With a checking of some things, walkaway
can be greatly weakened. It would be absence of any reasonable ability to get out of Lewisburg.
In reality, there was nothing "convenient" about it. The police spent several weeks search for a body, and discovered
nothing. The police checked his residence for any evidence of a crime, and found nothing.
It was, primarily, the witness sightings that put RFG outside of Lewisburg, days and weeks later, that generated the possibility of walkaway. It is the seeming lack of assets that generated the possibility of walkaway. It was RFG's interest in a prior walkaway case that generated the possibility of walkaway.
In short, it was the
evidence that has generated the talk of walkaway.
He had been passing off cases. As noted (and noted by another poster prior to my joining) the amount of his pension would be hire if his employment would end prior to retirement. His daughter gets that.
Now, that is a
possible motive.
The Treasury/Homeland Security link is noted here:
http://www.centredaily.com/2011/07/14/2834622/watching-the-watchmen-watch-us.html
It has come from two
independent sources.
The standard for a declaration of death is PA is basically, "we have not heard from the missing person, and we have made a 'diligent inquiry' for the missing person." You can read about it here:
http://www.centredaily.com/2011/02/18/2529829/gricar-is-alive-legally.html#storylink=misearch
LE basically does not have a role in a declaration of death, in this case, except to indicate what they did in terms of the "diligent inquiry."
The blog was first posted in 2010. Further, in the other missing person case that RFG was somewhat interested in, Mel Wiley, the police determined he left voluntarily, but he was declared dead.