Wednesday, February 28, 2018

#5 & #6::APD confirms bodies are those of missing roommates | Albuquerque Journal

 
Zakaria Fry AND  Carrell Ray                                   

A month ago, a retired prominent Albuquerque attorney and a young transgender woman who rented a room from him were reported missing.

The Northeast Albuquerque home was in disarray, and police warned they could be in danger.


They were right.

On Feb. 19 – a month and a day after friends and family last heard from 70-year-old Eugene Carrell Ray and 28-year-old Zakaria Fry – two bodies were discovered a couple of miles apart, dumped off the side of the road in the small community of Stanley, about 45 miles east of Albuquerque.
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Officer Simon Drobik, a spokesman for the Albuquerque Police Department, said the case is being investigated as a homicide. He did not know how Ray or Fry were killed or any other details about how they were found.

But a rancher told the Journal last week that he had found the body of a woman, presumed to be Fry, a transgender woman, stuffed in a garbage bin. Ray’s body was found some distance away, but the details of the discovery have not been disclosed.

Detectives had been pursuing some leads in the case a couple of weeks ago, but say they are still investigating.

APD confirms bodies are those of missing roommates | Albuquerque Journal

See also:: 2 Bodies Found Confirmed to be that of 3rd and 4th Transgender Murders of 2018

Zakaria Fry and Carrell Ray had been missing since Jan. 18, 2018.  Ms Fry was out to everyone including her family as a transgender woman who rented a room from Ms Ray.  Britney Willis, the sister of Ms Fry tells us “the roommate, [her] name is [deadname omitted] Carrell Ray and [she] is also transgender.”  The children of Carrell Ray went to investigate after some time had passed without any contact from Ms Ray.  Det. Drobik tells us “They found the home in disarray suggesting to the police that Carrell and Zakaria could be in danger, by Jan 30th we were sure that we were looking at a body retrieval rather than a missing person.  A missing person report was filled but authorities and family members feared the worst.”

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