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
MISSOULA, Mont. - Montana has become all too familiar with Murdered and Missing Indigenous People (MMIP) cases going unsolved on reservations across the state. Loved ones are left with little
MISSOULA, Mont. - Montana has become all too familiar with Murdered and Missing Indigenous People (MMIP) cases going unsolved on reservations across the state. Loved ones are left with little
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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.