So family are saying in the trust proceedings that Bob died, in Placentia, sometime after 12 noon?
Conveniently, that turns the housekeeper into an alibi for son in law, as she's a witness he was in Bob's house from noon (with Bob already gone) until he left for Home Depot - and he has a receipt for that.
Exactly how can anyone maintain Bob died after 12noon though, when it's known he disappeared some time before that?
I suppose Paula's phone conversation with Bob is the crucial evidence being used here, to prove Bob was alive up until about 15 minutes before noon.
I'm sure Bob will have had life insurance. I wonder if the insurance company will want to carry out their own investigation, before making any payout?
I'd bet Bob did not have life insurance. He didn't like paying for LD. He had too much of his own money saved up to spend money on a monthly premium. He may have when his kids were young, but that was a long time ago.
I did think of that, but then I wondered - isn't it often tied up with work benefits? And if you cash in early, don't you lose a lot, and have to pay much higher premiums if you want to get insured again, when you're older?
I don't think Bob would have worried about his middle aged children getting a payout if he died, but there is maybe a chance he'd rather have kept up a policy than cash it in and see money going down the drain?
Perhaps Fontelle would be entitled to it, as his wife. In which case, the conservators probably stopped making any payments from the estate, and let the policy lapse, in my opinion.
Fontelle would probably be entitled to any pension Bob had and social security benefits.... I think it was probably those that the girls had stopped when it was discovered he was 'missing'.
So family are saying in the trust proceedings that Bob died, in Placentia, sometime after 12 noon?
Conveniently, that turns the housekeeper into an alibi for son in law, as she's a witness he was in Bob's house from noon (with Bob already gone) until he left for Home Depot - and he has a receipt for that.
Exactly how can anyone maintain Bob died after 12noon though, when it's known he disappeared some time before that?
I suppose Paula's phone conversation with Bob is the crucial evidence being used here, to prove Bob was alive up until about 15 minutes before noon.
Using PB's phone conversation still puts JeM with Mr. Harrod. If the below phone call between PB and Mr. Harrod really did take place, which I doubt, then Mr. Harrod disappeared between 11:30 am and 12 noon.
PB wrote:
"I called my dad that morning by telephone, he had obviously been getting quite a few phone calls that morning. Then I realized that my BIL was there and I DID hear him say he was going to the "hardware store". My dad responded to him in a favorable way. I told my dad that I would let him go and talk to him later. That was the last time that I spoke to him. Times vary as I could not tell you the exact time that I called Dad, I gave an approximate of sometime between 11 and 12 and found later it was probably after 11:30 a.m."
Bob's daughter JuM posted on her community forum...
"Nothing new here" and her laptop is overheating so she's not using it for much of anything.
Oh, and she's maintaining her weight.
"My dad responded to him in a favorable way." I mean really. I don't think it took place either, which is disappointing and clearly obstruction of the investigation when this is all litigated.
I have been thinking more about what travelbug is posting regarding AH. Maybe it is too easy to vilify everyone here-maybe there are shades of gray. Maybe he simply took advantage of the situation but didn't necessarily participate actively in it. Maybe he will be the one who will step up at the end of the day...you cannot financially benefit from a crime of this kind, so if everyone is knocked out of the beneficiary pool, I would think that AH or his immediate family might have some claim on the trusts. Maybe the combination of love of his GF and financial security will help him do the right thing.
Just the thought of OC Cold Case on one side and wrongful death litigation on the other side would make some hard decisions necessary for someone I would think.![]()
. On top of that they forced a confrontation over the trusts the day before he was killed and they found out that they were entitled to nothing while he was still alive. QUOTE]
<snipped>
Scary stuff, that.
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