A North Port Police spokesman is acknowledging that the department made mistakes in its handling of theBrian Laundrieinvestigation, according to new report.
Taylor said police had surveillance cameras set up around the Laundries' home, intent on keeping a close eye on Brian, who returned home on Sept. 1 from a road trip with Petito, alone.
However, that plan failed.
Investigators tasked with keeping tabs on Laundrie apparently saw him leave his parents' house in his grey Mustang on Sept. 13. Two days later, when the car returned, they mistook Laundrie’s mother for him.
“They’re kind of built similarly,” Taylor said.
At a press conference on Sept. 16, officials told reporters they knew where Laundrie was, and that they were confident he was in his parents' home.
Brian Laundrie.Instagram

On Sept. 17, Christopher and Roberta Laundrie reported Brian missing.
“That was certainly news to us that they had not seen him,” Taylor said. “We thought that we [had] seen Brian initially come back into that home on that Wednesday. But, we now know that that wasn’t true.”
Taylor alleges that Roberta drove Brian’s car back, and was wearing a baseball hat at the time.
“They had returned from the park with that Mustang,” Taylor says. “So, who does that? Right? Like, if you think your son’s missing since Tuesday, you’re going to bring his car back to the home? So it didn’t make sense that anyone would do that if he wasn’t there. So the individual getting out with a baseball cap we thought was Brian.”
What followed was a weeks-long search across a 25,000-acre nature preserve filled withsnake- and alligator-infested swamps— a search on the dime of taxpayers.
“No case is perfect,” Taylor says.
According to authorities, Petitodied from strangulationwhile on a two-month-long, cross-country road trip with Laundrie, who was named a person of interest in Petito’s disappearance on Sept. 15 — two weeks after he returned home alone.
The 22-year-old Long Island, N.Y., woman’s remains were found in Wyoming’sGrand Teton National Parkon Sept. 19.

The couple had spent the summer traveling across the country in a white van together,documenting their adventures on YouTubealong the way.
Laundrie’s family refused to meet with the FBI to discuss Petito’s missing persons case, referring them instead to their attorney, Steven Bertolino, a longtime family friend.

The Laundries told the FBI they last saw Brianon Sept. 13, after allegedly leaving their home to hike near where his body was ultimately found.
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Dental records were used to confirm thathuman remains found last weekin Florida’s Myakkahatchee Creek Environmental Park were Laundrie’s.
The body was found next to a notebookand backpack he owned.
Laundrie was never charged with Petito’s death or disappearance.
source: people.com