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The problem is we don't know what he would have perceived as a serious physical threat.
I'm not saying that there was not a physical threat. I am saying that whatever was causing RFG to act oddly was
not a physical threat.
With 30 some years under his belt as a DA, and probably some mailed letters and maybe even some phone calls to his office, along with any reports coming in from the jail about inmate's mouthing off, he may have become a little callous about the whole threat thing. Nothing had ever happen that we know of. No reports of even somebody taking a swing at him after court.
I think an inmate's mother slapped him at a parole hearing, or something. A now convicted defendant threatened to kidnap and rape SPM, kill her, cut her up, and flush her down the toilet in his cell, which would be an impossibility.
Lets say he thought maybe someone might be following him, or he has seen the same vehicle sitting in the same place a number of times. Maybe some hang up calls at home. Nothing dramatic, nothing real sure. Just a nagging feeling. Would that be enough to cause the distraction that has been reported?
What would he do? Would he actually report to LE that he thought someone may be following him or would he be to goosy and concerned about what they would think, especially if there was nothing that was real specific to tell and just keep it to himself.
Well, it doesn't involve RFG necessarily telling anyone, just him taking stupid chances, like driving in a remote, underpopulated area, unarmed, where he couldn't call out.
Further, why would RFG
care what LE thought? He does not need the FOP endorsement in the next election and no one from LE will be hiring him.
Maybe the reason he took those lesser traveled roads was to see if that "feeling" was correct. Basically to catch a glimpse of someone if he was being followed. We don't know.
Possibly, however, he did this on 4/14/05, not just 4/15.
We can only make assumptions based on what we each would perceive as a threat and how we would react to it. Then use that information to base our speculations on how he would act.
We have to assume three things about RFG to support the conclusion, "Whatever was causing RFG's unusual characteristics was not a perceived threat to his physical safety." Those two things are.
1. RFG would know that taking certain actions would increase the likelihood of a physical threat being carried out. He was both bright enough and experienced enough not to go into an area where he would have a lower chance of getting help from LE if the threat was carried out.
2. He was acting strangely.
There is evidence, substantial evidence, of both.
Only a person who effectively thought he was bulletproof would be worried about a physical threat and walk or drive into a situation which would
increase that threat.
Something was bothering him, and it wasn't that he thought someone was gunning for him.