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Brian Laundrie's family called the police after Dog the Bounty Hunter showed up on their property

Natalie Musumeci   

Brian Laundrie's family called the police after Dog the Bounty Hunter showed up on their property
  • Brian Laundrie's parents called the police on Dog the Bounty Hunter over the weekend.
  • He has joined the search to find Laundrie and showed up at the family's Florida home Saturday.
  • The North Port Police Department responded to a 911 call from the family on the matter, police said.

Brian Laundrie's parents called the police on Duane "Dog the Bounty Hunter" Chapman after he showed up at their Florida home over the weekend, police confirmed to Insider Monday.

The North Port Police Department responded to a 911 call from Laundrie's family on Saturday. The family said Chapman was on the property of their North Port home, Josh Taylor, a spokesman for the police department, said.

The reality-TV star, who has joined the search to find Laundrie, the fiancé of Gabby Petito, was seen knocking on the door of the Laundrie family home on Saturday.

"We did not tell him to leave," Taylor told Insider in reference to Chapman. "He left on his own."

In an interview with Fox News on Monday, Chapman said "it's a shame" that Laundrie's family "wouldn't speak with us."

"The police said we were welcome to knock on the door so we did," Chapman said. "I wanted to tell the Laundries that our goal is to find Brian and bring him in alive."

Laundrie, 23, has been the subject of a massive search since his parents reported him missing to police on September 17 - just two days after he was named a person of interest in the disappearance of the 22-year-old Petito.

His parents told police that Laundrie went out for a hike at Sarasota County's Carlton Reserve with only a backpack three days earlier and never returned to their North Port home.

Authorities have been searching the 25,000-acre nature preserve for more than a week for Laundrie. But Taylor told Insider on Monday that search efforts there would be "scaled back" this week.

Petito's body was found at a remote campsite in Wyoming on September 19, and her death was later ruled a homicide, according to a coroner's initial findings.

Last week, a federal court in Wyoming issued an arrest warrant for Laundrie in connection with the case.

Chapman said in a "Fox & Friends" interview on Monday that he had gotten more than 1,000 tips since he joined the search for Laundrie.

"We're going through all those leads right now," Chapman said. "I would say within 48 hours, we probably will have a location where we start the tracking at."

Laundrie and Petito set out on a cross-country road trip from New York on July 2, and Laundrie returned to Florida on September 1 with the van the couple was traveling in but without Petito.

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