Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We now know he was “extremely upset” and in a bad mental state when he left the house. Knowing this, the location and condition of his body, that there was never a camp fire, and the fact that he left his phone and wallet home, it seems to be a fair assumption that he didn’t leave the house to abscond from justice or hide away forever. He left to off himself. He didn’t bring a tent or supplies. He brought a notebook, which I’m going to guess he included his “story” in, and that’s pretty much seemingly it. He then went right to the park and entered an area that at the time was shoulders deep or more in water. All signs point to him killing himself that first evening - whether by bullet, alligator, overdose, hanging, or drowning. His parents knew his mental state when he left. It’s no wonder they insisted the only place they believed he would be is in the reserve. They knew he was almost surely dead and not fleeing. The fact that his lawyer called the FBI the very first night he left after Brian didn’t return is extremely telling regarding what they believed his mental state to be.
All of this seems likely accurate to me except they didn’t report him missing for at least 3 days. That is still strange to me. I can still never forgive the parents for not sounding the alarm when he returned without her and not answering her parents frantic calls and texts.
Couple things - they apparently reported him missing to the FBI the same night he left after not returning home. Second, you don’t know what he told his parents. The petito/s didn’t text/call until the 10th- the day before they filed the report and the van was confiscated. They admittedly included in their texts that they were going to call the cops. If the laundry’s didn’t know anything up until then, there was probably a wild scene in the household trying to figure it out with Brian which we know led to the attorney being retained on the 11th, if not the night of the 10th and then instructing them not to talk
Laundrie was reported missing on the 17th. His parents and lawyer even got the day wrong of when he left home. They first said the 14th was when he took the mustang to the reserve, recently changed that to the 13th.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We now know he was “extremely upset” and in a bad mental state when he left the house. Knowing this, the location and condition of his body, that there was never a camp fire, and the fact that he left his phone and wallet home, it seems to be a fair assumption that he didn’t leave the house to abscond from justice or hide away forever. He left to off himself. He didn’t bring a tent or supplies. He brought a notebook, which I’m going to guess he included his “story” in, and that’s pretty much seemingly it. He then went right to the park and entered an area that at the time was shoulders deep or more in water. All signs point to him killing himself that first evening - whether by bullet, alligator, overdose, hanging, or drowning. His parents knew his mental state when he left. It’s no wonder they insisted the only place they believed he would be is in the reserve. They knew he was almost surely dead and not fleeing. The fact that his lawyer called the FBI the very first night he left after Brian didn’t return is extremely telling regarding what they believed his mental state to be.
All of this seems likely accurate to me except they didn’t report him missing for at least 3 days. That is still strange to me. I can still never forgive the parents for not sounding the alarm when he returned without her and not answering her parents frantic calls and texts.
Couple things - they apparently reported him missing to the FBI the same night he left after not returning home. Second, you don’t know what he told his parents. The petito/s didn’t text/call until the 10th- the day before they filed the report and the van was confiscated. They admittedly included in their texts that they were going to call the cops. If the laundry’s didn’t know anything up until then, there was probably a wild scene in the household trying to figure it out with Brian which we know led to the attorney being retained on the 11th, if not the night of the 10th and then instructing them not to talk
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We now know he was “extremely upset” and in a bad mental state when he left the house. Knowing this, the location and condition of his body, that there was never a camp fire, and the fact that he left his phone and wallet home, it seems to be a fair assumption that he didn’t leave the house to abscond from justice or hide away forever. He left to off himself. He didn’t bring a tent or supplies. He brought a notebook, which I’m going to guess he included his “story” in, and that’s pretty much seemingly it. He then went right to the park and entered an area that at the time was shoulders deep or more in water. All signs point to him killing himself that first evening - whether by bullet, alligator, overdose, hanging, or drowning. His parents knew his mental state when he left. It’s no wonder they insisted the only place they believed he would be is in the reserve. They knew he was almost surely dead and not fleeing. The fact that his lawyer called the FBI the very first night he left after Brian didn’t return is extremely telling regarding what they believed his mental state to be.
All of this seems likely accurate to me except they didn’t report him missing for at least 3 days. That is still strange to me. I can still never forgive the parents for not sounding the alarm when he returned without her and not answering her parents frantic calls and texts.
Couple things - they apparently reported him missing to the FBI the same night he left after not returning home. Second, you don’t know what he told his parents. The petito/s didn’t text/call until the 10th- the day before they filed the report and the van was confiscated. They admittedly included in their texts that they were going to call the cops. If the laundry’s didn’t know anything up until then, there was probably a wild scene in the household trying to figure it out with Brian which we know led to the attorney being retained on the 11th, if not the night of the 10th and then instructing them not to talk
Anonymous wrote:If he was suicidal he would have killed himself in WY
Instead, he callously buried Gabby’s body , then cunningly texted her Mom to buy time , then drove home for 2 days straight without EVER getting pulled over for speeding
He ditched the phones
These are the actions of a loner who values himself above all others
These types kill other people ( school shooters )
He was on the run, fell asleep near a gator den and was eaten
Anonymous wrote:If he was suicidal he would have killed himself in WY
Instead, he callously buried Gabby’s body , then cunningly texted her Mom to buy time , then drove home for 2 days straight without EVER getting pulled over for speeding
He ditched the phones
These are the actions of a loner who values himself above all others
These types kill other people ( school shooters )
He was on the run, fell asleep near a gator den and was eaten
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Due to the condition of his remains, it may be too difficult to figure out Brian Laundrie’s manner of death.
We may never know whether or not he killed himself or was attacked by an alligator.
Rule out alligator: they carry their food under water and store it. Maybe a snake. Probably suicide.
Anonymous wrote:All the crazy theories, and it comes down to a seemingly simple tale.
Brian and Gabby were in an unhealthy relationship, and Brian was the primary abuser. He killed her in a fit of rage after multiple escalating instances. He did a couple of minor things to cover his tracks in WY, but he just wasn’t that smart. He drove home to FL and probably lied to his parents, who eventually figured out that something was amiss and contacted the lawyer. The lawyer (not highly competent) gave them the advice to completely shut up, so that’s the story behind not taking calls and not talking to press. He eventually felt the gravity of the situation and went to the park and offed himself. From the location of the car, the parents generally knew where the police should be looking, but the flooding interfered. Once the flooding subsided, they helped on another search and the cops found the materials and had the parents ID items.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We now know he was “extremely upset” and in a bad mental state when he left the house. Knowing this, the location and condition of his body, that there was never a camp fire, and the fact that he left his phone and wallet home, it seems to be a fair assumption that he didn’t leave the house to abscond from justice or hide away forever. He left to off himself. He didn’t bring a tent or supplies. He brought a notebook, which I’m going to guess he included his “story” in, and that’s pretty much seemingly it. He then went right to the park and entered an area that at the time was shoulders deep or more in water. All signs point to him killing himself that first evening - whether by bullet, alligator, overdose, hanging, or drowning. His parents knew his mental state when he left. It’s no wonder they insisted the only place they believed he would be is in the reserve. They knew he was almost surely dead and not fleeing. The fact that his lawyer called the FBI the very first night he left after Brian didn’t return is extremely telling regarding what they believed his mental state to be.
All of this seems likely accurate to me except they didn’t report him missing for at least 3 days. That is still strange to me. I can still never forgive the parents for not sounding the alarm when he returned without her and not answering her parents frantic calls and texts.
Anonymous wrote:Due to the condition of his remains, it may be too difficult to figure out Brian Laundrie’s manner of death.
We may never know whether or not he killed himself or was attacked by an alligator.
Anonymous wrote:
Frankly, I really hope he was killed by a gator. If Gabby's family can't get justice from him being convicted for her murder and sent to prison, being attacked and killed and mostly eaten by a gator is the next best outcome.
RIP Gabby
Burn in eternal damnation Brian
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who killed the guy?
Or was he bitten by a rattler?
This is what I wonder about. Petito is an Italian name, right? Maybe he made even the Mob angry and they dispatched a team to track him down and off him. Then they left his remains for the critters. Or do I read too many books?![]()
He didn't strike me as someone who would commit suicide. Then again, what do I know.
It’s so telling that in today’s hyper cancel culture where even a perceived slight against women, blacks, gays, Hispanics, etc. is quickly taken down off this and other boards, that an insult to Italian Americans doesn’t even register. Rules for thee.