Missing Persons Files: Gabby Petito

On July 2, 2021, twenty-two-year-old Gabby Petito left Long Island with her fiancé Brian Laundrie on a van life road trip across the American West. She documented every turn of the journey on Instagram and YouTube. She never came home. Her death — manual strangulation, manner homicide, at a Wyoming wilderness campsite — became one of the most covered missing persons cases in American history, exposing failures in domestic violence response, the disparity in who gets to be found, and what happens when a curated social media life collides with a private reality that can no longer be hidden.

Missing Persons Files: Gabby Petito
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On the afternoon of August 27, 2021, a white Ford Transit van with Florida license plates drove north on Highway 89 toward Bridger-Teton National Forest. Inside were two people who had spent the summer documenting what looked like freedom — national parks, open roads, Instagram posts with mountain light in every frame. Only one of them would be seen alive again.
Gabby Petito was twenty-two years old, a Long Island-born travel blogger who had quit her job at Publix, worked fifty-hour weeks to save for this trip, and converted a van into a home on wheels with her fiancé Brian Laundrie. She had been documenting every turn of the journey for thousands of followers. What those followers were watching — and what they did not know they were watching — sits at the center of this episode.
This case spans four years of investigation, civil litigation, legislative reform, and cultural reckoning. It covers the Moab police stop that asked an impossible question — what happens when the law fails the person it was meant to protect — and what it means when a family refuses to let the answer stay buried.

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