Remains Found In Florida Confirmed To Be Brian Laundrie’s

The FBI confirmed Thursday that the partial human remains found in a Florida park on Wednesday were in fact missing man Brian Laundrie.

EF
Ellen Fike

October 21, 20212 min read

Laundrie and Petito
(Cowboy State Daily Staff)

The FBI confirmed Thursday that the partial human remains found in a Florida park on Wednesday were in fact those of Brian Laundrie, former fiancee of the murdered Gabby Petito.

The FBI said in a statement that dental records were used to confirm the remains as Laundrie’s. Family attorney Steve Bertolino told CNN on Wednesday that the remains were like Laundrie’s.

“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 said Wednesday night.

The cause of death was not immediately reported.

CNN reported this week that after a brief search Wednesday of a trail Laundrie frequented, the Laundrie family and law enforcement found “some articles” belonging to him.

According to the FBI, which gave a news conference on Wednesday afternoon, the items found were a notebook and a backpack belonging to Laundrie. During the news conference, officials said they could not confirm if the remains found were Laundrie’s.

The notebook and backpack were first signs of Laundrie since he disappeared in mid-September after Petito was reported missing. Laundrie was never been named a suspect in Petito’s death, but was considered a person of interest.

Petito’s body was found in the Bridger-Teton National Forest last month after she was last heard from in August. She and Laundrie had been traveling the country in a van.

On Sept. 1, Laundrie returned to his home in Florida with the van and without Petito.

A warrant was issued for Laundrie’s arrest by the federal court in Cheyenne. The warrant did not accuse Laundrie of any role in Petito’s death, but accuses of him of unlawfully using a credit card in the days following her disappearance.

Last week, Teton County coroner Dr. Brent Blue confirmed the cause of Petito’s death as homicide by strangulation. He also said her body had been in the forest for three to four weeks before law enforcement officials discovered her remains.

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Ellen Fike

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