The Columbus Dispatch

Petito family honors her legacy

Grieving relatives ‘want to make some good from this awful tragedy’

- Christine Fernando

The family of Gabby Petito, 22, is honoring her legacy through matching tattoos and by bringing attention to other missing persons cases.

Petito's family said Tuesday at a news conference that they are confident the FBI will find Petito's fiance, Brian Laundrie. Petito's mother and father shared that family members got tattoos matching their daughter's: “Let it be” beside a wave symbol.

They got the tattoos together Monday night, the day after Petito's funeral.

The family announced the Gabby Petito Foundation to help find other missing persons, emphasizin­g that they all deserve the same attention Petito got. The foundation website requested donations in lieu of flowers for her funeral.

Petito's father, Joe, emphasized how much social media helped investigat­ors in their search for his daughter and thanked people for their “outpouring of support.” But he said, “This same type of heightened awareness should be continued for everyone.”

“I want to ask everyone to help all of the people who are missing and need help,” he said Tuesday. “It's on all of you, everyone that's in this room to do that. And if you don't do that to other people who are missing, that's a shame because it's not just Gabby that deserves that.”

Joe Petito initially announced the foundation Saturday on Twitter: “No one should have to find their child on their own. We are creating this foundation to give resources and guidance on bringing their children home. We are looking to help people in similar situations as Gabby.”

Richard Stafford, the Petito family's lawyer, said the foundation is working out the details on what type of missing persons cases will be targeted

“Gabby's family does not want that light to dim,” he said Tuesday. “And they want to make some good from this awful tragedy.”

Though the news conference centered around rememberin­g Petito, Stafford touched briefly on the search for

Laundrie, urging him to turn himself in and his family to offer any informatio­n they have.

“The Laundries didn't help us find Gabby,” he said. “They're sure not going to help us find Brian.”

Stafford said Petito's parents are “100% happy with the FBI” and “know that they will bring justice for Gabby.”

Authoritie­s said Monday they were scaling back the search for Laundrie in a Florida nature reserve. The search, led by the FBI, is “targeted based on intelligen­ce” rather than “large-scale” efforts, North Port police spokespers­on Josh Taylor said.

Last week, 16 law enforcemen­t agencies

searched for Laundrie in the 24,000-acre Carlton Reserve in Sarasota County, using dogs, drones and ATV vehicles in the treacherou­s wetlands, which include swampy terrain where alligators, snakes, bobcats and coyotes dwell.

Laundrie was last seen nearly two weeks ago after returning home without Petito on Sept. 1 from a crosscount­ry trip the couple took. His parents told authoritie­s that Laundrie said he was going hiking in the reserve Sept. 14.

The couple's trip was well-documented on social media and Petito's Youtube channel as a romantic adventure. When Laundrie came home alone, investigat­ors said, he and the people close to him refused to share crucial informatio­n with them.

Petito's body was found at a campground near Wyoming's Grand Teton National Park, and her death was ruled a homicide.

Authoritie­s named Laundrie a “person of interest,” but he has not been charged in Petito's death. Last week, the FBI issued a federal arrest warrant, saying he used a debit card and bank accounts without permission from Aug. 30 through Sept. 1.

Petito's funeral was held Sunday in Holbrook, New York, near the Bayportblu­e Point community where she grew up.

Contributi­ng: N’dea Yancey-bragg, USA TODAY; The Associated Press

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO/AP ?? Nicole Schmidt, mother of Gabby Petito, whose death on a cross-country trip has sparked a manhunt for her boyfriend Brian Laundrie, speaks alongside other relatives during a news conference Tuesday in Bohemia, N.Y.
JOHN MINCHILLO/AP Nicole Schmidt, mother of Gabby Petito, whose death on a cross-country trip has sparked a manhunt for her boyfriend Brian Laundrie, speaks alongside other relatives during a news conference Tuesday in Bohemia, N.Y.
 ?? USA TODAY ?? Gabby Petito’s body was found at a campground near Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park, and her death was ruled a homicide.
USA TODAY Gabby Petito’s body was found at a campground near Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park, and her death was ruled a homicide.

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