Gabby Petito sold a heartbreaking necklace before going on a deadly cross-country road trip with Brian Laundrie

2021-11-03 06:01:49 By : Ms. Sabrina Lin

GABBY Petito sold healing necklaces a few months before her unfortunate road trip with Brian Laundrie. These necklaces were designed to "eliminate pain, anger and stress" and "provide the strength to move on," and only he returned.

The 22-year-old Petito's body was found on September 19 at a campground in Teton County, Wyoming. She listed gold-plated necklaces for sale on her Depop page "thingsgabbydoes" last year.

Gabby sold at least three necklaces on her page for $10, which originally appeared to be made by Target.

One of the chains contained a piece described as the "Gold Howlite Healing Stone", which Gabby claimed helped the wearer find stability, patience and awareness.

"Howlite stones help develop patience and help eliminate anger, pain and stress," the list reads.

"Use this gold-plated healing stone pendant necklace to promote emotional expression...Inlaid with a cylindrical Howlite stone, whenever you wear it, it will bring a strong and positive vibration of self-expression and inspiration."

Around the same time, Gabby also sold a "black agate" necklace. That item claims to contain the power of "protection. power. alignment".

"Black Onyx is a grounding and protective crystal," the list reads. "It gives people a kind of calmness, an inner strength to move on, and it is also very helpful to keep calm in times or places of stress."

The third necklace sold was the "Amazon Light Therapy Stone", which claimed to represent "self-expression, inspiration and a peaceful atmosphere."

"Use this gilded healing stone to promote harmony and peace," Gaby wrote. "Inlaid with cylindrical amazonite, no matter when you wear it, it can bring a strong and positive vibration of self-expression and inspiration."

The 22-year-old van-life video blogger was found strangled a few months later. She also sold old clothes, headbands and custom items on her Depop page.

She sold a blood-stained bookmark hand-designed by Brian Laundrie for $5.

Bookmarks come in many designs, some of which feature birds, penguins, and even the shadow outline of the Marvel comic character Hellboy, which is a laundromat’s favorite.

Another design called "Chuck Palahniuk custom" includes a stamp with two angels facing each other on a fountain. Covering them is a bright pink lipstick mark.

This logo can be seen in Palaniuk’s famous novel "Fight Club", and Laudri often quotes it in his works of art and social media pages.

Blood drops and red stains spattered strangely on books and bookmarks.

The second design, the black outline of a dead robin, is also sold next to a copy of Palaniuk's horror satire novel Lullaby, and Gaby and Brian talk about reading in their doomed adventure.

All items on the Gabby's Depop page are listed as "sold," but it is not clear when these sales took place.

The design of the bookmark matches a similar image shared by Laundrie on his Instagram page @bizarre_design.

In a post on July 14, 2020, Laundrie uploaded a comic style sketch of Brad Pitt playing Taylor Durden in the movie Fight Club and cited the character.

"Only through disasters can we be resurrected. Only after losing everything can you be free to do anything. Nothing is static, everything is developing, everything is falling apart," he followed suit.

Original artwork depicting violence and other ugly themes are also shared on the page.

A post published on July 15, 2020 was titled "Reaper leads sheep to the slaughterhouse" and showed a group of sheep surrounded by cruel figures brandishing a sickle.

Some harvesters were carved into mousetraps and outlined in red.

The second work uploaded a week ago shows a man wearing a wolf mask sitting on a chair with a blood-stained knife in his hand, his arms and legs splattered with red.

Behind the subject's head is a red circle, and three other figures wearing animal masks are holding guns and a bat.

Specifically, what happened to Gabby and Brian during their cross-country road trip has yet to be determined by investigators.

Before Gabby disappeared on or about August 27, they planned a four-month cross-country road trip in the U.S. National Parks for about two months.

On September 1, Brian quietly returned to her home in Florida alone, without notifying the police or Gaby’s family that she was missing.

Gabby was eventually reported missing by her mother in New York on September 11. Allegedly, after 10 days, Brian and his parents obstructed the whereabouts of her daughter.

Brian then disappeared on September 13 and told his parents that he was going hiking in the Carlton Reserve. When he left home for the last time, they described him as "distracted" and "insane."

Six days later, on September 19, Gabi's body was found in a campground near Grand Teton National Park.

Subsequent autopsy confirmed that she was strangled to death by "human forces" about three to four weeks ago.

A five-week search of Laundrie was then conducted nationwide. Although he was not listed as a suspect in her death, an arrest warrant was issued against him on suspicion of bank fraud.

The search ended on October 20 after skeletal remains were found in Myakkahatchee Creek Park adjacent to the Carlton Reserve in Sarasota County, Florida.

The next day, officials determined that the body was a laundry.

It was not until October 20th that Brian's parents Chris and Roberta Laundrie agreed to join the police to search Myakkahatchee, and the investigation made a breakthrough.

Although ground troops, helicopters, corpse dogs, and drones searched the park for more than a month, it took Chris and Roberta less than 90 minutes to find a dry bag and another on the trail. An item belonging to Brian.

After an indeterminate autopsy at the end of last month, the cause and time of death have not yet been determined.

A forensic pathologist is investigating Blaine’s remains, which are believed to consist of only parts of human skulls and bones.

The 22-year-old Gabby Petito last appeared on August 24, when he left a hotel in Utah. The following is a timeline of Gabby Petito's disappearance:

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