• 'I can still hear her voice': Arches park ranger warned Gabby Petito he

    From buh buh biden@21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 1 04:06:36 2021
    XPost: alt.missing-adults, talk.politics.guns, sac.politics
    XPost: wyo.general

    Melissa Hulls can still hear Gabby Petito’s voice.

    On Aug. 12, the visitor and resource protection supervisor at Arches
    National Park, heard a call come over her radio of a possible domestic
    assault, stemming from an argument in Moab between Petito and her fiance,
    Brian Laundrie.

    Hulls arrived to find the couple pulled over by a Moab police officer
    inside the park. Knowing that in a domestic violence situation the female usually feels more comfortable talking with another female, she focused on Petito, who at that point was sitting in the back of a police cruiser.

    “I can still hear her voice,” Hulls said in an exclusive interview with
    the Deseret News. “She wasn’t just a face on the milk carton, she was real
    to me.”

    Hulls pictures the sobbing 22-year-old sitting in the back of the cruiser.
    She knows her mannerisms, just from the roughly hour-and-a half
    interaction.

    “I was probably more candid with her than I should've been,” Hulls
    recalls, warning Petito that her and Laundrie’s relationship had the
    markings of a “toxic” one.

    “I was imploring with her to reevaluate the relationship, asking her if
    she was happy in the relationship with him, and basically saying this was
    an opportunity for her to find another path, to make a change in her
    life,” she said.

    “She had a lot of anxiety about being away from him, I honestly thought if anything was going to change it would be after they got home to Florida.”

    In the end, Petito stayed with Laundrie.

    “This wasn't a good day for anybody. We thought we were making the right decision when we left them.”

    And on Sunday, when she heard the news that the FBI recovered a body in
    Wyoming “consistent with the description of Gabby Petito,” the law
    enforcement ranger of 17 years tilted her head back and let out a sigh of someone all too familiar with a body recovery effort.

    “I honestly haven’t looked at my body camera footage for that night. It’s
    hard to think about now because I feel like I could've said more to help
    her,” she said. “It’s hard not to second-guess myself, and wish I said
    more, or wish I had found the right words to make her believe that she
    deserved more.”

    Teton County Coroner Brent Blue confirmed on Tuesday the body found in
    Wyoming was in fact Petito’s. The coroner’s initial determination for the manner of death is homicide, though official cause of death remains undetermined, pending final autopsy results, Denver FBI officials tweeted.

    ‘Where is Gabby?’
    It’s a video that millions of Americans watched. Gabby Petito, sitting in
    the passenger seat of her van crying uncontrollably as she and Laundrie
    are approached by a Moab police officer.

    Petito apologizes multiple times. Laundrie, soft-spoken, nervous and also apologetic, sits in the driver’s seat as he takes the keys out of the
    ignition and proceeds to explain why the van hit the curb.

    “He really stresses me out. This is a rough morning,” Petito tells
    officers.

    “I don’t know, it’s just some days I have really bad OCD and I was just cleaning and straightening up and I was apologizing to him,” she says as
    the officer walks her away from the van, sitting her down on the curb
    before helping her into the air-conditioned cruiser.

    “I’m sorry that I’m so mean.”

    Petito then details a fight between her and Laundrie earlier that
    afternoon, where she says her fiance tried to lock her out of the car,
    telling her she “needed to calm down.”

    Their stories line up, with Laundrie telling officers, “I said, ‘Let’s
    just take a breather and let’s not go anywhere. Let’s just calm down for a minute.’” He then tells police that the several scratches on his face were
    from Petito hitting him as she tried to get back into the van.

    A striking image soon emerges — a sobbing Petito, surrounded by male
    officers. Then Hulls arrives.

    After consoling Petito, Hulls discusses what to do with her colleagues.

    They had several options. With the facts suggesting Petito was the
    aggressor, they could’ve taken her to jail. But Hulls said the situation appeared to be more of a mental health crisis than a case of domestic
    violence.

    What Petito did to Laundrie “was emotional,” Hulls said. “She shouldn't
    have done it, but it wasn’t done maliciously.”

    “I wouldn't have called (the relationship) unsafe. If we had any reason to think any one of them was in danger, we would’ve separated them,” she
    said.

    On Monday, audio of the 911 call was released, giving new insight into
    what led up to Hulls’ interaction with Petito.

    “A gentleman was slapping the girl,” the caller tells dispatchers. “They
    ran up and down the sidewalk. He proceeded to hit her, hopped in the car,
    and they drove off.”

    Why that information was not relayed is unclear. Moab police did not
    respond to a request to comment.

    Hulls detailed the complexing, difficult — and often scrutinized —
    relationship between law enforcement and domestic violence situations. Sometimes the choice is clear, and knowing the victim is in imminent
    danger can make the responding officer’s job easier. But it’s not always
    black and white.

    “Sometimes you get evidence and they don’t own up to it, and they’re just
    lying to your face and it’s unsafe, and you know that something more is
    going to happen if you let them go home together. That’s a much easier
    decision to arrest,” she said. “With this one, I just don’t think she understood how big a deal this was.”

    So they separated the couple. Petito took the van, Laundrie was taken to a hotel, and a few days later, they were back on the road, headed north to
    Salt Lake City.

    Their social media presence resumed, showing every indication of a happy
    couple in love and living out the coveted van life. They stopped in Ogden, where Petito is pictured in front of a butterfly mural, the last thing
    posted to her Instagram account.

    A few days later, Petito texted her mom before the couple reportedly went camping in Wyoming. It was the last time they heard from their daughter. A
    week later, she was reported missing.

    On Sunday the story took a heartbreaking turn when investigators made the
    grim announcement from Grand Teton National Park.

    The case is still under investigation — what exactly happened to Petito
    and the role Laundrie played has yet to be announced. But according to the thousands, maybe millions, following the story, Laundrie is guilty.

    “Where is Gabby?” became a rallying cry, repeated ad nauseam in the
    thousands of comments under Laundrie’s still active Instagram account.

    When the news broke of the incident outside Arches, Moab quickly became a
    focal point. Screengrabs from the body camera footage, with Utah’s iconic
    red rocks in the background, became the main image used by national media.

    Even now, weeks after the incident, the case is still casually mentioned
    all over Moab — spend a few hours at a coffee shop, bar, even the Arches National Park visitors center, and you’re bound to overhear Petito’s name.

    Sometimes they’re expressing grief. Sometimes they’re speculating on what happened. And sometimes they’re criticizing the response from Moab police.

    Why was Petito treated as the aggressor? Why was Laundrie, who towered
    over his fiance, treated as a victim? And why didn’t they notice, as some
    on Twitter suggested, the signs of a controlling and manipulative
    relationship?

    Hindsight is 20/20, Hulls said of the criticism, noting that “it’s easy to
    say that when you can break down a video, minute by minute, and judge it, versus being in the moment where we saw minor injuries and two people that
    were apologetic.”

    “It’s not that we didn’t think he was manipulative, but we have to worry
    about the safety, and not the psychology of it,” she said. “We have to go
    by the facts that we were faced with at the time, and not let our emotions drive the decision.”

    And while Hulls doesn’t fault the actions taken by her colleagues that
    day, she admits it can be hard not to fixate on what else she could have
    said to Petito.

    “It’s hard not to think that I could've done something more, or found the
    exact words to make her change her life right then,” she said. “There are
    so many circumstances where you wish it had gone a certain way, and if you
    get stuck with the ‘would have, could have, should have,’ you can’t do
    this job. You got to learn from it and keep going, otherwise you’re not
    going to be help for the next Gabby.”

    https://www.deseret.com/utah/2021/9/20/22684359/i-can-still-hear-her- voice-arches-park-ranger-warned-gabby-petito-relationship-seemed-toxic-
    brian

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