- United States
- Alaska
- Letter
Alaska cannot address the crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons (MMIP) in the dark. The Trump administration’s decision to remove the “Not One More” report from public view—despite it being required by law and focused on saving Native lives—does exactly that. This report, developed under the bipartisan Not Invisible Act, gathers testimony and concrete recommendations to improve safety and justice for American Indian and Alaska Native people.
In Alaska, Native women and girls experience some of the highest rates of violence in the nation, and the report specifically highlights the unique realities facing Alaska Native communities. Its removal makes it harder for families, tribes, and law enforcement to navigate already complicated jurisdictional gaps, poor data, and fragmented responses. Taking down the report is not a neutral administrative act; it undermines public safety, transparency, and accountability.
As your constituent, I urge you to speak out publicly, work with Senate champions who are already pressing for answers, and demand that the administration and the Department of Justice restore the “Not One More” report and fully implement its recommendations. If the administration is serious about addressing MMIP, it should not hide the very document that shows where we are failing and how we can do better.