Ray Wright's disappearance puzzled investigators and left his worried family deeply shaken. No one had any idea where he was or what happened to him. "[It was] years of not knowing," Haley Kendall said of her father.
Ray Wright's ex-wife, Peggy Wright, told "48 Hours" that before his absence, "Ray was at such a great spot in his life … he had it all."
But everything suddenly changed in January 2018, when Ray Wright was abducted.
Ray Wright, 55, mysteriously vanished. His daughters Kennedy Wright and Haley Kendall say he was a loving father who would never abandon his family. But now, no one could reach him.
Peggy Wright knew Ray had a history of drinking and briefly wondered if his disappearance was from a relapse.
Six years earlier, in November 2011, Ray Wright had driven drunk and crashed into a couple, seriously injuring them. He was convicted of DUI and sentenced to 18 months in jail. But his family says that after causing that accident, Ray Wright immediately stopped drinking and maintained his sobriety.
Two days had passed with no word from Ray Wright. His panicked brother Dean Wright had repeatedly checked Ray's home and the workshop he rented for his carpentry work. Nothing seemed unusual, except Ray's truck was missing. When Dean Wright returned to Ray's house on Jan. 13 and let himself in, he came face to face with an intruder. "[He] yelled at me, 'Get out of here …' And I said, 'Who are you?'… 'Where's Ray?'"
After the man fled, Dean Wright called police. He filed a missing person's report and showed them a soda cup on the counter that the intruder had left behind. It was a fresh drink – filled with ice and dripping with condensation. Police collected it as evidence.
While police investigated Ray Wright's disappearance, his family launched their own search, putting up flyers and posting on social media, hoping for any tips as to his whereabouts.
Police found Ray Wright's truck 10 days after he went missing at an apartment complex a few miles from his shop. The stereo and the license plates had been stolen.
Investigators noticed brown stains found on the carpet liner in the back of the truck. Testing would later reveal that those stains were Ray Wright's blood.
Just days later, investigators would get a major break in the case. A police officer noticed a white van with expired registration, but that had current registration sticker tags stuck to its license plate. When the officer attempted to pull the van over, it sped off, leading him on a high-speed chase reaching 100 miles an hour. The pursuit ended when the van crashed into another vehicle. Its driver suffered a broken leg and police had to pull him out of the van. He was rushed to the hospital. Police identified Victor Gray as the driver. Gray was arrested for felony DUI and felony evasion.
After searching DMV records, police learned that the registration sticker stuck on Gray's license plate actually belonged to Ray Wright's vehicle.
Investigators received a hit for the DNA found on the soda cup in Ray Wright's home. Testing revealed that Gray's DNA was a match. Gray had prior felony convictions, so police already had his DNA on file.
Rocklin Police and FBI investigators processed Victor Gray's van. "In the back of the van … wrapped up in a black tarp is just a treasure trove of evidence," says Sacramento County Prosecutor Matt Chisholm.
The evidence included Wright's belongings — a hat with "Ray Wright Design" embroidered on it, Ray's driver's license and wallet, broken eyeglasses, a smashed cell phone, and a bloody, yellow raincoat. The DNA on the jacket was later tested and matched Ray Wright.
Investigators also found Gray's cellphone in the van. Inside that phone, prosecutors say they found a series of texts between Gray and a woman referred to as "Kalifornia Katie." The messages were sent the same morning Ray Wright disappeared, and police believed the woman appeared to be working as a lookout for Gray, alerting Gray when Ray Wright was alone at his shop.
In Gray's phone, there was also a photo of a handwritten letter that prosecutors say Gray wrote and addressed to someone named "Bob." The letter was dated Jan. 27, 2018 — the same day as Gray's chase with police.
"It's clear that Victor has grievances with Bob … the grievances stem about not being paid for delivering the 'dude' to you," Chisholm told "48 Hours."
The letter reads, "I'm done waiting and need a fat package today" and mentions having "hand delivered you your revenge." Prosecutors believe Gray was referring to kidnapping Ray Wright and delivering him to Bob. But Bob's identity was still a mystery.
Police continued investigating Ray Wright's disappearance. They had identified "Kalifornia Katie" — the woman in the texts found in Gray's phone — as Katie Barnard, and brought her in for questioning. Barnard, who lived in a trailer across from Ray Wright's workshop, eventually told police that she was the lookout for Gray. She maintained that she only helped Gray because she believed he wanted to steal Ray Wright's truck. She said Gray later told her he had punched Ray Wright and delivered him to Robert "Bob" Manor. Bob Manor, it turns out, was the man Ray Wright had hit driving while drunk all those years ago.
Barnard also told authorities Gray complained to her that he never got paid. As the case progressed, Barnard told investigators that Manor also made an admission to her, admitting that he killed Ray Wright.
Police spoke with Tessa Trimble, a witness who said Manor had told her "he did it." Trimble was a massage therapist who had treated Manor for his injuries from the 2011 accident. Trimble told investigators said that she and Manor eventually developed a romantic relationship.
She said that after Ray Wright went missing, Manor called her over to his house to talk. "Instead of talking about our relationship … He told me that he took care of whatever — something he was trying to take care for a long time."
She says she knew Manor was talking about Ray Wright.
"He had a problem with that guy. He mentioned on multiple occasions he wanted to get that guy," she told investigators.
Three years after Ray Wright was abducted, Gray and Manor were charged with kidnapping and murdering him.
On Jan. 4, 2022, another witness surfaced. Chisholm interviewed Gray's cellmate in the Sacramento County Jail. The cellmate told investigators that Gray told him he had delivered Ray Wright to Manor. The cellmate said Gray told him Manor poisoned and had him dismembered. The cellmate also said that Gray complained that Manor didn't pay him.
Manor and Gray went on trial for Ray Wright's kidnapping and murder. Both pleaded not guilty to the charges.
During the eight-day trial, the jury heard from Barnard, who received immunity, Trimble, and the jailhouse informant.
Kennedy Wright says waiting for the verdict "was the most gut-wrenching day of my life." After a few hours of deliberation, the jury reached a verdict. Manor and Gray were found guilty of murdering and kidnapping Ray Wright.
Manor and Gray were both sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
At the sentencing hearing, Wright's family addressed Wright's convicted killers in their victim impact statements.
"I said, 'my dad will be in heaven,'" Kennedy Wright said. "'Like amongst the angels, like where he belongs, and you'll be in prison for life … where you belong.'"
Ray Wright has never been found. "There's no laying him to rest," Kennedy Wright said. "He doesn't get the send away that he deserves."
To this day, the case remains an open missing person's case with the Rocklin Police Department.
Anyone with information about Ray Wright's whereabouts is asked to call Rocklin Police at (916) 625-5400.
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