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Ray Martin DeFORD
Ray DeFord had a reputation as a bully and an outcast
at Oakwood Park. His parents, Tom Martin, 46, and Carolyn DeFord, 49,
were disabled and eaked out their social security checks by collecting
cans and bottles from the garbage. They were looked down on by other
tenants in the building and Ray was thought to be a trouble-maker.
DeFord, considered a hero by his family because he
woke them and guided them out of their bedroom window during the fire,
soon called attention to himself. First he bragged to the police that he
knew about the fire. Then he pulled the fire alarm in the hallway of the
Ramada Inn where survivors of the fire were staying.
On July 2, 1996 Ray Martin DeFord, 11, confessed to
starting the fire. He said he was “experimenting” with matches and
alcohol in the stairwell, when he accidentally set some newspapers on
fire. When he lost control of the flames he woke his parents and guided
them to safety. Ray DeFord would be charged with negligent homicide. He
would become Oregon’s youngest convicted murderer.
Ray
When
Raymond Martin DeFord was one and a half years old, his father hit
him over the head with a clipboard because he would not stop crying.
Doctors later testified that this injury caused the brain damage that
caused DeFord’s learning disabilities and agravated his behavioral
problems. Ray’s problems started with his father Tom Martin aka DeFord.
Tom Martin was a self-proclaimed “drifter” and drug
user with a needle and spoon tattooed on his arm. In 1969 he was
arrested for robbery in New Mexico. Martin blamed the crime, stealing a
car from someone who stopped to pick up a hitchhiker, on a friend. He
claimed he was only riding in the car and didn’t know about the crime.
New Mexico didn’t believe him and sentenced him to ten years for robbery.
Two years later Martin escaped from the New Mexico State Penitentiary.
A Texas native, Martin said he was “tired of the
desert” so he made his way to Oregon where it was green. Martin worked
as a short order cook. He worked under several different names and used
at least three different birthdates to hide his identity. In 1980 a
bloody riot at the New Mexico Penitentiary destroyed the records of
Martin’s crimes, further covering his trail. Eventually Martin married
Carolyn DeFord, a mentally retarded woman and on February 13, 1985 Ray
was born.
Abuse started early for Ray. Tom Martin was partially
paralyzed by a stroke and collected disability for himself and Carolyn.
No longer able to drive a car, Martin tooled around the neighborhood on
a three-wheeled bicycle collecting cans and bottles for recycling. In
his spare time Martin liked to watch pornography and smoke pot with his
son and older teenage boys from the neighborhood. When he got bored or
angry Martin would shoot Ray’s legs with a BB gun. Witnesses saw Martin
shoot Ray with BBs when the boy was as young as 6.
“Look at his parents, and you'll get the whole story,”
said Jed Dairy, a teenage neighbor at Oakwood Park. “He needed better
love and care; I don't think they know what he needed.” The DeFords were
not well-liked at Oakwood Park, where they moved in 1991. That year
Carolyn DeFord was convicted of harrassing a neighbor. It is possible
that Carolyn’s conviction prompted the move to Oakwood Park.
At 11 Ray DeFord was known as a bully. He owned a
python named Satan and regularly chased and beat up kids as young as 5.
He carried a knife “for protection” and often threatened children with a
BB gun. Ray had learned to blame others for his problems from his father.
His parents were always there for him when he got in trouble, too.
“One time he punched my son badly,” said Rafaela
Contreras Vargas, whose children were 5 and 9. “I complained to his
mother. She wouldn't say anything. She laughed.” Tom Martin taught his
son important lessons, like how to make cyanide gas from bleach,
detergent and Coca-Cola.
Teachers and other adults that came into contact with
Ray away from home found him to be a caring boy eager to please. Lisa
Mentesana, a reading coordinator at Barnes Elementary School who worked
durign the third grade with Ray and the Aguilar twins, who died in the
fire, said, “I never saw the child that they are saying that he is. I
never saw anything that would make me say this child is mean. I think he
was a little boy who needed lots of hugs and support. I just feel so sad.
”
Carol Pullen, the owner of Pet Circus, a pet store on
Tualatin Valley Highway, said that DeFord was an “exuberant little kid”
who seemed to have a great interest in animals and who cared about them
very much. She said that when Ray was shown respect he gave respect and
was very eager to please.
Ray was ostracized at school because he was a slow
learner who dressed in raggedy, dirty clothes. Kids would run from him
yelling “Ray germs” when he approached. Academically and socially Ray,
11, functioned on the level of a 7 year old.
Fire was a problem. Ray set fires on the counter in
the kitchen of his home. His parents didn’t punish him or even make him
stop. At least five times Ray set fires that could have got as badly out
of control as his fatal fire.
In 1994 Ray set a fire in the recycling bin at
Oakwood Park. His neighbor Raliegh Houk said that his son came running
into their apartment yelling “Fire.” Houk used a fire extinguisher to
put out the flames. Thinking that his son set the fire the boy was
punished. Houk said that DeFord admitted to setting the fire.
Houk told the police about this incident right away,
but he was not a credible witness. By the time DeFord went on trial Houk
was in prison for kidnapping. He had a previous record for burglary and
possession of a controlled substance. Nice neighborhood Ray grew up in.
After the fatal fire at Oakwood Park on June 28, 1996
Tom Martin(DeFord) and Carolyn DeFord were interviewed on TV and they
talked about how their son “the hero” rescued them from the flames.
Police investigating the fire soon heard rumors that Martin had been
overheard bragging that he had escaped from a prison in the southwest.
Soon “the hero” Ray was the main suspect.
Ray said he thought the fire had been set by three
kids from the neighborhood that were trying to pressure him into joining
their gang. When Ray was arrested for arson and murder, Martin said,
“What we need now is Perry Mason to find out who's done this thing.”
It didn’t take Perry Mason, just Detective Michael
O’Connell of the Washington County Sheriff’s Department. Ray confessed
to setting the fire to O’Connell. The detective said that Ray was
“pretty flat” emotionally while talking about the fire. He seemed to be
able to understand that eight people had died, but he didn’t seem to
understand what it meant.
Tom and Carolyn DeFord claimed that O’Connell had
coerced their son into his confession. Carolyn believed it until she
died of cancer at 51 in 2000. About nine months after the fire, Michael
O’Connell had the duty of arresting Tom Martin and sending him back to
New Mexico. Martin served a little over two years and was released in
1999. He returned to Oregon and now lives in the Hillsboro area.
Ray DeFord faced trial for murder and arson, the
youngest person ever charged with murder in Oregon. Ray was so young
that he caused all kinds of problems for the system. Oregon’s juvenile
justice system was set up for children 12 and over. DeFord’s parents had
to waive Ray’s right to a verdict and sentence in 56 days so that he
could be tried as a juvenile after his 12th birthday.