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A new federal alert system for missing and endangered people will soon launch over TV, radio, and wireless phones. The new has many Native Americans in Oregon and across the U.S. pleased with the news.
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The color red, visible and hard to ignore, features prominently at events as people gather for healing, justice and remembrance.
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Last night, about 50 people gathered in Springfield near the Willamette River to honor missing and murdered Indigenous women. Poetry reader: “In the dark,…
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Today, Native American activists in Oregon and elsewhere will hang red dresses, carry portraits, and grieve missing and murdered Indigenous women (MMIW.)…
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The following is an extended, online-only interview between KLCC reporter Brian Bull, and Cedar Wilkie Gillette, Oregon's first appointed Missing and…
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Justice officials acknowledge that Native Americans have been disproportionately affected by violence. Last month, the District of Oregon U.S. Attorney’s…
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The nation’s first Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons (MMIP) report issued by a U.S. Attorney’s Office came out last week. But comprehensive data…