LOST Gabby Petito
Family of Brian
Laundrie, Gabby Petito's fiancé, tell police they have not seen him since
Tuesday
By Aya Elamroussi and Christina
Maxouris, CNN
Updated 0306 GMT (1106 HKT) September 18, 2021
(CNN)The family of Brian Laundrie, the fiancé of
22-year-old Gabby Petito -- who
was reported missing by her family nearly a week ago --
told police in North Port, Florida, they haven't seen him since Tuesday,
according to police spokesperson Josh Taylor.
"We've been trying all week to talk
to his family, to talk to Brian, and now they've called us here on Friday,
we've gone to the home, and they're saying now they have not seen their
son," Taylor told CNN's Chris Cuomo on Friday night.
"So we are working through those details as we speak. It is another twist
in this story."
A timeline of missing 22-year-old Gabby Petito's case
The disappearance of the fiancé was
confirmed by the Laundrie family lawyer.
In a statement Friday night to CNN,
attorney Steven Bertolino said Brian Laundrie's whereabout "are currently
unknown."
He added: "The FBI is currently at
the Laundrie residence removing property to assist in locating Brian. As of now
the FBI is now looking for both Gabby and Brian."
The FBI declined to comment on this
statement when asked for verification by CNN.
Separately, North Port Police Chief Todd
Garrison wrote on Twitter on
Friday night the conversation between the Laundrie family and police was
complete. The chief also asked for calm, adding, "Please let us work
through this and information will be forthcoming."
Police previously had visited the home
but the family refused to talk and instead gave authorities the information for
their attorney, Taylor said earlier this week. Petito's family and their
attorneys have pleaded with the Laundrie family for several days to speak to
authorities and help them find the young woman.
The FBI has now also released a new Missing Person poster, asking
for help in the search for the young woman.
'Two people went on a
trip, and one person returned'
On Thursday, Garrison said he believed
the family was withholding critical information.
"I believe Brian has the
information," the police chief told CNN's
Don Lemon. "I believe people around Brian may also have the
information, and we are pleading to those people to come forward. Provide us
the information that we need to find Gabby and reunite Gabby with her family
because she deserves it and her family deserves it."
Petito was traveling with Laundrie in
her white 2012 Ford Transit van with a Florida license plate, police said. When
her family didn't hear from her since late August, they reported her missing on
September 11. Police believe she was in the Grand Teton National Park in
Wyoming before the last communication with her family, who lives in New York.
"We are conducting a missing person
investigation. Two people went on a trip, and one person returned. And that
person is Brian. And we're looking for Gabby, and he is not willing to provide
us any information," Garrison said Thursday.
Authorities believe Laundrie was the
last person to see Petito before she went missing.
On September 11, police found the van
the couple was traveling in at the home Petito shared with Laundrie and his
parents in North Port. Laundrie allegedly returned to North Port on September
1, police said in a news release.
Laundrie's sister, Cassie Laundrie, told
ABC's "Good Morning America" in an interview that aired Friday,
"Me and my family want Gabby to be found safe. She's like a sister and my
children love her.
"All I want is for her to come home
safe and sound and this to be just a big misunderstanding," Cassie
Laundrie said, adding she hasn't been able to speak with her brother since he
returned home.
The FBI's office in Denver on Thursday
announced it was joining the investigation.
"No piece of information is too
small or inconsequential to help in law enforcement's efforts to bring Ms.
Petito home," the office said on Twitter, calling on the public to submit
any information to the FBI, including "potential sightings, photos,
videos, or any other details."
'Do the right thing,'
Petito's stepfather says
Cassie Laundrie said she had spoken with
police, but Taylor, the police spokesperson, previously told CNN, "That
was news to me," adding he can't confirm that she spoke with North Port
police.
"She may have spoken to police, but
I would not consider the family being entirely cooperative," Taylor said.
"This started Saturday with us showing up to the door and we were
essentially handed a piece of paper with their attorney's contact information.
That has been the extent of our conversation with Brian's parents. We have
never spoken a word with Brian."
Authorities are investigating some
materials they found in the van after they processed it, though they didn't
clarify what exactly they're looking into, Taylor said in a prior news
briefing.
And the Laundries haven't been talking
to Petito's family,
who have been pleading for people to come forward.
Gabby Petito's family makes plea for information about
missing daughter
"We've had no communication between
our family and theirs. It's absolutely absurd. We don't understand why,"
Petito's stepfather, James Schmidt, told CNN affiliate Court TV.
Schmidt explained that he is in Jackson,
Wyoming, as a liaison between his family and law enforcement as investigators
search for Petito. He said he believes Laundrie knows information about his
stepdaughter's disappearance and is "hiding behind" his attorney.
"He grew up with Gabby; they went
to school together. They're not strangers. They've known each other for a long
time," Schmidt said.
Schmidt addressed Laundrie during the
interview, calling on him to come forward with information he may know.
"This is the love of your life.
It's been out there on social media. You posted on your accounts. If that is
true, then do the right thing. You need to do it now. Stop waiting,"
Schmidt said.
'Right now, we don't
have a crime,' police say
Garrison told CNN on Thursday that his
department wasn't working to obtain a search warrant for Laundrie's home
because they haven't concluded that a crime has occurred. "In order to get
a search warrant, you have to be tied to a crime. Right now, we don't have a
crime," Garrison said.
He added Laundrie has invoked his Fifth Amendment right,
which generally means a person cannot be forced to make statements he or she
feels might be negative or used against them. The amendment is usually invoked
so a person can avoid answering specific questions. The right must be
affirmatively waived.
"So I can't compel him to
speak," Garrison said. "All of our information has been directed
through an attorney. That can change. The attorney can come forward and say,
'listen, Brian wants to provide a statement now.'"
Police looking for missing woman Gabby Petito ask for her
boyfriend's cooperation
The couple did, however, have a recent
interaction with police in Moab, Utah.
Last month, officers with the Moab City
Police Department responded to reports of disorderly conduct involving Petito
and Laundrie, which ended with a report describing them as having "engaged
in some sort of altercation."
The report released by the police
department indicates Laundrie and Petito had a physical fight following an
argument, but "both the male and female reported they are in love and
engaged to be married and desperately didn't wish to see anyone charged with a
crime," according to the report from Officer Eric Pratt.
The officers who responded to the
incident suggested that Laundrie and Petito should separate for the night,
according to the report. Petito is described by one officer as "confused
and emotional."
"After evaluating the totality of
the circumstances, I do not believe the situation escalated to the level of a
domestic assault as much as that of a mental health crisis," Officer
Daniel Robbins wrote in the police report.
No charges were filed. Robbins wrote
Laundrie said the pair had been traveling together for "the last 4 or 5
months."
CNN's Artemis Moshtaghian, Andy Rose,
MiSeon Lee, Deanna Hackney, Mirna Alsharif, Christina Maxouris, Jenn Selva, Ben
Norbitz, Claudia Dominguez and Halimah Abdullah contributed to this report.
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