I could see someone helping RFG leave voluntarily; that is not criminal.
Also, Roy Gricar did drive a distance to commit suicide. Joan Rivers late husband killed himself in another city from his home. I see that a barrier to the suicide theory.
Totally agree with you that enlisting the help of another to leave ( disappear) is not criminal as he did not stage any crime. As you know, I believe, that, in the absence of a body or any evidence of foul play, this is what happened.
I also believe that there was someone WAITING for him in a major city in the US or in another country who had things " ready" for his upcoming life, financially and otherwise. Someone who knew him and loved him. ( Family in Slovenia, maybe, if not a lady).
My point is that with him not being a celeb. or a celeb's spouse like Edgar was, and having all the time in the world in the sleepy small hamlet of Bellefonte to plan and commit a suicide right there in his own home while Patty was at work, or exercising at the Y, or just asleep at night, he would not have had to leave home.
MAYBE the location of Roy's suicide was one of the things Ray struggled with to put the pieces together. It has been said by the family that Ray didn't know a lot about mental illness. ( I suspect, though, that he often was present in the courtroom when mentally ill people faced charges and were sentenced to first Ohio and then, PA locked mental units in prison or other secure mental facilities.)
However, Roy was Bi- Polar and not compliant with his meds. Ray was not Bi- Polar, and had no mental issues at all in his life history, including depression, according to the police reports regarding his health records.
Bi-Polar disordered people can cycle rapidly from a mania to a depression, or have features of both manic
actions and depressive
thinking. We are finding out that " some" psych. medications actually make this combo more common and that's disturbing in 2017.
Because the combo of manic actions with depressive thinking is usually indicative of a long- term psych. disorder, I don't equate Roy's suicide with Ray's disappearance in any way, except that they were brothers and both are now gone... which is tragic for the few family members they loved.
Regardless, it is very common for suicide to occur in the person's home. Usually, we can control our environment better at our own home than anywhere else. Also, there is a type of final comfort in dying at home according to my Psychology studies. I can provide statistics if you'd like. I've seen it with age groups from teens to octogenarians. ( Nurses see some awful tragedies).
Helper to leave taking of his own choice to a place he had picked out and planned for is not in the same category as a person who helped him commit suicide and then hid the body, or watched him die in another way and hid the body. That person would not have been his " helper friend" but a criminal, and Ray would have known the burden he was placing on another person and the criminal culpability. I don't believe he would have done this. I truly do not think he would have involved anyone else in a suicide..
I also do not think he committed suicide, mostly because I think he would have gotten help for depression or another psych. disturbance if one had been present in his life to the point that it was causing him to have thoughts of self- harm and death. Also, there is the fact that he went through it with his brother and knew it was a final act of a person who had other options- treatment facilities, medications, therapy.
I consider suicide to be the least likely option for his disappearance by almost 99.9%,.
I'm in my late 50's, and it ain't that old when ya get here, ya know?
I feel like I have a LOT to live for, and I believe he did, too. Much more to live for than we can actually know.
I really hope I'm right, but we don't know.
Always enjoy the case discussion. I see things new ways every time. This is the first time I've considered the criminal charges a " helper" would face in an assisted suicide or concealment of the body after a suicide ( with knowledge of the plans beforehand).
A recent headline case caused me to stop and think about the laws affecting the second person, which Ray would have known, of course.