http://www.centredaily.com/mld/centredaily/14836948.htm
Gricar probe files turned over to state police
By Mike Joseph
[email protected]
BELLEFONTE -- Borough police this week turned over all their files on missing prosecutor Ray Gricar to a state police team that will investigate their investigation.
The state police Criminal Investigative Analysis team for western Pennsylvania, based in Bedford, took possession of a banker's box full of Bellefonte police paperwork at 9 a.m. Thursday to begin a six-week study of the entire case, police chief Shawn Weaver said Friday.
At the end of July, the state police team will have prepared a PowerPoint presentation and will use it as the basis for question-and-answer session with Bellefonte police and all other Gricar investigators, Weaver said.
"They could give us some possible avenues (of further investigation) or some insight," Weaver said.
Gricar, Centre County's district attorney for 20 years, vanished on April 15, 2005, eight months before he planned to retire, and hasn't been heard from since.
Weaver and detective Darrel Zaccagni said Friday that police in Minnesota and Michigan investigated two supposed sightings of Gricar last month -- a month of extensive national coverage of the disappearance -- to no avail.
In Minnesota on Mother's Day, May 14, a woman thought she saw Gricar dining in a restaurant with a woman, but the man turned out to be a dentist who has been well known to the community for 20 years, Weaver said.
In Grand Rapids, Mich., the following week, someone mistook a greeter in a Wal-Mart store for Gricar and called Bellefonte police. "It was a person that matched Ray's description, but he had been working there several years," Weaver said.
In both cases, Weaver said, Bellefonte took the initial reports from witnesses and relayed the information to Minnesota and Michigan authorities, who found and spoke to the targeted man and came away satisfied he wasn't Gricar.
"It comes and goes in spurts," Weaver said. "It seems that every time there's national coverage, it tends to generate a lot of interest and calls. Unfortunately, they haven't panned out."