Agree with everything you wrote!
Consider that what has not been reported might be even more significant than what has been reported:
We know that Comunale
worked as a sales associate at Tri-Ed Ltd., which sells security products such as closed-circuit TV cameras -- these are really high tech total surveillance solutions that Tri-Ed sells to residential and commercial buildings. We know that
Comunale's father, Pat, is the President of Tri-Ed. We know that
"it was determined that Comunale, who worked as a sales associate at for security product company Tri-Ed Ltd., had visited the exact same luxury building."
I'm going to bet that The Grand Sutton at 418 e 59th Street was Tri-Ed client. This might explain the astonishingly fast turnaround time on the surveillance footage -- Pat Comunale likely [and rightly] made it a top priority and was able to tell NYPD exactly what it shows and when.
What we have not heard and never really came up is anything related to usage of Comunale's credit/debit cards after leaving the club and anything related to activity on Comunale's mobile device(s). In most missing persons cases these are usually the first things mentioned in the media and examined by NYPD; but it was the surveillance footage that has been discussed. I might be wrong but I don't recall hearing anything about the location of or status of Comunale's mobile(s), wallet or car. Kinda strange...
I think that the large safe, so big that NYPD had to wheel it out of James Rackover's apartment, is going to be significant. I doubt anything damning is in it but if they cleaned the safe as well as they cleaned the apartment no doubt that NYPD will find trace evidence of whatever might have been in there.
Just my thoughts, I'm probably wrong...
;-)