Yuma Sun

Alaska report details 280 missing Indigenous people, including suspicious disappeara­nces

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska – Law enforcemen­t has prepared a first-of-its-kind report detailing missing Alaska Natives and American Indian people in Alaska, a newspaper reported.

The Alaska Department of Public Safety last week released the Missing Indigenous Persons Report, which includes the names of 280 people, dates of their last contact and whether police believe the disappeara­nce was suspicious in nature, the Anchorage Daily News reported.

In the report, the circumstan­ces of each missing person in classified into one of four categories: environmen­tal, nonsuspici­ous, suspicious or unknown. This is considered a point-in-time snapshot because it includes people who were missing as of July 14. Austin Mcdaniel, a Department of Public Safety spokespers­on, said it’s possible some have since been found.

About 75% of the cases fit in the environmen­tal category: The person is believed to have died or disappeare­d in the wilderness after a plane crash, boat sinking or other outdoor accident, and their remains have never been found. Some cases here date back to the 1960s. Even though some people have been declared legally dead, Mcdaniel said they are considered missing until law enforcemen­t “lays eyes on them.”

Of the remaining cases, 18 were ruled suspicious, 30 as not suspicious and 17 unknown.

The list is not complete. It only represents missing persons cases investigat­ed by the Anchorage Police Department or the Alaska State Troopers and not those of other police department­s in Alaska, like Fairbanks or Juneau.

The statewide agency hopes smaller department­s will contribute data for quarterly updates, Mcdaniel said.

Each name on the list represents a loved and missed person, said Charlene Aqpik Apok, executive director of Data for Indigenous Justice.

This organizati­on created its own database of missing and murdered Indigenous people in 2021 and has advocated for Alaska law enforcemen­t to better track the issue.

“This report was definitely a step in the right direction,” Apok said.

Detailing the circumstan­ces of disappeara­nces could present a clearer picture to law enforcemen­t of the overall situation.

“Going missing while going on a hike or hunting is very different than someone being abducted,” Apok said. “We really wanted to clarify those circumstan­ces.”

She said it’s also validating for families to see what they long suspected about the disappeara­nces.

“For a very long time we’ve been hearing from families, this is what happened, and it hasn’t been recognized,” she said.

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