Anonymous wrote:This guy is long gone. He was very smart in how he handled it all. He had two weeks to think things through. I think he thought there was a good chance she would never be found, and likely assumed that AT MINIMUM it would have taken WAY longer, but he clearly got his ducks in a row. He didn't say a thing to the police and he got out of dodge as soon as the youtube video surfaced. I'm sure his parents helped. We'll never see him again. He has not really slipped up one time in exposing himself other than coming back to Florida with the van but he had to show back up somewhere eventually. I'm sure he had a plan cooked up with his family before his tires touched florida ground.
Anonymous wrote:This guy is long gone. He was very smart in how he handled it all. He had two weeks to think things through. I think he thought there was a good chance she would never be found, and likely assumed that AT MINIMUM it would have taken WAY longer, but he clearly got his ducks in a row. He didn't say a thing to the police and he got out of dodge as soon as the youtube video surfaced. I'm sure his parents helped. We'll never see him again. He has not really slipped up one time in exposing himself other than coming back to Florida with the van but he had to show back up somewhere eventually. I'm sure he had a plan cooked up with his family before his tires touched florida ground.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the Laundrie parents were so concerned about their "missing" son, why weren't they out there looking for him? Why would they bring his car back home and essentially leave him in the reserve without transportation? Why weren't they on every news station pleading for their son's safe return? Because they knew in advance that he had murdered her and helped him get away, that's why. Why can't the police bring charges against these people for obstructing justice? don't they have bank records? flight records? phone records? something?!? Why are we searching in swamps instead of interrogating the very people who know his whereabouts? We're wasting a ton of resources on searching for this guy-the parents know.
Is the state of Florida going to sue them for all the resources being wasted looking for their "missing" son?
Anonymous wrote:How can they possibly think they could possibly still live in that house, with the amount of hate surrounding them rising each day.
Anonymous wrote:If the Laundrie parents were so concerned about their "missing" son, why weren't they out there looking for him? Why would they bring his car back home and essentially leave him in the reserve without transportation? Why weren't they on every news station pleading for their son's safe return? Because they knew in advance that he had murdered her and helped him get away, that's why. Why can't the police bring charges against these people for obstructing justice? don't they have bank records? flight records? phone records? something?!? Why are we searching in swamps instead of interrogating the very people who know his whereabouts? We're wasting a ton of resources on searching for this guy-the parents know.
Anonymous wrote:I agree, he is dust - that nature reserve is a red herring to tie up resources while he moves further and further away from home / his responsibilities.
What a disgrace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you believe he is willingly living in a swamp, with the bugs, gators, snakes and who knows what else without a tent?
He won’t stay there. He’ll hike along the perimeter and exit when he finds a safe, remote area. He probably knows that preserve well. I’m guessing he is long out of the swamp. Probably helped by his parents. He could easily be out of the country by now. I hope not.
being an international fugitive takes resources. Judging by his parents' house, they don't have those resources. If he fled the country he'll turn up eventually
Wrong. His parents owned four properties in Florida. Not everyone goes all out with new money purchases in gated neighborhoods.
On top of that they recently liquidated three - one condo received $50,000 in equity, another home sold for $20,000 in equity, and a third was $55,000 in equity. So they have/had $125,000 in cash without touching retirement or the rest of home sale values when he showed up with 13 days to run ahead of the police.
That's enough to lay low for 5 years in Mexico, learn the language and find a permanent out of the way community, as long as he doesn't trust the wrong people.
Wow. How recent is "recently"?