
The three-year search for missing Texas State University student Jason Landry continues with unwavering resolve from the Texas Office of the Attorney General (OAG) as they comb through evidence and leads. Landry disappeared on December 13, 2020, and was last seen that same day, with his vehicle later found abandoned on a rural Luling road, KXAN reports.
The enigmatic case that has baffled authorities involves a crashed car and Landry's possessions, found scattered in an area notorious for its oil fields. In the span of the investigation, countless hours were allocated to forensic testing, witness interviews, and evaluations by an array of experts, FOX 7 Austin reveals. Despite these efforts, answers remain elusive, and every lead pursued seems to deepen the mystery.
The OAG's Cold Case and Missing Persons Unit conducted a methodical case review in November 2023, seeking to extract new insights from the unsettling silence that followed Landry's disappearance. A conclave of specialists in digital forensics, criminal intelligence, and geospatial sciences concluded that "all credible leads and investigative steps have been thoroughly pursued up to this point," the Texas OAG said, as stated in the Fox7 Austin report.
While the search presses onward, authorities urge anyone with potential information to reach out to the OAG's dedicated unit. The Caldwell County Sheriff's Office's working theory has always been a bizarre one, with suggestions that Landry may have undressed in the street before vanishing, leaving his personal belongings behind—yet, thus far, this lead has not yielded the closure the Landry family desperately seeks.
In remembrance of the third anniversary of this ongoing tragedy, the Landry family holds fast to hope despite facing another year without their son. As the investigation persists, the commitment to discovering Jason Landry's fate remains steadfast—an endeavor echoed by law enforcement and shared by a community longing for answers.









