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Entire life prepares Alaska investigator of missing and murdered Indigenous people

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Entire life prepares Alaska investigator of missing and murdered Indigenous people

May 11, 2022 | 2:57 pm ET
By Lisa Phu
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Anne Sears, the State of Alaska’s investigator for Missing and Murdered Indigenous People, stands in front of the Alaska State Capitol on May 5, 2022. (Lisa Phu / Alaska Beacon)
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Anne Sears, the State of Alaska’s investigator for Missing and Murdered Indigenous People, stands in front of the Alaska State Capitol on May 5, 2022. (Lisa Phu / Alaska Beacon)

When Anne Sears spoke in front of a crowd of more than 100 people on the Alaska State Capitol steps for the Missing and Murdered Indigenous People rally on May 5, she wore a red scarf that belonged to her mom. “She passed away a couple of years ago. I think she’d be beyond words to see where I have come today,” Sears said to the crowd.

Sears is Inupiaq, born in Nome and spent a lot of her childhood and adult life in Juneau. She spent 22 years in law enforcement and was the first Alaska Native woman hired to be an Alaska State Trooper. She worked as one in Palmer, Galena, Nome, Fairbanks and Kotzebue, and retired in October 2021. Now, she’s the state’s investigator for missing and murdered Indigenous people with the Alaska Bureau of Investigation, the first position of its kind in the state.

“Being in law enforcement for 22 years, being an Indigenous woman, being born and raised in the state of Alaska, having lived all over Alaska growing up, then working all over Alaska as a state trooper and being in public service for 30 years has kind of all culminated in this one position, this one purpose, this one issue,” Sears said in an interview before the rally.