|

Our
Loved Ones' Stories
THOMAS TRAYLOR MURDER - ANOTHER MILITARY TRAGEDY

By Charolette Traylor
On December 6th, a week after Thanksgiving 1998, AOC Thomas
Richard Traylor, USN, age 36, was found dead, in rural Inyokern,
CA, from a gunshot wound to the chest. The cause of death was
listed as suicide. He had been missing for two days. Traylor was
a Navy Aviation Ordinance Chief on active duty stationed at the
Weapons Testing Squadron, Naval Station, China Lake, CA.
On that morning of Dec 6th, Traylor's neighbors, Larry Seymour &
Joanie Hanson, found Traylor. They became alarmed when Traylor's
vehicle set on a dirt road for two days, only a quarter of a
mile from Traylor's home. They drove to the scene and found
Traylor dead sitting behind the steering wheel of his vehicle.
They immediately returned home and called the authorities.
The Inyokern County Fire Department was the first to arrive
on the scene. Next was the County Reserve Deputy Roger Clark and
Reserve County Coroner Ron Lunsford. The Liberty Ambulance
Service arrived but did not transport. The remains went to the
Kern County Morgue, Bakersfield, CA.
Mrs. Traylor had been in San Francisco for a couple of months
making arrangements to place an elderly aunt into a rest home.
She last spoke to Traylor on Thursday evening, Dec 03, 1998,
around 6:00 P.M. from (SF). At that time Traylor was on his way
out to a squadron get-together and promised to call her the
following morning - which would be then Friday, Dec 04, 1998.
When Mrs. Traylor did not receive the promised phone call from
her husband the following morning she immediately contacted
Traylor's Gunner, CWO2 Vince Howell, at the Weapons Testing
Squadron and was told Traylor had not been heard from or seen
since the previous day which had been Thursday.
Mrs. Traylor continued to try and contact Traylor by phone
through Saturday. Alarmed because this was not Traylor's pattern
of behavior by not calling his work, Mrs. Traylor drove home to
Inyokern. When she left SF on Sunday, Dec 06, at 9:30 A.M. she
gave specific instructions to contact her by cell phone
immediately if her husband was located. After seven hours of
driving she arrived home at 4:30 P.M. Mrs. Traylor's neighbor, Joanie Hanson then went to the Traylor home and informed Mrs.
Traylor she was a "widow."
Around 5:30 P.M. Deputy N. Dancy and Deputy J. Dancy arrived
at the Traylor home - they had had a shift change at the
Sheriff's Dept and had no details on Traylor's death. In shock,
Mrs. Traylor called the Coroner's Office, Bakersfield, CA and
spoke to the Homicide Officer Glenn Johnson, who informed Mrs.
Traylor her husband had committed suicide. Mrs. Traylor
protested and told Homicide Officer Johnson her husband had
never been suicidal and that Traylor detested anyone who
considered such a cowardly act!
The China Lake Weapons Testing Squadron personnel arrived
after Mrs. Traylor's son-in-law, CAPT T. Glick, USMC, Cherry
Point, NC called the China Lake Command - they were LCDR
Severson, CDR J. L. Budnick, MMCM(SS)B. Stone, and The Gunner,
CWO2 V. Howell. They had no further information on the death.
China Lake is located in a remote area, 150 miles northeast
of Los Angeles, CA, between the Sierra Nevada Mountains and
Death Valley, away from the public eye. Traylor was attached to
VX-31, Hanger-3, at China Lake. Traylor supervised the
Avionics/Armament Division of the Naval Weapons Testing Squadron
and overlooking the Explosive Safety Inspections. He was
instrumental in the squadron's preparedness for the rigorous
maintenance, and loading/downloading of conventional weapons on
FA-18s. Traylor's technical knowledge of missile and bomb
launching well qualified him in the training of weapons
personnel and he often made trips to Point Mugu, CA and Puerto
Rico, Cuba. He was extremely conscientious in the sensitive
information surrounding his work. The China Lake Bombing Range
covers 20,000 square miles of restricted air space where the
famous Sidewinder and Tomahawk missiles were developed.
Traylor was written-up by his command for been absent from
work that Friday, Dec 04, 1998.
Traylor was buried on December 10, 1998, Mrs. Traylor spent
the remainder of December 98 with her parents in Missoula, MT.
In January 1999, when Mrs. Traylor returned to Inyokern she
went to the Sheriff's Branch Office, Ridgecrest, CA, and learned
her husband's case had been closed. Not accepting her husband's
death as a suicide she started her own investigation as follows.
When Mrs. Traylor took her case to Traylor's Squadron
Commanding Officer, Commander R. Rutherford he stated "Well, you
and your husband were having marital problems, you were
separated and he killed himself". This was a shock to Mrs.
Traylor she expected the Commanding Officer to support her in a
further investigation.
Prior to Mrs. Traylor going to SF she had been counseling
with a Mr. Richard Rohrlick, the China Lake Base counselor,
concerning her husband's increased drinking; she also spoke to
her husband's Gunner concerning this same matter.
Mrs. Traylor last visited her husband at Inyokern on Nov
19,1998, two weeks earlier, to celebrate their wedding
anniversary. At that time Traylor seemed jumpy and paranoid in
public (which was not like him) and then cried when she left to
return to SF.
She spoke to her husband weekly and it was during one of the
last conversations he told her "he didn't think he was going to
live long," when the remark alarmed her he changed the subject.
Below is a list of things Mrs. Traylor noted at her home on
her arrival on that fatal Sunday, Dec 06, 1998:
Traylor's uniform for work was folded and lying on the bed in
preparation to wear Friday, Dec 04, 1998.
On the couch was clean unfolded laundry.
Traylor had his stair-master in front of the TV for exercising
in preparation of his annual physical.
The master bathroom window was open, the screen lying on the
lawn, and a towel lain over the windowsill. Someone had broken
into the house by crawled through the window.
Traylor had just purchased a $350.00 pipe corral for his horses
and was assembling it in the yard.
All the small animals at the Traylor home were locked in the
house the two days Traylor was missing: three cats, two dogs,
and outside were three horses, starving. Traylor would never
have left his beloved animals without first making arrangements
for their care and feeding.
Back tracking Traylor's days leading up to his death:
Dec 02-Wed: Neighbor, Joanie Hanson noticed Traylor was outdoors
cleaning the horse corral and later with his friend, The Gunner
outside working on Traylor's motorcycle.
Dec 03-Thur: At 3:00 P.M. Traylor left his work on base to kept
his appointment with Richard Rohrlick, the base counselor, to
discuss rehabilitation for himself.
At 9:00 P.M. Traylor was seen by a female bartender, Mickey at
Tommy T's, a local sports bar in Ridgecrest. Later it was
verified there had been a military get-together on that evening
Dec 03, 98, the last night Traylor spoke to his wife and was
seen alive.
TRAYLOR'S Planned Schedule for 4,5,6 Dec 1998:
DEC04-Fri: Traylor had a Squadron promotion ceremony to conduct.
DEC05-Sat: Traylor was to attend a farewell party for his First
Class John Barfield, Traylor never missed a party but he was a
no show.
DEC06-Sun: Traylor had committed himself to drive to San Diego,
CA to move shipmate, Todd Roger and wife who were transferring
to China Lake, a 3-1/2 hour drive one-way.
Traylor's Military Identification card had been on him when he
was found and the Officer-of-the-Day, at Weapons Test Squadron,
LT Neviou and AO2 Hall were notified, but Mrs. Traylor was never
called.
A resident of Inyokern saw Traylor's truck sitting on the dirt
road near the Traylor home on Friday and Saturday, Dec 04, 05,
1998.
A neighbor told Mrs. Traylor how her husband had been parking
his vehicle in the desert in the evenings for a couple of weeks
before his death. From where Traylor parked he had a clear view
of his home without being seen himself.
Traylor's AO1 "Shorty" Wellington and AME3 Gerry Sims claimed to
have driven to the Traylor home on Saturday, Dec 05, 1998,
searching for Traylor but did not see Traylor's vehicle sitting
near the Traylor home.
AO2 Phil Kamp's wife, Brenda stated that Traylor started to act
strange, no longer would he let anyone drive him home after he
had had to much to drink; instead Traylor would leave the social
gatherings when no one was aware, this was just prior to his
death.
During Mrs. Traylor's investigating she was told her husband
often expressed his love for her and looked forward to her
return from SF at Christmas permanently; and how he expected a
visit then from their first grandchild.
Mrs. Traylor had to harass the Naval Crime Investigator
Service's (NCIS) for their results, it was a duplicate of the
Sheriff's Report. NCIS reasoning behind the lack of a JAG
investigation was because Traylor was found off the base and it
was Kern County's responsibility to investigate. The Navy was
tossing the case back to the County.
After six-months of waiting Mrs. Traylor received Coroner D.
Brown's report. The report was vague and assumptions were made
about the Traylor's separation supporting suicide. No internal
autopsy had been performed to validate the gun and shells found
in Traylor vehicle with him were the weapons that killed him.
There were no X-rays. No tape recording of the external autopsy
or diagram. No resin testing of the hands - proving Traylor held
the gun. Last, no time of death was established through eye
testing or did the report state if rigor had set-in yet, how long
had Traylor been dead? A Toxicology Test was done showing an
alcohol level of 0.28 but no urine test to back it.
In June 1999, Mrs. Traylor met with Kern County Coroner M.
Kaiser at Bakersfield, in protest of the suicide theory and
present the true facts. Coroner Kaiser agreed there was not
enough evidence to justify a suicide. She changed the death
certificate to "undetermined" and amended the Coroner's Report -
still the case was not reopened by the county.
Mrs. Traylor was not able to obtain an appointment with the
China Lake Base Commanding Officer CAPT C. H. Johnston, to
present the new death certificate and to again request a
reinvestigation. Nor would the California Congressman William
Thomas pursue the case. The FBI stated they saw no crime
committed.
Traylor's best friend, "The Gunner" avoided Mrs. Traylor for a
year after the death. When she was finally able to corner him he
told her "All you want to do is talk about Traylor, I want to
believe it was a suicide," and avoided Mrs. Traylor from then
on.
The Summer of 1999, Mrs. Traylor drove her husband's vehicle to
the base gas station and while inside paying she noticed CDR
Budnick, the Squadron Test Pilot, standing frozen in shock
staring at Traylor's vehicle like he'd just seen a ghost until
he saw Mrs. Traylor and regained his composure.
In November 1999, Mrs. Traylor obtained the photographs of the
scene of death from the County Technical Laboratory. The photos
revealed the following:
Traylor is shown sitting behind the steering wheel of his
vehicle with his cap on his head and his glasses in his right
hand.
A shotgun is pointing at Traylor from the floorboard of the
passenger's side of the vehicle with the barrel propped against
the side of the console, a card, and a "Bud Light" beer can.
Blood is shown running straight down Traylor's right-thigh
verifying he died where he was found.
Mrs. Traylor can verify the blood location and pattern in the
vehicle, because on Monday, Dec 07, 1998, the day after Traylor
was found Mrs. Traylor reclaimed her husband's vehicle. The
vehicle has not been impounded in a police lot but towed to a
business garage in Inyokern on Dec 06.
Blood was found on the front of the console and the cup-holders
in that area - the console divided the bucket-seats. Blood was
found near the gas peddle and the seat part of the driver's
buck-seat and blood dripped to the floorboard. But, the largest
splattering of blood is on the drive-shaft.
A box of shells (birdshot) was on the passenger seat with opened
mail.
When Mrs. Traylor presented these photos to Kern County Homicide
Officer Johnson for answers and a reinvestigation he became
angry and escorted her out of his office.
After AO1 Wellington viewed the photos he stated "the Squadron
never thought Traylor committed suicide". Unfortunately, the
Squadron couldn't help - they had been given a "Gag Order" not
to speak to Mrs. Traylor; they feared for their own lives if
they talked.
CONCLUSION
The investigation was shut down because the Navy had Kern County
close the case immediately without an investigation through
their "Good Old Boys Connect", call the death a suicide and lay
blame on the wife.
So, it wasn't necessary to notify or even contact Mrs. Traylor
for questioning as a suspect of murder. That is why Homicide
Officer Johnson so bluntly informed Mrs. Traylor her husband had
committed suicide, nine hours after Traylor had been found.
To strengthen their suicide theory, there was a letter found in
the vehicle addressed to Traylor asking him to sign a waiver.
This was assumed to be leading towards divorce papers in the
first Coroner's Report. The letter actually concerned Mr.
Traylor's release from Mrs. Traylor retirement money. Mrs.
Traylor of course, was never questioned about the letter.
Traylor, himself was an extremely private individual and more so
about his personal life. The only two people that had
information on the Traylor's marriage were The Gunner, (CWO2 V.
Howell), and Mr. Richard Rohrlick, the base counselor. One of
these two people gave the background for the theory of suicide.
The vehicle was moved and never sealed-off because again there
wasn't going to be an investigation. The Coroner's Report lacked
vital information, as stated previously. The Sheriff's Report
excluded fingerprints, footprints, or tire prints from the
scene. Photos: show Traylor's hands and arms had no blood or
blow-back from skin on them. Traylor didn't drink Bud Light beer
as the photos show from inside the vehicle; and he didn't take
his glasses off and hold them after he shot himself. The photos
were staged.
When Traylor made the statement to his wife "he didn't think he
was going to live long" that was a tip-off his life was in
danger. He tried to avoid his death by hiding in the desert. But
Traylor was ordered to the Thursday night military get-together;
here he was gotten drunk, followed, stopped just short of his
home, and killed. Traylor's shotgun was obtained from his home
by gaining entrance through the bathroom window - so
identification was not necessary. The squadron get-together may
have occurred at the Sierra Club, Inyokern, CA a mile from the
Traylor home.
The China Lake Base is a highly secured installation due to
warfare weapons developed there. Traylor was military property
for fifteen years, there should have been a JAG investigation by
the Navy.
In 2000, Mrs. Traylor again tried to re-open the case by
contacting Kern County and she received a reply from Sheriff
Sparks threatening to reverse the cause of death "Undetermined
back to suicide" if she continued to pursue the matter.
In Aug 2003, Prof. J. Starrs, Dr. J. Frost, and team from George
Washington University, Washington, D.C., performed the internal
autopsy on Traylor. It was found that the angle of the shot was
from the upper right side of the chest to the lower left side of
the media. The angle of the shot was not possible inside the
confinement of the cab of the vehicle.
THEORY
The shot came from outside of the passenger's side of the
vehicle when Traylor leaned over and opened the passenger's
door. The impact forced Traylor's body back into the area of the
console and the drive-shaft of the vehicle where the majority of
the blood was located. There was no blood on the dashboard,
steering wheel, windshield, driver's door, or the roof of the
vehicle. According to the autopsy Traylor's heart stopped
immediately. Traylor's body was set back into the seat, glasses
placed in his hand and cap put on his head. Some item was
removed from Traylor's right thigh that left a square pattern
clear of blood. There was no blood on the beer can or the card
that supported the gun pointing at Traylor. Again Mrs. Traylor
can verify the location of the blood splatter. Last, Traylor's
wristwatch was not on any of the photos from the scene but
returned to Mrs. Traylor with the personal effects.
The whole concept of suicide is an insult to Thomas R. Traylor's
integrity.
QUESTION:
Why wasn't Mrs Traylor notified that Sunday? It wasn't
necessary. Her name and SF phone number were written on an
envelope next to the Traylor's kitchen phone.
Why was it not necessary to identify the shotgun as being owned
by Traylor? (The gun had never been registered nor had a hunting
license been bought. Traylor had not used any of his number of
guns in years nor in the thirteen months he had been at China
Lake and his only acquaintances were military. Traylor also
owned a handgun - which would have been easier to use in the
vehicle).
Traylor grew-up outside of El Paso, TX, enlisted in the U.S.
Navy in 1983, a Navy career-man retiring in five years. He was a
kind-hearted, soft-spoken man with no enemies.
If you have information about this case, or would like to
contact Mrs. Traylor,
email us and we'll forward your message to her.
Copyright non-combat-death.org. Please
contact us
for permission to use our material.
THOMAS TRAYLOR
MURDER - ANOTHER MILITARY TRAGEDY
By Charolette Traylor
On December 6th, a week after
Thanksgiving 1998, AOC Thomas Richard Traylor,
USN, age 36, was found dead, in rural Inyokern,
CA, from a gunshot wound to the chest. The cause
of death was listed as suicide. He had been
missing for two days. Traylor was a Navy
Aviation Ordinance Chief on active duty
stationed at the Weapons Testing Squadron, Naval
Station, China Lake, CA.
On that morning of Dec 6th,
Traylor's neighbors, Larry Seymour & Joanie
Hanson, found Traylor. They became alarmed when
Traylor's vehicle set on a dirt road for two
days, only a quarter of a mile from Traylor's
home. They drove to the scene and found Traylor
dead sitting behind the steering wheel of his
vehicle. They immediately returned home and
called the authorities.
The Inyokern County Fire
Department was the first to arrive on the scene.
Next was the County Reserve Deputy Roger Clark
and Reserve County Coroner Ron Lunsford. The
Liberty Ambulance Service arrived but did not
transport. The remains went to the Kern County
Morgue, Bakersfield, CA.
Mrs. Traylor had been in San
Francisco for a couple of months making
arrangements to place an elderly aunt into a
rest home. She last spoke to Traylor on Thursday
evening, Dec 03, 1998, around 6:00 P.M. from
(SF). At that time Traylor was on his way out to
a squadron get-together and promised to call her
the following morning - which would be then
Friday, Dec 04, 1998. When Mrs. Traylor did not
receive the promised phone call from her husband
the following morning she immediately contacted
Traylor's Gunner, CWO2 Vince Howell, at the
Weapons Testing Squadron and was told Traylor
had not been heard from or seen since the
previous day which had been Thursday.
Mrs. Traylor continued to try
and contact Traylor by phone through Saturday.
Alarmed because this was not Traylor's pattern
of behavior by not calling his work, Mrs.
Traylor drove home to Inyokern. When she left SF
on Sunday, Dec 06, at 9:30 A.M. she gave
specific instructions to contact her by cel-phone
immediately if her husband was located. After
seven hours of driving she arrived home at 4:30
P.M. Mrs. Traylor's neighbor, Joanie Hanson then
went to the Traylor home and informed Mrs.
Traylor she was a "widow."
Around 5:30 P.M. Deputy N. Dancy
and Deputy J. Dancy arrived at the Traylor home
- they had had a shift change at the Sheriff's
Dept and had no details on Traylor's death. In
shock, Mrs. Traylor called the Coroner's Office,
Bakersfield, CA and spoke to the Homicide
Officer Glenn Johnson, who informed Mrs. Traylor
her husband had committed suicide. Mrs. Traylor
protested and told Homicide Officer Johnson her
husband had never been suicidal and that Traylor
detested anyone who considered
such a cowardly act!
The China Lake Weapons Testing
Squadron personnel arrived after Mrs. Traylor's
son-in-law, CAPT T. Glick, USMC, Cherry Point,
NC called the China Lake Command - they were
LCDR Severson, CDR J. L. Budnick, MMCM(SS)B.
Stone, and The Gunner, CWO2 V. Howell. They had
no further information on the death.
China Lake is located in a
remote area, 150 miles northeast of Los Angeles,
CA, between the Sierra Nevada Mountains and
Death Valley, away from the public eye. Traylor
was attached to VX-31, Hanger-3, at China Lake.
Traylor supervised the Avionics/Armament
Division of the Naval Weapons Testing Squadron
and overlooking the Explosive Safety
Inspections. He was instrumental in the
squadron's preparedness for the rigorous
maintenance, and loading/downloading of
conventional weapons on FA-18s. Traylor's
technical knowledge of missile and bomb
launching well qualified him in the training of
weapons personnel and he often made trips to
Point Mugu, CA and Puerto Rico, Cuba. He was
extremely conscientious in the sensitive
information surrounding his work. The China Lake
Bombing Range covers 20,000 square miles of
restricted air space where the famous Sidewinder
and Tomahawk missiles were developed.
Traylor was written-up by his
command for been absent from work that Friday,
Dec 04, 1998.
Traylor was buried on December
10, 1998, Mrs. Traylor spent the remainder of
December 98 with her parents in Missoula, MT.
In January 1999, when Mrs.
Traylor returned to Inyokern she went to the
Sheriff's Branch Office, Ridgecrest, CA, and
learned her husband's case had been closed. Not
accepting her husband's death as a suicide she
started her own investigation as follows.
When Mrs. Traylor took her case
to Traylor's Squadron Commanding Officer,
Commander R. Rutherford he stated "Well, you and
your husband were having marital problems, you
were separated and he killed himself". This was
a shock to Mrs. Traylor she expected the
Commanding Officer to support her in a further
investigation.
Prior to Mrs. Traylor going to
SF she had been counseling with a Mr. Richard
Rohrlick, the China Lake Base counselor,
concerning her husband's increased drinking; she
also spoke to her husband's Gunner concerning
this same matter.
Mrs. Traylor last visited her
husband at Inyokern on Nov 19,1998, two weeks
earlier, to celebrate their wedding anniversary.
At that time Traylor seemed jumpy and paranoid
in public (which was not like him) and then
cried when she left to return to SF.
She spoke to her husband weekly
and it was during one of the last conversations
he told her "he didn't think he was going to
live long," when the remark alarmed her he
changed the subject.
Below is a list of things
Mrs. Traylor noted at her home on her arrival on
that fatal Sunday, Dec 06, 1998:
- Traylor's uniform for work was folded
and lying on the bed in preparation to wear
Friday, Dec 04, 1998.
- On the couch was clean unfolded laundry.
- Traylor had his stair-master in front of
the TV for exercising in preparation of his
annual physical.
- The master bathroom window was open, the
screen lying on the lawn, and a towel lain
over the windowsill. Someone had broken into
the house by crawled through the window.
- Traylor had just purchased a $350.00
pipe corral for his horses and was
assembling it in the yard.
- All the small animals at the Traylor
home were locked in the house the two days
Traylor was missing: three cats, two dogs,
and outside were three horses, starving.
Traylor would never have left his beloved
animals without first making arrangements
for their care and feeding.
Back tracking Traylor's days
leading up to his death:
- Dec 02-Wed: Neighbor, Joanie Hanson
noticed Traylor was outdoors cleaning the
horse corral and later with his friend, The
Gunner outside working on Traylor's
motorcycle.
- Dec 03-Thur: At 3:00 P.M. Traylor left
his work on base to kept his appointment
with Richard Rohrlick, the base counselor,
to discuss rehabilitation for himself.
At 9:00 P.M. Traylor was seen by a female
bartender, Mickey at Tommy T's, a local
sports bar in Ridgecrest. Later it was
verified there had been a military
get-together on that evening Dec 03, 98, the
last night Traylor spoke to his wife and was
seen alive.
TRAYLOR'S Planned Schedule
for 4,5,6 Dec 1998:
- DEC04-Fri: Traylor had a Squadron
promotion ceremony to conduct.
- DEC05-Sat: Traylor was to attend a
farewell party for his First Class John
Barfield, Traylor never missed a party but
he was a no show.
- DEC06-Sun: Traylor had committed himself
to drive to San Diego, CA to move shipmate,
Todd Roger and wife who were transferring to
China Lake, a 3-1/2 hour drive one-way.
Traylor's Military
Identification card had been on him when he was
found and the Officer-of-the-Day, at Weapons
Test Squadron, LT Neviou and AO2 Hall were
notified, but Mrs. Traylor was never called.
A resident of Inyokern saw
Traylor's truck sitting on the dirt road near
the Traylor home on Friday and Saturday, Dec 04,
05, 1998.
A neighbor told Mrs. Traylor how
her husband had been parking his vehicle in the
desert in the evenings for a couple of weeks
before his death. From where Traylor parked he
had a clear view of his home without being seen
himself.
Traylor's AO1 "Shorty"
Wellington and AME3 Gerry Sims claimed to have
driven to the Traylor home on Saturday, Dec 05,
1998, searching for Traylor but did not see
Traylor's vehicle sitting near the Traylor home.
AO2 Phil Kamp's wife, Brenda
stated that Traylor started to act strange, no
longer would he let anyone drive him home after
he had had to much to drink; instead Traylor
would leave the social gatherings when no one
was aware, this was just prior to his death.
During Mrs. Traylor's
investigating she was told her husband often
expressed his love for her and looked forward to
her return from SF at Christmas permanently; and
how he expected a visit then from their first
grandchild.
Mrs. Traylor had to harass the
Naval Crime Investigator Service's (NCIS) for
their results, it was a duplicate of the
Sheriff's Report. NCIS reasoning behind the lack
of a JAG investigation was because Traylor was
found off the base and it was Kern County's
responsibility to investigate. The Navy was
tossing the case back to the County.
After six-months of waiting Mrs.
Traylor received Coroner D. Brown's report. The
report was vague and assumptions were made about
the Traylor's separation supporting suicide. No
internal autopsy had been performed to validate
the gun and shells found in Traylor vehicle with
him were the weapons that killed him. There were
no X-rays. No tape recording of the external
autopsy or diagram. No resin testing of the
hands - proving Traylor held the gun. Last, no
time of death was established through eye
testing or did the report state if rigor had
set-in yet,how long had Traylor been dead? A
Toxicology Test was done showing an alcohol
level of 0.28 but no urine test to back it.
In June 1999, Mrs. Traylor met
with Kern County Coroner M. Kaiser at
Bakersfield, in protest of the suicide theory
and present the true facts. Coroner Kaiser
agreed there was not enough evidence to justify
a suicide. She changed the death certificate to
"undetermined" and amended the Coroner's Report
- still the case was not reopened by the county.
Mrs. Traylor was not able to
obtain an appointment with the China Lake Base
Commanding Officer CAPT C. H. Johnston, to
present the new death certificate and to again
request a reinvestigation. Nor would the
California Congressman William Thomas pursue the
case. The FBI stated they saw no crime
committed.
Traylor's best friend, "The
Gunner" avoided Mrs. Traylor for a year after
the death. When she was finally able to corner
him he told her "All you want to do is talk
about Traylor, I want to believe it was a
suicide," and avoided Mrs. Traylor from then on.
The Summer of 1999, Mrs. Traylor
drove her husband's vehicle to the base gas
station and while inside paying she noticed CDR
Budnick, the Squadron Test Pilot, standing
frozen in shock staring at Traylor's vehicle
like he'd just seen a ghost until he saw Mrs.
Traylor and regained his composure.
In November 1999, Mrs.
Traylor obtained the photographs of the scene of
death from the County Technical Laboratory. The
photos revealed the following:
- Traylor is shown sitting behind the
steering wheel of his vehicle with his cap
on his head and his glasses in his right
hand.
- A shotgun is pointing at Traylor from
the floorboard of the passenger's side of
the vehicle with the barrel propped against
the side of the console, a card, and a "Bud
Light" beer can.
- Blood is shown running straight down
Traylor's right-thigh verifying he died
where he was found.
Mrs. Traylor can verify the
blood location and pattern in the vehicle,
because on Monday, Dec 07, 1998, the day after
Traylor was found Mrs. Traylor reclaimed her
husband's vehicle. The vehicle has not been
impounded in a police lot but towed to a
business garage in Inyokern on Dec 06.
Blood was found on the front of
the console and the cup-holders in that area -
the console divided the bucket-seats. Blood was
found near the gas peddle and the seat part of
the driver's buck-seat and blood dripped to the
floorboard. But, the largest splattering of
blood is on the drive-shaft.
A box of shells (birdshot) was
on the passenger seat with opened mail.
When Mrs. Traylor presented
these photos to Kern County Homicide Officer
Johnson for answers and a reinvestigation he
became angry and escorted her out of his office.
After AO1 Wellington viewed the
photos he stated "the Squadron never thought
Traylor committed suicide". Unfortunately, the
Squadron couldn't help - they had been given a
"Gag Order" not to speak to Mrs. Traylor; they
feared for their own lives if they talked.
CONCLUSION
The investigation was shut down because the Navy
had Kern County close the case immediately
without an investigation through their "Good Old
Boys Connect", call the death a suicide and lay
blame on the wife.
So, it wasn't necessary to
notify or even contact Mrs. Traylor for
questioning as a suspect of murder. That is why
Homicide Officer Johnson so bluntly informed
Mrs. Traylor her husband had committed suicide,
nine hours after Traylor had been found.
To strengthen their suicide
theory, there was a letter found in the vehicle
addressed to Traylor asking him to sign a
waiver. This was assumed to be leading towards
divorce papers in the first Coroner's Report.
The letter actually concerned Mr. Traylor's
release from Mrs. Traylor retirement money. Mrs.
Traylor of course, was never questioned about
the letter.
Traylor, himself was an
extremely private individual and more so about
his personal life. The only two people that had
information on the Traylor's marriage were The
Gunner, (CWO2 V. Howell), and Mr. Richard
Rohrlick, the base counselor. One of these two
people gave the background for the theory of
suicide.
The vehicle was moved and never
sealed-off because again there wasn't going to
be an investigation. The Coroner's Report lacked
vital information, as stated previously. The
Sheriff's Report excluded fingerprints,
footprints, or tire prints from the scene.
Photos: show Traylor's hands and arms had no
blood or blow-back from skin on them. Traylor
didn't drink Bud Light beer as the photos show
from inside the vehicle; and he didn't take his
glasses off and hold them after he shot himself.
The photos were staged.
When Traylor made the statement
to his wife "he didn't think he was going to
live long" that was a tip-off his life was in
danger. He tried to avoid his death by hiding in
the desert. But Traylor was ordered to the
Thursday night military get-together; here he
was gotten drunk, followed, stopped just short
of his home, and killed. Traylor's shotgun was
obtained from his home by gaining entrance
through the bathroom window - so identification
was not necessary. The squadron get-together may
have occurred at the Sierra Club, Inyokern, CA a
mile from the Traylor home.
The China Lake Base is a highly
secured installation due to warfare weapons
developed there. Traylor was military property
for fifteen years, there should have been a JAG
investigation by the Navy.
In 2000, Mrs. Traylor again
tried to re-open the case by contacting Kern
County and she received a reply from Sheriff
Sparks threatening to reverse the cause of death
"Undetermined back to suicide" if she continued
to pursue the matter.
In Aug 2003, Prof. J. Starrs,
Dr. J. Frost, and team from George Washington
University, Washington, D.C., performed the
internal autopsy on Traylor. It was found that
the angle of the shot was from the upper right
side of the chest to the lower left side of the
media. The angle of the shot was not possible
inside the confinement of the cab of the
vehicle.
THEORY
The shot came from outside of the passenger's
side of the vehicle when Traylor leaned over and
opened the passenger's door. The impact forced
Traylor's body back into the area of the console
and the drive-shaft of the vehicle where the
majority of the blood was located. There was no
blood on the dashboard, steering wheel,
windshield, driver's door, or the roof of the
vehicle. According to the autopsy Traylor's
heart stopped immediately. Traylor's body was
set back into the seat, glasses placed in his
hand and cap put on his head. Some item was
removed from Traylor's right thigh that left a
square pattern clear of blood. There was no
blood on the beer can or the card that supported
the gun pointing at Traylor. Again Mrs. Traylor
can verify the location of the blood splatter.
Last, Traylor's wristwatch was not on any of the
photos from the scene but returned to Mrs.
Traylor with the personal effects.
The whole concept of suicide is
an insult to Thomas R. Traylor's integrity.
QUESTION:
Why wasn't Mrs Traylor notified that Sunday?
It wasn't necessary. Her name and SF phone
number were written on an envelope next to the
Traylor's kitchen phone.
Why was it not necessary to
identify the shotgun as being owned by Traylor?
(The gun had never been registered nor had a
hunting license been bought. Traylor had not
used any of his number of guns in years nor in
the thirteen months he had been at China Lake
and his only acquaintances were military.
Traylor also owned a handgun - which would have
been easier to use in the vehicle).
Traylor grew-up outside of El
Paso, TX, enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1983, a
Navy career-man retiring in five years. He was a
kind-hearted, soft-spoken man with no enemies.
If you have information about this case, or
would like to contact Mrs. Traylor,
email
us and we'll forward your message to her.
|
|