I would think the court of the Laundries own minds will be the most troubling “court” to them. Late at night, when they’re trying to fall asleep. The idea that maybe if they had been forthcoming with the police immediately or had dealt with him differently, maybe their son would still be alive. To me, that would be much tougher than ignoring a bunch of yahoos who will soon turn their attention to next pretty blond woman to disappear.
The moment that Laundrie realized he was going to face consequences he left the house and killed himself. I’m not sure anything they did would have changed that. We also have zero idea what they knew, it’s entirely possibly they know no more about the circumstances of Gabby’s death that we do. If that’s the case, there’s not really anything they could have done differently that would have altered Brian’s ability to kill himself.
It’s been mentioned in press coverage that his notebook was not in the dry bag, so it would have to be handled with care so as not to damage it any further than it already is
I think it’s also been mentioned that he went out hiking in that swamp on previous times. Maybe he felt some kind of “connection” to the place, and wanted that to be the place where he would die. He may have chosen “suicide by alligator” (or water moccasin), or something similar.
Looks like we’re getting a possible explanation for how Laundrie managed to evade surveillance and/or how local police may have injected confusion into the timeline over when he disappeared.
Top flight police work, that’s all there is to it. Fella’s probably a Lieutenant by now…
Given a relatively hot, wet environment with scavengers having full access to the corpse being reduced to a skeleton or nearly so can actually happen pretty fast.
So, wait…I may have lost the thread here. Brian drives his car to the nature preserve and leaves it. Then his mom/parents pick it up? And they later report him missing?
That’s it (unless there is yet another change in the parents’ memories). As of now:
September 13: date the parents say Brian drove away, saying he was going to the nature preserve. (Originally they’d said “September 14.”)
September 15: Laundrie parents tell investigators they drove to the preserve on this day, saw Brian’s Mustang parked there, but left it where it was. They report that it had a note from police (saying ‘please remove this vehicle’) on the windshield.
September 16: Laundrie parents tell investigators they drove back to the preserve and this time one of them drove the Mustang back to their house.
September 17: date on which the Laundrie parents reported Brian to be missing.
If they believed their son to be suicidal, all this is difficult to understand. People have come up with explanations, but I have to admit I haven’t heard one that sounds convincing.
I’m really hung up on the part where they brought his vehicle back and didn’t report him missing immediately (but did report it). I can’t make any kind of sense of it–not an innocent explanation, nor a guilty one.
Confusion. Not sure what to do/how to handle the situation. Seems to cover the whole affair from the parents’ perspective, as far as I’m concerned. Requires neither collusion nor stupidity, just a very novel situation. I mean, if I can allow that a trained police officer might mistake the mom for her son, I think I can charitably grant the parents might act imperfectly too.
So they drove off with the car, leaving Brian stranded in the swamp? This begs the question: What were they thinking at the time? Is this place within walking distance of where they lived? If Brian had come back to the parking lot and found his wheels not there, could he have walked home, or walked to someplace reasonable? Did he have a mobile phone with him (or did his parents believe/assume that he did)?
Yeah, if you look on google maps the location it was purportedly left is like right at the entrance (but not at a parking space or anything) to a public park, off on the side of the road. In most places if police leave a warning note on a car like that, they do intend to tow it the next time they get around to that area, so moving the car back to their house probably didn’t seem optional.
I believe they went to the park looking for him, since that is where he had indicated he was going. They saw the car abandoned there with a police notice affixed to it.