Details: A Cincinnati woman named Phyllis Strub managed a credit union for a large Hilton hotel in the city. She was a trusted employee at the union, and had worked there since 1967 as a treasurer and teller. There seemed to be no reason that any would suspect her of any wrongdoing until July 16, 1980, when a federal auditor was waiting at the credit union when she returned from a family vacation. She claimed that because of it, she was not prepared for the auditor, and needed more time to get the paperwork together. The auditor worked for days but kept coming up $250,000 short. Phyllis claimed that she had to go put a deposit in the bank, but she never returned and was never seen again. Earl, her husband, assumed that his wife had stayed at the hotel that night, but the next day, he met w
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