1. Even if RB called-in the request for the welfare check, I have a feeling that she did so at the direction of others.
2. What would the alleged POI in the Black Tahoe stand to gain by making Mr Harrod disappear?
~jmo~
1. Seems to me that the natural response to discovering someone is missing is for the person who made the discovery to call LE. In cases where the guilty person was in a position to make the discovery, they often try to get someone else to make the call. It's pretty well known, I think, that the last person known to have seen a victim is often the first suspect.
2. The POI (to the family, not to LE) in the black Tahoe would have lost a friendship with an elderly man who apparently gave the family POI substantial sums of money. I'm assuming that the family POI did not appear in Bob's will, so that family POI could only lose by Bob's disappearance.
Slightly off topic but perhaps relevant in a sideways sort of way: My parents had the same housekeeper for close to 30 years. Part of the deal was that she brought some sort of dessert with her (cake, pie, batch of cookies, etc) each time.
When she had to retire due to back problems, my parents were sad. They gave her a gift of cash that worked out to $1K per year she had worked for them plus enough extra to pay the taxes on it. Us kids thought that was a lovely gift, considering all the happiness she (the housekeeper) had brought with her over the years. That woman has a hand with pie crust that I can't even describe!
After three years off, she contacted my father recently, said that the back surgery and PT had really improved her symptoms and she would he be interested in her resuming her job if he wanted her.
Us kids were
overjoyed to get that news! They like each other, she comes bearing good stuff to eat, she cleans the house and fixes him a homecooked meal... what's not to love?
The housekeeper sent us a group email recently saying my dad has been giving her moderately expensive gifts of jewellery, gift certificates for a day at the spa, etc, that she appreciated but felt uncomfortable accepting; what did we want her to do?
All of us wrote back saying "keep the gifts, it makes Daddy happy to give them to you, he likes you very much and looks forward to your day of the week."
In the aftermath, it came out that all three kids had been slipping her a small amount of money for years to encourage her to keep working for my dad. It's not that he's hard to work with (you could do all the cleaning his house needs in less than an hour because he does his own bed, vacuums, dusts and does his own dishes). It's just that he likes her, he trusts her and he looks forward to her pastries.
There are some things that are worth more than money. Having someone my dad trusts and enjoys go to his home once a week bearing goodies, socialising with him and cleaning up with him, while covertly reporting to us kids about anything she sees that might be of concern... heck YEAH that's worth a lot to us.
My dad can afford to give gifts. He's been doing so a lot since my mom died a year ago. The money means nothing to us kids. We've already decided that in the unlikely chance that he runs out of money, the three of us will contribute to continue to keep his income at the current level. I doubt that will come to pass because for the last couple years, he's made more off his portfolio than he has spent.
So I don't get the animosity towards the hairdresser. She clearly provided a service that Georgia probably really looked forward to, Bob liked and trusted her and in terms of his estate, his gifts to her were not outrageously large. None of the daughters were seeing Bob frequently, so they should have felt grateful to have a set of younger eyes to make sure Bob wasn't slipping mentally and in need of assistance.
I would have been begging the hairdresser to continue seeing Bob. Someone like that is beyond rubies and gold in value.