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Media Fascination With The Petito Mystery Looks Like Racism To Some Native Americans

A memorial to missing and murdered Indigenous women is set up in St. Paul, Minn.
Universal Images Group via Getty Images
A memorial to missing and murdered Indigenous women is set up in St. Paul, Minn.

Updated September 21, 2021 at 5:22 PM ET

The FBI has confirmed that remains found in Wyoming Sunday are the body of 22-year-old Gabrielle Petito. The mystery around the death of the photogenic young white woman with a carefree social media presence has been headline news across the country.

And that's frustrating to people who say the media ignores an epidemic of missing and murdered Native American women in the state.

Since 2000, Indigenous people have made up 21% of homicides in Wyoming, even though they are only 3% of the population. That's according to a state report released in January.

Cara Chambers, chair of the task force that released the report says only 30% of Indigenous homicide victims had any media coverage. That number is closer to 51% for whites.

"The themes and media portrayal of homicide victims that when you had an Indigenous victim, the articles were more likely to have negative character framing," Chambers said, "more violent and graphic language, really focusing more on sort of like where the homicide occurred versus anything about the victim."

Ahyla Grey Bull, Destiny Spoonhunter, Kiera Spoonhunter, Alea Sanchez, Alicia Sanchez, Annalilla Sanchez and Arianna Sanchez pose for a portrait to raise awareness of missing and murdered Indigenous people.
/ Paulita Spoonhunter
/
Paulita Spoonhunter
Ahyla Grey Bull, Destiny Spoonhunter, Kiera Spoonhunter, Alea Sanchez, Alicia Sanchez, Annalilla Sanchez and Arianna Sanchez pose for a portrait to raise awareness of missing and murdered Indigenous people.

Chambers says those kinds of portrayals can deter people from reporting that their loved ones are missing to the media or police.

"It's kind of heart-wrenching, when we look at a white woman who goes missing and is able to get so much immediate attention," said Lynnette Grey Bull, who is Northern Arapaho and a leading advocate for improving Wyoming's response to missing and murdered indigenous women.

"It should be the same, if an African American person goes missing, or a Hispanic person goes missing, a Native American ... we should have the same type of equal efforts that are being done in these cases."

Both she and Chambers hope more people will recognize differences in the urgency and attention cases of missing Indigenous women get, leading to an improved public response.

Copyright 2021 Wyoming Public Radio. To see more, visit Wyoming Public Radio.

Kamila Kudelska
Email: kkudelsk@uwyo.edu
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