In a heartbreaking development that has rocked the ongoing nationwide manhunt for Travis Turner, the 46-year-old former Union High School football coach from Big Stone Gap, Virginia, his son Grayden Turner, 21, has come forward with a handwritten letter found hidden in his father’s truck—the very vehicle left behind on November 20, 2025, the day Travis vanished into the Appalachian woods. The letter, discovered by Grayden on December 4 while retrieving personal items for his younger siblings, raises urgent new questions about what Travis may have been facing in the hours before he disappeared amid 10 felony warrants for child pornography possession and soliciting minors. “I found it tucked under the passenger seat, folded like he didn’t want anyone to see it right away,” Grayden told WCYB News 5 in an exclusive interview, his voice breaking. “Reading it… it doesn’t sound like a man running.

The letter, written in Travis’s distinctive block handwriting on a single sheet of yellow legal paper, reads in part: “If you’re reading this, something went wrong. Tell Leslie and the kids I love them more than anything. I never meant for this to touch them. There are people who know things — things I can’t say here. Protect the family. I’m sorry.”

Grayden, who has taken over as interim head coach of the undefeated Union Bears in his father’s absence, said the note was dated November 20 at 4:12 p.m.—roughly 90 minutes before Travis was last seen walking into the woods with a firearm. “He wrote it the same day,” Grayden said. “He knew something was coming.”

Investigators confirmed receipt of the letter on December 5 and are now analyzing it for fingerprints, DNA, and potential coded language. Virginia State Police spokesperson Robin Lawson called it “a significant development,” noting the reference to “people who know things” has expanded the probe to include possible third-party involvement or threats. “We’re treating this as both evidence and a potential cry for help,” Lawson said.

The discovery has intensified scrutiny of the timeline. Travis disappeared hours after learning police were en route for an interview in a child exploitation investigation. His earlier text to a relative—”My wife and children are in danger”—now reads differently in light of the letter. Retired detective Ken Lang told News Channel 11: “This doesn’t sound like a suicide note. It sounds like a man who believed he was being watched or targeted.”

Travis’s wife Leslie Caudill Turner, 44, was shown the letter by investigators and collapsed, according to family members. “She keeps saying, ‘Who was he afraid of?’” a close friend told the Bristol Herald Courier.

As the search enters its third week—drones, K-9 units, and U.S. Marshals scouring Wise County’s 400 square miles of dense forest—the letter has shifted the narrative from fugitive flight to possible coercion or foul play. Grayden, leading the Bears to a Region 2D championship game this Saturday, read the note to the team before practice: “Dad’s still fighting. So are we.”

The Union High community remains in shock. A vigil planned for Friday night now includes a public reading of the letter (redacted portions). “He was our coach, our friend,” said senior player Ethan Mullins. “Whatever he was running from, we want him home safe.”

With the letter now in evidence and new questions swirling—who were the “people who know things”?—the manhunt for Travis Turner has entered its most urgent phase. One thing is clear: the coach’s final words were not goodbye. They were a warning.