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MISSING: Darrel “Bubba” Johnson Sr.

3h ago29:205,031 words
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At a busy campsite one summer night, Darrel “Bubba” Johnson Sr. says goodnight and zips up his tent. By sunrise, he’s gone. No Bubba. Just a borrowed flashlight, a phone that pings but is never found,...

Transcript

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Hi, Crime junkies, it's Frit.

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Investigative journalists Kylie Loat digs into cold cases and missing persons from New England. Working closely with families and communities to advocate for the truth. If you care about justice the way we do, this podcast belongs in your queue. Listen to Dark Down East now, wherever you get your podcasts. Hi, Crime junkies, I'm your host Ashley Flowers.

And I'm writing solo today to bring you a story about a very strange disappearance that took place in the summer of 2024. A man who was with a big group at a busy campsite goes into his tent to sleep one night and by morning he's just gone.

The initial assumptions that maybe he walked away, maybe he just kept going.

That's the theory police appeared to accept pretty fast. But over a year and a half later, there's still no reason why. There's no recovered wallet, no cell phone, no physical trace of where this man went.

Just one clue that might suggest he never left at all.

This is the story of Darrell Baba Johnson Senior. [Music] It's Saturday, June 29, 2024. Afternoon, when New Mexico State Police Officer Jonathan Gonzalez arrives at Canges Lake State Park. It's windy out in the desert where he's meeting a crew of campers who just reported a friend of theirs missing.

Are you the one that calls? Do you call him? He's talking to a small group of campers that appears to include Alejandra Diaz, who goes by alley. Her daughter's Vanessa and Roxanne and Roxanne's husband, George. It was Roxanne who made the report about their missing friend.

And in it, she mentions 30+ people in their camping party. But according to the report, when Gonzalez arrives, these are the only four from their group that he notes speaking with. Now we spoke to a couple of these same people like Ali. And she said that everyone else, including her boyfriend, who was with them, Ernie, was out searching for Baba. Now the story that these four give starts shaping everything.

They tell the officer that the missing man's a family friend. 67-year-old Daryl Johnson Senior, known as Baba. He made the nine-hour drive from Phoenix, Arizona, where he lives, two New Mexico with Vanessa, arriving the day before on Friday to celebrate Roxanne's birthday. Now this was a big family-friendly event.

I mean, Roxanne says most of the party were kids under the age of 18. And everyone is having a great time all day Friday. And somewhere between 11pm and midnight, Ali says that she checked on Baba in his tent before he went to sleep. He said he was all good. But then, by 7am, once she was up, Baba's not there.

And not like he had packed up and left, his bags still in Vanessa's car. And he couldn't have left without her anyway because she's the one who drove. But according to Ali, his phone and wallet were gone too, like all the stuff he normally had on him.

So at first, they thought that maybe he just went to find the bathroom,

or maybe he took a walk. But after a few hours passed, they ended up reporting him missing. Does he take off like this? No. I mean, he walks home every now and then because he lives in Phoenix.

But that's in Arizona. Not out here. No, you don't have nobody here.

Here, that's what we're like looking for.

We went around. No, that's a thing. Like, this area is really, really rough terrain. So it's kind of awkward for him just to walk off in the middle of nowhere. Why would he take off all of a sudden? Oh, you guys were, you didn't get into it with him or anything.

No. That's my mom's best friend. Gonzalez asked about drinking, medication. Anything that would change the urgency. And they say no, Baba doesn't drink.

And this comes up more than once. They're adamant. Now there were other people drinking, but according to Ali, nothing was out of control or anything. Though she does mention that her boyfriend, Ernie, may have been drinking a little more than she would have liked.

So anyways, I was like, well, you need to stop drinking.

Then Baba says, if you have said to him, I said,

"Oh, you just need to stop drinking."

Because I was wanting to upset you, you know.

And then I might have had upset because I told him to stop. When our reporter Madison spoke with Ali, she said that there may have been something going on between her and Ernie because of his drinking, but whatever it was, it wasn't a blow-up. And he didn't even involve Baba.

She said, at most, Baba might have been upset just because Ali was upset, but that's it. According to her, soft spoken Baba wasn't involved in anything that she would even label as an argument, let alone an actual altercation.

So within 15 minutes of responding to this report, Gonzales is already circling around an explanation. Well, at this point, it sounds like he might have this one of his right out of here. So at this point, we're going to put out a bowl of firm.

I mean, that's all we can do. Because if he was around here, they would have spotted him. I think he's right about that. Depending on what part of the country you're from, you might hear camping and think trees and forests,

but this campground's mostly flat, almost as far as the eye can see. And no one sees Baba. At least not that morning. But someone had seen Baba the night before.

After, Ali said the night to him in his tent. There is this campsite that was two spots south, who says that at 12 30 a.m. Baba walked up to them and asked to borrow a flashlight. He didn't say why or what he needed it for,

but they loaned him one. And then they watched him continue to walk south along the shoreline of the nearby lake. But before you go thinking he fell in, let me tell you two things.

Campers who knew Baba insist that he would never go near the water.

He's not a fan. Like when they tried getting him to go out on a boat before, he was like nope, all good right here on dry land. And number two, even though Baba started walking south down the shoreline of the lake,

those same campers who loaned him the flashlight, watched him turn around and head back north toward his own camp. Now they say that he seemed drunk or under the influence of something. But again, everyone says that Baba doesn't drink or do drugs. The friends who knew Baba suggested to Gonzalez

that maybe these people just weren't familiar with how Baba normally spoke. No, that he talks really low, almost like him mumbles. Another neighboring campsite confirms that they saw the same grief interaction and Baba walking back toward his own camp. But then what?

People at the camp were still up. I mean, it was like peak summer. Lots of people were still sitting around the campfires talking having a good time. Did Baba make it back without anyone seeing him?

Or had he just kept wandering off into the pitch black night with his flashlight?

It could be both. Maybe Daryl had made it back to his tent on notice

and then gone out for a walk in the morning like they first assumed.

I mean, one tip that authorities got made that seem kind of credible. A man towing a boat says that he saw a black man walking along Highway 104 around 6.37am on Saturday. And this guy was wearing a red shirt and blue jeans. Now, based on where this sighting was, it would have been about a 20 mile walk from the campsite.

And it kind of sounded legit because based on his friend's statements and the last known picture taken of Baba while camping on Friday, the clothes that this man was wearing matched what Baba had on. But this man had one more thing. He was carrying a blue Walmart bag.

Now, Roxanne couldn't remember if they had brought any with them or not. But if they didn't, it doesn't make sense that Baba would have gone to a Walmart. I mean, the closest one was over two hours away. But it seems like one's Highway 104 enters the picture. The focus switches fast.

And Gonzalez starts talking like Baba for sure just walked off the campgrounds, reach the road and just kept going. Mystery solved. But that same day, police determined that the man on Highway 104 was someone else, a younger guy who was known in the area.

Our reporter Madison even tracked down the witness just to be extra sure that nothing was lost in translation and she confirmed. Yeah, they saw a different person total coincidence. But even in the short time before they ruled Baba out as being the sky,

walking on Highway 104, something important has already happened.

This walk away theories basically been reinforced.

And it's reinforced again in officers' minds when they call in to notify Baba's family

Of his disappearance.

They first talked to Baba's son, Daryl Johnson Jr., who is back in Phoenix.

So the son said if she would have pissed them off, I'm going to take him off.

The she, he's referring to is Baba's girlfriend, Ali. Now Daryl Jr. told us that when he said that to the officer, the officer was like, "Well, well, wait. What do you mean, girlfriend?" Everyone's told a lie, but what happens when one lie becomes a life, a movement, a conspiracy. I'm Josh Dean, host of Camillion, and I uncover true stories of deception scams so intimate

and convincing they fooled the people closest to them. These are strangers, their lovers, friends, and trusted allies. Because the most dangerous cons don't feel like crimes, they feel personal. Listen to Camillion, wherever you get your podcasts. Obviously, the officer had already been told by Ali herself that she's dating Ernie.

Baba is just a friend, but not according to Daryl Jr. This was the first time he was hearing about this other guy, Ernie. In that moment, he says he felt like he was being gaslit. Like, "What do you mean my dad wasn't with Ali in that way?" He says he'd seen text messages between the two, even heard conversations that made it seem otherwise.

None of this was making sense to Daryl Jr.

Never mind the Ali stuff.

His dad hadn't given him or his sister Jaina a heads up that he was going out of town, which was really odd because normally he would ask Daryl Jr. to take care of his dog Muffin if he's going to be away. But he says that he hadn't heard from his dad, so this is kind of the test. When Daryl Jr. gets off the phone with authorities, he asks friends to go buy and check on Muffin. Now, the dog's fine, Baba had left some food out and water, but not enough for a longer trip.

So within an hour of getting the call from the state police, Daryl Jr. and his family get in the car and they drive straight through the night from Phoenix to New Mexico. And as they drove, there was a thought that kept nagging at them.

Why had they heard about Baba's disappearance from state police and not from Ali?

I mean, Daryl Jr. would give Baba rides to and from Ali's house all the time, so she should have had his number. And it sounds like she did have his number because when Madison talked to Ali, she said she thought that she did call him early on. But Daryl Jr. insists that's wrong and spoiler alert that won't be the last thing that these two disagree on. Now, Daryl Jr. powers through the nine hour drive. He doesn't stop at a hotel or anything. Just goes straight to the campsite and gets there at like two o'clock in the morning on Sunday.

And he said that it was downright eerie there in the desert because he rolled up and he said the tents were gone. The cars were gone. The people who were with Baba during his last confirmed hours, he says he doesn't see them anywhere. And standing there, staring out into the darkness, it hits him. The people who last saw Baba aren't there to answer his questions.

And he gets this sinking fear that he might never know what happened to his dad.

Now, if you ask Ali and Roxanne, like we did, they say that they would have still been there at 2 a.m. That they didn't leave the campsite until later on Sunday afternoon. But it's hard for me to imagine how Daryl Jr. could have missed them. Either way, no one disputes that they were definitely gone by mid-day Sunday. Just one day after their good family friend was reported missing.

And the excuse Daryl Jr. heard was basically that everyone had to get back to work. Sorry. Daryl Jr. stays in New Mexico, though for a few weeks. As authorities conduct some searches on foot, on a TV's with a drone, boats even go out on the lake. There is just no sign of Baba, or his clothing, or the wallet, or the flashlight he borrowed, or his phone. But, they did use his phone to get one clue.

Right when Baba went missing, authorities were able to pinpoint when and around where his missing phone last pained. And the results were confusing. They could tell that it last pained somewhere near the campsite Saturday afternoon at 223 p.m. I mean, this is two and a half hours after Roxanne even called the report Baba missing.

Now they go and try and find this phone around the campsite, but they have never been able to locate it.

And it doesn't appear to have ever been turned back on again. So what does that mean? Did someone at the campsite have it?

Did Baba just drop it somewhere before he disappeared?

I mean, there is this one scenario that has played out in my mind that I think makes a lot of the puzzle pieces in this story fit.

Some people have suggested maybe Baba went looking for the campsite bathrooms...

But after we talked to a lot of people who knew Baba, they were like, maybe, but honestly, Bubba's the kind of guy that would have no problem,

just like finding a secluded area and pop in a squat out in nature. So what if he did that?

What if he at some point went to the bathroom and then eventually realized that he can't find his phone?

He goes looking, realizes it's too dark to even search, so he stops and asks a neighbouring campsite for a flashlight. It would explain why he walked off in one direction, then turned around and walked in the other. Is he looking for something? Did he get lost? Did he somehow go into the lake accidentally and was unable to get out?

We were told that Bubba couldn't swim, so that's very possible. Now one very interesting thing that came up later after a PI named Lewis Carlos and a journalist named Crystal Gutierra started digging into this case. They said they followed the coordinates tie to that last phone ping and they say that it maps out to be in the water.

Now we know phone things aren't always precise, tower data can be me.

But if the phone really did end up in the water, that raises questions. Now I don't know if this can be ruled out completely because to this day, as far as we know, there have never been any divers out there in the lake to look for Bubba or his belongings. But people familiar with this lake all told us the same thing. In many cases, if someone goes into the water, they will eventually resurface. Because sadly, this kind of thing has happened there before. People can go missing in this area.

But it's really rare for someone to vanish completely without leaving anything, like even bits of clothing behind. Or without their body floating up to the surface if they really went into the lake. And that is what makes Bubba's disappearance so unsettling. Eventually, Daryl Jr has to return home without his father. And without any answers, but he does have a lot of questions.

First of which, is why Ali's telling police Bubba isn't her boyfriend?

And where did this guy Ernie come from? And if Bubba came along and Ali was there with her boyfriend, then why does he see two sleeping bags in Bubba's tent when the family got access to the body camp footage? Now Gonzales tries to clear up whatever this weird love triangle thing is by phone since Ali had gone back to Phoenix. And yours part of that conversation? No, Daryl's my friend.

Ernie is my boyfriend. He's been my boyfriend for 13 years. So how come Daryl Jr saying that you and his dad were dating?

No, we have never dated, he lives with me, overseeing your lives with me. You've lived with me for the last two years.

Well, how come the family keeps saying that that you and Daryl were boyfriend and girlfriend?

No, we're not. We've known each other for about 40 years. You lived here with me. Okay, so he was into a boyfriend. I have never had any kind of relationship like that with him. Bubba's best friend Tony told us that Bubba introduced Ali to him as his girlfriend, not as a friend or as a roommate. But Ali stood firm on this one, then on the call with Gonzales and even now when Madison talked to her too.

She said that Bubba is like family, but that they'd never been intimate in all the years that she'd known him. And when presented with all the things people told us to the contrary, she said she can't speak for why Bubba would tell people anything different. She said maybe people just assumed they were together because they lived together. But she claims that Bubba knew she was with Ernie, that Ernie would spend the night at her house when they were dating while Bubba was living there. So it wasn't like she was even keeping Bubba from Ernie and Ernie from Bubba.

And apparently, they were cool with each other. And while her daughter Roxanne was talking through the events of Friday, she told Madison unprompted that they'd even given Bubba several sleeping bags since all he had was a tent. So maybe there was nothing to the two sleeping bags on the body camp footage. Maybe there was nothing to any of this. Everyone's told a lie, but what happens when one lie becomes a life, a movement, a conspiracy.

I'm Josh Dean, host of Camillion, and I uncover true stories of deception sca...

These are strangers, their lovers, friends, and trusted allies, because the most dangerous cons don't feel like crimes, they feel personal.

Listen to Camillion, wherever you get your podcasts.

According to Tony, it sounds like something might have been bubbling under the surface. He told Madison that months before Bubba went missing, Bubba had called Tony after some kind of uncomfortable interaction involving Ernie at Ernie's house. Tony says this was not a physical fight or anything, but like Ernie had showed up, Bubba felt disrespected so he left. And after that, Tony says that Bubba started seeing his relationship with Ali differently. He started feeling used emotionally and financially.

It might seem hard to hear everyone's story and make the pieces fit together, but maybe they do.

Whatever Bubba's arrangement with Ali was, it seems he clearly did know about Ernie.

And it seems like the two men could hang around one another and be cool. And I'm not taking anyone's word here, there is a picture of Bubba Ali and Ernie, just the three of them, hanging out in camping chairs together smiling that last Friday. This is actually the last known picture of Bubba, but remember what Ali said to Gonzalez that Ernie was drinking. It was making her upset and maybe that made Bubba upset. We got our hands on Facebook messages between one of Ali's daughters and Bubba's niece and those messages echo that.

I'm going to have a voice actor read one of them.

Some are saying there was an argument. Bubba is very protective of my mom. The only thing Bubba and I talked about the night before was he didn't like how my mom's boyfriend gets drunk and talks to her.

Very childish. Nothing abusive. I told him not to worry that if the boyfriend acted up, we'd all tell him something. He told me, you know, I don't go for any man to disrespect a female, especially your mom. Everyone seems to agree that if an argument happened, Bubba might have removed himself. He might go for a walk, so maybe that's what happened. The problem with this though is that's not anyone's story. No one is saying that there was some kind of beef and he went on a walk. Everyone is saying that there was no fight. No one at the campsite says they saw him leave. They say he went into his tent and the next thing they know he's just gone.

It's possible that Bubba walked off and got lost, but his family can't shake the feeling that they're just not getting the whole story. Something feels off, and they aren't the only ones who feel that way. Our reporter spoke to a woman named Sicily. She has a lake house near the park and she was there that same weekend. She had an interesting story to tell. She says that about a week after Bubba went missing, she ran into a small crew who was out looking for signs of him. It was Ali, her daughter Roxanne, and Roxanne's husband George.

Now they were driving around asking if anyone had seen Bubba, and Sicily didn't have any helpful info, but in the conversation one critical thing came up.

She was asking something like, "Oh, well, you know, if he walked away to use the bathroom or take a walk or something like, did he at least have his phone on him?" And that's when Sicily says that they told her Bubba wouldn't have had his phone because they'd found his phone in his tent. But in the records we have, it's the opposite story. I mean, we know his phone paying Saturday afternoon at 223pm near the camp area. But, according to all the records and people's official stories, Bubba's phone was never recovered. Now Sicily didn't know that at the time.

But even without that knowledge, she told our team that the vibes were just off. So off that she says she went back inside and told her husband she felt like something bad had happened to this Bubba guy.

Now we asked Ali about this, and she denies this. She says, "No, they never said they found a phone never had it in their possession."

Roxanne says this had to be a misunderstanding. Like, maybe they'd been explaining that the police said the phone less peeing near the campsite, so maybe it was still there somewhere, not that they had actually found it themselves. Now there is one more witness citing that I am struggling to make sense of two. The tip came like a year after Bubba went missing. And it was from a couple who lives off Highway 104. Now we went and spoke to them directly, and they say that the Saturday that Bubba was reported missing,

around eight or nine o'clock at night, they were driving home from the store when they saw a black man in a white t-shirt, not a red one.

On the side of the road, right where they were coming to a stop before their ...

What stood out wasn't just that he was there in some remote area, or that he was one of the only black men they'd seen in their town, which was predominantly full of a Hispanic population. It was how scared this man looked. They say that he was reacting to a car on the other side of the road, possibly some kind of sports car. And it's interesting because the husband remembers his car being red, while the wife thinks it was maybe metallic, like a silver or gold.

And it's like wild how the human mind can do that, right?

But either way, the wife told us that in her mind it felt like the people in the car were trying to get this man to come closer to get him in the car to go with them. But she also admits that she didn't actually see who was inside the car or hear any exact words. That was just the impression she got in that like quick, dark moment. Now when she later saw Bubba's missing person photo, that's when she felt sure that the man she saw looked like him, similar age and everything. But what does this mean if it was Bubba?

The people at the campground are the ones who reported him missing. If they would have found him while police and other people were out there looking, you think they would have told everyone, called off the search. So if this was Bubba, I think you would have to say that the people trying to get him in the car weren't from his group.

So to me that leaves two possibilities, one that this wasn't Bubba.

If that's the case and anyone hears this, who might know who that was, please let us know so we can rule this out. The witness feels confident that this couldn't have been the younger man people saw on Highway 104 earlier. She was clear that this man that she saw was at least in his 50s.

And that leaves the second possibility that this was Bubba, and whatever happened to him didn't involve anyone at the camp site,

meaning that maybe Bubba did go for a walk or something, and then he met with foul play at the hands of a stranger. The most statistically improbable, sure, but not if your story mixed onto the show. Crime junkies know that the unlikely happened more than you'd think, and to the most unsuspecting people. When we reached out to the New Mexico State Police, they wouldn't do a formal interview.

They did agree to answer some questions via email.

They told us there is no evidence to suggest criminal activity, and that according to witness statements, it is believed that Bubba walked away from his campsite. They also said, "The lack of recovered remains or belongings is explained as not uncommon in cases of missing persons, especially when environmental factors, time or location may affect the ability to locate physical evidence. Therefore, the absence of items alone is not treated as proof of foul play."

And while it is possible for someone to go missing and never be found, everyone else familiar with this area who we spoke to told us the same thing.

It would be hard, especially with this many people around, especially without a single confirmed piece of evidence left behind. Ali agrees with that. She thinks there is a chance Bubba's disappearance could be the result of foul play, just not by her hand or anyone else in their group for that matter. She says they would never hurt Bubba.

She even told us she doesn't think the New Mexico State Police did a thorough job enough, because they never tracked down the rest of her group.

They never went to her boyfriend Ernie to get his statement.

Now, she and Ernie have since broken up, but she still set no way no chance did he do anything. Even if he had been drinking. She told Madison she is willing to take a polygraph to prove to Bubba's family that she wants to find out what really happened just as much as they do. Now, we tried reaching out to Ernie for this episode, but as of this recording, we haven't heard back. Over a year and a half after Bubba's disappearance, there is still no body, no phone, no explanation that fully makes sense for Bubba's family.

And that's been unbearable. So if you know something that hasn't been shared, please call the New Mexico State Police dispatch at 505-841-9256, and they'll get you in touch with the right person. You can find all this source material for this episode on our website crimejunkey.com. You can also follow us on Instagram @crimejunkeypodcast, and we'll be back with a new episode.

We'll see you in the next episode.

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