Still adjusting to widowhood about a year after her husbandâs loss, a petite, brown-eyed Casper woman settled in at home one October evening to eat leftover ham and beans and watch âDancing With the Stars.â
Then she vanished.
Kris Richardsonâs husband of 42 years died in 2013. The pair ran a trucking company together, and Richardson went to work faithfully every morning at 7:30, Richardsonâs daughter Amber Fazio told Cowboy State Daily on Wednesday.
When the morning of Oct. 7, 2014, came and Richardson didnât go to work, Fazio and her husband Pete, who lived one corner away, went to look for Richardson at her home.
Both of Richardsonâs vehicles were parked at the house. Every door was locked except the internal door leading from garage to house, which was always unlocked. The front door was even dead-bolted, Fazio recalled.
Richardsonâs cellphone, purse, cash and identification were right there in her home. Fazio said there was no sign sheâd been packing; no sign of a struggle; no sign of forced entry.
The ham-and-bean pot sat in the sink, soaking in dishwater.
Fazio called the police.
As she grew more frantic, she called public transportation services to see if her mother had hopped a ride.
Fazioâs brother drove up from his home in Laramie. The family and other friends gathered and brainstormed.
Richardson was nowhere.
âI feel like I was in a fog most of the day once we realized she was gone,â Fazio recalled.
A Sign In The Desert
Nine years later, Richardsonâs location remains a mystery, and no one has been charged with a crime in connection with her disappearance.
When Cowboy State Daily published a story about a hunter finding a human skull in Wyomingâs Red Desert in the stateâs southwestern corner Nov. 11, the Fazios dared to hope.
âWhenever you hear that either a body or any remains have been found, I guess more for closure purposes, you hope this is the one,â she said. âI want to know sheâs at peace and that our family can have some type of closure.â
She and her husband scour the headlines and social media for clues.
Fazio doesnât have some innate feeling that her mother has died. She only hopes that Richardson hasnât been held somewhere as a prize or a target for torture all these years.
She hasnât gained any new information about her motherâs vanishing since it happened and doesnât have any hard evidence to link the event to the skull found in the Red Desert, near private oil wells and the faint crisscrossing roads leading to them.
Except, one of Richardsonâs employees had worked in the oil and gas industry, Fazio said.
â(He) had some infatuation with her,â Fazio said, theorizing the oil wells could have given that employee a âreason to be outside of Casper.â
Sweetwater County Coroner Dale Majhanovich didnât have much news on the skull Wednesday. A state anthropologist has it and is in the process of determining its age. If the skull isnât ancient, authorities will examine its dental formation. They may extract DNA if possible, he said.
The anthropologist told Majhanovich itâs possible the skull belonged to a male, but thatâs not definite, the coroner related from that conversation.
âSomebody Knows Somethingâ
Fazio does not believe her mother staged her own disappearance. Richardson was new at being a widow, but was close with her grandchildren and her family, and was devoted to her work. She was an avid Wyoming Cowboys fan and would have the occasional dinner with one of her few close friends.
Richardson was not dating at the time of her disappearance, said Fazio.
âSomeone else â no matter how you look at the situation â (even) if she chose to leave on her own, someone helped her,â she said. âSomebody knows something.â
With help from other family and friends, the Fazio family is offering a $250,000 reward for information leading to the discovery of Richardsonâs location and the conviction of a suspect in the case.
Fazio still struggles to get her head around the absence of clues in her motherâs case.
âItâs seriously the most perfect scene you ever would have imagined,â she said. âWe walked in and it was just like everything she told me the night before.â
âThereâs No Wayâ
The evening of Oct. 6, 2014, Amber Fazio had invited her mother to go to a football game with the family, where Fazioâs son was playing. That was when Richardson said she was going to cozy down at home instead, eat her leftovers and watch âDancing With The Stars.â
Though distraught after her husbandâs death, Richardson didnât seem suicidal, Fazio said.
âThe thought wouldnât cross my mind,â said Fazio. âBut to orchestrate a disappearance, thereâs no way.â
Richardson was then 61. She would be 70 today. She stood 5 feet, 4 inches tall and weighed 90 pounds, according to the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigationâs missing person database.
The database says Richardson is believed to have disappeared between 7:30 and 11:30 the evening of Oct. 6, 2014. If someone kidnapped her, that person wasnât after money: the database said Richardson left âa large amount of cashâ behind at home.
The DCI page instructs anyone with information about Richardsonâs case to call 307-777-7181.
âI never thought weâd be nine years in and still not know anything,â said Fazio.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.




