Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has Brian’s sister spoken publicly? I remember she seemed to be more open speaking to the press/public.
I was just wondering this. I think she gave a statement towards the beginning. Wonder what she would say now, knowing that her brother is a murderer.
Anonymous wrote:Has Brian’s sister spoken publicly? I remember she seemed to be more open speaking to the press/public.
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:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
He was reported to the FBI as having “not come home” on Monday evening, the 13th
Where is this stated?? Why did they forget what day he didn't come home, when they reported on the 17th? Even their lawyer contradicts that in his interviews last night.
It sounds like it's the shady lawyer saying all of this. For some reason there are a few posters who REALLY don't want his parents to be held accountable for their role in at the very least wasting extensive taxpayer resources searching for this dummy. Makes you wonder what sort of shit they've covered up for their own kids.
You are exemplifying the mob mentality quite nicely.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Yes. They didn’t report it for days, couldn’t even remember the day he left, went and picked up his car, etc. So sketchy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
He was reported to the FBI as having “not come home” on Monday evening, the 13th
Where is this stated?? Why did they forget what day he didn't come home, when they reported on the 17th? Even their lawyer contradicts that in his interviews last night.
It sounds like it's the shady lawyer saying all of this. For some reason there are a few posters who REALLY don't want his parents to be held accountable for their role in at the very least wasting extensive taxpayer resources searching for this dummy. Makes you wonder what sort of shit they've covered up for their own kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
He was reported to the FBI as having “not come home” on Monday evening, the 13th
Where is this stated?? Why did they forget what day he didn't come home, when they reported on the 17th? Even their lawyer contradicts that in his interviews last night.
Anonymous wrote: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.
He was reported to the FBI as having “not come home” on Monday evening, the 13th
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.