Disappearance of Jason Landry

On December 13, 2020, Jason Landry, a 21-year-old student at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas, disappeared after his car was found crashed and abandoned along a rural gravel road near Luling, Texas. Landry had been driving from San Marcos to his family home in Missouri City, Texas, but never arrived.

Jason Landry
Crop of photo of Jason Landry, courtesy of family, from Caldwell County Office of Emergency Management
Born (1999-07-29) July 29, 1999 (age 26)
Missouri City, Texas, United States
DisappearedDecember 13, 2020(2020-12-13) (aged 21)
Near Luling, Texas, United States
StatusMissing for 5 years, 5 months and 28 days
EducationTexas State University

His vehicle was discovered shortly after midnight on Salt Flat Road in Caldwell County, Texas. Several personal belongings, including clothing, were found scattered along the roadway near the crash site, but Landry himself was not located. Despite extensive searches by law enforcement and volunteer organizations, he has not been located.

The disappearance has received regional media coverage and prompted continued search efforts and investigations by state and local authorities. As of 2026, Landry remains missing.

Background

edit

Jason Landry grew up in Missouri City, Texas. In 2020 he was a student at Texas State University in San Marcos.[1]

Landry had planned to travel from San Marcos to his family home in Missouri City during the evening of December 13, 2020.[2]

Disappearance

edit

On the night of December 13, 2020, Landry left San Marcos and began driving toward Missouri City. At approximately midnight, his vehicle, a Nissan Altima, was discovered crashed and abandoned along Salt Flat Road, a rural road near Luling in Caldwell County.[1]

Authorities reported that the crash appeared to involve only Landry's vehicle. Investigators found several of his personal belongings in and near the car, including his clothing scattered along the roadway.[2]

Landry himself was not located at the scene, and there was no immediate evidence explaining where he went after the crash.

Timeline of disappearance

edit

A detailed timeline of Landry's disappearance was reported by the Austin American-Statesman.[3]

  • December 13, 2020, 10:55 p.m.: Landry leaves his San Marcos apartment, intending to drive to his parents’ home in Missouri City. He opens the Waze navigation app to guide his route.[3]
  • 11:05 p.m.: According to the Caldwell County Sheriff’s Office, Landry is driving his Nissan Altima on Texas 80 and passes under Interstate 35 in San Marcos.[3]
  • 11:15 p.m.: Landry continues south on Texas 80, passing Texas 130 and traveling through small towns including Fentress, Prairie Lea, and Stairtown.[3]
  • 11:24 p.m.: Landry enters Luling on Texas 80. At the intersection where Texas 80 becomes Austin Street, he stops using Waze and begins using Snapchat, according to investigators.[3]
  • Around 11:30–11:34 p.m.: Authorities believe Landry deviated from his planned route at Magnolia Avenue, driving straight through the intersection toward Salt Flat Road and crashing on that rural road.[3]
  • December 14, 2020, 12:31 a.m.: A volunteer firefighter spots Landry’s Altima crashed and abandoned on Salt Flat Road in the 2300 block. The lights were on, the keys were in the ignition, and the front passenger door was locked.[3]
  • About 1 a.m.: Texas Department of Public Safety troopers respond roughly an hour after the vehicle’s discovery, continuing initial investigation procedures. Investigators suspect that Landry overcorrected on the gravel road and spun out of control.[3]
  • Approximately 5:30 a.m.: Jason’s father, Kent Landry, arrives at an impound yard where the vehicle was taken. He finds Jason’s phone inside the car and later returns to the crash scene to find clothing and personal items scattered on Salt Flat Road, including his backpack and blood-stained shorts.[3]
  • Later on December 14: Landry is officially declared missing. Search efforts are mounted by volunteer organizations and law enforcement agencies.[3]

Search and investigation

edit

Following the discovery of Landry's vehicle, local law enforcement agencies began search operations in the surrounding rural area. Search efforts included the use of drones, a helicopter with infrared cameras, side-scan sonar, search dogs, and volunteers.[4]

The nonprofit search organization Texas EquuSearch assisted with early search efforts in Caldwell County. After several days of searching without locating Landry, the organization suspended its active search operations.[4]

Three years after Landry's disappearance, the Texas Attorney General's Cold Case and Missing Persons Unit stated that they had conducted an extensive review of the case and concluded that all credible leads had been thoroughly pursued up to that point. It was also stated that the investigation is ongoing and that the public are encouraged to submit credible tips to law enforcement.[5]

Aftermath

edit

Family members and local community members organized prayer vigils and additional searches following Landry's disappearance.[2]

As of 2026, Landry remains missing and the investigation into his disappearance is ongoing.

See also

edit

References

edit
edit