Blissful video, troubled travel: Police bodycam footage is latest twist in Gabby Petito mystery

  • Police in three states say 22-year-old Gabrielle “Gabby” Petito disappeared Aug. 30, last seen in Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming.
  • Newly-released body camera footage from Utah police shows Petito and her fiancé, Brian Laundrie, trying to work out a manic episode on the side of the highway.
  • In the bodycam video, Petito tells an officer that she suffers from an obsessive-compulsive disorder that affects her behavior.

The idyllic viral video has struck a chord around the world: A lovely young couple on a cross-country trek together, eating granola and yogurt breakfasts, doing cartwheels on the beach, and kissing under the big sky of the West.

But behind the video is a story full of mystery, a young couple’s battle with their mental health woes and – possibly – a tragedy.

Police in three states say 22-year-old Gabrielle “Gabby” Petito disappeared Aug. 30, last seen in Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming. Her fiancé, Brian Laundrie, 23, is being called a person of interest in the case after he drove back to the couple’s primary residence in Florida on Sept. 1 without her.

The past few days have seen a flurry of activity in the case: A plea from Petito’s father for details on what happened to his daughter, body camera footage from Moab, Utah, police showing the couple trying to work out a manic episode in the desert, and police reports revealing simmering difficulties between the two over their intensifying closeness on the cross-country trip.

Gabrielle Petito, 22, was reported missing Saturday by her family in New York after they hadn't heard from her in two weeks. Petito was on a cross country trip in a van with her boyfriend.

Petito and Laundrie were childhood sweethearts on Long Island before moving from Blue Point, New York, in 2019 to live with his parents in North Port, Florida.

Police in North Port are the lead agency investigating the case. No charges have been filed and Petito’s whereabouts remain unknown. The bits and fragments of social media postings and police video of the couple are among the few clues to emerge so far in the case.

“He doesn’t really believe that I can do any of this . . . We’ve just been fighting all morning,” a tearful Petito says under the intense sun shining on the side of a Utah highway near Arches National Park, where she spoke with a police officer investigating a fight between the two. The August video of the officer’s bodycam footage has been released to the public and offers a glimpse of the couple’s troubles, about two weeks before her disappearance.

Gabby Petito timeline:From a road trip with Brian Laundrie to a missing persons investigation

She told an officer that she suffers from an obsessive-compulsive disorder that affects her behavior.

“Yeah, 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 saying that I’m so mean because sometimes I have OCD and get frustrated,” she said in police video footage.