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LAS VEGAS — What began as a vacation to Las Vegas has turned into another case of a missing Indigenous woman. Missing is Lummi Nation tribal citizen Reatha May Finkbonner, 30, who went to Las Vegas with her fiancé and friends.

[UPDATE:  Reatha Finkbonner has been found alive in Las Vegas.  We have published an update story.]

Finkbonner, who resides on the Lummi Nation in Bellingham, Wash., was last seen in front of Bridger Inn Motel at 301 S. Main St., Las Vegas, according to a witness who last saw Finkbonner. 

“She is a Lummi tribal member, lives on the Lummi Nation, and is a daughter, niece, mother, friend and sister,” Nikki Finkbonner, aunt of Reatha, told Native News Online. “She’s human.” 

Nikki didn’t find out that her niece was missing until the evening of Sept. 6. So, she wrote her own press release, created her own missing person flyers and shared them on social media. She filed a missing person report with the Lummi Nation Police Department and the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department on Sept. 7.

When she filed the missing person report with the Lummi Nation Police Department,  she said was met with indifference and an uncaring demeanor. “The reporting officer who took my statement for my niece’s missing-person’s report told me that tomorrow is his Friday,” said Finkbonner. “I was met with uncaring law enforcement that generally said that my niece is off partying in Las Vegas.”

A liaison for the Washington State Patrol heard that Nikki was having difficulty filing a missing person report with the Lummi Nation Police Department and recommended for the family to file a missing person report with the Bellingham Police Department.

“At first, the police told me they couldn’t get involved because of jurisdictional reasons,” said Finkbonner. “It was back and forth with multiple law enforcement agencies.” 

Reatha Finkbonner’s missing person report wasn’t entered in the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) until Thursday, Sept. 16, 2021, nearly two weeks after her disappearance. The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department filed a missing person report, but the report wasn’t filed in the national database as they are not required to do so. 

Since the national media coverage of Gabrielle Petito’s disappearance, and later discovery of her remains in the Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming, many questioned the bias in the media. Petito’s family filed a missing person report on Sept. 11 and a nationwide search by law enforcement found her remains on Sept. 19, only 8 days after her initial report was filed. 

Since the story of Gabby Petito has flooded the nation, Finkbonner’s case has gained some attention among other media sources. 

“I can’t believe how much attention this case is getting after the Gabby story,” said Finkbonner. “Before the story, there was nothing by any media and now CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, and every other major publication has been reaching out to learn more.” 

“All of our lives matter. I don’t understand how Indigenous women are always after the fact,” Finkbonner said of the growing media attention. 

Reatha's fiance and friends are not cited as suspects and haven't been investigated, according to Nikki Finkbonner. "I'm so disappointed with the Lummi Nation Police Department."  

The Las Vegas Review-Journal reported on Thursday that the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department said that Reatha Finkbonner isn’t “endangered.” The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department didn’t respond for comment, but Nikki Finkbonner said, “She’s still missing and she’s still a human.” 

According to the Las Vegas Police Department’s website, there are 200 individuals reported missing monthly in Las Vegas. Most are found or voluntarily return home within 48-72 hours after being reported.

Reatha Finkbonner is a mother of two children. She has brown eyes and brown or blond hair, is 5 feet, 5 inches tall and weighs approximately 150 pounds.

Anyone with information about Reatha Finkbonner’s whereabouts is asked to contact Lummi Nation Police Detective Sgt. Richard Hart at 360-312-2274 or Las Vegas police at 702-828-3111.

Finkbonner is on the Washington State Patrol’s list of missing Indigenous persons, which was released Monday, and the Lhaq’temish Foundation, a nonprofit that supports the Lummi Nation, is sharing information about Finkbonner.

A fundraiser to find Reatha Finkbonner has been organized by the Lhaq’temish Foundation and donations can be sent via Paypal.  

Nikki Finkbonner asks anyone with any information about her niece to call her at (360) 594-1211.

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About The Author
Author: Darren ThompsonEmail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Darren Thompson (Lac du Flambeau Ojibwe) is a staff reporter for Native News Online who is based in the Twin Cities of Minnesota. Thompson has reported on political unrest, tribal sovereignty, and Indigenous issues for the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, Indian Country Today, Native News Online, Powwows.com and Unicorn Riot. He has contributed to the New York Times, the Washington Post, and Voice of America on various Indigenous issues in international conversation. He has a bachelor’s degree in Criminology & Law Studies from Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.