Search for Brian Laundrie in 25,000-acre Florida preserve enters fifth day

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Defense attorney breaks down Gabby Petito case

Defense attorney Anthony Rickman lays out the case from multiple points of view.

Florida authorities will continue to search through Sarasota County swampland on Thursday to find the one person who may know what happened to Gabby Petito

Federal, state and local officials have been searching for any sign of Brian Laundrie in the Carlton Reserve. He is the sole person of interest in Gabby’s death, which has been ruled a homicide

North Port police said they’ll be back at the park once again Thursday to search for him. They haven’t revealed why they’re continuing the search in this massive nature preserve other than to say that he’s still missing and this is where is parents said he last went.

The search includes an array of resources: scent-sniffing dogs, swamp buggies, drones, ATVs, airboats and divers – who were requested before noon Wednesday.

MORE: Gabby Petito: Timeline of 22-year-old woman's disappearance, death

Laundrie’s parents reported him missing last Friday, telling police he’d driven to the Carlton Reserve three days before and hadn’t come back. They also told police they’d later found his Mustang there and decided to bring it back home.

So far, four days of exhaustive searching in a dense and swampy 25,000-acre park has turned up nothing.

Meanwhile, Laundrie’s neighbors are sharing details about behavior they found strange in the days after Brian returned home from Wyoming, before Gabby was reported missing.

Neighbors tell FOX the Laundries appeared to take a weekend camping trip with their son in the family’s new camper – days later Gabby’s family would report her missing and after calls and texts to Brian and his parents continued to go unanswered.

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Neighbors recall Laundrie family's trip after Brian's return

William and Charlene Guthrie told to Fox News they noticed the Laundries had gotten a new camper attachment for their pickup truck and were loading it up, presumably for a trip about a week into September.

PREVIOUS: Neighbors: Brian Laundrie, parents went on trip with new camper after Gabby disappeared

An autopsy on Tuesday ruled Gabby’s death a homicide, but the official report, which has yet to be publicly released, will shed more light on the exact cause of death.

Gabby Petito death

On Tuesday, a coroner confirmed that a body found Sunday in Wyoming was indeed Gabby. They said the manner of death was homicide. Investigators believe Brian – Gabby's fiancé – is the last person to see her alive. 

The remains were discovered Sunday in the Bridger-Teton National Forest after a national search for the 22-year-old. Video captured by a vacationing Tampa family accidentally caught what appeared to be the couple's van parked at the Spread Creek Dispersed Camping Area in the forest; Gabby's body was later found nearby.

Video captured by a vacationing Tampa family accidentally caught what appeared to be the couple's van parked at the Spread Creek Dispersed Camping Area in the forest; Gabby's body was later found nearby.

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Tampa family says it was fate that led to video of Gabby Petito’s possible van

The Bethunes, who live in the Tampa area, say they spotted what is believed to be Gabby Petito's camper on August 27. On Sunday, they submitted their video to the FBI -- which also happens to be the birthday of their son, Ethan, who died in 2011. ‘He would’ve turned 17, and I fully believe that Ethan had a hand in bringing Gabby home for sure.’

Her body was found nearly three weeks after Brian returned home to North Port with the camper van – without Gabby. Brian was later named a person of interest in her disappearance. The remains were discovered Sunday in the Bridger-Teton National Forest after a national search for the 22-year-old. 

As for a digital trail of evidence, North Port Police Chief Todd Garrison said last week they didn't have Gabby's phone and were still looking for it. As of Wednesday, it does not appear police have Brian’s phone. It could have been one of the items he took with him when his parents said he left. 

READ: After 'cease and desist' letter, Gabby Petito photo removed from 'unclaimed' Yelp page for Laundrie's attorney

Gabby had been documenting the trip across the country on social media. Her last post was made August 25, the same day that she last spoke with her family by phone.

The FBI and other local law enforcement began the search in the national forest Saturday, September 18. Gabby had visited the area on August 27; her family reported her missing on September 11 after her fiancé, Brian, returned home to North Port, Florida with the van, but without Gabby, following a domestic altercation in Moab, Utah.

A 911 caller who reported the "domestic dispute" between Brian and Gabby on August 12 was heard telling a dispatcher that "the gentleman was slapping the girl."

Body camera footage from the responding officers showed Petito crying in the couple's van. Officers ended up splitting up the couple for the night to cool off.

RELATED: Gabby Petito showed behavior of victim in Utah bodycam video, domestic violence counselor says

After the missing person's report was filed on September 11, police in North Port and elsewhere began looking for her, but they did not have any help narrowing down the search from the Laundrie family.

Brian Laundrie missing

Investigators said Brian hasn’t been seen since September 14, according to his parents, who said they believed he was at the park. Officials turned their attention to the Carlton Reserve over the weekend. The preserve is closed until further notice, according to the non-profit, Friends of Carlton Reserve.

Now, over the weekend, investigators scoured the reserve but search efforts were focused on the North Port end. They paused their search Monday – the day the FBI served a search warrant at Brian’s parents’ home in North Port – resuming Tuesday, this time in Venice, on the other side of the reserve.

Tuesday, investigators were out in full force once again, utilizing drones, swamp buggies and dogs to try and pick up a trail on Brian.

Rain over the past few days hasn’t made investigators’ job of looking for Brian any easier. The Carlton Reserve is a large area – more than 25,000 acres of heavily wooded and swampy land. A plethora of wildlife that call it home, including gators and snakes. 

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Brian Laundrie search: What led police to the Carlton Reserve?

FOX 13's Kimberly Kuizon has been following the Gabby Petito case since the 22-year-old was reported missing. She's got the latest on the search for Brian Laundrie, including the most commonly asked questions.

MORE: Brian Laundrie argued in Wyoming restaurant hours before Gabby Petito vanished: eyewitnesses

At this point, it’s unclear as to what Brian’s parents have told investigators about his whereabouts or why the search has shifted to the Venice side of the reserve. Many believe Brian is using Florida's expansive wooded areas to his advantage to evade authorities.

After not speaking with investigators for days, the Laundrie family eventually told investigators Brian had left days earlier with a backpack, heading for the preserve. The family’s attorney said Brian’s parents actually went looking for him on Wednesday and found his car parked at the preserve, but they left it so he could drive home. 

Brian Laundrie, seen in Aug. 12 Moab police bodycam video

However, when he didn’t return Thursday morning, the parents say they went to retrieve the car themselves. 

Investigators are still asking the public for help in locating Brian Laundrie. They say he is a white male, 5-foot-8 and weighing 160 pounds. He has brown eyes, very short brown hair, trimmed facial hair, and was last seen wearing a hiking bag with a waist strap.  

Anyone with information is asked to call 1-800-CALL-FBI.

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