I hope he gives the police a reason to beat his fucking skull in when they find him.
I hope he gives the police a reason to beat his fucking skull in when they find him.
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Music was better when ugly people were allowed to make it.
Such a shame...
by KC Wildmoon - Crime Online
North Point police say Brian Laundrie’s parents went to the Carlton Reserve this week after their son went there and brought the Mustang convertible he drove back to their home.
The Laundries called police to their home on Friday to tell them Brian was missing, that he had gone to the 25,000-acre nature reserve on Tuesday and hadn’t been heard from since.
But the Mustang he took there was back in their driveway on Wednesday, video from reporters on the scene showed.
ABC7’s Jeff Butera reported that police told him the parents retrieved the vehicle and that it wasn’t registered in Laundrie’s name.
Laundrie and his girlfriend Gabby Petito set out on a cross-country trip in July, but Laundrie returned home to Florida on September 1 without Petito.
Petito’s body was found Sunday in a remote area of Bridger-Teton National Forest, near where she was last known to have been.
There has been no sign of Laundrie.
Possible accessory charges. Maybe obstruction of justice/interfering with an investigation.
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Music was better when ugly people were allowed to make it.
Charge those mother fuckers with aiding and abetting, right now.
Teh One Who Knocks (09-21-2021)
By Stephanie Pagones , Lawrence Richard | Fox News
One of the final messages that Gabby Petito’s family is believed to have received from her was in the form of an "odd text" sent at the end of August, when loved ones began to grow concerned about her wellbeing, according to the state search warrant released Monday.
Gabrielle Petito, 22, sent her mother, Nichole Schmidt, a text message on August 27, in which she wrote: "Can you help Stan, I just keep getting his voicemails and missed calls," states the search warrant, filed in the Sarasota County Circuit Court on Friday and made public Monday.
According to the document: "The reference to ‘Stan’ was regarding her grandfather, but per the mother, she never calls him ‘Stan.’ The mother was concerned that something was wrong with her daughter."
The text was one of a dozen grounds local law enforcement claimed it had for probable cause to conduct a search warrant at the home of Brian Laundrie, Petito’s fiancé, and his parents in North Port, Florida.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation raided the home on Monday morning in conjunction with local law enforcement. A spokesperson for the FBI’s Tampa Field Office told Fox News their search warrant was still under seal.
Local law enforcement officers were seeking, and received, permission to search a black Western Digital External Hard Drive, the document shows.
According to reporters on the ground, several unmarked law enforcement vehicles descended on the home as officers established it as a "crime scene." Agents took Laundries’ parents, Chris and Roberta, into an unmarked van that was parked at the home before they were led back into the house. Officers could be seen carrying several boxes out of the home and even towing Brian Laundrie’s silver Ford Mustang away.
Meanwhile, a pair of North Port Police Department personnel were seen roughly 40 minutes away going into the home of Brian Laundrie’s sister, Cassie, later on Monday. They remained for approximately 30 minutes before driving away.
Petito and Laundrie embarked on a cross-country trip in mid-June with the plan to visit national parks and chronicle the journey on social media along the way, the document states.
But Schmidt told authorities Petito began to describe how there "appeared to be more and more tension between her and Laundrie," according to the search warrant.
Fox News was first to report that on Aug. 12, police in Moab, Utah responded to a report of a domestic dispute between the young couple. In a 911 call placed at the time, a person can be heard telling a police dispatcher that "the gentleman was slapping the girl."
The call appears to contradict a police report in which an officer states "no one reported that the male struck the female."
"The male tried to create distance by telling Gabbie to go take a walk to calm down, she didn’t want to be separated from the male, and began slapping him," the report continued. "He grabbed her face and pushed her back as she pressed upon him and the van, he tried to lock her out and succeeded except for his driver’s door, she opened that and forced her way over to him and into the vehicle before it drove off."
One of the officers on the scene wrote that the incident could be "more accurately categorized as a mental/emotional health ‘break’ than a domestic assault."
Schmidt later reported that she received a text message from her daughter on August 30, in which Petito allegedly wrote: "No service in Yosemite." But Schmidt did not believe that the text was actually written by her daughter.
The search warrant describes the Aug. 27 text message as being "the last communication anyone had with the subject." After that, according to the document, her cell phone was "no longer operational."
The search warrant also reveals that Brian returned home in the van – alone – just before 10:30 a.m. on Sept. 1.
Petito’s family ultimately reported her missing on Sept. 11, and police seized the van pursuant to a separate search warrant three days later.
On Sunday, FBI officials announced they had discovered human remains in Teton County, Wyoming on Sunday that "are consistent with the description" of Petito. A county coroner is expected to positively identify the body and perform an autopsy in the coming days.
A few people online were dissecting the police video, saying that Laundrie's face was all scratched up, implying he was the one being abused. Other people are saying that Petito was showing the hallmark signs of the behavior of a woman in an abusive relationship.
Warning: The posts of this forum member may contain trigger language which may be considered offensive to some.
Music was better when ugly people were allowed to make it.
By Amanda Prestigiacomo - The Daily Wire
Brian Laundrie apparently slapped and repeatedly hit his now-missing 22-year-old girlfriend Gabriele “Gabby” Petito, according to released 911 audio from a Utah witness made on August 12 (listen below).
Laundrie went missing last week while the search for his girlfriend intensified. Police in North Port, Florida, named the 23-year-old as “a person of interest” in the disappearance case last week.
The FBI raided Laundrie’s home on Monday and removed his parents amid reports that remains have been found near where Petito is thought to have disappeared, The Daily Wire reported. The family home has reportedly been declared a “crime scene.”
Audio of the 911 call in question, which was first obtained by Fox News, “portrays Mr. Laundrie as the aggressor in the incident,” The Independent reported Monday.
“I’m right on the corner of Main St by Moonflower… I’d like to report a domestic dispute,” the caller says in the recording. “The gentleman was slapping the girl… they ran up and down the sidewalk, he proceeded to hit her and then they drove off.”
Following the alleged incident, authorities pulled over the couple but decided not to press charges on either Petito or Laundrie. Body camera footage from the stop shows a distressed and crying Petito; Laundrie seemed somewhat calm as authorities looked at the marks on his face and arm, supposedly from Petito.
TMZ reported Monday on the call:
FOX obtained the 911 call in question, which was placed on August 12 near Moab, Utah — not too far from where Gabby and Brian were eventually pulled over later that day by a city cop, whose body camera captured a distraught Gabby … and Brian unseemly denying anything had happened between them.
Check out the audio … you hear a man tell the operator he’s calling to report a domestic dispute he says he saw in town, going on to paint a picture of the white van Gabby and Brian had been traveling in, while also providing a license plate number … and descriptions of both of them.
When the operator asks point blank what he saw them doing … the guy doesn’t hesitate — he says he saw the man slapping and hitting the female, then both of them running up and down the sidewalk … and finally jumping into the van and driving off.
The FBI Denver, the National Park Service, and law enforcement announced Sunday during a news conference in Grand Teton National Park that remains found in Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park are believed to be consistent with Petito, ABC7 reported. The local outlet added that “Charles Jones, the FBI’s supervisory senior resident agent, said that a full forensic identification hasn’t yet been completed, but investigators did notify Petito’s parents.”
“We continue to seek information from anyone who utilized the Spread Creek Dispersed Camping Area between the dates of August 27 and August 30,” Jones said. “Anyone that may have had contact with Gabby, or her boyfriend or who may have seen their vehicle in that area, please share any new information with the FBI.”
The cause of death remains undetermined at this time. An autopsy is planned for Tuesday.
LISTEN:
That's a big red flag
By Brandon Gillespie | Fox News
MSNBC host Joy Reid turned to race Monday while discussing the media's coverage of missing 22-year-old Gabby Petito, dismissing the focus on the case as "missing White woman syndrome."
During a segment on her show "The ReidOut," Reid said while Petito's family deserved "answers and justice," she felt the same media attention didn't apply to non-White people when they go missing..
"It goes without saying that no family should ever have to endure that kind of pain. And the Petito family certainly deserves answers and justice," Reid said. "But the way this story has captivated the nation has many wondering, why not the same media attention when people of color go missing?"
"Well, the answer actually has a name: Missing White woman syndrome. The term coined by the late and great Gwen Iffil to describe the media and public fascination with missing White women like Laci Peterson or Natalee Holloway, while ignoring cases involving missing people of color," she added, referencing two well-known cases of missing women.
MSNBC has extensively covered the case and its website Monday morning prominently featured an opinion piece on the missing woman.
Reid spent the remainder of the segment discussing multiple instances of missing Black and Native American individuals she claimed to have never heard about in the same way as the Petito case.
She also cited statistics from the Black and Missing Foundation that suggested the disparity in media coverage between missing White women and non-White women was attributed to missing minorities often being classified as runaways, minority adults being labeled as associated with crime, and that minorities are dismissed because it's believed they live most of their lives with poverty and crime as a regular part of their lives.
Reid ended the segment by suggesting that missing women of color weren't noticed as much because they didn't look like the daughters or granddaughters of newsroom executives, alluding to one of her guest's earlier claims on the show that stories on missing non-White women weren't sensational enough for the White, middle-aged males leading newsrooms.
Black people do go hiking
I really don't like Joy Reid. In this case,though I don't agree with how she said it, she's not exactly wrong.