The report on missing people about 14-year-old Emily Pike reveals more details to lead to their deadly death
PHOENIX – – We learn more about the case of Emily Pike, a 14-year-old girl who was murdered after the missing person last month.
The authorities are still looking for the suspect who dismembered the Apache Teenager who lived in a house of the Mesa group.
What we know:
We received 12 pages of documents from the MESA police.
The case of this missing person is now closed because of the continuing investigation for murders, but we get a look at Emily's past and the timeline that leads to the tragic discovery of their remains.
The background story:
On January 27 near Mesa Drive and the McKillips Road, a group house manager, 14-year-old Emily Pike of the Mesa police, reported.
According to the report, she said Emily sneaked out of her bedroom window and that this was not the first time that she was going away.
The manager said the last time she left the house when Emily left the house.
The staff checked the Rock Teen Center a few days later, where Emily had visited, but nobody had seen or heard it.
They deeper:
Until February 19, a Mesa police officer said that he had spoken to an agent of the office for Indian affairs, who believed that Emily was found in the Gila County Indian reserve after 277 human remains were discovered on Highway 60 North near Milepost.
This area is about a hundred miles away, where the teenager of San Carlos Apache was recently seen alive.
Two weeks later she was identified positively and there was a murder examination.
Why should you take care of it:
Since then, tribal communities and families have been united in their grief and demand justice.
“Emily was a spark and she definitely triggered the world and now the world is on fire because of Emily,” said April from April Victor, Emily's Aunt on March 4.
Mesa PDS missing people about Emily also reveals the “history of the behavioral and psychological health problems” of the teenager.
Emily took medication for these problems and had a case manager from the San Carlos Apache tribe.
Anonymous tip, which is based on a Facebook post, said that Emily was with her mother in the reservation just a few days before her remains were found.
This later turned out to be untrue, as her mother said, she did not hear from her Emily, according to the police.
What you can do:
Anyone who has information about the case can send tips on this 411 link.
Edited report from the MESA police:
Crime and public security officers
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