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   alt.native      Pretty sure excluding the pilgrims      29,288 messages   

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   Message 29,240 of 29,288   
   useapen to All   
   A 14-year-old girl disappeared from Mesa   
   10 Mar 25 08:19:34   
   
   XPost: alt.missing-kids, az.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh   
   XPost: sac.politics, talk.politics.guns   
   From: yourdime@outlook.com   
      
   "Justice for Emily" was written in red plastic cups at the intersection of   
   Mesa Drive and McKellips Road in Mesa, the last place 14-year-old Emily   
   Pike was seen alive.   
      
   "Forever 14" was painted on one rock laid beneath bouquets of flowers.   
   Rain-smudged notes covered the dusty ground. Purple and yellow ribbons   
   were tied along the fence.   
      
   Since March 2, people have left stuffed animals, balloons, posters and   
   candles at the intersection, memorializing Pike, who was found dead on   
   Valentine's Day after being reported missing in late January.   
      
   Pike's remains were found almost three weeks after she was reported   
   missing from Mesa, according to police. They were found in a woody area   
   off U.S. 60, northeast of Globe, about 100 miles away from where she was   
   last seen, the Gila County Sheriff's Office said in a news release.   
      
   What happened between her disappearance and when she was found is part of   
   a homicide investigation, the Sheriff's Office said.   
      
   Here's what we know about Emily Pike.   
      
   What happened to Emily Pike?   
   According to Mesa police, Pike was last seen around 7:45 p.m. near Mesa   
   Drive and McKellips Road in Mesa. She left on foot from her group home   
   where she was living, a flier from the Police Department read.   
      
   On Feb. 14, Pike's remains were found off U.S. 60 north, mile post 277, on   
   Forest Service Road No. 355 northeast Globe, the Gila County Sheriff's   
   Office said in a Facebook post.   
      
   The Gila County Sheriff's Office has not returned requests for comment   
   about how Pike's body was found. However, information about the case was   
   found circulating on social media.   
      
   "Unfortunately, the information on Facebook was intended only for Law   
   Enforcement Agencies and was leaked," according to the Gila County   
   Sheriff's Office.   
      
   No details were released about how the leak occurred.   
      
   The cause and manner of death have not been released, according to the   
   Pinal County Medical Examiner's Office, which investigates deaths in Gila   
   County.   
      
   Who was Emily Pike?   
   Pike was described as a sweet girl by multiple people who left messages at   
   the memorial. She was a member of the San Carlos Apache Tribe.   
      
   "Our Tribe is mourning the tragic death of one of our young members," read   
   a statement from San Carlos Apache Tribe chairman Terry Rambler. "This is   
   a terrible loss for the teenager’s family and our Tribe."   
      
   Pike's death sparked a large response on social media, with many putting   
   focus on the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.   
      
   More: Over 500 people walk through Phoenix to remember missing Indigenous   
   people   
   Pike's family could not be reached for comment. Pike left behind her   
   grandmother, mother and three siblings, according to a GoFundMe.   
      
   Pike was living at a Mesa group home, police said. It was unknown how long   
   she had been living in the group home and whether this was her first time   
   in a group home.   
      
   The Arizona Department of Child Safety said that Pike was not in its care.   
      
   Mesa police had responded five times to Pike running away, police   
   spokesperson Sabrina Amyx said.   
      
   Who is investigating?   
   The case is being investigated by the Gila County Sheriff's Office and the   
   San Carlos Apache Tribal Police. The Pinal County Medical Examiner's   
   Office confirmed that they are also investigating Pike's death alongside   
   police.   
      
   A spokesperson for the FBI said the bureau will not join the   
   investigation.   
      
   Anyone with information about the case can call a Gila County Sheriff's   
   Office detective at 928-200-2352, a Bureau of Indian Affairs special agent   
   at 505-917-7830 or a San Carlos Apache tribal police detective at 928-475-   
   1755.   
      
   https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/mesa/2025/03/05/what-to-know-   
   about-emily-pike-teen-found-in-the-woods-globe/81095924007/   
      
   --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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