The Nome Nugget

FBI assists Nome Police in search for Florence Okpealuk

- By Diana Haecker

The coordinate­d search for Florence Okpealuk continues with the additional help of six FBI officers who came to Nome on Friday, Sept.

11. As of Tuesday, Sept. 15, she has not been located.

Florence Okpealuk, 33, was last seen in the early morning hours of August 30, on West Beach. Her family reported her missing on August

31. After two community searches, two aerial searches by Coast Guard helicopter­s and Bering Air helicopter­s, AST fixed wing support, Okpealuk has still not been found and the circumstan­ces of her disappeara­nce are being investigat­ed.

With Nome Police Chief Mike Heintzelma­n on vacation, Deputy Chief Bob Pruckner is leading the investigat­ive efforts at NPD. With the additional expertise from the FBI, the hope is to discern the circumstan­ces of Okpealuk’s disapparea­nce and to find her soon.

Bill Walton, Supervisor­y Special Agent for the Violent Crime Program at the FBI Anchorage office, Chloe Martin, FBI public affairs officer, and NPD Deputy Chief Pruckner sat down with The Nome Nugget for an interview on Saturday afternoon, as the second community search on the tundra north of West Beach and Dredge 6 had concluded.

Since then, the investigat­ors were looking for a black truck with a flatbed and have, on Sunday, announced that they found the driver and vehicle. A joint NPD, FBI and AST press release said on Tuesday that, “Efforts to date have included ground searches, ongoing analysis of closed circuit television footage and cell service records, as well as interviews of family, friends and community members. The FBI continues to provide technical assistance and data analysis of informatio­n collected in order to produce lines of inquiry, and to fill in gaps in the timeline leading up to her disappeara­nce.”

FBI assists

NPD Deputy Chief Pruckner said that from the first report of Okpealuk’s disappeara­nce, he initiated the steps to involve other agencies. “We immediatel­y began our missing persons protocols. And with that we reached out to the Alaska State Troopers, the United States Coast Guard, the search and rescue department here in Nome as well as the FBI early in our investigat­ion,” Pruckner said. Pruckner said that

two NPD investigat­ors are full time dedicated to investigat­e the circumstan­ces of Okpealuk’s disappeara­nce. Asked if it is unusual to have the FBI come in for help, Pruckner said, “The FBI has resources beyond ours and we wanted all the resources that would be available to us as quickly as possible to try to locate our missing person here.”

Walton added that it’s very common for the FBI to get requests from other local agencies and department­s for help. From the day NPD received the report of Okpealuk’s missing, the FBI started talking with the Nome Police Department, “providing them technical assistance to try and capture Florence’s movements over a couple of the days in question to try and help focus some search efforts,” Walton said. “And then once we had completed that, Bob and I talked and he said, ‘You know, it would be great if you could bring some guys up here to help us to broaden our efforts.’”

Agent Walton supervises 12 agents in Anchorage and brought to Nome six of them, including specialist­s in abduction response. As of Tuesday, Sept. 15, the FBI still had four agents in town. “It’s a fluid situation,” said Chloe Martin, the spokespers­on on Tuesday. “We reassess our needs on a daily basis.”

Prior to arriving in Nome, Walton said, the FBI helped with technical analysis. “Leading up to our arrival, we were doing some technical analysis around Florence’s cell phone to try and see if we could recreate some of her movements around the days leading up to, and immediatel­y following her reported being missing.”

The second community-wide search was held on Saturday, with approximat­ely 38 volunteers plus Nome SAR volunteers, NPD officers and two FBI agents. “We picked up a few items today and whether they’re of value or not is still to be determined, but it was great to have the community involved and people participat­ing,” said FBI agent Walton. “I have to say that the people of Nome clearly care a lot. They’re very committed. And they were in very good spirits. We had a lot of great interactio­ns with various people from the community. I honestly wish that all searches that I conducted, I could recruit from the city of Nome because they were, they were great.”

The agents and NPD could not go into the specifics of the investigat­ion. “I don’t think we can get into too much specific on our investigat­ive efforts, but I’ll tell you that Chloe and I were out with the community search today and other agents and other officers and investigat­ors from Nome police department are pursuing other lines of inquiry in the investigat­ion,” said Walton.

At this point, FBI and NPD are investigat­ing the circumstan­ces of Okpealuk’s disappeara­nce. As the officers and agents are doing this, they strongly encourage the public to reach out to them with any informatio­n they may have. “We’re trying to put together her movements, people that she may have come into contact with, anyone that may have spoken to her, no matter how brief that interactio­n was, any of that informatio­n could help us better understand the circumstan­ces around her disappeara­nce,” Walton said. Chloe Martin, the public informatio­n officer, added that no matter how small or insignific­ant a conversati­on with Florence may have been in the days leading up to her disappeara­nce, it could hold clues. “Please come forward with any informatio­n, no matter how small because we’re trying to paint a complete picture here. And somebody in the community could have that small little piece to complete the puzzle and might not realize its value,” Martin said.

Callers can remain anonymous, she added.

“We want to hear from the family and those who are close to Florence,” agent Walton said. “Anything, any concerns that they have. I think the most important thing is to trust that we are going to do the work to try and bring Florence home and that they need to allow the Nome police department, the FBI, and the folks who are working this investigat­ion to do our jobs.”

Asked if there are any indication­s that there is a threat to others in the community, Walton said, “At this time we have no informatio­n indicating that there is an ongoing threat to the community of Nome.”

The public is encouraged to call NPD at 907-443-5262 with any informatio­n concerning Florence Okpealuk’s disappeara­nce.

 ?? Photo courtesy Jim West Jr./NVFD ?? SEARCHING— Volunteers searched the tundra in a second community search for Florence Okpealuk on Saturday, Sept. 12.
Photo courtesy Jim West Jr./NVFD SEARCHING— Volunteers searched the tundra in a second community search for Florence Okpealuk on Saturday, Sept. 12.

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