Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon January 11, 2023 Page 7 In the Tribal Court of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs TRACI SUPPAH, Pe- titioner, vs EZEKIEL LECLAIRE, Respon- dent; Case No. DO135- 15. TO: TRACI SUPPAH, EZEKIEL LECLAIRE: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an CON- SERVATOR GUARDIAN- SHIP has been scheduled with the War m Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to ap- pear in this matter at a hear- ing scheduled for the 7 TH day of FEBRUARY 2023 @ 2:00 PM CTWS, Petitioner, vs OLEA YAHTIN, Re- spondent; Case No. JV24- 19. TO: OLEA YAHTIN, TREVOR TEWEE, CPS, JV PROS: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an AS- SISTED GUARDIAN- SHIP has been scheduled with the War m Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to ap- pear in this matter at a hear- ing scheduled for the 8 TH day of FEBRUARY, 2023 @ 10:00 AM E R E M Y HERKSHAN, Petitioner, vs JAMIE BALL, Re- spondent; Case No. DO39- 22. TO: JEREMY HERKSHAN, JAMIE BALL: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an SHOW CAUSE has been scheduled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 7 TH day of FEBRU- ARY 2023 @ 10:00 AM CTWS, Petitioner vs R A E N E L E WEASELHEAD, Respon- dent; Case No. JV41-18. TO: RAENELE WEASELHEAD: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a ASSIS- TANT GUARDIANSHIP REVIEW has been scheduled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 6 TH day of FEBRU- ARY, 2023 @ 2:00 PM CARLOS CALICA, Pe- titioner, vs LEBRON BOISE, Respondent; Case No. DO136-22. TO: LEBRON BOISE, CARLOS CALICA, LEIONAH SCOTT, DARIAN SCOTT, MAR- QUISE SCOTT, BERNICE MITCHELL, YOUNG BOISE: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an EMER- GENCY CONSERVATOR GUARDIANSHIP has been scheduled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 2 ND day of FEBRUARY, 2023 @ 3:00 PM CTWS, Petitioner, vs TALULLAH McGILL, Respondent; Case No. JV79,80,-17; JV23-18. TO: TALLULAH McGILL, DEVANEE & WILLIAM BERTRAND: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a AS- SISTED GUARDIAN- SHIP REVIEW has been scheduled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 20 TH day of FEBRUARY, 2023 @ 2:00 PM CTWS, Petitioner, vs LUCILLE POLK, Re- spondent; Case No. JV18,19,20-21. TO: LUCILLE POLK, Public summons: Notification to serve as juror To the following in- dividuals: You are hereby notified to appear before the Tribal Court to serve as a Juror on each date listed below during the month of February, 2023. Juror orientation will be at 4 p.m. on Tuesday, February 7 for people with last names starting with A through M. Juror orientation will on February 7 at 4:30 p.m. for people with last names starting with N through Z. Voir dire: February 8 at 10 a.m.; and trial date 10 a.m. on February 9. Voir dire: February 15 at 10 a.m. Tribal date at 10 a.m. on February 16. Voir dire: February 22 at 10 a.m.; and tribal date at 10 a.m. on February 23. If you fail to appear on the dates and times listed above, you may be charged with Contempt of Court. This summons is for the following in- dividuals: Allen, Shirley Anderson, Tyler Marcus Arthur, Joseph Buffalo Horn Arthur, Monica Lynette Begay, Anson Jon Bill, Johnson Leslie Blackwolf, Levi Matthew Boise, Jenessa Daisy Brisbois, Donald Joseph Brown, Tamiesha Delrae Brunoe-Holliday, Chris- tina Lee Caldera, Nakia Marie Campuzano, Edna Juanita Cardenas Jr., Gerald Laurence Circle, Rain Danzuka Jr., Owen George Dimmick, Charlene Pearl Eguizabal, Elbrosia Am- brosia Foltz, Taw James Fuiava, Ford Wyatt Gibson, Urban Christo- pher Greene, Katrina Lee Hatlestad, Robinique Patricia Heath, Violet Renewable energy project clashes with Yakama site Each spring Yakama Na- tion families head to Pushpum, a towering ridge above John Day Dam in Klickitat County. There, on the south-facing slope dot- ted with juniper bushes, grasses and shrubs, they gather Indian celery, one of the first food plants of the season. “It’s a really important First Food gathering area,” said Elaine Harvey, environ- mental coordinator with Yakama Nation Fisheries and a member of the Kamiltpah Band. The whole area is known to the Yakamas as “the mother of all roots.” It also holds archaeological and cer- emonial sites. Now, a portion of it is slated for a proposed pumped-water storage project intended to generate a supply of hydropower to complement transitions to re- newable energy sources like wind and solar. First Foods gathering near Pushpum, Klickitat County. Jack, Cameron Jensen, Timothy James Jim, Wendell James Kenyon Jr., Rodney Alan Lucero, Leander Louis Martinez, Demus Dar- win Miller, Demiryce Orthelia Mitchell Sr., Arthur Brian Patt, Howard Lorin Picard, Yvette Marie Ross, Mary Madeline Shike Jr., Raymond Tulee, Roy Russell Vaeth, Mathew Shawn Waheneka, Harlan Em- ery Waheneka, Latisha Malika Wallulatum, Dyrrel Devere Wallulatum, Janell Anne Williams, Jason Ray Williams, Josie Anne Windy Boy, Virgil James Winishut, Aaron Stacy Winishut, Derek Lindsey Wolfe III, James Lee Wolfe, Agnes Ardis Josie Yahtin, Amelio GLENN WHIZ JR, CPS, JV PROS: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an CUS- TODY REVIEW has been scheduled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 8 TH day of FEBRUARY, 2023 @ 3:00 PM ADRIANNA PEREZ- GREENE, Petitioner, vs PAUL MARTINEZ JR., Respondent; Case No. DO113-22. TO: ADRIANNA PEREZ- GREENE, PAUL MARTINEZ JR.: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an DISSO- LUTION OF MARRIAGE has been scheduled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are sum- moned to appear in this mat- ter at a hearing scheduled for the 22 ND day of FEBRU- ARY 2023 @ 9:00 AM CTWS, Petitioner, vs SUZIE CHARLEY Re- spondent; Case No. JV2- 12, JV92-12. TO: SUZIE CHARLEY, CURTIS DICKSON, AMBER & JIM SANDERS: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an AS- SISTED GUARDIAN- SHIP REVIEW has been scheduled with the Warm Springs Tribal Court. By this notice you are summoned to appear in this matter at a hearing scheduled for the 8 TH day of FEBRUARY, 2023 @ 2:30 PM Human remains finally identified Human remains found in November 2008 in a remote area of the Yakama Reservation have been identified as those of a Yakama woman missing since late summer 1987. Yakima County coro- ner Jim Curtice said Wednesday the remains found on November 26, 2008, west of White Swan have been confirmed by DNA analysis as Daisy Mae Heath, 29, who grew up in White Swan as Daisy Tallman and was living there when she dis- appeared. She was re- ported missing on Octo- ber 29, 1987. Testing was completed by Othram Laboratories, a private DNA laboratory in Texas known for iden- tifying people whose re- mains have been uniden- tified for decades. Fund- ing for the DNA testing was provided by the Washington State Attor- ney General’s Office, Curtice said in a news re- lease. “I am hopeful that this may help with the healing process for family and friends,” he said. Though Heath’s cause and manner of death will remain undeter mined until further information is available, Curtice said, the FBI has described her disappearance as a sus- pected homicide. The FBI has jurisdiction to in- vestigate all serious crimes involving Native Ameri- cans on tribal lands. Heath’s backpack, keys and a turquoise ring were also found in the area west of White Swan where her remains were discovered. The land is closed to non-tribal citizens unless they have permission to be there. Road access is monitored when a guard house with a gate is staffed. In the 1980s and 1990s, at least 14 Native women were murdered in cases that remain unsolved, or died un- der mysterious circum- stances on the 1.3-million- acre Yakama reservation spanning Yakima and Klickitat counties. Some were found within or near closed portions of the reser- vation and died of strangu- lation or hypothermia. Heath was one of at least two Native women who dis- appeared in that time. Karen Johnley Wallahee, who was last seen in Harrah on Nov. 7, 1987, is still missing. She also was 29. It wasn’t unusual for Heath to be gone for ex- tended periods of time. She would spend weeks in re- mote country hunting, fish- ing and gathering traditional foods. She also traveled be- tween White Swan on the Yakama Reservation and the Warm Springs Reservation in Oregon, where the family had more relatives and friends. She was reported missing to Yakama Nation Tribal Po- lice when relatives hadn't seen or heard from her for about two months. Heath was born on Janu- ary 10, 1958, and grew up as Daisy Mae Tallman, which was her mother's mar- ried name, but changed her last name to her father's name shortly before she went missing. She was the youngest of six sisters and raised by maternal grandpar- ents Elias and Lillie Whitefoot, along with ex- tended family, on a ranch in Medicine Valley near the foothills of the Cascades. She was known for her prowess in basketball and softball and her dedi- cation to family, espe- cially her nieces and nephews, some of whom she helped raise. Though she was athletic and able to survive on her own in the region's rugged backcountry, Heath was struggling with two pro- found losses when she dis- appeared—the deaths in 1986 of her infant daugh- ter and the beloved grand- mother who raised her and her sisters. Heath was living with her sister Patricia Whitefoot and in a “very vulnerable state” when she disappeared, Whitefoot said during a March 2021 gathering of Yakama and Warm Springs sisters and close relatives of Heath and her cousin, Agnes Whitefoot Lora. They remembered Heath and Lora, who was murdered in Wapato in April 1994. Relatives shared sto- ries as they spoke of their missing and murdered loved ones. They wanted to ensure that their loved ones are remembered as people, not just statistics or case numbers, and let others know they will al- ways be missed. “I want to get the story of my sister out there, other than the fact that she is missing,” Whitefoot said during the gathering. “She was a good person. She was looked to in a very positive light by her sisters and family mem- bers and nieces and neph- ews she helped raise.”