Dateline: Missing In America - MISSING: Aubrey Dameron
Episode Date: August 9, 2022Aubrey Dameron, a 25-year-old citizen of the Cherokee Nation, was last seen leaving her family’s home on the outskirts of Grove, Oklahoma, in the early morning hours of March 9, 2019. She was report...ed missing when she failed to return home or answer calls. Aubrey’s family fears that as a transgender Native American woman, she may have been the victim of a hate crime. Dateline’s Andrea Canning talks to Aubrey’s uncle Christian Fencer, her aunt Pam Smith and the director of the Cherokee Nation Marshal Service. Aubrey is 5’10”, and weighs 150 lbs. She has two distinguishing tattoos: a triquetra symbol on her back and the word “Shorty” on her upper left arm. Anyone with information about Aubrey’s case is asked to call the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI or the Cherokee Nation Marshal Service (918) 207-3800. More photos and information can be found at DatelineMissingInAmerica.com
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Saturday, March 16, 2019. It was cool and dry, a perfectly ordinary day in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Inside her home on a street of meatlons and old trees, Pam Smith was waiting for her brother
Christian to bring back lunch. While she waited, she checked Facebook and saw something that would turn her life upside
down.
It was a message about her niece, Aubrey, nicknamed Shorty.
A friend of mine, who's been my friend for like over 30 years, she messes with me and
asks me if Shorty's missing.
I was like, not that I'm aware of why.
So she sent me a screenshot of one of Aubrey's friends
that made a post on Facebook asking if anybody had seen Shorty
to have her call this number.
Pam contacted the Sheriff's Office for Delaware County,
90 miles from Tulsa.
The county is part of the Cherokee Nation where Aubrey lived.
The Sheriff's Office confirmed that Aubrey's family had reported her missing.
So I started asking questions and the dispatcher asked me how I was related to Aubrey.
I said, I'm her auntie. I was like, you know, her mom and I are sisters.
She said, well, you'll have to call your sister and she can give you the details.
Pam's brother, Christian Fencer, arriving home, immediately sent something was off.
I go inside and look at my sister's face.
I just knew something was wrong before she could even say anything.
And she said that Shordy was missing.
At that point, I was like, okay, she's probably somewhere at a friend's house.
But Pam was already making her next phone call.
She called her sister Jennifer, Aubrey's mother, who said
she'd last seen Aubrey about a week before.
Jennifer said that she woke up about 3.30 in the morning,
walked down the hallway to the restroom,
and she saw Aubrey walking out at the side door, which
goes out to under the carport.
And she said she was wearing a black jacket, a black
top, a black skirt, and black hose, like knitted hose or something, and black boots.
Jennifer told Pam that Aubrey said she was going out to meet somebody. She never returned.
Where had she gone? For Pam and Christian, that would only be the first question in an odyssey through a small
town and an ancient culture, a place where a young woman walked all, before walking into
something dark, leaving behind a trail of heartbreak and haunting clues.
I'm Andrea Canning, and this is Missing in America, a podcast from Dateline about everyday
people who have simply vanished.
Listen closely because you or someone you know might be able to help find Aubrey, to
give a family desperately needed answers, and solve a mystery that's become intensely
personal to the head of the Cherokee Tribal Police.
Marshall Shannon Buwell.
She was a beautiful woman.
That's what she was.
You could tell she was a beautiful Cherokee woman.
That was proud, that was happy, that had a future.
This had grown with desires and wants and needs.
And it's my hope that she found those wants needs and is living happy and whatever.
But if it's not the case, somebody cut that short,
and we gotta find out if that happened who that was.
Pam Smith's head was spinning.
She just found out her beloved niece,
25-year-old Aubrey Dameron, was missing.
Even more worrying, she-old Aubrey Dameron, was missing.
Even more worrying, she learned that Aubrey, who was epileptic, had left her medication behind.
Pam and her brother Christian didn't waste any time.
They reached out again to the Delaware County Sheriff's Office and spoke to the police
captain in charge of Aubrey's case.
And they got to work.
They put out the word on social media, asking for volunteers to help search a potentially
daunting task.
The Cherokee Nation Reservation is 7,000 square miles, almost the size of New Jersey.
The reservation is dotted with cities and small towns, but also includes vast rural areas,
home to numerous state parks full of woods
and lakes.
But they started in the most logical place, outside of Aubrey's ranch-style house on the
outskirts of Grove, Oklahoma, one of the towns on the reservation.
That's where Aubrey lived with her mom, stepped at and brother, and as well from time to
time, other family members.
We got a group of about three dozen people together,
and we searched the entire property as well as the surrounding areas.
We also got some specialists out there,
some dive teams who went in two of the ponds
in the surrounding area, and they didn't find anything.
Back above ground, they hoped technology might provide an idea
where Audrey had gone.
Whenever she left her house, she would walk to the left as she left her driveway and
to the left of her driveway there's other houses. There's people with ring doorbells
so they have the cameras on them. So we went over there and we checked those doorbells and Aubrey
was nowhere to be found on any of those ring doorbell video cameras. That was a blow, but a major potential clue would turn out to be just steps away.
We were walking down the side of the road where the neighbor who has the Ring Doorbell across
the road from their house was a sock that had what appeared to be blood on it.
The sock was sent off to be tested, But whatever results came back, both Pam and Christian were already thinking about one thing
that might be behind their niece's disappearance.
It's a hate crime.
I sit without a doubt.
Why would they think that?
25-year-old Aubrey Dameron was missing. Her aunt, Pam Smith, and uncle Christian Fencer said right away, they had a strong suspicion
that their niece might be the victim of a hate crime.
To understand why, you need to go back in time.
Though Christian is Aubrey's uncle, at just six months older than Aubrey, they were
raised more like siblings.
Brothers actually.
Because you see, at birth, Aubrey was assigned male.
As little boys, Pam says Aubrey and Christian too, preferred dolls to toy trucks.
They came at his gate to one another as teenagers, each confessing they had a crush on a boy
at their school.
But for Aubrey, there was one more step in becoming the person she felt she was meant to be.
Eventually, she told her family that she was transgender.
When Aubrey decided to transition, could you see a big change in her? Was that just like,
you know, the weight of the world was off of her shoulders? Absolutely. I wouldn't say it was like
a light switch, but it was a quick transition. I always thought that she was happy, prior to
her transition. She was a happy little boy growing up, but whenever I saw her after she'd come out as transgender, she was just this beautiful, amazing young woman.
That amazing young woman took to social media to share her story.
Here in one of her posts is Aubrey in her own voice.
It's really a blessing, you know, to be able to explain my life and my story to you guys,
you know, to have somebody to listen to when you cry out
and, you know, you're not alone.
There was another part of Aubrey's identity
that was important to her too, being Cherokee.
What do you think was most important to Aubrey
about your heritage?
I think the letting people know that she was Native American.
Oftentimes, people would assume that she was Caucasian, and if you checked her social
media or if you sat down and actually talked to her, she would bring up being Native American
within the first five minutes of the conversation.
It's just something that she was proud of.
She always wore that with like a badge of honor.
Historically, in some Native American tribes, there has been an acknowledgement that there
were people who embodied both the male and female spirit.
Christians as such people, known today as two-spirit, were often greatly revered.
Prior to colonization, inside of indigenous communities, there were members of society
who were seen as two-spirit.
They were believed to be able to walk in both the male form and the female form, and they
were held in high regards in society.
They were held as sacred members because they could walk in both forms of men and women.
This acceptance of gay and transgender life might have been a tradition in some tribes,
but today it's not something embraced by everybody.
Pam says life for Aubrey and Grove, Oklahoma was not easy.
How was she received in the community?
Not very well.
I'm her in Christian debt with a lot of homophobic slurs and Christian didn't tell me a lot of
the details until after Aubrey went missing about them being chased home from school by people in a vehicle and, you know, them yelling slurs and stuff like that.
And when he shared that, it was heartbreaking over again at a different level because I'm because when I would find out things I would ask Aubrey. I was like, who is this person or what do they live?
You know, let's go take care of this and and she would be like, no, Pam, it's okay. She said I'll pray for him.
You know, that was her answer
Christian says Aubrey maintained her dignity no matter what
We would walk into these restaurants or these stores and people would stare like they've
never seen another human being before.
And Aubrey has her head held high and she's walking with a grace of a thousand Debbie
taunts because that's just how graceful she was whenever she entered a room.
Christian tells us Aubrey's decision to transition wasn't always appreciated in her own home,
either.
It was something that was new to everyone within our community, but it was really new to
our family.
They didn't really know how to take it.
I know that they could have taken a lot better, but they did what they knew how to do
and just continue to push forward from there and found acceptance.
It took a while.
It wasn't overnight.
It's something that they worked toward.
Now, in March of 2019, a few days after Aubrey had disappeared, her aunt and uncle were
doing everything in their power to find her. They'd put the word out on social media,
gathered volunteers, and searched the area around Aubrey's home on the outskirts of town.
If you're wondering why they were taking so much on themselves, well, they didn't at first.
As we mentioned, they'd gone to the police as anybody would.
But they say that the investigator in charge of Aubrey's case, Captain Gail Wells of the
Delaware County Sheriff's Office, seemed dismissive.
Captain Wells, when I first spoke with him, he asked me why I thought she was missing.
I was like, well, she can be goal-born naive and he says, well, we don't believe she's a missing person.
And I'm like, why are you saying that? Like, I don't understand.
Pam says the captain told her Aubrey wasn't actually missing because of her quote, lifestyle.
I was like, what do you mean her lifestyle? I said because she's
transgender. You know, she's indigenous. No, no, I was like, so
what do you mean? You know, as the sheer told me that my niece is
life is more searching for because of her lifestyle. And he was
like, Oh, we don't have the resources, we don't have the manpower.
And he goes, but yeah, we just don't believe she's missing.
In fact, the Sheriff's Department told us Aubrey was entered into their system as a missing person
as soon as the family reported her disappearance.
But Pam came away outraged that, as she sought,
Captain Wells was blaming Aubrey for whatever might have happened to her.
Lynette Grable, founder and director
of Not Our Native Daughters, dedicated
to increasing awareness about missing
and murdered indigenous women, says
Native communities are used to blame the victim attitude
from law enforcement.
I've been with families in the actual police department
where the mother and the family and the loved ones, the sisters,
the brothers, has to sit in a law enforcement conference room. And I've heard the investigator
lead officer actually explain that this person is XYZ or this person has a risky lifestyle of,
they're known to party or they their known to hang with this group.
And it's really damaging when you're sitting
in a law enforcement office, probably confused,
and dazed, and heartbroken, and you're thinking the worst.
And you have an officer who tells you that your daughter
or your son has put this upon themselves to be missing
and to be in this predicament.
So now, Pam and Christian,
in their minds, not much help coming from law enforcement,
were doing whatever they could to find Aubrey
with a group of volunteers,
one of whom had discovered a sock near Aubrey's house
that had what looked like blood on it.
The sock was taken to be tested against Aubrey's DNA.
Did anything come from that?
We were informed that it was, what is the word I'm looking for?
That there was no match.
No match or inconclusive.
Yeah, inconclusive.
That may not be quite the end of the sock story.
We'll get back to that later.
So there was no physical evidence yet
to indicate what might have happened to Aub later. So there was no physical evidence yet to indicate
what might have happened to Aubrey, but what about possible motives? Who might have wanted
to harm her? A year or two before her disappearance, Aubrey had left town. Pam and Christians said
she lived with a boyfriend in New Mexico who had taken her to Colorado to have breast augmentation
surgery. When she returned to Oklahoma, they say not everyone appreciated the changes.
Do you believe that her decision to transition somehow fits into this mystery that someone
was not happy with her choices?
I believe that's a high possibility living in Northeast Oklahoma.
I've seen the hate that is created there.
I mean, not just Northeast Oklahoma, it's throughout the world,
but specifically in Northeast Oklahoma because that's where we live.
That's what I was exposed to. I can speak on that.
I think that her transitioning could have played a part in her disappearance.
Could someone in Grove who didn't accept her transition have done something to Aubrey?
And what about the boyfriend she'd gone to stay with?
Would he have any reason to hurt her?
According to Pam,
their relationship was far from healthy.
I remember when she came back from New Mexico
and she and I talked to had a pretty long conversation
on the phone in November of 2018.
And I asked her,
are you just the Infra-A-Visit or are you here to stay?
She goes, I came back to stay. I was like, okay, I was her, like, are you just the Infrared Visit or are you here to stay? She goes, I came back to stay.
I was like, okay, I was like, so, Nester, you know,
what happened?
She goes, and Pam was just wasn't a good relationship.
Pam says at this point, Aubrey started to get emotional.
She said, I just needed to get away,
and she started crying, saying that she felt like she should
go back, like she owed him something,
and she said he would tell her that she owed him for everything that he did for her.
We tried to contact Aubrey's now ex-boyfriend, but we were unable to find him.
Closer to home though, there was something else that Pam and Christian found themselves wondering about.
Both say that Aubrey's mom Jennifer, her stepfather and her brother seemed to show little interest
in searching for Aubrey.
Do you think her mom knows more than she's letting on?
Absolutely, without her doubt.
We reached out to Aubrey's mother and brother, but received no response. If Aubrey is the victim of a crime, we know one thing.
She's far from alone.
According to the Urban Indian Health Institute, Native American women face rates of violence
up to 10 times higher than the national average.
Why would that be?
Experts cite reasons including poverty, a lack of education
in Indian country, as well as jurisdictional issues that often hinder prosecution of those
committing violence against Native Americans. Lynette Grable adds another reason,
Indigenous women, she says, have been seen as disposable for centuries.
been seen as disposable for centuries.
It's actually been researched by professors and universities that the selling, the trading, the exploitation
of indigenous women and children is no new thing.
This has actually been something that's been going on
since first settlers came to this country.
Indigenous women and children were offered to new settlers
as they came into this country by the boatloads
as a sign of that we have conquered these people,
do what you want with these women and children,
and we're still facing the violence
as Indigenous women till this day.
And that's hard to say.
It was now May, Aubrey Dameron had been missing for almost three months.
And then one day, out of the blue, a stunning tip.
One of Aubrey's friends from there in Grove came forward to help.
The girl said, if you look from her house
up on one of the hills there in town,
there's a flagpole up there.
She says, and if you stand off of my yard
by the road and look up there, she goes.
They say the Aubrey's buried up there. Pam Smith and Christian Fencer had just gotten a startling tip.
A friend of Aubrey said she'd heard something alarming
about a hill near her house.
She goes, they say the Aubrey's buried up there.
Searchers headed to the area, 30 miles southwest from Aubrey's
home.
On the first day of the search, we had a good number of people
there.
And several search and rescue people from different teams.
And they went to that hill where the girl mentioned.
And they ran dogs up there and didn't hit on anything.
So then everybody came back. and they ran dogs up there and didn't hit on anything.
So then everybody came back and they'd go up on the hill
next to it where the water towers at.
This time, Christian says, the dogs seem to have more luck.
One of the dogs hit and so they brought another dog up
and that dog hit on the same spot as well.
And they looked at the spot and it looked like a shallow grave
that was sinking in.
And next to it was a black leather jacket, which was oddly quenched in on to what Aubrey
was last seen wearing.
So we thought that, okay, this is huge.
But no sooner had they made this potentially enormous discovery when Pam says they were
faced with another setback.
It was Memorial Day weekend, and according to Pam,
Captain Wells said the department's forensic anthropologist
was unavailable to search the grave-like hole for human remains.
He came back and said that the anthropologist couldn't be there until Tuesday.
One of the people that was searching with us and I looked at her and I'm like,
I didn't know anthropologists to call it aes off.
You know, they always have somebody on call.
And he said, well, they just can't get out here
until Tuesday.
Eventually, the forensic anthropologist did show up.
So they came back and did they find anything?
They actually found a bone, Captain Welles told us
that the bone was an animal bone.
Pam says besides the black jacket,
investigators discovered another article
of clothing nearby.
They just said that they took the jacket and,
like, it was like a basketball jersey, it was filmed,
just not far from it.
Were they able to determine if any of the items belonged
to Aubrey when you ever get an answer?
For Pam and Christian, it was yet another blow. But they continued searching, putting up flyers and speaking to the media
as Pam did in this report on KJRH and B.C.'s affiliate in Tulsa.
A candle-life vigil was held tonight for Aubrey Damret.
People that wonder why we're still looking, you know,
if it was your loved one, would you stop?
They didn't stop, and then about 16 months after Aubrey vanished, they got some help from 1200 miles away.
Up until that point, Aubrey's case had belonged to the Delaware County Sheriff's Office.
But in July 2020, the Supreme Court issued a ruling regarding Indian reservations
that meant the case would now be investigated by tribal police and the FBI. Both have many
more resources than the Sheriff's Office. Though the director of the Cherokee Nation Marshall
Service, Shannon Buehl, says his team has had to make up for lost time. We have to follow the leads that Delaware County initially got. The
Investigator that worked Aubrey's case initially is no longer the Sheriff's Office
and from everything I've heard he probably didn't treat this case like I would
treat it. He didn't give the due respect in my opinion to Aubrey and that's
that's a loss. It's a loss that now we're playing catch-up on
maybe a case that I had said maybe it could have been solved quickly but wasn't.
So now we're having to play catch-up to fit pieces of puzzles that maybe those pieces
don't even exist anymore.
Captain Wells, who has since retired, told us,
quote,
I've dealt with persons of all race,
creed, religious beliefs,
and sexual orientation,
with the same concern and professionalism
throughout my career.
About the forensic anthropologist delay,
he says it had nothing to do with the holiday weekend.
He says she was working two homicide sites in different parts of the state and came as quickly as possible. He also says he never
told Aubrey's family that his department didn't have the manpower to conduct searches,
though he did say that his agency was small and couldn't handle every tip that came
their way.
As for Pam's allegation that he blamed Aubrey's disappearance on her lifestyle, Captain
Wells says her case was considerably more difficult to investigate because he says she was
known to use drugs.
And that, he says, meant there were an infinite number of possibilities for coming in contact
with, quote, undesirables who might have caused Aubrey harm.
With the case now in his hands, Marshall Buuell is doing a lot of things differently, starting
with its designation.
The Delaware County police had called it a missing person's case, while Marshall Buell
is calling it a homicide, even though he very much hopes Aubrey is alive.
A lot of agencies will call something that might be a homicide a missing person and maybe
that's due to they don't want to upset the family.
There's reasons why an entity would do that.
The Marshall Service we look at it as if we have a missing person that truly we think there
might be some bad things that happen.
We always want to treat that missing person as a homicide.
There's reasons for this. Making it a possible homicide puts a
high up on the scale of importance to a lot of agencies. When we call and talk to
people, we're looking at a possible homicide, not a possible missing person. If
you can kind of understand the psyche of that, you know, we can get a lot more
information, in my opinion, if I'm assigned to homicide
detected, it's not just assigned to a detected looking for a missing person.
Pam and Christians say they're relieved that Marshall Buehl and his team are now in charge,
and the Marshall has shared with us a slew of important developments in the investigation.
He tells us that the clothing found near that hole in the ground was not a match for
Aubrey and that testing on the bloody sock is incomplete.
He says his team is actively looking at a particular pond, and he confirms they are
also investigating whether Aubrey's ex-boyfriend or a hate group could be behind her disappearance.
And he shared with us news about another potential clue. During a
November 2019 search, volunteers discovered something on Aubrey's family's
property. There was a search where we had again K9 dogs that hit on the shed
there at the property and inside of the shed was a little blue kitty pool and
inside of the kitty pool was a tarp. Well we laid the tarp out and the kitty pool out and they hit on the tarp again.
So then we looked at the tarp and there were some stains on there that could go
inside with blood. We had law enforcement come and pick it up.
It took them about over a month to get it, 60 miles down the road to get it tested.
Marshall Buil confirms that the tarp wasn't tested in a timely way.
He does say there's evidence suggesting a connection between the shed and Aubrey, but
that investigating isn't going to be easy.
There's some belief that maybe Aubrey might have been there at the shed.
The problem with anything on that property is I have to convince a judge to get me back
on that property. We're not getting consent to go back on that property is, I have to convince a judge to get me back on that property.
We're not getting consent to go back on that property.
So I've got to have enough to have a tribal judge look and go, yes, here, get on that property
and look.
In terms of potential suspects, Marshall Buel says he's looking hardest at those closest
to Aubrey. People do bad things with people generally because they love them,
or they did love them, or there's some type of relationship.
So I believe that if we find out that
Hemford Bed Aubrey was murdered,
chances are it's going to be a very, very close person
that's been a lot of time with her,
and that person knows where she is right now.
He confirms his team has talked to Aubrey's immediate family members, but I can tell you
we have not interviewed every family member yet.
There's a couple that we're not interviewing on purpose yet.
Again, Aubrey's mother didn't respond to our requests for comment.
But in November 2021, she did speak to news nation.
She said she had no idea what happened to her daughter, but that at that point, she had
come to believe that Aubrey was dead.
I felt my child pass a year ago. I went to Mother-in-Chall as a born and I felt it.
I hit the floor.
Pam says she's much more optimistic now
than before that they will learn what happened to Aubrey.
Do you have any more hope now that it's with the FBI
and the tribal police that it will get solved?
Absolutely.
That's good.
I believe without a doubt that we're going to get answers.
Marshall Buil says getting those answers
could depend on a tip, any tip.
We're looking for any little thing.
Just some off-hand comment.
I've seen this car.
I heard this from a friend at a party.
I mean, that's what we're looking for.
We're looking for somewhere to come forward
with what they think is the dumbest, worthless piece of information
that they could ever give the police.
That's what we want.
If the Marshall sounds deeply invested in Aubrey's case,
maybe it's because he is.
Like all Cherokee Marshalls, he's a member of the tribe.
Hopefully we find resolution before the end of my career here and I move on,
but I can promise you when I'm holding my ground, I have two little granddaughters.
When I'm around them, when I'm 80 years old, she will be one of the cases I think about,
whether we find her or not.
She's important. She's important to me.
So this is not a case that's going away anytime soon.
If somebody out there did something to Aubrey, don't sleep well,
because you have strong men and women out here that are motivated to find you.
Whatever happens, Aubrey has left behind at least one legacy for her uncle Christian.
Her pride in being Cherokee has inspired him to learn more about their shared heritage,
and he says that Tribe has been welcoming, inviting him to learn Stickball, a native
game similar to LaCrosse, as well as to take part in various ceremonies.
Members of the Cherokee Nation have been phenomenal.
They've come out and shown us support.
They've introduced us to traditions
that we didn't even know we had.
Marshall Beale wants us all to know something
about what it means to be Cherokee.
The Cherokee Nation is a tribe of laws.
We believe in the rule of law.
To a fine point we do. We believe in the rule of law. To a fine point we do.
We believe in the protection of civil liberties.
Individual responsibility and individual freedom
is huge at the Cherokee Nation.
Individual freedom, something Aubrey Dameron
fought so hard for.
What happened to Aubrey?
As the tribal police and FBI pursue leads, deploy dive teams and take in tips, her uncle
Christian does his best to stay positive.
Where is she?
I lose hope, but at the same time I see stories of people being found after years of being
missing, after months of being missing after months of being missing. And I just, I hold on to hope that maybe, maybe,
just maybe, everything will fall in the place someday and we'll get Aubrey Pack.
Aubrey Dameron has described his five foot nine in about 130 pounds. She has brown eyes,
long brown hair, and a triangle composed of interlaced arcs tattooed on her back,
and another tattoo reading Shorty on her upper left arm.
If you know something about Aubrey's disappearance,
you can call the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI,
or go online at tips.fbi.gov.
You can also call the Cherokee Nation Marshall Service at 918-207-3800. Thanks for listening. To see pictures of Aubrey and learn more about
other people we've covered in our Missing in America series, go to datelinemissinginAmerica.com.
There, you'll be able to submit cases you think we should cover in the future.
Missing in America is a production of Dateline and NBC News.
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