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A Mesa group home in Arizona, where slain Indigenous teen Emily Pike lived, has been asked to update its policies following ...
Sacred Journey Inc. was asked to take action following a licensing inquiry into the Mesa group home that housed Emily Pike.
Turquoise Alerts aimed to call attention to missing Indigenous people. But the first alert in Arizona involved a White girl.
The Department of Public Safety issued the first statewide Turquoise Alert on Wednesday, and it has since been canceled after ...
A Turquoise Alert was sent to cell phones on Wednesday night, marking the first time it’s ever been used in Arizona. Here's ...
The alert was also known as "Emily's Law," named in honor of slain San Carlos Apache teen Emily Pike, 14, who was killed after she ran away from a Mesa group home.
It was named after 14-year-old Emily Pike. A member of the San Carlos Apache Tribe, Pike went missing in January and was later found dead.
The legislation is known as “Emily’s Law” to honor San Carlos Apache tribal member Emily Pike, a 14-year-old girl whose remains were found after she went missing from her Mesa group home ...
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