I'm sorry, but there is significant evidence that RFG was the person seen. The searches were done prior to 4/15, from what I've gathered. He googled a map to Lewisburg prior to 4/15. The idea that someone else could have done that is very unlikely.
There are 10 witnesses, that have been revealed, that saw RFG on 4/15. They all fit the timeline and didn't even know of the existence of the others.
PEF received the call. There is a record of the call. She passed the polygraph on the call. That witness number 11.
Aside from these witnesses, and the car, a bloodhound detected the scent of RFG in the parking
lot.
That is a significant amount of evidence that RFG was there.
Money is but one possible reason.
Here are some other possible reasons.
1. He was worried about someone he prosecuted tracking him down one day, and decided to
vanish.
2. He wanted to become a "legend," similar to Mel Wiley. Vanishing would prove his
superiority. (If that was the reason, he was quite successful.)
3. He was ultimately planning to commit suicide, but wanted to follow a
"bucket list" of things first.
There are number of reasons, possibly several, why RFG might have left voluntarily
The problem with statements like "there was NO reason," is that requires trying to enter into
RFG's mind. That, along with these other reasons, requires this mind reading. As RFG once said in court, "Motive, your Honor, is something we never have to prove."
#2 and #3 on your list (the bucket list and getting famous notion) are about as deep into mind-reading as anyone could be. However, have no problem entering RG's mind long enoigh to say that there is nothing is his life that would suggest he would walk away from all of his commitments and responsibilities. (And while we're at it, the walkaway proponents are so deep in Gricar's brain they have forgotten to look at the man's life up to that point in favor of rank
speculation about whether he had somehow managed to squirrel away enough money on a public salary to make up for walking away from an actual pension and Social Security.) The website written by his colleague (which was linked above last week) makes a strong argument that he wasn't a guy who would do that.
If you know that he had reason to be so afraid of something that he would walk away from EVERYTHING, including his life savings, retirement, all possessions, including the car he was
driving, his girlfriend and his daughter, then it is far more likely that this horrendous thing he
was afraid of caused his death. We haven't seen any indication of official malfeasance, the one reason a proud professional might walk away. He had divorced before, so breaking up with a
girlfriend--that would be easy. So I see ZERO reason for walkaway. Normally, if a man in his position disappeared, his car left abandoned, his laptop destroyed, everyone and his uncle
would say
foul play. That people atill have this walkaway scenarion going boggles my mind.
The most likely reason for his disappearance was that he was either killed by a professional
enemy (e.g., criminal) or a personal one. He could have been killed or injured somewhere else, transported to Lewisburg, moved to another vehicle (accounting for dogs scenting him in
parking lot only) and then his body dumped or buried. Or he could have gotten into a car in Lewisburg for some meeting, personal or professional, and then things went wrong from there.
The walkaway scenario does sell papers and provide fodder for discussion. But it doesn't make
logical sense. That LE has embraced the "three equally likely scenarios" explanation also boggles the mind. The whole point of LE is to test out the sceanrios and eliminate them. That they cannot do so in the case of a prosecutor smells to high heaven.i