It's probably my computer but I can only pull up a blank page. Do I take it they found this poor child? Darn it!
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The body of an eight-year-old girl missing for more than a year has been found on the Crow Indian Reservation.
The Big Horn County Coroner has not officially released the identity of the person found on Wednesday near Garryowen.
Crow Chairman Frank White Clay wrote in a statement, identifying Mildred as the person discovered Wednesday, that he hoped she receives justice.
"Our hearts ache for the family and I lift them up in prayer. The entire community felt the loss when Mildred went missing and we feel it again today. My hope is that we can find closure, grieve together, and work to ensure that children are protected and supported on the Crow reservation and beyond. We want justice for this child and for all of the victims of the epidemic of people missing from reservations across the country," White Clay wrote.
Details surrounding Mildred's recovery are unclear. Calls to the Big Horn County Sheriff's Office were not immediately returned Thursday.
A spokesperson with the FBI declined to comment and would not say if the agency was investigating the death.
The Bureau of Indian Affairs did not respond to an email or phone call requesting additional information on Mildred's death or circumstances surrounding her discovery.
Relatives of Mildred informed the BIA at Crow Agency in mid-November that they had not seen her since July 2018, the FBI said last year.
The FBI could not comment on where exactly the girl was staying with her guardian when she went missing in 2019.
Two women were arrested in December in Billings in connection with the missing girl.
Veronica Tierza Dust, 34, and Roseen Lincoln Old Crow, 34, were charged in January in Crow Tribal Court with a misdemeanor charge of endangering the welfare of a child, which holds a maximum sentence of 6 months in jail and a $2,500 fine.
Both were granted informal custodianship over Mildred in March 2017, according to the charges filed in January.
On Dec. 6, 2020 a formal petition was filed with the Tribal Court requesting a hearing because the two guardians had “breached their fiduciary duty to the child.”
On Feb. 12, the two were both charged with an additional count of custodial interference and remain in custody on a $5,000 bond, said Crow Tribal prosecutor David Sibley. The two are scheduled to appear in court in April.
It is unclear what the relationship is between Mildred and the two women, but Mildred had stayed at their residence, according to court docs.
Mildred was one of 18 Indigenous people who have been missing in Montana for more than a year, according to data from the Montana Department of Justice.
In Montana, Native Americans go missing at a rate disproportionately higher than non-Natives.
Despite making up less than 7% of the population, Indigenous people consistently account for more than a quarter of the state's missing persons cases.
A little more than half of the 53 missing Indigenous people were age 21 or younger and of that nine are believed to be living with a non-custodial relative or went missing after custodial interference, according to the DOJ.