SEATTLE — As of Sunday, Mary Johnson-Davis had been missing for 746 days.
The Tulalip woman’s face stared out from all corners of the room on posters, banners and red T-shirts, at an event titled “What Happened to Mary Johnson-Davis? Two Years is Too Long” on Sunday.
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, People & Families hosted more than 50 attendees at the Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center in Seattle. Family and advocates have continued to shine a light on the case, even as it has faded from headlines.
“If she had white privilege, we would have answers. This would have been solved,” said Gerry Davis, the youngest of the four Davis sisters.
Gabriel Galanda, an Indigenous rights attorney, made a clear and impassioned call to action.
“To the United States government, to the Department of Justice, to the Federal Bureau of Investigation: Do everything in your power across state lines on an inter-jurisdictional basis between local, state, tribal and federal government to, first and foremost, start providing answers to the family,” Galanda said. “Even if it is the sad truth that they’ve been waiting to hear for two years, they deserve to know what happened to their sister.”