, but the glasses are perfectly intact and the phone is perfectly
intact.
Wait, you mentioned the sandal may have been scuffed when he was running.
Do we think he ran?
So I don't know.
I don't know anything.
But according to Makita Brotman's book, the distance from the 14th floor rooftop that
Ray was supposed to have jumped from to the hole on the lower roof below was 43 feet.
And that's that's a distance.
Yeah.
And I've been trying to figure out a way to like help you guys picture this in your
mind, like how long 43 feet is and like this is the best I can come up with.
Like if you are listening to this while you're laying in bed, a standard queen bed is six
feet long from head to toe.
So imagine six beds end to end plus a little bit more.
I mean, that is how far of a leap we are talking about.
So in order to make that kind of a jump, Ray would have had to have had a running star
and he would have had to like get up to at least 11 miles per hour, like fully sprinting.
Wow.
And in flip flops.
Yeah.
Listen, not my theory.
And to be honest, there's definitely something I don't know like odd about the series of
events that police are considering here.
It's not that I don't think death by suicide from the top of a huge building is possible.
It's always possible, even when it seems to come out of nowhere.
But there are things that really don't make a ton of sense to me.
Like how Ray, again, he just like ducks out of his house with no warning in flip flops
unplanned that night and how he would have had to take a running jump at 11 miles per
hour in those flip flops, 43 feet out from the wall.
And I'm not the only one who's at least a little sketched out by this because police
at least have some reservations that I do about it being a suicide.
So not so much of that, but more the distance and the angles just like aren't fully adding
up to them.
So they wonder if maybe they've got the angle wrong or maybe even the exact rooftop wrong
because even they're like, this isn't fully adding up.
Like I think at that point they still thought this was likely a suicide, but they couldn't
make the math work.
So they're looking at, you know, maybe he jumped from the parking garage, the one that
his like three coworkers are on.
But when they look at that closely, it doesn't totally add up either.
That fall would have only taken Ray about 20 feet down before he'd go through the roof.
And while a fall from that height wouldn't be pretty, I mean, you could survive it.
And I have a hard time believing that a fall from just 20 feet would cause the kind of
gruesome injuries that you were reading from his like medical examiner's report.
Right.
His body was truly broken.
Mangled.
Yeah.
So are those the only two places he could have jumped from?
There were no other plausible options.
So not the only options.
So the Belvedere is this like really ornate old building.
And there's this ledge that goes around the outside of the building on the 11th floor.
It's wide enough to stand on.
I mean, not easily, mind you, but totally doable.
So police start thinking maybe like that's the other option.
But even that's not a great theory either because even to police, it seems impossible
that a guy raised size would be able to climb out the window onto that ledge.
And not to mention the windows aren't like publicly accessible like in a hallway or anything.
They're actually inside a nightclub on the 11th floor of the Belvedere.
So he would have had to go into the nightclub, then climb out to the window on the ledge.
And here's the thing about all of this ledge, no ledge.
No one reported seeing Ray that day in the club, outside of the building, anywhere else
for that matter.
And like the entire building is private property.
Like it's still called the Belvedere Hotel, but it's actually not a hotel anymore and
hasn't been since the 90s.
So at this point, it's like condos, offices, event spaces, and we've got that bar nightclub
that I mentioned.
And because it's privately owned, roof access at the Belvedere is super restricted.
I read in an unexplained death that to get to the Belvedere roof, you have to climb up
this ladder in the attic, but to get to the attic, you have to either be able to unlock
the elevator so it can take you up to the 12th floor or you have to go through the back
of the nightclub.
Now, to be fair, I also read that the nightclub staff used to keep the door to the roof unlocked
like it was quicker for them to just go take their smoke breaks or whatever.
But even with an unlocked door, I mean, you still have to know exactly where that is,
right?
Didn't go to this nightclub.
So how did he get to the roof if we're going to say it was the roof?
How did he get to this window to the ledge if we're going to say it's the ledge?
And how did he do it without anybody seeing him?
And how did he do it without anyone seeing?
Thank you.
I'm going to assume there were no security cameras, otherwise you would have brought
them up by now.
So apparently there were security cameras up on the roof, but they were disconnected
that day.
If he was up there, there is no video evidence of it anywhere.
That's really shady.
Oh, it's super shady.
So at this point for Allison, none of what she's being told by police adds up to her
at all.
It feels super wrong, especially because of this one thing I haven't told you yet.
Ray was terrified of heights.
But he didn't even like to get up on a ladder to put Christmas decorations up.
That's how scared he was.
Oh, wow.
So he was the absolute last person in the world who would go up on the tall roof of
a building 118 feet off the ground for any reason.
I mean, even if he were going to take his own life, this isn't how this would happen.
All of this, it's like a cloud drops down over his family, making it harder and harder
to see the truth.
Making this nightmare situation feel even more confusing.
None of the police's theories make any sense, and none of the evidence police find at the
Belvedere convinces Allison or the Rivera's that Ray chose to end his own life, not the
phone, not the flip flops, none of it.
And the medical examiner's final ruling doesn't help lift that dark cloud.
Because again, they at first were like, you know, could have jumped, could have jumped,
everything kind of like lined up with what police were saying, but when they actually
like put out the official report, Ray's manner of death comes back as undetermined.
And all of this just adds to Allison's suspicions that there is something else going on here
besides a man deciding on an impulse to end his own life.
Because of the Emmys ruling, police don't officially close the case, but they're pretty
like clear to everyone that they're all but certain Ray's tragic death was by suicide.
But Allison is not willing to accept that on face value.
She keeps searching.
She is sure there is something somewhere that will help put her mind to rest, something
that will either confirm that Ray died by choice or confirm that he didn't.
And as she digs for answers, it's right there in her own very house that she makes a stunning
discovery.
During her in depth search of Ray's things, Allison finds a piece of paper taped to the
back of Ray's computer in his office, and it's folded up into a little square.
And when she opens it, it's a note.
Is it a suicide note?
Well, here, why don't you tell me?
It's a super long kind of strange note.
So just read me the first and the last line and tell me what you think.
So the first line is, quote, brothers and sisters, right now, around the world, volcanoes
are erupting.
What an awesome sight, end quote, okay.
And here is the last line, quote, whom virtue unites, death will not separate, end quote.
If this is a suicide note, it must be written in some sort of code.
So you're not too far off, really, that second part whom virtue unites, death will not separate.
According to unsolved mysteries, that's a Freemason thing.
Like those Freemasons, secret society, Illuminati, like pick a rabbit hole, you can go all the
way down here.
I mean, you know, I live for this stuff.
And people talk about the Freemasons like they're a super, super secret society, but
I got to say, like if I can bring up like all your home pages and learn how to become
a member in like 30 seconds, to me, I'm not sure what is so secret there doesn't seem
so secret.
Aren't they pretty much just a social club now?
Yeah, that's the initial impression that I got.
So I looked at the Indiana Freemasons, which is the one obviously close to me and their
website describes it as, quote, world's oldest, largest and best known gentleman's fraternity.
End quote.
And they say they do like charity work and have a scholarship program.
And to be honest, I mean, at least what they're putting on the website, like it all looks
pretty aboveboard to me, nothing nefarious, but there's always been like a lot of mystery
and intrigue around the Freemasons as a secret society, which is why raise reference to them
in his note definitely raises some eyebrows, but Ray wasn't a member, right?
So no, but according to Allison, he was definitely interested in secret societies and an unexplained
death goes one step further claiming that on the day he disappeared, Ray actually bought
a copy of Freemasons for dummies and met with a local Mason to talk about joining the Baltimore
police theorize that Ray's interest in the Masons might not have been like a charity
or club thing, but they think maybe it could have been related to a belief that Ray had
that the Masons had some kind of clout in the movie industry and that being part of
that group might help him like get in front of the right people when he break in.
Yeah.
Yeah.
When he got to LA.
Now, here's the thing.
The rest of the note, I mean, the end part about the Masons is confusing, but the rest
of the note is just as confusing if not more so.
It's not even really a note so much as it is this like stream of consciousness type thing.
Like it lists a lot of movies Ray liked important people in his life, family members, just kind
of going on and on without having any kind of real direction.
Like here, I want you to read like a direct passage from Makita Brotman's book about
like some of the meat of this note.
It says, quote, the note mentions current participants and refers to the actor Christopher
Reeve who had died the previous year and the director Stanley Kubrick, as well as a long
list of Rivera's friends, colleagues and relations with a request to make them and himself five
years younger.
This is followed by a list of recent inventions and technologies, portable data assistance,
flash drives, the human genome, genetic engineering, viagra type drugs, the fuel cell, Bluetooth,
overnight express shipping, airbags, computer operating systems, thermal depolymerization,
horizontal drilling, Wi-Fi, the Da Vinci surgical system, hybrid engines, muscle milk and heads
up displays.
It also includes a series of media related abbreviations, VCD, DVD, HDVD, HDTV, JPEG
and MPEG, end quote.
I'm sorry, what?
I have no idea what any of that's supposed to mean.
Like honestly, even you reading it out loud, like there's no logical sense there.
It's, I mean, nothing to me.
And Allison has no idea what any of it means either, but she does know one thing for sure.
This is not a suicide note.
She is 100% sure.
She knows that Ray liked to write down all kinds of stuff.
She said that he would like scribble ideas and thought fragments pretty much on any scrap
of paper that he could find.
But even this is totally different than anything else that she has seen of his.
So Allison actually hands it over to police and they try, but they can't make sense of
it either.
And when they can't figure out what it is, the Baltimore police turned the note over
to the FBI to see if they can figure out what Ray was trying to say in this note, if he
was trying to say anything at all.
But the FBI comes back and they agree with Allison.
They say Ray's letter isn't what they would call a quote, legitimate suicide note.
And they say if this note is some kind of code, like we don't know what that code is.
And to this day, nobody's ever been able to crack it.
Okay.
If it is even a code.
If it wasn't a suicide note, we're assuming the Freemason thing was just a red herring.
I mean, I guess it's totally possible.
I mean, I think it's also possible that Ray was interested in that group and maybe thinking
of joining.
It might have just been on his mind when he sat down to write.
I mean, none of this is necessarily evidence that, you know, there's some grand secret
society mystery involved here.
There's literally no reason the Freemasons would want to kill Ray because he's not even
part of their club yet.
It doesn't make sense.
And it feels like a red herring to me.
Okay.
But you said this note was like folded up and taped to the back of his computer.
Yeah.
He had it folded up super tiny and taped to the back.
You had to be looking hard for it.
Yeah.
I guess I don't understand what the reason for hiding it would be.
That's the thing too.
It's like, it's all seems like nonsense.
And Ray, according to Allison, used to like scribble down just like random thoughts like,
why isn't this just so why protect this piece of paper?
Yeah.
And I, so here's the thing too that I didn't mention earlier.
Like it was all typed out, but it was all like shrunken down, itty, itty bitty.
So this like huge long note fit on this tiny little like cut out of a page.
And that's what I don't understand either.
Like leave this stuff on a Word document in your computer if it truly is just a stream
of consciousness.
We're just writing down things we're thinking about.
Why are we typing it, shrinking it, printing it, cutting it, and then taping it to the
back of your computer.
So all of this nonsense is hidden from who?
Okay, but something that I have to ask because you haven't brought it up yet is, was there
anybody who would have wanted Ray dead?
I mean, that right there is literally one of the biggest questions around this entire
case.
Like, we can't find any reason he would want to take his own life, but like, why would
he be worth killing?
Like who would have anything to gain?
I mean, Allison certainly doesn't know the answer to that question, but she thinks that
there might be someone who could shed some light on what happened.
She wants to talk to the person who called Ray the night he disappeared.
Because really, I mean, at least from the outside, that seems like what started it all.
Because surely that person on the other end of the line could give at least some insight
as to why Ray just up and left his house that day.
Like maybe they don't know how he died or when he died, but it's at least a piece of
the puzzle.
We just know why he left in the first place.
Exactly, because we still don't know that yet.
So police pull Ray's phone records sometime during the first couple of weeks after his
body is found, and they actually are able to determine where that call came from.
It came from Stansbury and associates, but according to unsolved mysteries, because of
the way their phone system was set up at the time, the call was from an extension that
was routed through a switchboard, so there was no way to track exactly who made the call.
But it's interesting.
So both Stansbury Associates and the Oxford Club, where Ray was freelancing when he died,
are under the umbrella of this same big finance company called Agora.
So even though Ray's not on Stansbury and associates direct like payroll or working
full time there anymore, he's still under contract working for the same like overarching
group of people that he was when he was still writing with Porter, his like friend that
he grew up with.
Right.
So police obviously want to talk to the people at Stansbury and associates, particularly
Porter, because, you know, we already said not only is he one of Ray's old friends,
like the one who actually put up the reward, which is now like $5,000 by the way, but according
to WBALT News, he has also mentioned multiple times in that weird note on the back of Ray's
computer.
But here's the thing, as helpful as Porter has been throughout the search for Ray, things
are about to take a really complicated turn.
When police try to reach out to Porter Stansbury, they're surprised when he won't help police
with their investigation into Ray's death.
And not only is he not really willing to talk to police a whole lot, he won't let any of
his employees talk to them either.
Wait, this is the same guy who posted the reward and was helping with the initial search?
It is.
Why will he not talk and won't let any of his people talk?
So he says that it's because he doesn't think police will treat him fairly because he's
been investigated by the SEC for fraud before.
But that's a completely different section of law.
Yeah.
Obviously, like these homicide cops in Baltimore have nothing to do with that, but that's what
he says.
And you know, around this same time, it's very strange, Porter does this total heel
turn and out of nowhere starts being really cold to Allison.
And she's totally gutted by it.
Of course.
I mean, here's Ray's best friend, the one guy she would have thought would have done
anything to help find out what happened.
Well, and who has been supporting her and the search for answers since the beginning?
Yeah.
But now, I mean, not only will he not talk to police, he tells all of his employees
that they can't talk to them either.
And he actually gets the Stansbury and Associates lawyers to institute a literal gag order for
the whole company.
So even if people wanted to help with the investigation, like literally they can't risk
violating it.
This is a huge slap in the face for the Rivera's and it begins to make them question Porter
and his motives overall.
And for Allison, it makes her even more determined to find the answers by any means that she
knows how.
And she starts by going back to the medical examiner because she feels like there has
to be more there.
There are answers there because clearly the medical examiner wasn't willing to call it
suicide, like police thought.
So what she keeps thinking is like, what did they see that made them list his death as
undetermined?
Because I mean, it would have been super easy for them to just go with what police think,
go with the main theory, but something held them back.
When Allison talks to the Emmy, they tell her that the way Ray's shins were broken is
not consistent with a fall.
And not only that, while Allison is there, the medical examiner also says to her, quote,
I know what they're trying to do and we're not closing the case.
End quote.
What does that mean?
And who are they?
What are they trying to do?
That is the million dollar question, but just wait, it gets even stranger.
So remember how I said that the cameras up on the Belvedere's roof were disconnected the
night that Ray died?
Yeah.
And that was super shady.
Already super shady.
But Allison finds out that every other camera in the Belvedere was working fine that night.
It was only the rooftop camera that was disconnected.
Now Allison doesn't find this out until after the police are finished with the footage and
it's returned to the Belvedere building manager.
So Allison goes down to the Belvedere to sit with him and watch this footage.
I mean, she wants to see with her own eyes whether her husband was in that building at
any point the night he died.
So the footage starts on the night of May 15th and it looks totally normal.
But then the whole thing just like skips ahead past May 16th, the day that Ray died
and jumps ahead to like more recent stuff.
Like that one specific day of tape, the one that they need the most.
It's just gone.
It's just gone, almost like it's been deleted.
Did the manager give any explanation for that?
Was it always missing or did it come back that way?
Nope.
He doesn't know any more than she does.
So I mean, it's like with every door Allison opens, she finds more questions.
I mean, at least she's feeling at this point like she's making progress.
But just then she gets another huge setback.
Three weeks after Ray's death, the lead detective on the case, Michael Byer, gets reassigned
off Ray's case.
And listen, I fully understand that investigation shipped around from person to person.
I mean, we see this all the time.
But usually that happens like in older cases, cases that can go on for years, even decades,
this is three weeks after Ray's death.
And it probably wouldn't be suspicious, except the guy they took off the case was the only
officer that I could find who thinks that Ray might not have took his own life.
He was the only one looking at other possibilities.
So he was the only one conflicting like the company line, essentially, I don't know.
So for the people that believe Ray was murdered, I mean, this ties right in because the inconsistency
is just keep piling up, right?
Like there's nothing you can point to one thing and be like, yes, this proves something.
But when it all comes together, I mean, the missing footage, the detective's reassignment,
the phone, the screwy fall trajectory, it's all pointing to something sinister behind
the scene and some kind of secret worth killing for.
Even though Detective Byer is off the case, Allison isn't done.
But the detective actually warns her, be careful.
Because even the author, Makita Brotman, who wrote an unexplained death, she keeps hearing
the same thing over and over while she's researching the book.
Be careful of who or what.
I don't even know.
Many people think that maybe it had to do with Ray's work, maybe going all the way up
to Agora Financial, that big like parent company.
I mean, they're a rich and powerful bunch worth like $500 million back in 2015, according
to Mother Jones.
But as Allison says on Unsolved Mysteries, she thinks that Ray stumbled onto something
that he wasn't supposed to and that it may have cost him his life.
But again, suspicion isn't enough to prove murder or to rule out suicide.
For those that believed Ray did actually take his own life, they say the evidence speaks
for itself.
Like, they keep asking, what else would he have possibly been doing up on that rooftop?
Yeah, but I don't even really buy that anymore.
I guess, can we talk a little bit about a murder theory and like what that would even
look like?
Well, I've been out, I want to, but like no one really explores that theory in a lot
of detail.
But I mean, I guess in my mind, it goes something kind of like this, like Ray gets that phone
called, it lasts a couple of seconds, Ray says, oh, rushes out of the house.
And I assume it was to meet someone or maybe someone lured him onto that roof somehow.
I don't know what they would have said to get him up there.
Maybe he was running from someone, maybe he was pushed.
Again, why all of this happened, we still don't know.
Does it have something to do with someone that he was connected to through work?
Maybe are the Freemasons somehow involved?
Like, honestly, at this point, who the heck knows?
There's just almost nothing about this case that makes sense.
Like to me, something is clearly up.
You have the alarm going off around his house leading up to the day he left, the way he left
in such a hurry, that weird note that he made super itty bitty tiny and then taped to the
back of his computer.
Like none of that to me falls into a normal category of day to day living for Ray.
So what was happening around this time?
What piece of the puzzle are we missing?
There are just so many lingering questions in this case and a lot of rabbit holes to get
lost in.
A lot of people will point to Occam's razor and say the simplest explanation is the best.
We jumped.
But I don't know.
I mean, I know enough to say that I don't think we can say that we've done a lot of cases
where someone has had a psychotic episode or we even talked about how the decision to
take one's life can happen so quickly, even though they make plans and are talking about
the future.
It doesn't mean they couldn't, but there's just something like that, that phone call.
Why can no one talk about that phone call and the injuries, the ones that didn't even
make sense to the medical examiner.
Every time I look at this case, I have more questions and answers, but I hope that one
day there are some answers for Allison and for all of the Rivera's who are still left
wondering what really happened to Ray.
Definitely check out Ray's story on the new unsolved mysteries that premieres July 1st
on Netflix.
And if you want to see the other source material we used for this episode and the pictures,
visit our website, crimejunkiepodcast.com.
And be sure to follow us on Instagram at crimejunkiepodcast.
We'll be back next week with a brand new episode, but stick around for a prepped of
the month story.
Crimejunkie is an audio check production.
So what do you think Chuck, do you approve?
Okay Ashley, are you ready to hear about a very special puppet named Willow?
Yes, I can't wait, I feel like we haven't done this in so long.
I know, so Willow's mom is named Dara and I feel like you and I are pretty smart and
a lot of our listeners are like incredibly smart.
Dara is a paleontologist.
Oh my gosh.
Really smart.
Yeah, like way smarter than any of us here.
So she's like really legit.
Anyway, Dara was on a dinosaur dig in Montana over the summer.
This is a life I cannot even imagine.
That's so cool.
So she was on this dig with the museum where she works and she'd actually left the dig
to accompany some of the volunteers back to where they had lived.
And the day after she left she started getting all these text messages about this dog that
had just wandered to the campsite, which to her was really weird because it had been like
super stormy and terrible weather the night that she left.
But her friends still at the dig were like, yeah, there was this huge thunderstorm and
everyone at the camp had woken up by like this crazy barking and then like these yips
and yaps and howls of coyote.
Oh no.
And the crew chief went out to check things out and they ended up finding this little
prepet and he came right up to the crew chief and rolled over at her feet, which I mean,
poor her.
Tell me rubs, you have to give them.
Yes you do.
They made a safe place for the prepet to stay for the night underneath the trailer, assuming
it like sleep it off, rest up and go back into the wild by morning just needed to be
safe for the night.
But the next day this dog was still there and she was obviously super skinny and it
was clear she'd been wandering on her own for a while and was even kind of favoring
one paw and, you know, kind of limping.
And everyone at the camp absolutely fell in love with this little pup.
And she became Willow the paleopup, an official mascot of the dino dig.
Oh my goodness.
I know.
She would even follow the crew out to the actual dig and help them dig up a tyrannosaurus
rex.
Oh, I bet she's the best digger there ever was.
This dog is already like so much cooler than I am.
Oh my gosh.
She's literally digging up dinosaurs.
As a job.
And she just like wandered there, I'm in love.
So while Dara was away from the camp, she still got updates on this dog.
And other members of the team had tried to locate an owner, asked around the area, but
no one claimed this dog or even recognized her.
And Dara had just moved to North Dakota and was totally ready to get a dog.
And the entire field team brought Willow back for her.
And what can I say?
They have been besties ever since.
Oh my gosh.
Send pics.
Wait, send pics.
I have to see this pup.
Okay.
So give me just a second.
I'll send you a pic.
She has ears, footaches.
I know.
She's like, looks like a little bit like a cattle dog, right?
Like she's got like the, she's a lot of black and white speckles on her paws, speckles on
her chest, and literally just like satellites for ears.
Yeah.
So Willow is a blue healer border collie mix, which God bless you, Dara.
I've had both of those energy and they are insanely smart little balls of energy.
I would not be able to keep up.
And just like it had been reported back at the camp, she had a pretty serious injury
to her paw, but it had mostly healed by the time Dara got her and she's back to completely
full health and being a total goofball.
Dara said that some of Willow's favorite things to do are to run up and downstairs
and do her zoomies in the yard, which I feel like is really accurate.
And apparently to find dinosaurs, which I think she does on the wreck.
So, so cool.
Oh, that is amazing.
So Dara and Willow are living their happiest life together and I'm so excited for them.
Again, check out our website because Willow's ears are the diaper.
They're so cute.
They do into another like dimension, mentally and emotionally.
I love them so much.
And as a reminder, instead of doing adoptive proppets, because they keep getting adopted
before we could even put the episode out, which is great news.
Great news.
Yeah.
A great problem to have.
We're highlighting shelters or animal rescues and this month I want to feature the Humane
Society of Western Montana, which obviously Montana is where Willow was found.
So the Humane Society of Western Montana is an amazing organization committing to providing
care in every aspect to animals, matching people with pets to enrich each other's lives, which
I loved that line.
And engaging in their community to educate people on the issues surrounding animal welfare.
So Montana folks, if you're in the market for a furry new best friend, check out the
Humane Society of Western Montana and we'll be sure to link to them as well as so many
pictures of sweet, sweet Willow the Paleo pup on our website.