The Ukiah Daily Journal

Yurok Tribe hires investigat­or for missing, murdered Indigenous cases

- The Times-standard

The Yurok Tribe announced this week it hired a law enforcemen­t leader to investigat­e existing and new cases involving Missing and Murdered Indigenous People in California's North Coast region.

MMIP investigat­or Julia Oliveira brings to the new position 25 years of experience. She is a member of the Wyandotte Tribe and spent two decades with the Humboldt County Sheriff's Office, where she held a variety of roles ranging from patrol deputy to school resource officer. During her career, she conducted missing persons and child sexual abuse investigat­ions. Oliveira continues to serve on HCSO'S Crisis Interventi­on Team and is its longest-serving member. For the past four years, Oliveira led the Blue Lake Rancheria Tribal Police Department. She also holds a leadership position in the U.S. Office of Violence Against Women's Task Force on Research on Violence Against American Indian and Alaska Native Women.

“I applied for the MMIP investigat­or position because I am very passionate about this subject,”

Oliveira said in a prepared statement. “Throughout the state of California, very few resources are allocated to cases involving missing and murdered Indigenous people. I was very excited when I saw the opportunit­y to be the person who is solely focused on finding missing Indigenous people.”

The chair of the Yurok Tribe expressed enthusiasm for the hiring of Oliveira.

“We are so fortunate that Julia decided to accept the investigat­or position. She has the ideal background for this important job,” said Joseph L. James in a news release. “She will help bring closure and justice to the families of missing tribal citizens. The new investigat­or will be engaged in our MMIP prevention effort too.”

Oliveira is the first fully dedicated tribal MMIP investigat­or in California. She works within the Yurok Office of the Tribal Prosecutor, which is part of the Tribe's MMIP response team. The investigat­or will conduct inquiries into current and cold MMIP cases.

Prior to accepting the position, Oliveira served on the Office of the Tribal Prosecutor's MMIP

Roundtable. The roundtable group meets on a regular basis to discuss solutions to the MMIP crisis and is currently comprised of the following tribes: Yurok Tribe, Hoopa Valley Tribe, Trinidad Rancheria, Bear River Band of the Rohnervill­e Rancheria and Quartz Valley Tribe. It is open to all tribes in the region.

The San Manuel Band of Mission Indians awarded the Yurok Tribe a grant to hire the MMIP investigat­or. In addition to funding the investigat­or position, the $350,000 grant will support the creation of a database that will be employed to analyze patterns in missing persons cases and identify potential perpetrato­rs.

In December 2021, the Yurok Tribe declared an MMIP emergency in response to a spike in MMIP cases in Northern California, including the disappeara­nce of Hupa citizen Emmilee Risling. Risling was last seen on the Yurok Reservatio­n on October 14, 2021.

California has the fifthhighe­st number of MMIP cases in the US. Nearly every one of the state's 110 federally recognized tribes are experienci­ng MMIP crises.

 ?? YUROK TRIBE - CONTRIBUTE­D ?? From left, Yurok Prosecutor Rosemary Deck, MMIP Investigat­or Julia Oliveira, Yurok Tribal Police Chief Greg O'rourke and Yurok Tribal Police Lieutenant Jacob Morris pose for a photo. Oliveira was recently hired as the state's first investigat­or solely focused on solving cases of missing and murdered Indigenous people.
YUROK TRIBE - CONTRIBUTE­D From left, Yurok Prosecutor Rosemary Deck, MMIP Investigat­or Julia Oliveira, Yurok Tribal Police Chief Greg O'rourke and Yurok Tribal Police Lieutenant Jacob Morris pose for a photo. Oliveira was recently hired as the state's first investigat­or solely focused on solving cases of missing and murdered Indigenous people.

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