Couple planned to learn agriculture at Oregon pumpkin farm
Before he killed Gabby Petito at a cold campsite in Wyoming, Brian Laundrie told his parents the couple planned to work for free on an Oregon pumpkin farm and learn skills he could use to achieve his goal of one day running his own farm, according to court documents.
Days after a 911 caller in Moab, Utah, told police he saw Laundrie hitting Petito in the face, the soon-to-be killer flew home to Florida under the pretense he needed to clear out a storage unit near his parents' home to save money.
During a brief stay with his parents, he did not tell them about the Moab incident or raise any concerns and instead said he and Petito had plans to work for free on the farm in exchange for parking for her van, according to depositions from Christopher and Roberta Laundrie in a lawsuit.
Gabby Petito poses for an Instagram photo in Bryce Canyon National Park. (Family of Gabby Petito)
"He told us again that they were going to Oregon to maybe work in a pumpkin place that they'd get … learn farming and help with that season of pumpkins," Christopher Laundrie told Pat Reilly, the attorney for Joseph Petito and Nichole Schmidt, during a deposition. "That's it. That's what he told me."
Roberta Laundrie said her son wanted to clear out the storage unit because the planned stay at the farm would prolong their trip.
GABBY PETITO AND BRIAN LAUNDRIE'S FAMILIES HEADED TO MEDIATION IN FLORIDA LAWSUIT
Brian Laundrie as seen in bodycam footage released by the Moab Police Department in Utah. (Moab Police Department)
"It was some sort of a farming co-op, or – I don't know what they called it, but him and Gabrielle were going to work there and learn about farming and be able to park their van for free," she said in her own deposition. "And I thought that sounded great, and I was excited about that."
However, she added, he didn't have anything specific to say about Petito during that return home.
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Chris and Roberta Laundrie in the Myakkahatchee Creek Environmental Park on the morning police discovered their son's skeletal remains. (Michael Ruiz/Fox News Digital)
While Laundrie's parents said their son did not contact them about the Moab incident, Petito texted both of her parents from the scene, where she took a photograph of herself with a black eye and blood on her face. Police split the couple up for the night.
But Laundrie, after his five-day return to Florida, rejoined her on the road in Salt Lake City and killed her within two weeks.
Laundrie brought up the pumpkin patch again in an Aug. 28 phone call with his mother, according to Christopher Laundrie, the day before he said "everything, you know, hit the fan."
Attorney Steven Bertolino, right, speaks with attorney Laura Kelly, center, during arguments to dismiss a complaint against him, filed by the parents of Gabby Petito. (Mike Lang/USA Today Network)
Petito was last seen alive around 2:30 p.m. on security footage from the Jackson, Wyoming, Whole Foods store Aug. 27, 2021, shortly after the couple left the Merry Piglets Tex-Mex restaurant after a public argument between Laundrie and three female employees.
A seemingly irate Laundrie left and returned to the restaurant four times before Petito apologized, witnesses told Fox News Digital after she vanished. She is believed to have been killed that evening or the following day.
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The Laundrie parents speak with a North Port Police detective shortly after investigators found their son's partial remains. (Fox News Digital/Michael Ruiz)
Laundrie then made a panicked call to his parents, who gave Atty. Steven Bertolino $25,000 to retain a high-powered Wyoming lawyer. However, according to court filings, instead of remaining in Jackson, Laundrie took Petito's van and drove back to his parents' house in Florida.
The family went camping and refused to comment publicly on the case.
Two days after Petito's mother reported her missing, Laundrie sneaked away and killed himself in a swamp, leaving behind a suicide note in which he confessed to her murder.
The parents are scheduled for mediation next week. Petito's mom and dad are separately suing the Moab Police Department for its handling of the domestic stop, which resulted in no arrests.
Michael Ruiz is a reporter for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to