One year after Robert Roos' mysterious death, the two people who deserve most to know what happened say they know the least.
Russ and Bertha Roos' grief has been accompanied by frustration, confusion and sometimes fear since their 33-year-old son, Robert, died from a massive head injury a day after he was found in the driveway of the rural Corcoran home where he lived with his parents.
Authorities have spent a year investigating the case yet have divulged little to Roos' parents, who are demanding to know what happened to their only son, a shy young man who studied at Stanford University.
"I want somebody to tell me, was this an accident? Was this a crime? Or what has happened here?" Russ Roos said in a recent interview at the family's home. "The information we get is this: 'It's under investigation and we can't discuss it.' Every which way we turn, we come to a roadblock."
The Hennepin County Sheriff's Office has declined to discuss its investigation into Roos' death with the Star Tribune, as did Hennepin County Medical Examiner Dr. Andrew Baker. Roos' death certificate says he died from complications of a blunt force head injury, but the manner of death -- homicide, suicide or accidental -- "could not be determined." Both Baker and a Sheriff's Office spokeswoman refused to say whether any of the three possibilities have been ruled out. Sheriff's Lt. Todd Turpitt and spokeswoman Lisa Kiava declined to discuss the case or say whether they're searching for a suspect.
"It's an open and active investigation," Kiava said.
Parents: Someone knows
Meanwhile, Russ and Bertha Roos say they've been left in the dark as telephone calls from investigators slowed, then virtually stopped.