logo
Native American group leader traveling to AZ to spread awareness on missing indigenous people

Native American group leader traveling to AZ to spread awareness on missing indigenous people

Yahoo07-06-2025
The Brief
Keely Birdtail, a Cherokee Comanche native, is traveling to Arizona from Indiana.
She is spreading awareness on the issue of Missing and Murdered Indigenous People (MMIP)
PHOENIX - An Indiana woman rode all the way out to eastern Arizona to spread awareness about Missing and Murdered Indigenous People.
"I left Indiana four weeks ago on a mission to start spreading awareness for MMIW/MMIC/MMIP," said Keely Birdtail.
The backstory
Birdtail is a Cherokee Comanche native who is originally from Oklahoma. She started a group called Missing One Society, which is a motorcycle group dedicated to helping Indigenous people with missing relatives.
Her destination was the San Carlos Apache Reservation, where she met with the family of Emily Pike to discuss her unsolved murder. Birdtail says Emily's murder has reopened the conversation that could help Native tribes across the country.
What Birdtail Said
"We need to spread the word, and let her be the catalyst of us uniting together as one tribe instead of all these little tribes," said Birdtail.
Birdtail says her background as a mentor at Native American juvenile detention centers gave her insight into what teens like Emily are faced with.
"I really got to the full aspect of what their lives were like and how they could've quickly went into something like this," Birdtail said.
What's next
Birdtail says she hopes to start up grief counseling and life coaching for Indigenous youth across the nation, but hopes the bigger message is that solving Emily's murder and other unsolved Indigenous murders will take more than just her.
"I'm just a drop in the ocean, like I said before," said Birdtail. "With all of us, we become the ocean. We can do this, we can cause, we can get some justice, we can get some answers, maybe we can get some things done as a group."
What you can do
The reward in Emily Pike's case has increased to $175,000. If you have any information, you're asked to call the FBI's tipline at 1-800-CALL-FBI.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Convicted killer Jodi Arias signals fresh legal push more than decade after guilty verdict
Convicted killer Jodi Arias signals fresh legal push more than decade after guilty verdict

Fox News

time2 hours ago

  • Fox News

Convicted killer Jodi Arias signals fresh legal push more than decade after guilty verdict

Jodi Arias, convicted in 2013 for the brutal murder of her ex-boyfriend Travis Alexander, may be preparing to pursue another legal challenge to her conviction. Nearly a decade after her high-profile trial, Arias, now 45, remains behind bars at Arizona's Perryville state women's prison, serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole for the 2008 killing. Recently, Arias has reemerged in the public eye through prison-created artwork sales and a new blog on Substack. In a June 27 post, Arias dismissed tabloid rumors that she flirts with prison staff, calling the claim "a juicy lie." "It might be difficult for some to grasp, but flirting is not among my priorities. It's a waste of time and does nothing to serve my goals," she wrote. She added that her focus now lies on "PCR (post-conviction relief), my art, and my writing, including some manuscripts that may or may not ever be published." That line has fueled speculation that Arias is preparing another legal maneuver in her long-running effort to overturn her conviction. Most of her Substack content is subscriber-only, but the June 27 entry was made accessible to the general public. Although previous appeals have been unsuccessful, Arias has consistently expressed a desire to overturn her conviction. She has claimed that proceeds from her artwork are being set aside to help finance any future legal filings. In Arizona, post-conviction relief (PCR) is a legal option available after all standard appeals have been exhausted. It can be used to introduce new evidence or raise constitutional concerns. Back in 2008, Arias traveled to Alexander's home and murdered him in what authorities described as a calculated and cold-blooded attack. Investigators discovered his body in the shower, noting that his throat had been slashed, he had been shot in the head and he sustained numerous stab wounds. Prosecutors argued that the crime was fueled by jealousy and rage. During the 2013 trial, prosecutors said Arias was furious after Alexander ended their relationship and began seeing someone new, rejecting her attempts to rekindle their romance. After her conviction on May 7, 2013, jurors were unable to reach a unanimous decision on her sentence, not once, but twice. As a result, in 2015, a judge sentenced her to life in prison. In 2014, Arias was ordered to pay over $32,000 in restitution to Alexander's family following a court hearing. Since 2022, Arias has held a job as a library aide at the prison and, more recently, was assigned to assist with music programs, including the prison band and choir, according to jail records. Arias is currently serving a life sentence at the Perryville state women's prison located in Goodyear, Arizona, with no possibility of parole. According to public records, she is housed in a medium-low security unit, classified under a lower "custody class" within the facility. Stepheny Price covers missing persons, homicides, illegal immigration, and more. Story tips and ideas can be sent to

Woman arrested on felony charges after month-long burglary investigation
Woman arrested on felony charges after month-long burglary investigation

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Woman arrested on felony charges after month-long burglary investigation

An area woman was arrested on felony charges after a month-long burglary investigation in Richmond, Indiana. [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] On August 12, Richmond Police Officers arrested 38-year-old Kristi Wampler in the 200 block of North 13th Street, according to a social media post from the department. TRENDING STORIES: Police searching for woman accused of stealing goods from Kroger Person hospitalized after being rescued from Ludlow Falls; Fire department warns of dangers 'Violation of your privacy;' Police searching for person responsible for several daytime break-ins Wampler was wanted on an active warrant for a fourth-degree Felony burglary charge and a fifth-degree felony theft charge. The arrest is the result of a month-long investigation of a burglary that was reported on July 8 in the 300 block of South 16th Street, according to the post. RPD Detective Tom Legear 'put in the work' following leads, gathering evidence, and securing a warrant for Wampler's arrest. 'Good police work means we don't stop when the call is over. We keep working until the person responsible is found and brought to justice,' RPD Chief Kyle Weatherly said. [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

The influence of Edward Abbey's ‘Monkey Wrench Gang' as it turns 50
The influence of Edward Abbey's ‘Monkey Wrench Gang' as it turns 50

Washington Post

time12 hours ago

  • Washington Post

The influence of Edward Abbey's ‘Monkey Wrench Gang' as it turns 50

When he was 16, Zak Podmore and a group of friends in his native Utah made a plan: They would break into the construction site of a shopping mall and pour Karo syrup into the equipment's gas tanks, disabling the machines and stalling the builders for a time. Podmore's career as an adolescent ecoterrorist ended pretty much before it began. 'Of course we got cold feet and turned around, never even trespassed, let alone committed sabotage,' he said. But he was inspired — and remains inspired — by a book he had read a couple of years earlier: Edward Abbey's 'The Monkey Wrench Gang' (1975), a novel about a quartet of outlaws who tear through northern Arizona and southern Utah, evading the authorities while halting development by any means necessary and fantasizing about dynamiting the crudest man-made intrusion on the landscape, the Glen Canyon Dam.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store