If Your Loved One Is Missing
- Immediately call 911 - There is no waiting period to report.
- When you call 911 - Let them know the missing person is native and be prepared to provide them with a detailed description of your loved one including:
- Name
- Date of Birth
- Height/weight
- Scars/tattoos
- Tribal affiliation
- Recent, unfiltered photo
- Make sure to let them know when and where your loved one was last seen and what they were wearing.
- If the missing person is a minor, report to NCMEC.
Grace Johnson serves as the Liaison for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons for the Nebraska Attorney General’s Office.
Under the supervision and direction of the Bureau Chief of the Criminal Bureau, the Liaison for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons communicates with local, state, tribal, and federal entities during the reporting and investigating of missing and murdered indigenous persons.
Grace Johnson graduated with a master’s in clinical counseling from Bellevue University in 2014 and has extensive experience working with Native communities.
She previously served as an advisory board member for Community Action as part of the Honoring Indigenous Families Grant. In addition, she held positions on the Great Plains Tribal Leaders Health Board and the Nebraska Indian Child Welfare Coalition Board.
In 2022, Grace Johnson served as a mental health therapist for the University of Nebraska Medical Center after previously serving as the Director of Behavior Health Department for the Omaha Tribe of Nebraska.
She is an enrolled member of the Oglala-Lakota tribe.
Everyone deserves their story to be told.
Everyone deserves their name to be remembered.
Everyone deserves an ending.
~Survivor of childhood kidnapping