Was it ever mentioned if the red stain on the boots were blood or paint?
Wondering if and when the results will be in..
Lengthy and
interesting article.
No answers 2 years after 20-year-old student vanishes -- a single case in an epidemic in American Native communities
2019
''Loring Family Photo(NEW YORK) — In a remote corner of the Blackfeet Nation, tucked beside a dark stretch of cottonwood and paper birch, there was a desolate trailer that had been vacant for months. Its tin paneling, singed black in places from fire, had begun to peel off in the High Plains wind. The small dank rooms were mostly empty save for piles of discarded clothing and abandoned furniture.
Only the cautious footsteps and hushed voices of the Loring Heavy Runner family betrayed any sense of life that day in June 2018. Their flashlights cast about in the solemn darkness.
“What do you got?” Kimberly Loring Heavy Runner asked her aunt and uncle as they bent down behind an old box television set.
“Right there, do you see how discolored it is, and the rest is clean?” Jenna Loring said, pointing her cellphone at a small discoloration in the shag carpet. “Does it look like it could be dried blood?”
“Possibly,” Justin Loring, her husband, answered as he revealed a box cutter from his pocket and began to cut a square from the carpet. The family huddled over him in anticipation.
“Oh my gosh, it’s all red,” Jenna Loring said as she stared down at a maroon-colored stain in disbelief.
Justin Loring, already wearing blue plastic gloves, tucked the removed piece of carpet into a plastic grocery bag and tied it tight. “Don’t know how well I’m preserving it, but we’re getting something,” he said.
Overwhelmed, Kimberly Loring stepped outside into the fading light for some air, the rosy silhouette of the Rocky Mountains looming before her.
Kimberly Loring, 25, never imagined she and her family would be investigating the agonizing mystery of what happened to her little sister Ashley Loring, who was 20 years old when she disappeared from Montana’s Blackfeet Nation in June 2017. Scenes like this one have become all too common for her.
“It’s a nightmare that never stops,” she told “Nightline.”
For more than two years, the Loring family has scoured their immense reservation, largely on their own, hoping to retrace their loved one’s last known steps. The carpet square is not the only piece of potential evidence Kimberly Loring says her family has turned over to law enforcement.
Just weeks after Ashley Loring went missing, Kimberly Loring and a family friend discovered a pair of red-stained boots and a tattered sweater that the family believes belonged to Ashley Loring on the northern edge of the reservation. More than two years since turning those items into law enforcement for DNA testing, the family says they have not received any results''.