March 5, 2025

USA: 14yo Girl Went Missing From A Mesa Group Home In January Dismembered Remains Were Found In Trash Bags Off Of A Desert Highway In Arizona. Detectives Need Help To Find Her Killer.

🚨NO WHITE SUPREMACISTS INVOLVED🚨

🚨NO ISLAMIC JIHADISTS INVOLVED🚨
Arizona’s Family CBS 5 published February 28, 2025: Mother heartbroken after her teen daughter’s body found near Globe. A mother wants to know what happened between when her daughter and when her dismembered body was found on Feb. 14 near Globe.
12 News published February 28, 2025: New details about remains of 14-year-old found near Globe. The young woman had been missing from her group home for over 2 weeks.
Arizona’s Family CBS 5 published March 4, 2025: Former roommate gives insight on Emily Pike’s disappearance in Mesa. New details shed light on what happened inside a Mesa group home that Emily Pike, 14, ran from before her dismembered remains were discovered in rural Arizona.

AZFamily.com
written by Briana Whitney
Tuesday March 4, 2025

MESA, Arizona — New details shed light on what happened inside a Mesa group home from which 14-year-old Emily Pike ran from before her dismembered remains were discovered on a rural forest road 100 miles away.

Pike was last seen alive on Jan. 27 near Mesa Drive and McKellips Road. The Gila County Sheriff’s Office said her body parts were found in trash bags on Feb. 14 off U.S. 60 northeast of Globe.

Pike’s former roommate in the group home shared what happened before the teen’s disappearance and why she may have left in the first place. This fills in several missing pieces about what Pike’s life was like in the group home, a place where she was not the first, or only, teen to have run away from.

“My relationship with Emily was trying to steer her in the right direction because it’s hard being in the group home,” said her former roommate, who we’re referring to as Chelsea to protect her identity.

Chelsea said she lived at the group home near Mesa Drive and McKellips for four years and that Emily lived there two different times.

Pike was from the San Carlos Apache reservation, and Chelsea said she came to Mesa due to her struggle with mental health and because there were better resources to help in the Valley.

While Chelsea recently moved out, she is in contact with many girls who still live there. She said Pike left the home in late January because she wanted to visit a boy she met while taking guitar lessons. Chelsea said that at the time Pike left, a church group was conducting activities at the group home.

“What it looked like was that the church was there, and that served as a distraction of when Emily left,” Chelsea said. “She left because she wanted to go out and see the boy she liked, and she wanted to talk to him. She either used the back door or used the window and left as everyone was distracted.”

Police tell Arizona’s Family that the group home manager reported Pike missing. And Chelsea said Emily had run away before.

“My time being there, I’ve seen many, many kids run away from this group home,” Chelsea explained.

According to the Mesa Police Department, this group home alone reported 30 children as missing over the past three years. Stuart Somershoe, a retired Phoenix Police missing persons detective, said this is common but that these cases quickly become high-risk.

“A lot of our human trafficking and sex trafficking originate from group home kids because they are the most vulnerable victims out there,” Somershoe said.

Based on where Emily’s remains were found off U.S. 60 heading northeast, Chelsea believes she was just trying to go home.

“I feel like she just ran away, and she was trying to hitchhike back to her reservation to see her parents, and she just got picked up by the wrong person,” Chelsea said.

The Gila County Sheriff’s Office is the lead on this investigation. Arizona’s Family asked for an update on the case Tuesday, but they did not respond.

A vigil in Pike’s honor is planned for 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, where she was last seen alive.

No comments: