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Gila River Jane Doe has been unidentified for 27 years today.
Yeah Imo the horse isn't related to her at allI have very little experience with horses, but at least to me, an ankle-length skirt does NOT sound like a garment suitable for riding a horse in.
Also, there's a decent amount of wild/feral horses in the Southwest. It's possible the horse bones could be from a wild horse that died in the area.
Namus says that the remains of the horse where found near the body not on top of itWeird coincidence that a wild or stray horse just so happened to die on top of her remains. How decomposed was the horse? MOO.
I know I am very late to this thread, but I just came across it while looking for something else. I thought this post wondering if the Gila River Reservation Jane Doe could be Anthonette Cayedito and didn't really see any follow-up here. I haven't had a chance to do much more research, but I did look at GRR Jane Doe's NAMUS and Anthonette is NOT listed as a rule out. Does anyone know if this was ever considered and/or submitted.Probably nothing, but could she be a grown up Anthonette Cayedito? Gallup, NM, from where she went missing at age 9, is not that far from the Gila River Indian reservation. Approx. 5 hours. She would have been the right age (Namus still lists this Jane Doe between 17 - 20) Cayedito was born on December 25, 1976, to Penny Cayedito (1952–1999), a Navajo Native American, and Anthony Montoya (1951–2012), a father of Italian and Hispanic descent. The mother had a relation to Gila. From the references on wikipedia (I know not a official source) "Teresa Or Penny Cayedito, 1999; citing Payson, Gila, Arizona, United States)
Disappearance of Anthonette Cayedito - Wikipedia
Anthonette Christine Cayedito – The Charley Project![]()