Laundrie Parents Beeline To Evidence

Parents

The very first day that Myakkahatchee Creek Environmental Park reopened to the public, the parents of Brian Laundrie made a beeline straight to the evidence, with the FBI trailing just behind. One side is saying that it looks just a little too convenient while the other side counters this proves they’ve been cooperating all along.

Parents home in on remains

After a month of combing the nearly limitless swamp of the Carlton Reserve, the parents knew just where to look.

The remains they found were likely Brian’s but it will take a lot of tests to know for sure, “unless he was trying to plant evidence next to someone else’s remains to throw law enforcement off his tracks.” That, believe it or not, remains a possibility.

According to left leaning New York Post, the “assistance Brian Laundrie’s parents gave to investigators searching for their son ‘undercuts’ speculation that they may have helped him evade authorities.”

Ever since the public learned of Gabby Petito’s disappearance amid suspected foul play, Chris and Roberta Laundrie “remained largely holed up in their North Port home in Florida.” They lawyered up and the information they gave detectives was full of holes and inconsistencies. The story keeps changing day-by-day. They didn’t even give cops the right day for the one he vanished, throwing the trackers off even further.

On Wednesday, October 20, the search party led by Laundrie’s parents recovered what “appears to be human remains and items belonging to Brian Laundrie, including a backpack.” They also found his notebook.

He wasn’t camping underwater but his “apparent remains were found in an area that has been under water until recently.” Unless that was a ruse to make someone else’s body decompose enough they would think it was his and stop looking. They “appear to have been there a while” and “may take some time to officially identify.”

Just out of sight

The FBI kept both parents under close observation from the moment they walked into the park. About a 45-minute walk from the entrance, around 3 miles inside the Carlton Reserve, Chris Laundrie “ventured off the trail into the woods.” Acting just like everyone else in the search team, he “was zigzagging in different areas” while Roberta “was walking down the trail.”

At the crucial moment Chris made the dramatic discovery of his son’s “dry bag,” he happened to be totally out of sight of law enforcement. Instead of leaving it in place and bringing the cops to it, he picked up the bag and took it to them. His lawyer insists he didn’t plant it.

Family attorney Steve Bertolino claims, “the dry bag was in some brambles and he didn’t want to pick up the bag, because he wanted his law enforcement to see it.”

Chris Laundrie “couldn’t find the law enforcement,” the attorney argues, “because they were then out of sight and didn’t want to leave the bag there with a news reporter standing nearby, so he picked it up.” Brian Laundrie’s parents don’t like news reporters for some strange reason.

The lawyer adds that Chris “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.”

That’s when the parents were “notified there was also remains near the backpack, and they were asked to leave the preserve.”

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