Crime LIVE: Partial human remains found near Brian Laundrie’s backpack and notebook, FBI says - Update: Remains have been confirmed

by: Athina Morris, Heather Monahan Posted: Oct 20, 2021 / 01:59 PM EDT / Updated: Oct 20, 2021 / 05:42 PM EDT

TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) — Law enforcement officials searching for Brian Laundrie found partial human remains in the Carlton Reserve on Wednesday near personal items that belong to the 23-year-old, according to the FBI.
Special Agent in Charge Michael McPherson with the FBI Tampa office gave a brief update on developments in the search for Laundrie on Wednesday afternoon. He did not take questions and did not identify the remains, but confirmed several items of interest had been found in an area that was previously underwater.
“As you’re aware, the FBI and the North Port Police Department, and our state and local law enforcement partners, have been searching the area of the Carlton Reserve for Brian Laundrie – a person of interest in the murder of Gabby Petito,” McPherson said. “Earlier today, investigators found what appears to be human remains, along with personal items such as a backpack and notebook belonging to Brian Laundrie.”
According to McPherson, the FBI’s evidence response team is at the scene using “all available forensic resources” to process the area. It’s likely they will remain at the park for several days, he said.
What happened to Gabby Petito?
“I know you have a lot of questions but we don’t have all the answers yet,” McPherson said. “We are working diligently to get those answers for you.”
8 On Your Side reached out to Steve Bertolino, the attorney representing the Laundrie family, after the FBI’s update.
“Chris and Roberta will wait for the forensic identification of the human remains before making any additional comments,” he said.
Several hours before the news conference with the FBI, the Sarasota County Medical Examiner’s Office confirmed it had been called to the Myakkahatchee Creek Environmental Park by police. The environmental park connects to the Carlton Reserve, where the search for Laundrie has been focused for more than a month now. Search crews had previously cited difficulties maneuvering through the massive area due to some sections being underwater.
Bertolino told 8 On Your Side both of Laundrie’s parents went to the Myakkahatchee Creek Environmental Park to search for Brian on Wednesday morning. He said the FBI and North Port Police Department met the parents, Chris and Roberta Laundrie, at the park Wednesday morning.
“After a brief search off a trail that Brian frequented some articles belonging to Brian were found,” Bertolino said.
Brian Laundrie timeline: Remains found in search for person of interest in Gabby Petito disappearance
In addition to the medical examiner’s office, FBI team and North Port Police Department, a mobile command unit from the Lee County Sheriff’s Office was also seen pulling up to the search area Wednesday.
The Pasco County Sheriff’s Office confirmed it was assisting as well.
“North Port PD has once again requested a human remains detection K9 to assist with the search today,” Public Information Officer Amanda Hunter confirmed. “We sent one HRD K9 team and two spotters to ensure the safety of the team during the search.”





Both entrances to the park, which reopened to the public on Tuesday after being closed for nearly a month, were blocked off by North Port police on Wednesday. They told WFLA’s Allyson Henning the park was closed, but did not share any further details. North Port Public Information Officer Josh Taylor would only say, “the search continues.”
Laundrie remains the only person of interest in the disappearance of his fiancée Gabby Petito, who was found dead last month a week after being reported missing.
What happened to Gabby Petito? Timeline of disappearance, death, search for Brian Laundrie
The couple had set off on a cross-country trip across the United States in July, and documented their travels online. Police said Laundrie returned home to North Port without Petito on Sept. 1. Her family reported her missing on Sept. 11.





Petito’s remains were found on Sept. 19 at a campground in Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park. The 22-year-old had been strangled to death, a coroner said earlier this month.
Laundrie is wanted for unauthorized use of a debit card. A federal grand jury indictment alleges he withdrew or spent $1,000 after Petito went missing, using a debit card that wasn’t his.
Gabby Petito case: Who’s who in disappearance, death & search for fiancé Brian Laundrie
Laundrie’s parents say their son went for a hike in the nearly 25,000-acre Carlton Reserve on Sept. 13 and never returned. The reserve connects to the heavily-wooded Myakkahatchee park, a 160-acre area just north of Interstate 75.


Local and federal agencies have spent more than a month combing the vast reserve and the park in hopes of finding Laundrie.
This story is developing and will be updated.
 
I half wonder if he didn't even have the balls to off himself and instead accidentally died from eating the wrong berries in the woods or something like that.
I would've much preferred Jeepers Creepers scenario, but it's probably the latter.
Dude probably fancied himself somewhat of a camper/survivor and escaped into the wild thinking he'll be able to sit this mess out or whatever, and ended up shitting himself to death after eating something he wasn't supposed to or otherwise contracting some nasty bacteria.
 
What if it turns out that she killed him and then killed herself? I haven't seen anyone float that theory yet.
 
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how did byuu's dead body get from Japan to Florida?
m night shyWHATATWEEST.jpg
 
Why should anyone give a flying fuck about Gabby Petito or Brian Laundrie? Why have the media decided that these people are important enough to be national news? I've never seen a more forced story than this. This is some Laci Peterson bullshit, and I'm not having it. These people are not fucking relevant to anything, ever. The publicity of this case has nothing to do with informing people and everything to do with entertaining and distracting folks with fake TV drama. It also doubles as an alarmist indictment of nomadic living. You know what the media is saying with this shit, right? Don't do van life. Don't go off the grid. Be dependent. Be subservient to the system.

Fuck the media. Fuck this pointless fucking spew. I hope the raccoons had a good meal.
 
I'm skeptical it's really him since his dad was the one who found the bag (and couldn't wait for the cops, so he had to pick it up and go through it and find the cell phone). They allegedly told the cops exactly where he likes to hike and then, surprise, they find his stuff right where they said he liked to hike. Dad either planted the bag there or the cops / searchers were totally inept (which is entirely possible).

I hope it's him because that's the end of the story. Boy accidentally kills girl in fit of rage and then kills himself. Not the first time that has happened. Won't be the last.

If this is an attempt to fake his death, then we're going to have to hear about this shit for years. Because if he isn't dead, he is long gone and mom and dad aren't ratting him out. We'll have Laundrie sightings all the time because the dude is pretty average and lots of people could be mistaken for him.

I'm hoping a gator got him. That would be a funny ending. He probably just offed himself. There'd better be at least a long, rambling suicide note in that notebook of his.
 

Dental records show remains found at Carlton Reserve are those of Brian Laundrie, FBI says​

By Aya Elamroussi, Taylor Romine, Leyla Santiago, Randi Kaye and Sara Weisfeldt, CNN

Updated 5:50 PM ET, Thu October 21, 2021
FBI agents begin to take away evidence from the family home of Brian Laundrie, who is a person of interest after his fiancé Gabby Petito went missing on September 20, 2021 in North Port, Florida.


(CNN)[Breaking news update, published at 5:48 p.m. ET]
The FBI's Denver office said Thursday that remains found in a Florida nature reserve are those of Brian Laundrie, who went missing last month. The FBI said dental records confirmed the identification.
[Previous story, published at 5:33 p.m. ET]
Police in Florida said Thursday that skeletal remains found during the search for Brian Laundrie at the Carlton Reserve on Wednesday are of a human.
"They are human remains, no doubt there. I would say that the remains were consistent with one individual, you know skeletal remains," North Port Police spokesperson Josh Taylor said in an on-camera interview with CNN.
Investigators found clothing believed to belong to Laundrie, he said.
"It's consistent with what he was believed to be wearing," Taylor said.
Taylor indicated the belongings had been out there for some time.
Laundrie went missing last month, a few days before authorities in Wyoming found the remains of his fiancée, Gabby Petito, whose death was ruled a homicide by manual strangulation.
Investigators also found a backpack and a notebook belonging to Laundrie, 23, near the remains while they were searching the Carlton Reserve in North Port, according to FBI Special Agent in Charge Michael McPherson.
"The notebook to my understanding has not been opened. You know, that will need to be processed," Taylor said.
Florida nature reserve's swampy landscape made the search for Brian Laundrie treacherous
Florida nature reserve's swampy landscape made the search for Brian Laundrie treacherous
A source with knowledge of the investigation told CNN the notebook is "possibly salvageable." The source said the notebook was "outside of the dry bag."
"It had been clearly wet and they are going to use any potential means to dry that out before opening it," according to the source, who added: "They'll be very careful with it."
The source said it is unclear how the notebook ended up outside the dry bag.
When Taylor was asked about whether a weapon was found, he said he could not comment.
When asked if there is an ongoing search for the murderer of Gabby Petito, he responded, "That is certainly not in the North Port Police Department's purview."
During a search with police, Brian's father, Chris Laundrie, was the first to spot an item belonging to his son, according to Taylor.
Laundrie family attorney Steven Bertolino told CNN's Chris Cuomo on Wednesday that "the probability is strong that it is Brian's remains."
The discovery came on Wednesday morning when Laundrie's parents and law enforcement searched an area of the reserve that had been underwater but recently reopened to the public.
"It's quite sad, you can imagine as a parent, finding your son's belongings alongside some remains. That's got to be heartbreaking. And I can tell you that they are heartbroken," Bertolino told Cuomo.
Lee County Sheriff Carmine Marceno said Thursday law enforcement had been searching in treacherous conditions, including nearly chest-high water full of snakes and alligators.
A timeline of 22-year-old Gabby Petito's case
A timeline of 22-year-old Gabby Petito's case
"These are very, very difficult conditions. You're searching in areas that you just can't walk up and look. It's not like you're searching a house or a car," he said. "These areas are huge and they're covered by water."
The exhaustive search for Laundrie stretched over a month as authorities tried to piece together what happened to him and Petito during their road trip through the Western US this summer.
Petito, 22, disappeared on the trip amid tensions in their relationship, and her remains were later found in Wyoming near where the couple had last been seen together. Teton County Coroner Dr. Brent Blue ruled her death a homicide and said she died by manual strangulation.
Laundrie, who had returned by himself to his parents' home in Florida, refused to talk with investigators and then went missing in the nearby nature reserve. He has not been seen since September 13.
He has not been charged in her death, although he was indicted for allegedly using two financial accounts that did not belong to him in the days following her killing.
A cadaver dog searched the Carlton Reserve in North Port, Florida, on Wednesday.


A cadaver dog searched the Carlton Reserve in North Port, Florida, on Wednesday.

Authorities, including several K-9 units and off-road vehicles, returned to the reserve on Thursday morning to further search the area. A medical examiner arrived to the reserve on Wednesday, and a formal identification of the remains could take some time. A source close to the investigation told CNN that the remains "appear to have been there a while."
"Based on the condition of the remains, it may take some time to officially identify. It is going to be a very thorough process with the medical examiner," the source said.

Brian Laundrie's parents were on scene when remains were found​

FBI: Apparent human remains found in search for Brian Laundrie








FBI: Apparent human remains found in search for Brian Laundrie 01:57
Laundrie's family had declined to talk publicly following legal advice, but they had directed authorities to where they believed Laundrie may be staying in the reserve, Bertolino said.
The parents -- Chris and Roberta Laundrie -- joined in the search Wednesday morning and found a bag belonging to their son at the park, which their attorney described as "happenstance."
According to Bertolino, Laundrie's parents informed the FBI and the North Port Police Department on Tuesday night that they wanted to visit the park Wednesday morning to search for their son.
Law enforcement met them there and closely accompanied them as they entered the park, Bertolino said.
"As they went further in, Chris ventured off the trail into the woods. He was zigzagging in different areas, law enforcement was doing the same thing. And Roberta Laundrie was walking down the trail," Bertolino said. "At some point, Chris locates what's called a dry bag. The dry bag is a white bag, laying in the woods, say 20 feet or so off the trail."
Here's what we know about Brian Laundrie's disappearance
Here's what we know about Brian Laundrie's disappearance
The dry bag was in some brambles and he didn't want to move it because he wanted his law enforcement to see it, Bertolino said. However, Chris Laundrie couldn't find law enforcement and didn't want to leave the bag there with a news reporter standing nearby, so he picked it up, Bertolino explained.
"He did meet up shortly with law enforcement, they looked at the contents of the bag. At that time, law enforcement officers showed him a picture on the phone of a backpack that law enforcement had located also nearby and also some distance off the trail," Bertolino told CNN.
"At that point, the Laundries were notified there was also remains near the backpack, and they were asked to leave the preserve."
The remains were found "about 2 to 3 miles inside the Carlton Reserve, or about a 45-minute walk" from the entrance at Myakkahatchee Creek Environmental Park, Taylor said Wednesday.
When asked why the parents chose to go to the park on Wednesday, Bertolino said it was the first day it was reopened to the public.
"The parents had assumed that the experts, the FBI and all the tracking teams they had would be able to locate Brian based upon the information that we had provided them to the specific areas and trails in the park that Brian liked to visit," Bertolino said. "The park had been closed to the public. There was really no other reason for the Laundries to go search anywhere else."
CNN's Eric Levenson, Steve Almasy, Rob Frehse, Madeline Holcombe, Rebekah Riess, Devon M. Sayers and Nick Valencia contributed to this report.

 
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