Dayton Daily News

Questions surround Ohio woman’s death

Her body is missing after husband said she died during trip.

- By Amanda Garrett

Philip and Roberta Snider left their Hartville home Jan. 4 for possibly their last trip to the Tennessee home of Elvis — Graceland. Only Philip made it home. He told his family, and later police, that Roberta — who would have turned 70 on Monday and had several serious medical issues — died in their Ford F-150 in a hotel parking lot across the street from the place that bills itself as the world’s most famous rock-and-roll residence.

Philip never called 911. He told police he saw an ambulance in a parking lot adjacent to the motel and waved it down for help.

Emergency medical technician­s whisked Roberta’s body away, Philip told police, but he didn’t know where they took her, so he came home.

Roberta’s brother called Hartville police last week after hearing what happened, hoping they could help the family bring Roberta’s body home.

“We talked to her husband who said she passed of natural causes,” Hartville police Chief Larry Dordea said Thursday. “At first blush, what happened seemed reasonable.”

But Dordea has since discovered that Tennessee authoritie­s have no record of Roberta’s body, nor any Jane Does who match her descriptio­n.

Dordea is now trying to retrace the couple’s steps along the 725-mile route between Hartville and Graceland in Memphis, Tennessee, looking for clues as to what happened.

“I think [Philip’s] recollecti­on may be suspect,” Dordea said.

But, he cautioned, it’s not clear whether Philip intentiona­lly misled police or not.

“It’s a traumatic time for him, a lot of emotional pain,” Dordea said. “I’m not ready to clearly support any kind of thesis on this now. We have to painstakin­gly, methodical­ly sift through the evidence.”

Philip, 72, and Roberta lived in a 3-bedroom condominiu­m in this Stark County town of about 3,000 people.

People knew Roberta as “Bobby,” her brother Brian Heisler said Thursday.

She had been a housewife and an avid crafter, he said.

Heisler last spoke to his sister on New Year’s Day.

Philip and Bobby told at least one of the children they were headed to Graceland, a place Philip wanted to take his wife to one more time before she died, police said.

Investigat­ing something that may have happened a couple of states away isn’t easy, Chief Dordea said.

Police have searched Philip and Bobby’s condo and taken some receipts from the trip. But the credit card they used was in Bobby’s name only and police cannot access those records without a judge’s order, he said.

Dordea said he hopes publicity might turn up witnesses who saw the Hartville couple during the journey.

“I don’t know what informatio­n may trickle in to put us on the appropriat­e path with this, or whether I may have tripped over it already,” Dordea said.

“Whether this is a crime or not, we want to find Mrs. Snider and get her back to family so she can be laid to rest in proper manner.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Roberta Snider left her Hartville home on Jan. 4 for a trip to Graceland, with her husband Philip, but never made it home. Hartville police are trying to retrace the couple’s steps to find the missing woman.
CONTRIBUTE­D Roberta Snider left her Hartville home on Jan. 4 for a trip to Graceland, with her husband Philip, but never made it home. Hartville police are trying to retrace the couple’s steps to find the missing woman.

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