Nightline starts right now with byron pitts. Good evening. Thank you for joining us. Tonight, as the 4th july creeps closer, the explosion of cases of covid19 across america. Doctors in hot zones now asking for help. While warning the worst is yet to come. Heres abcs kaylee hartung. Honestly, i was an idiot, straight up. I know when im wrong. I didnt take this virus seriously. I didnt take my own health seriously. Reporter jimmy flores has a warning for everyone. Dont be like him. The oncehealthy 30 year old from scottsdale, arizona is now at home with covid19. I got 103degree fever. I started developing loss of sense of taste and smell e. Reporter he suspects he contracted it after a busy night out at a bar. There was action that could have been better, like sharing drinks and whatnot. There was a really high risk of getting covid there. Reporter and as now he sees the number of cases explode hes urge being othevigilant. I was looking at my friends on facebook, still partying, still d
Nightline, twice disappeared will be right back. Nightline, twice disappeared continues. Here now, juju oh my gosh, look at this picture. This is just ashley right here. Oh, that one, i like that one. Reporter kimberly and jonnilynn cling to photos of their sister ashley. Ashley is a beautiful and amazing person. My inspiration, my protector and my angel. Every time i think about my sister, i just think about her smile. Everybody wanted to talk to her, she was so beautiful and outgoing. Ashley knew no stranger. Reporter Ashley Loring heavyrunner, a loving sister. Say his name again, what is it . Eugene. Reporter a doting godmother. A star athlete in high school, known for her contagious smile. She excelled at college. She was also incredibly humble about it. Every time shed get a paper back and got a good grade, shed say, really . I got an a . Or, really . I got a b . Me . Reporter her Bright Future ahead of her, until the tentacles of poverty, crime, and drug abuse that plague her hom
Haley Omeasoo, the founder and executive director of Ohkomi Forensics, was 20 years old when she saw a missing persons flier for her former high school classmate, Ashley Loring Heavyrunner. Seeing the face of someone she knew on a missing persons flier wasn’t a new experience for Omeasoo, a citizen of the Hopi Tribe and a Blackfeet descendant. “It's kind of a normal thing, you see a post on Facebook about so and so being missing or an attempt to locate, and a lot of the time, they do end up showing up,” Omeasoo told Native News Online.
Over the summer, I procrastinated writing The Electric’s six anniversary post. Then I put off writing my New Year’s post. I wasn’t sure what I wanted to say, or even if I wanted to keep doing this work. Then I said I was going to channel all of my frustrations and thoughts into a Valentine’s
Feeling let down by law enforcement and tangled in a web of complex legal jurisdictions, family members often conduct their own investigations into their loved one s disappearance or death.