Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why was Gabby afraid to drive it? That thing looks smaller than my Honda Odyssey.
Woman here - I hate driving. I refuse to drive anything larger than a mid-sized SUV. And I live in an area that facilitates easy Ubering or I get my SO to do it.
I don't think I'm the only one.
Anonymous wrote:It’s nearly a certainty that Brian had something to do with the murdered married couple and that was a reason she was upset. That area is insanely sparsely populated, just north of Moab is Green River, a town of less than a thousand people. Moab itself has less than six thousand. Green River is on Interstate 70, the nearest towns on Interstate 70 going west are Salina, Utah, less than 3,000 people, and Richfield, Utah, 8,000 people. It is over 100 miles from Green River to Salina. There are zero, zilch, zip services of any kind on that over 100 mile stretch from Salina to Green River on Interstate 70. It stays sparsely populated until Grand Junction, Colorado going east from Green River with only a few services along that part of the route, none from Green River until Thompson Springs, and none after that until Cisco.
The odds that these two parties did not meet, sharing the same at least partially nomadic lifestyle in such a sparsely populated area when there are timelines and photographs that do place them at the same locations at or near the same time, and that Brian Landrie isn’t the creep the couple were referring to and upset by and who murdered them, are infinitesimal.
Anonymous wrote:Why was Gabby afraid to drive it? That thing looks smaller than my Honda Odyssey.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another camper traveling through Wyoming spotted Gabby's van on August 27th. They also confirmed that she was seen alive in Idaho on the 25th or 26th.
I’m not a camper. Is that a legal/allowed camping spot? It looks very close to the road.
Depends on the jurisdiction. It's legal some places, illegal and overlooked in others. It's called stealth camping--not unusual at all. There are websites dedicated to helping people find spots in various areas.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another camper traveling through Wyoming spotted Gabby's van on August 27th. They also confirmed that she was seen alive in Idaho on the 25th or 26th.
I’m not a camper. Is that a legal/allowed camping spot? It looks very close to the road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another camper traveling through Wyoming spotted Gabby's van on August 27th. They also confirmed that she was seen alive in Idaho on the 25th or 26th.
I’m not a camper. Is that a legal/allowed camping spot? It looks very close to the road.
Anonymous wrote:Another camper traveling through Wyoming spotted Gabby's van on August 27th. They also confirmed that she was seen alive in Idaho on the 25th or 26th.

Anonymous wrote:At what point is his family guilty of obstruction/impeding an investigation? Can anyone with an actual legal backaground explain (not guess)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So tired of this story. Another "poor innocent white girl goes missing" story. It's not a mystery - let's move on.
I understand where you’re coming from. There’s so many other missing women, black women, Hispanic women, any other race. As always, the young pretty white girl gets all the media attention. Sadly this poor girl is probably dead but if I was her family I would also want her case being in the media and people wanting to find her so while it’s not fair I don’t think we should dump on this poor girl.
Here is one:
An arrest has finally been made in the brutal 2012 murder of Faith Hedgepeth a Native American college coed at UNC:
https://www.wbtv.com/2021/09/16/man-charged-2012-murder-unc-student-faith-hedgepeth/
I see some other threads have started that I’ve been reading. Please start a new thread rather than embedding these in this thread. Because honestly, when I’m reading this thread I’m only interested in the mystery of Gabby and Brian and I am not likely to open links to other mysteries. And then when I read the other threads, that’s when I focus on The subject that thread is focused on.