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Funding shortfalls and too few foster homes are straining the state's group home system, leaving tribes to seek other solutions.
The reward for information about Emily Pike's killing is on top of $75,000 separately offered by the San Carlos Apache Tribe.
Even as Oak Flat moves ahead, the mining industry commits to voluntary guidelines to consult with communities.
The Native plaintiffs have won over a wide variety of allies to their case. But for some reason, the high court is dragging its feet in making a decision.
Ancient oak trees rise above gigantic boulders scattered across a high desert mesa in Arizona’s Tonto National Forest. This ...
Apache Stronghold and its attorneys have argued the land transfer and subsequent destruction of Oak Flat would violate the ...
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Oak Flat is sacred to Western Apache. The Trump administration intends to approve a plan to destroy itEnvironmentalists, local opponents and members of the San Carlos Apache Tribe lambasted the administration’s decision to move forward without a ruling from the court. “The U.S. government is rushing ...
Emily Pike's father met with lawyers from the Phillips Law Group and agreed to file a lawsuit from a prison in Eloy, where he ...
Environmentalists, local opponents and members of the San Carlos Apache Tribe lambasted the administration ... is rushing to give away our spiritual home before the courts can even rule ...
The FBI is offering up to a $75,000 reward for verifiable information identifying those responsible for the brutal murder of ...
Emily ran away from a Mesa group home on Jan. 27 ... sexually assaulted on the San Carlos Apache Reservation about 18 months before she was killed. The tribe's Game and Fish Department, not ...
The San Carlos Apache Tribe is also offering a separate $75,000 ... ran away from a group home and disappeared weeks before her body was discovered off Highway 60. They also met with U.S. Reps.
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