Gabby Petito, DAMN!!! what really happened to her.


Ms. Petito's body was discovered in Wyoming. Her fiancé, Brian Laundrie, and her had visited national parks together, and their social media accounts provide an insight into their vacation.#


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Gabrielle Petito, 22, went missing on September 11 when her fiancé, Brian Laundrie, and she did not return on a months-long cross-country journey. Her remains were eventually discovered in a Wyoming national park. Authorities were looking for Mr. Laundrie, who had gone missing after returning to his Florida home alone. This is the case's timeline.

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On July 2nd,
According to Ms. Petito's stepfather, Jim Schmidt, the pair left New York for a four-month cross-country trip that included seeing and camping in national parks.
They used their Instagram and YouTube profiles to capture their journeys. 





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Mr. Laundrie and Ms. Petito told the cops they were in love, engaged to be married, and "desperately didn't want to see anyone punished with a crime." Mr. Laundrie told an officer that "problems between the two had been escalating over the last few days," according to the police report.



"Van Life: Beginning Our Van Life Journey," an eight-minute video by the couple, was released on YouTube. It depicted them kissing, climbing rocks, and laughing over how the sun in Utah had melted Mr. Laundrie's granola chocolate. Ms. Petito smiled at Mr. Laundrie and remarked, "I love the van."


 
Mr. Schmidt and Ms. Petito's mother, Nichole Schmidt, last communicated with her on a FaceTime chat about this time, according to Mr. Schmidt. Ms. Petito allegedly told them that she and Mr. Laundrie were leaving Utah and traveling to Wyoming's Grand Teton National Park. Ms. Petito texted her mother a few times after that, according to Mr. Schmidt. Her most recent Instagram post was made on August 25th.




According to The New York Post, Nichole Schmidt received a text from her daughter's phone. "No service in Yosemite," the text stated, according to Ms. Schmidt.

 
Mr. Laundrie drove back to his home in North Port, Fla., in the white Ford van that the couple had rented for the trip and was registered to Ms. Petito. He was on his own.


According to the North Port Police Department, Ms. Petito's relatives reported her missing.


Mr. Laundrie was described as a "person of interest" by the police, who said he was the last person seen with Ms. Petito before she vanished. Mr. Laundrie's lawyer, Steven Bertolino, was contacted by North Port Police Chief Todd Garrison, who asked him to arrange a meeting with Mr. Laundrie on Twitter.
Mr. Bertolino stated that he had urged Mr. Laundrie against speaking with the authorities.


Rangers from Grand Teton National Park are collaborating with the National Park Service, the FBI, and other local authorities to locate Ms. Petito, according to park officials.


 
Mr. Laundrie was using his constitutional right not to speak with the authorities, Chief Garrison stated at a press conference, and detectives were still considering the issue as a missing persons investigation.
Ms. Petito's father, Joseph Petito, spoke at the press conference and asked for tips and assistance from the public in finding his daughter. Ms. Petito's parents and stepparents also publicly pleaded with Mr. Laundrie's parents to tell where "Brian left Gabby."
 "We implore you to envision yourself in our position," they said in the letter, which their lawyer, Richard Stafford, read aloud. "We haven't been able to sleep or eat for several days. And our lives are in shambles."




Mr. Laundrie's parents called the police to their North Port house, saying they hadn't seen their son since Sept. 14.

North Port police announced that they were looking for Mr. Laundrie at the Carlton Reserve, a 25,000-acre area about 13 miles from North Port. The police wrote on Twitter that Mr. Laundrie's family "says they believe he entered the region earlier this week."
The FBI said it was looking for Ms. Petito at Grand Teton National Park and the Spread Creek Dispersed Camping Area, both in Wyoming. 

The F.B.I. said human remains believed to belong to Ms. Petito were discovered in a national forest in Wyoming. The remains were "compatible with a description of" Ms. Petito, according to an agent, but a thorough forensic identification would be required to confirm.
Mr. Laundrie was sought by Florida authorities in the Carlton Reserve, a 24,565-acre park in Sarasota County. North Port, Fla., police reported their search at the Carlton Reserve was over and there was nothing new to report.



The Laundrie family's home in North Port was searched by federal authorities, according to the F.B.I. in Tampa. It stated that the warrant was relevant to the investigation but did not provide any other information.
A forensic test proved the remains were those of Ms. Petito, according to the FBI. The cause of death was homicide, according to the agency. On Tuesday, police in North Port, Fla., began their search for Mr. Laundrie in the reserve.
In Wyoming, a federal arrest warrant for Mr. Laundrie was issued, accusing him of debit card fraud. Mr. Laundrie was charged with a single felony count of using unauthorized access devices related to a Capital One bank debit card in a single-count indictment filed on Sept. 22 in U.S. District Court in Cheyenne, Wyo.
The officials did not specify whether Ms. Petito had used the debit card.
Ms. Petito died of strangulation, according to Dr. Brent Blue, the Teton County coroner. At a news conference, he stated her body had been outside for three to four weeks, but the exact date of her death remained unknown.
The F.B.I. said human bones were discovered near a notepad and a backpack that had belonged to Mr. Laundrie in a thickly wooded Florida park. Investigators were using "all available forensic resources" to investigate the scene in the Carlton Reserve and the adjacent Myakkahatchee Creek Environmental Park in Sarasota County, Fla., according to Michael F. McPherson, special agent in charge of the F.B.I.'s Tampa field office.
The F.B.I. reported that a check of dental records proved that the remains discovered in the Carlton Reserve and the Myakkahatchee Creek Environmental Park were those of Mr. Laundrie.
Mr. Laundrie died by suicide, according to the medical examiner's office in Sarasota, Fla., and the cause of death was a gunshot wound to the head.




REST IN PEACE GABBY PETITO💖












































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