National Native News

Tuesday, January 27, 2026


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Photo: A crowd congregates in Mesa, Ariz. where a roadside memorial remembering slain San Carlos Apache teen Emily Pike was taken down nearly a year after she disappeared. (Gabriel Pietrorazio / KJZZ)
It was one year ago, on January 27, 2025, that San Carlos Apache teenager Emily Pike went missing from a Mesa, Ariz. group home.

Her dismembered remains were discovered a month later in garbage bags more than 100 miles away.

No arrests have been made, nor suspects named.

Earlier this month, a memorial in Mesa marking where Emily was last seen alive got taken down.

As KJZZ’s Gabriel Pietrorazio reports, it’s the latest rallying cry for justice in the 14-year-old girl’s unsolved murder.

“Who are we here for?”

“Emily Pike.”

“Then say her name.”

“Emily Pike.”

At the corner of Mesa Drive and McKellips Road, dozens of demonstrators met on a recent Saturday as cars drove by honking their horns.

“Justice for who?”

“Emily Pike.”

“Justice for who?”

“Emily Pike.”

“Who do we love?”

“Emily Pike.”

“Who do we love?”

“Emily Pike.”

This is where Emily was last seen alive.

Since her disappearance, a chain-link fence hugging the edge of a 28,000-square-foot vacant lot has become home to a roadside memorial for the slain Apache teen. And it just kept on growing as more shared her story.

Visitors from near and far have flocked to this bustling intersection, adorned with flowers, stuffed animals, a banner of Emily’s face, and lots of red ribbons – each markers of the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples (MMIP) movement.

That was, until someone suddenly took everything down earlier this month. No matter who did it, Jolene Shorty is still upset.

“Look what you guys did. You took down her stuff. There is a respectful way. There is a traditional way to let things go. This is not the way.”

For Shorty, she says this is the second tragedy to happen there.

“But what I see here my people, what I see here my tribal nations, I see a clean slate, a clean slate to start over. … In a way, they almost helped us. We’re going to come back and put up more stuff. We’re going to honor them the way we’re supposed to.”

Delvina Charley (Diné) thinks taking down those mementos adds insult to injury.

“This is the respect that we got … we’re pushed to the side that our voices meant nothing, that she meant nothing. If this was a different privileged girl, it would have been handled differently.”

Since the items were taken down, Emily’s family has been in talks with the city of Mesa on planting a tree and placing a bench at Fitch Park – just a few blocks from her last known location.

They’re also in discussions with the Arizona Department of Transportation about putting up a highway sign honoring Emily at milepost 277 along US 60 near Globe – where her remains were found in the Tonto National Forest.

“This girl lost her life thinking nobody cared.”

Jared Marquez is San Carlos Apache and treasurer of the Turtle Island Women Warriors.

“I’ve been there, being a 13-year-old kid, never talking to my parents, running around on the reservation, you know, nobody ever truly caring. And it’s hard to think what this girl went through – a lot of us could have been through.”

As for the investigation into Emily’s murder, KJZZ asked the FBI, the Bureau of Indian Affairs’ Missing and Murdered Unit, and the lead agency, Gila County Sheriff’s Office, for the status but did not receive any updates.

The National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) and the Native American Rights Fund (NARF) are hosting a webinar titled “Know Your Rights,” followed by a Q&A on Wednesday.

NARF will provide practical guidance for Tribal citizens on interactions with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

The organizations say it is in response to growing concerns from across Indian Country.

 

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Tuesday, January 27, 2026 – The concern over rising American imperialism to Indigenous people abroad and at home

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