At 11:30 a.m. (
EDT) on April 15, 2005, Gricar called Fornicola to inform her that he was driving through the Brush Valley area northeast of
Centre Hall. Gricar failed to return home, and late that evening, Fornicola reported him
missing. The car contained his county-issued
cell phone but not his laptop computer, keys, or wallet. Pennsylvania authorities asked the
FBI to analyze Gricar's bank accounts, credit card records, and cell phone records, but found no clues as to where he may have been. Divers searched the area of the river near where it was found over the next several days, but found nothing else. however, it was badly damaged, and analysis by the FBI, the
U.S. Secret Service, and the data-recovery firm
Kroll Ontrack failed to recover anything from it. In April 2009, Bellefonte police revealed that before Gricar's disappearance, someone had used the home computer at the residence he shared with Fornicola to perform
internet searches on topics such as "how to wreck a hard drive", "how to fry a hard drive" and "water damage to a notebook computer". In June 2011, Gricar's daughter Lara, who was trustee of his
estate, petitioned Centre County to declare him dead. County President Judge David E. Grine
declared him "dead in absentia" on July 25, 2011. The following day, police in
Utah arrested a man resembling Gricar on a
misdemeanor charge who refused to reveal his identity. Centre County authorities sent copies of Gricar's fingerprints to Utah, but they did not match. Authorities eventually identified the man. ==Theories==