The Latest in Armchair Sleuthing: Who is Brian Laundrie and What Did He Do?

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hanselthecaretaker

My flask is half full
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Nov 18, 2010
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The first I’ve heard of this missing persons involved someone picking him up hitchhiking in the Tetons on the way to Jackson Hole.


 

XsjadoBlayde

~ just another dread messenger & artisanal kunt ~
Apr 29, 2020
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Possible update, about as optimistic an outcome as it first implied I suppose;


MOOSE, Wyo. (AP) — Authorities said a body discovered in northern Wyoming was believed to be that of a 22-year-old woman who disappeared while on a cross-country trek with a boyfriend now the subject of an intense search in a Florida nature preserve.

The FBI said the body of Gabrielle “Gabby” Petito was found Sunday by law enforcement agents who spent the weekend searching camp sites on the eastern border of Grand Teton National Park.

The cause of death not yet been determined, said FBI Supervisory Special Agent Charles Jones. Specifics on where and how the body was found were not disclosed.

“Full forensic identification has not been completed to confirm 100% that we found Gabby, but her family has been notified,” Jones said. “This is an incredibly difficult time for (Petito’s) family and friends.”

Boyfriend Brian Laundrie, 23, has been identified as a person of interest in the case. He was last seen Tuesday by family members in Florida.


Jones and other law enforcement officials declined to take questions during a Sunday evening press conference in Grand Teton announcing the body’s discovery.

Petito’s father, Joseph, posted on social media an image of a broken heart above a picture of his daughter with a message that said, “she touched the world.”

An attorney who has been acting as a spokesman for Petito’s family asked in a statement that the family be given room to grieve.

Attorney Richard Benson Stafford indicated that the family would make a public statement at a later date, and he thanked officials with the FBI, Grand Teton Search and Rescue and other agencies that participated in the search for Petito.

“The family and I will be forever grateful,” Stafford said in a statement.

An undeveloped camping area on the east side of Grand Teton bordering national forest land will remain closed until further notice while the investigation continues, Jones said.

Jones said investigators were still seeking information from anyone who may have seen Petito or Laundrie around camping sites in the area of Spread Creek, where law enforcement search efforts focused over the weekend.

The pair left in July on a cross-country trek in a converted van to visit national parks in the U.S. West. Laundrie was alone when he drove the van back to his parents’ home in North Port, Florida, on Sept. 1, police said.


More than 50 law enforcement officers on Sunday started a second day of searching for Laundrie at the more than 24,000-acre (9,712-hectare) Carlton Reserve in Sarasota County, Florida, a wildlife area with more than 100 miles (160 kilometers) of trails, as well as campgrounds.

Police in North Port, Florida said in a statement that they were heartbroken to learn of the discovery of the body and pledged to continuing searching for answers in the case.

Petito’s family filed a missing persons report Sept. 11 with police in Suffolk County, New York.

Petito’s family had been pleading for the Laundrie family to tell them where their son last saw her. Petito and Laundrie were childhood sweethearts who met while growing up on Long Island, New York. His parents later moved to North Port, about 35 miles (55 kilometers) south of Sarasota.

The couple’s trek in the Ford Transit began in July from Long Island. They intended to reach Oregon by the end of October, according to their social media accounts. But Petito vanished after her last known contact with family in late August from Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming, authorities said.

Police video released by the Moab Police Department in Utah showed that an officer pulled the van over on Aug. 12 after it was seen speeding and hitting a curb near the entrance to Arches National Park. The body cam video showed an emotional Petito, who sat inside a police cruiser while officers also questioned Laundrie.

Moab police ultimately decided not file any charges and instead separated the couple for the night, with Laundrie checking into a motel and Petito remaining with the converted sleeper van.
The boyfriend is most likely guilty, but most likely will get away with it, or a sentence so light it counts as getting away with it regardless.
 

XsjadoBlayde

~ just another dread messenger & artisanal kunt ~
Apr 29, 2020
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What makes you say that in this case?
His choice of actions after are so very beneficial for a guilty person to take, but so much more incredibly counter productive, dumb and harmful for any innocent person to even consider. Oh and he's mysteriously disappeared now, so I guess mommy and daddy's lawyer payed off pretty well.



Anyway, I hadn't realised this was a big news thing in America, it just popped up during a recent psychologist video binge, so would like to add a new perspective of which confirms some uncomfortable suspicions against a wider context;


“The Petito family certainly deserves answers and justice,” Reid acknowledged while decrying the inconsistent media coverage.

On Monday’s airing of The ReidOut, host Joy Reid addressed the massive media coverage surrounding Gabrielle “Gabby” Petito, the young New York woman found dead in Wyoming after going missing earlier this month while on a road trip from Florida with her fiancé.

Remains found in Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park were confirmed as Petito on Tuesday. Her boyfriend, Brian Laundrie — who has been named as a person of interest in her disappearance and apparent death — went missing after refusing to speak with investigators.

“The way this story captivated the nation,” Reid told her viewers, “has many wondering why not the same media attention when people of color go missing? Well, the answer actually has a name: Missing White Woman Syndrome, the term coined by the late and great Gwen Ifill to describe the media and public fascination with missing white women like Laci Peterson or Natalee Holloway while ignoring cases involving of people of color.”

While noting the inconsistencies in the media’s coverage of Americans gone missing, Reid acknowledged the sadness of the Petito case. “It goes without saying that no family should ever endure that type of pain,” she said, “and the Petito family certainly deserves answers and justice.”

On Reid’s weekday show Monday, panelists included Derrica Wilson of the Black and Missing Foundation and Lynette Grey Bull of Not Our Native Daughters Foundation. They pointed out a case of a missing 24-year-old young Black man who disappeared after a car crash in Arizona in June. His case is only now starting to get national media attention.

As previously reported, Daniel Robinson was last seen driving away from his job site in the Buckeye, Arizona desert on June 23. His father, David Robinson, has been organizing search parties, launched a website, and he even hired a private investigator after he felt law enforcement authorities weren’t providing much help. Their family has set up a GoFundMe to continue their search for Daniel.

Reid noted that she had not heard of Daniel Robinson’s case until a friend shared the information with her.

“It is definitely the issue,” said Wilson. “And we have been sounding the alarm for nearly 14 years because of this. When it comes to missing persons of color, men, women and children, our cases are not taken seriously, and no one is looking for us if we were to go missing.”

Reid asked guest Grey Bull why she feels missing indigenous women don’t get media coverage, and she replied, “One of the main factors and one of the key factors that a lot of people don’t want to talk about is that it’s racism. It’s systemic racism. We’re still fighting oppression in our tribal communities. We are still facing inequality across the board, whether it comes to our community, housing, jobs.”

“I mean, you can pick any topic in any country and have an issue there,” said Grey Bull. “So, it’s no different when it comes to missing, murdered indigenous women and girls.”
 
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Dwarvenhobble

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May 26, 2020
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So to break down what is known.

  • Gabby Petito is a social media influencer who does stuff on youtube and instagram.
  • She and her boyfriend Brian were doing some "Van Life" touring thing for a while (it's become a trend basically people convert vans to live in and tour round places, a sort of minimalist living for a few months to a year thing).
  • An incident happened and Police were called. The person calling the Police said they saw Brian hit Gabby but this wasn't relayed to officers.
  • Officers on the scene saw visible scratch marks on Brian's face and asked what was going on to which Gabby admitted to slapping him round the face.
  • After this contact somewhat goes dead exact for a text two weeks later to one of Gabby's family / friends but it referred to them by a name they don't normally use instead of their normal nick name.
  • Brian comes home in the Van without Gabby and apparently his parent's don't ask anything.
  • 2 weeks pass
  • Gabby determined missing due to social media pushes to get it attention.
  • Brian becomes a suspect
  • Brian's parent's lawyer up for him.
  • Lawyer says he's still in the house.
  • Parent's say Brian has left to go to some nature reserve place to meditate and clear his head because of all the chaos going on.
  • Parents of Brian say they can't find him but found his car in the middle of the nature reserve place and left a note.
  • Outdoor youtubers looking through their footage find in the missing 2 week period Gabby's van parked in a sort of public camping ground area / open camping ground area. No sign of Gabby but the door shuts as they approached in the car. (possibly reasonable due to dust etc from passing vehicles getting blown into places).
  • Location of the van in the footage checked and nearby Gabby's body was found
  • Autopsy shows signs Gabby's death was homicide not natural causes or anything else.
  • Feds get a warrant
  • Feds raid the parents house
  • Parent's claim they don't know where Brian is but they found his car at the nature preserve at left a note but won't tell authorities where the car was.
  • Reports of Brian hitch hiking, some claiming they may have seen him on a trail cam and a weird report of Gabby's phone setting off a GPS ping in Argentina or something?
Possibilities:

Brian is a monster and killed her over some petty shitty thing, based on some weird cryptic messages posted on a Pintrest it's suggested she may have had an abortion without telling him at some point. Brian is now trying to avoid justice

Gabby was a monster, attacked Brian and he fought back killing her in self defence and now he's freaking out

Something else happened, they had some weird bad relationship break up while on the road and I dunno Brian too her van to drive home while she was meant to camp out for a while then come home and while Brian was away some-one else attacked and killed Gabby and now Brian is blaming himself for not being there and thinking he could have prevented it and is freaking out in the woods over feeling he failed her.
 

Dwarvenhobble

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May 26, 2020
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Second post because I feel this warrants saying.

I'm fairly disgusted by all the outlets coming out with the "Oh another case of missing white woman syndrome".
Plenty of women go missing and get little attention. The sister of American McGee went missing and is still missing and that got maybe a handful of articles in local papers at most and that dude is pretty well known if not outright famous.
Gabby going missing made the news because:

1) She's an influencer even if I'd not heard of her before, she had an audience.
2) Said audience cared enough to spread it asking others for help
3) The youtube community that she is part of brought attention to it because one of their own was missing and so other youtubers covered it
4) It reached a point where it showed up on analysts SEO charts for bigger companies and publications so they started covering it and the story spread which generates more SEO and interest so more places cover it.

Many of the outlets and people on about "Oh another case of missing white woman syndrome" have no history of covering any of the missing persons cases they are suggesting should get covered more to begin with so they're jumping on the Gabby Petito thing just to get SEO clicks themselves. They're aren't being the change they're complaining that other outlets don't act the way they want when they as an outlet themselves have the power to act and be the change by reporting on the missing people but they won't because that's deemed a risk by their corporate overlords but instead of addressing that issue or admitting it they're pretending it's every other outlets fault.