FBI joins search for missing Montana woman
The FBI announced this week it has agreed to investigate the disappearance of 21-year-old Ashley Loring Heavyrunner who vanished from Montana’s Blackfeet Reservation in June of 2017.
The Bureau of Indian Affairs had previously been the lead investigative agency in the matter.
“I’m glad the FBI has finally taken over,” Kimberly Loring, Ashley’s older sister, told ABC News.
The decision for the FBI to take control of the case comes nearly nine months after her sister first went missing.
A family's desperate search for a missing young woman highlights questions about justice on tribal lands
“It’s been nine months and we don’t have anything and it seems like we are at the same place we started from,” Kimberly Loring said.
According to BIA spokesperson Nedra Darling, law enforcement has identified several persons of interest, though the individuals’ names have not been released.
“Law enforcement officials have conducted approximately six searches and 60 interviews and offered a financial reward for information relating to her disappearance,” Darling wrote in an email last October to ABC News. “The BIA Office of Justice personnel take all of their investigations seriously.”
The Bureau of Indian Affairs had previously been the lead investigative agency in the matter.
“I’m glad the FBI has finally taken over,” Kimberly Loring, Ashley’s older sister, told ABC News.
The decision for the FBI to take control of the case comes nearly nine months after her sister first went missing.
A family's desperate search for a missing young woman highlights questions about justice on tribal lands
“It’s been nine months and we don’t have anything and it seems like we are at the same place we started from,” Kimberly Loring said.
According to BIA spokesperson Nedra Darling, law enforcement has identified several persons of interest, though the individuals’ names have not been released.
“Law enforcement officials have conducted approximately six searches and 60 interviews and offered a financial reward for information relating to her disappearance,” Darling wrote in an email last October to ABC News. “The BIA Office of Justice personnel take all of their investigations seriously.”
Source: abcnews.go
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