Dateline: Missing In America - MISSING: Nevaeh Kingbird
Episode Date: May 30, 2023On October 22, 2021, 15-year-old Nevaeh Kingbird, a member of the Red Lake Nation, left her family’s house in Bemidji, Minnesota at around 1 a.m. At 2 a.m. she left another home in a nearby trailer ...park. She was last seen in the Nymore neighborhood of Bemidji. Andrea Canning talks to Nevaeh’s mother, Teddi Wind, her sister, Lakaylee, her uncle Daniel Wind, and Indigenous missing persons advocate Lissa Yellow Bird Chase. Nevaeh was 5’4” and weighed 120 lbs. at the time of her disappearance. She has brown eyes and dark brown hair with blonde highlights. She has two scars: one on her left eyebrow, another on her left thigh. If you have information on Neveah’s case call the Bemidji Police tip line at 218-333-9111 or the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children at 1-800-THE LOST.More photos and information can be found at DatelineMissingInAmerica.com
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It's just after dawn and people are climbing out of their trucks.
It's so cold, they can see their breath.
They got word on Facebook to meet at the Eagles Club.
They've got miles to walk before sundown.
Probably everybody showed up.
They set out across the south end of Bemidji.
It's a small city in northern Minnesota that sits near three Native American reservations,
and hugs a lake with the same name.
They're here to follow this man, Daniel Wind.
I'm not going to quit.
Uncle's going to find her.
He's looking for any sign of his 15-year-old niece, Navea.
If she's out there, you know, we got to find her.
In the winter of 2021, Daniel and dozens of volunteers
spent days on end searching for her,
hiking through woods and brush, and a long railroad tracks.
So got a few miles yet to go.
Teddy Wind is Daniel's sister and Nevea's mother.
I couldn't feel the cold.
I couldn't even feel if I walked four miles at day.
The dinner bothered me because I was looking for my child.
Nevea is still missing, but Teddy has seen her in her dreams,
a girl with a cheeky smile and a blonde streak
in her dark hair.
She said she loved me and she missed me and that she was sorry.
And Teddy has recorded a message for Naveia.
It's on her voice mail, just in case she calls.
Naveia, can you please leave a message?
Mommy misses you and love you.
This is a story about a family that's determined to bring a missing child home.
It's a journey that has consumed them and changed them.
You are like a different person almost since this happened, driven by getting answers.
Yeah.
And sometimes driven by anger.
Because Daniel and Teddy, members of the Ojibwe tribe, have learned
there are so many other families like them.
It's real, you know, the fight, the fight, the struggle that we got.
I'm Andrea Canning, and this is Missing in America, a podcast from Dateline.
We first featured Naveia Kingbird's case in our digital series in 2022.
In this episode, we'll take you deeper into her mysterious disappearance.
You want to solve this case.
Yes, I do.
It's difficult to know that a 15-year-old
just disappeared.
We'll tell you about the intriguing clues
uncovered by police and her family,
and the disturbing questions those clues have raised.
So please listen closely, because you or someone you know might be able to help find Naveia,
and give her loved ones desperately needed answers.
October 21, 2021.
It was a Thursday afternoon in Teddy Wind was heading off to work.
She told her daughter, Naveia, that she could go to the movies later that evening with friends.
I told her that she had to be back at a certain time and she said she will be.
And she seemed to be really happy and a good mood.
She was just beyond excited to just go to the movies.
Teddy worked at a casino on one of the three reservations,
not far from Bemidji.
She was on the Ford and Midnight shift,
and called Nevea around 8 p.m. to chat.
But Nevea didn't pick up.
I called a couple times, and I didn't get answers.
Like, oh, she's probably not back from the move
to the ad.
So I kept on trying, kept on trying.
And then she finally answered.
And she was kind of slurring her words.
And I said, what's wrong with you?
And she said, nothing's wrong with me, Mom.
And then she started crying.
Tedi's mama, Barra Larm, was blaring.
Nevea had recently lost two friends to suicide
and she'd been struggling with her grief.
In fact, Teddy had been so concerned
she'd taken five days off work to be with Naveya
and make sure she was okay.
Now she told her supervisor that she had to leave early
and rushed home.
What she saw when she got there was hard to absorb.
Sprawled in her living room,
where a path doesn't or so teenagers, she didn't know.
At least one of them appeared to be passed out.
But where was Nevea?
Teddy headed upstairs, and that's where she found her daughter.
I looked at her, and she was just like looking through me.
And that's when I could tell it was alcohol that she was on.
Naveya had pulled a bait and switch straight out of the teenage handbook.
Turns out she hadn't gone to the movies.
She'd been partying with friends at another house on a reservation 20 miles away.
And then they got kicked out of that party and came to my house.
I end up confronting Naveya about why are these kids here?
Why are you drunk?
And why do you have a bottle in your hand?
I think I was just talking too fast for her.
And she's like, mom, mom, mom.
And that's when Teddy says one of the teenagers
started pushing her.
She wouldn't let me near Navea.
She was standing between me and Navea.
And I said, I'm going to call the cops.
And then she goes, no, mom, don't call the cops.
And I was like, your friends trying to fight me.
I have to call the cops.
I don't know who these kids are.
Teddy went outside, got in her truck,
and sat in the dark, staring at her phone.
Thinking about how much she and Navea had been through together,
how close they once were.
Teddy had always thought of Navea as her mom's girl.
Nevea was only two years old,
just a few months over two years old,
when me and her dad split up.
The third oldest of Teddy's six children,
it was Nevea who helped her single mom
keep the rest of the kids in line.
Even when she was little,
Nevea would pick out her younger brother
and sister sisters clothes,
make sure their hair was brushed. Naveya was the boss of everybody, even me. She stayed that way
her whole life. She would take charge. Yeah, she was in charge of everything. She made sure of that.
And I allowed her to be that way. I just knew that was her way or no way.
Teddy says Nevea loved her with that same fierce spirit.
If I'm eating, she would eat off my plate.
If I give her the same thing, she would switch my plate
and take her, make me her plate.
I felt like she was still holding on being a baby to me.
I know how teenagers and their moms, I know it can be hard.
Did you two have that same experience of that transition into being a teenager?
Oh yeah, definitely. Like, Naveya developed faster. She was taller than my other daughter
and her body developed faster than hers.
Teddy says by age 12, Naveya had confided in her that she was what some Native Americans
called two-spirit, meaning a person who embodies both the male and female spirit.
Naveya's revelation was no surprise to Teddy, though.
Naveya likes girls.
I figured that out at a young age for her because one of the kids were like in Justin Bieber.
She was like in Selena Gomez. So I'm like, all right. I knew she, they're like, oh, no,
Vaya, you can't like girls in the Vaya. I was like, I like whoever I want to like.
You two didn't butt heads over her being too spirit. No, not at all. The only thing I was upset with was the choice of the people she was interested in.
They were not very kind to her, and I learned that I had to let my kids make their own choices.
Now, sitting in her truck, Teddy faced a choice of her own.
Nevea had begged her not to call the police,
but she was terribly worried.
And I was like, I gotta call them.
Teddy dialed 911,
and then she heard banging from her garage.
Girl is trying to fight me,
walked out the wrong door.
Instead of going straight,
she went into my garage door.
So I let her out my garage door,
and I was like, where's Naveya?
And she's like, Navea left.
And I went to the back door and the back door was wide open.
Before Teddy even had time to think, the Bemidji town police arrived at the scene.
And then everything was chaos.
Another police car showed up.
Then an ambulance.
One of the teenagers was taken to the hospital with alcohol poisoning.
Only then did Teddy get a chance to tell officers ambulance. One of the teenagers was taken to the hospital with alcohol poisoning. Only
then did Teddy get a chance to tell officers that her 15-year-old daughter had slipped out,
drunk, into the bone-chilling dark.
It was after one o'clock in the morning in Bemidji, Minnesota.
Teddy Wind was watching city police cart drunk teenagers out of her house.
But there was no sign of her own 15-year-old daughter, Navea.
She'd slipped out the back door into the frigid night.
It was only 23 degrees.
It wasn't snowing out, but it was super cold.
You know, like desert cold at night.
So Teddy reported Neveia missing to one of the officers.
And he goes, oh, she just ran away on you.
And I was like, well, then you need to go find her
because she's intoxicated.
Police officers went looking for Neveia,
but they didn't see her on the roads in the dark.
Her mother was worried but wasn't panicking, not yet.
I thought she was just going to wake up at one of her friends, Halston, and contact me,
and then would fix it.
Teddy couldn't just call Navea.
Navea's phone didn't work unless it was connected to Wi-Fi.
They usually chatted on social media, but there was no message from Nevea the next day,
or the next.
Teddy reached out to her brother, Daniel.
She says, brother Nevea's gone.
She, you know, I can't reach her.
She hasn't been active when I said,
well, just give her a day, you know,
just give her a day and she'll come home.
Then, before Teddy could do much more,
a curve ball knocked her off her feet.
She and her children came down with COVID
and she could barely function.
Even as her missing child spoke to her in her sleep.
I kept on having bad dreams of her.
I had a dream of her being in like some fancy house
with another girl and she was telling me
she was dead and she can't come home.
In Teddy's house, Nevea's absence filled every corner and there was someone else who
wasn't there.
Her sister, Lecaeli.
It just like, works my soul, I guess, because I couldn't be there.
She's one year older than Nevea and was a way at a residential program that provides
support for teens with mental health issues.
That must have been such a struggle for you not being home during this time.
Yeah, it made me feel like helpless.
Because Lecaeli knew Nevea better than anyone.
We would talk to each other, like tell each other everything, like every night after school
she'd tell me about school her day. We would talk to each other, like tell each other everything, like every night after school,
she'd tell me about school her days.
Navea loved school and had big plans for both of them.
La Cale read me a text that Navea sent her
a year before she disappeared.
She said, when we get older,
I want to get an apartment together in New York
while I go to college to get my bachelor's degree.
That's what she said to me. Those are big dreams.
Yeah, going to New York and I'm bringing her sister with her.
Yeah, we were we were close. Very close.
At first, Lakeali wasn't surprised when she found out Nevea had taken off into the night
after Teddy busted up the party.
I would be on run, too, because I'd be scared to go home after I just brought up a bunch
of random people into my mom's house.
You might think Lakeali is being dramatic when she says she would have run away, too.
But here's the thing you need to know about Neaveya. Something her family and police were aware of,
as they tried to track her down those first few weeks.
You and Naveya had run away before.
Yeah.
Not once, but repeatedly.
Naveya and Likely had both run away from home separately,
and one time they did it together.
Naveya stayed away for an entire month.
As fiercely as Navea loved her mother,
they could argue too.
All of us kids bumped heads with my mom,
but who does it about pets with her mom.
But we took it deep, I guess.
When she first told the Bemidji police
that Naveya was missing,
Teddy reported her as a runaway.
Looking back, she wonders if that label stopped
the police from working Naveya's case hard
in those early days.
She says it took a week for the officer she filed her report
with to even call her.
He said, Naveya, come home.
And I said, no, Naveya, they come home, not yet.
And then he goes, all right, I'll call you in a week, see if she came home.
And then he hung up.
She blames herself for not pushing them to do more.
I kick myself in a butt more.
Like, I think I'm more harder on myself than I'm hard on anybody else because I'm like,
what could I have done more to search for my, for my daughter?
After several weeks with no word from Nivea,
La Cale realized this time was different.
She believed Nivea hadn't just run away.
She would always keep in contact,
even though she was on run,
she would keep in contact,
even if it was through somebody else's social media.
But there's no signs, nothing.
Another red flag to Lake Haley.
She hasn't came back for none of her clothes.
Her clothes are like everything to her, and it's just like surprising that she didn't leave
with anything.
And then there was their little sister Natalie, who was five.
She was so close to Nevea she'd fall asleep in her bed every night.
L'Caile and Teddy didn't think Nevea would ever leave her willingly.
Natalie was her whole world.
Those two were close, huh?
Yes.
Very close.
If Nevea wasn't a runaway, then what had happened to her?
In November 2021, the case had a grim milestone.
Around the 30-day mark is when investigation starts.
The teenager's case file was handed off to a detective, which is department protocol for
runaways who are still missing after a month.
Detective Sergeant Dan Seaburg, a veteran of the Bemidji Police Department, said the officers
before him had done their best to find Navea, but this wasn't a typical runaway case.
Naveya had been gone too long.
Do they usually come back in your experience?
Usually they return home.
So this was a big cause for alarm that Naveya had not returned home.
Correct.
When Teddy informed me that she hadn't been active on any social media,
and friends were reporting they hadn't heard from her,
it made me very concerned.
Navea's mother was now in full panic mode.
It wasn't just her daughter's silence that worried her.
She had found out something new,
a potentially huge break in the case,
which she shared with Detective Seaburg,
where Naveya went after bolting from their house.
Someone told Teddy's 12-year-old son
that Naveya and another girl had run to a trailer park
just a few blocks away.
Naveya knew someone there.
The girls had climbed through a window
to get inside his trailer.
So I spoke to a number of people
that were in that trailer.
Navea and her friend showed up.
Navea and her friend were there
for a while visiting.
They were talking.
The juvenile male's dad knocks
or step-dad knocks on the door
because he hears voices,
so he's telling everyone they need to go home.
When he knocks on the door,
Navea jumped out of the window.
The juveniles looked out the window
and Naveya was gone.
Her friend had got a ride home,
but Naveya had run off into the dark again,
this time alone.
And she'd left her phone behind,
which maybe explained why no one had heard from Naveya.
Naveya and her friend both left their phones behind.
The juvenile male that resides at the residence
actually found their phones a couple weeks later between his bed and the wall so they
must have fallen out when they climbed in the window. Was anyone able to get
into her phone? Did it provide any information? Yes, we were able to finally crack
the passcode on her phone and we got into it. It hasn't provided any further
information. So no messages from anyone saying I'll come pick you up or Naveia telling someone,
you know, I'll come over to your place, nothing like that?
Nothing that night, no.
And no trace of her on the trailer park's security camera footage, either.
We checked with everyone that had security cameras
in the trailer park that night,
and no one's security cameras went back
to the night in question.
That's a shame that that couldn't have been done sooner.
It is, yes.
Precious time was lost.
Yeah.
Investigators used dogs and drones
to search the area around the trailer park.
The detective had a sobering working theory
about what might have happened. You thought she might have frozen to death or been in capacity?
Incapacitated somewhere.
Jumping out the window and she fell asleep somewhere because she was trying to hide or
just laid down.
The police search came up with nothing and the trail went cold until a crime analyst at
the Bemidji Police Department spotted another possible
clue in a property damage report of all places.
It had been filed about eight hours after Navea jumped out of the window at that trailer
park.
The complainant reported that a female had knocked on their door, early morning hours, and
asked for somebody and then had laughed in the following morning when they woke up,
they found their detached garage had two broken windows on it. Could it have been Nevea seeking shelter
in the cold? The people who filed the complaint live just south of the trailer park. Detective Seaburg
went to see them. They described a mid-teen Native American female with dark wavy hair,
with either blonde or orange highlights in it.
They also described what she was wearing.
A black zip-up, put a sweatshirt, the white t-shirt,
skinny jeans, and no shoes, dark colored socks.
No shoes.
Yeah, no shoes.
That description matches the clothes
Navea was wearing that night.
But when Detective Seaburg showed the couple the photos of Nevea,
they didn't identify her as the female who knocked on the door.
They indicated that they didn't believe it was Nevea due to some different things in the photos,
but in talking to them, the description they provide matches her almost to a tea.
Do you think she spent the night in that garage?
I don't know that.
If she had, she was clearly gone by the morning when the property owner had called the Sheriff's
Office.
Did they live near a busy road at all, a highway, somewhere where she could have hitchhiked
her?
Yeah, they lived right along a
Washington Avenue which is a main road leaving Bemidji, Southbound.
Some people think that road might just lead to answers in this mystery and
possibly another one. Do you think there's any possibility that Nevea and
Jeremy's disappearances are connected?
Winter was coming in Bemidji, Minnesota. Temperatures were dropping, snowstorms gathering,
and so were theories about what had happened
to 15-year-old Nevea Kingbird.
She'd been missing for more than a month.
A girl who looked like her had been reported to police hours after Nevea disappeared, close
to a road leading out of town.
Have you heard about the theories of human trafficking that she might have met with harm
when she possibly went out to that road.
We don't have any evidence of that, but it's definitely a possibility.
Is human trafficking an issue in Bemidji?
We don't see a large amount of human trafficking in Bemidji, but it's definitely prevalent in the northern part of the state.
A few weeks after Navea disappeared,
there was another possible sighting.
A girl with a black eye and a resemblance to Navea
was spotted by a family friend at a target store.
Could it be her?
Detective Seaburg tracked down the girl and talked to her.
She wasn't Navea.
So a dead end fell so long.
Correct.
For Navea's mother, the false alarms
and the uncertainty were agony.
She couldn't stop thinking about the night of the party.
I felt like I was frozen in time because I'm like,
should I not have called the cops on them kids?
Or, you know, like, just be it myself up like that.
Then, almost two months after her disappearance
came another painful moment for the family.
A big storm had covered Bemidji in knee-deep snow.
Law enforcement suspended their searches for Naveya.
We had done what we believed we could do due to the snow.
Teddy was determined to keep the search going.
She asked volunteers to meet the family at the Dollar General Store near her house.
Hundreds of people showed up, including her brother Daniel.
When Navea disappeared, he told Teddy not to worry, told her Navea would come home.
It wasn't until the day of actual day of the search, it hit me like a f***ing wave.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, and then I...
Yeah.
The search made it feel real that here we are looking for Naveia that she's.
Yeah, reality hit, yep.
Something else hit Daniel during the family's first search.
I noticed there was a, there was lack of structure and like organization.
Nobody was doing grids.
Nobody was keeping track of what was searched.
And I was like, dang, I knew I had to step up.
Daniel knew more than most about that kind of thing.
He had spent more than a decade working as a firefighter,
battling wildfires across Minnesota.
I'm sure you never thought your experience
fighting wildfires would translate into your own search
for your niece.
Yeah.
At the family's second search, four days later, Daniel took the lead.
The volunteers were marching off for our second-largerous search.
And this time they found something at the trailer park,
buried in the snow was a pair of frozen women's jeans.
Then, a few days after that, someone found another piece of clothing,
a sweatshirt that looked like one Navea's grandmother owned.
It had strands of hair in the hood.
Police collected both of the items.
Daniel and Teddy kept searching in the bitter cold.
I couldn't even talk.
I cried all the time. I was hysterical.
I was out there digging and snow piles to see if my daughter
was on her own snow piles.
Just trying to imagine you as a mother, searching
for your own daughter, that fear of what's
around the corner, what's under that snow pile.
I was afraid, more afraid than I ever been in my whole life.
After weeks of searching, even a trained first responder
like Daniel was struggling.
I'm able to keep my emotions in tact,
but like, when they hit, it cuts deep.
The hurt, the sadness is just as intense as the anger
when that comes, you know what I mean?
Yeah.
And Daniel was plenty angry with the police.
First thing I noticed at that first search
is there was absolutely no law enforcement present
there were what it saw ever.
Like you look at all these searches on the news
and they're out there leading searches
are there out there taking part in them.
I didn't even see one cop, one patrol in there.
It made him think the police just didn't care
about a missing indigenous girl.
The world reacts different to us, you know what I mean?
You know, I'm not saying that directly to anybody is just the way life is for us, you know.
Five months after Naveia disappeared, her family was starting to feel defeated and so alone.
And that's when someone knew came into their lives.
She brought me home.
She brought...she brought.
She brought that to me.
Sorry.
Oh, it's okay.
Teddy is talking about a woman named Lisa Yellowbird.
I am a justice seeker for missing murdered and exploited people with a preference for indigenous
people.
I first met Lisa in 2020 when I was reporting on a story for Dateline about her murdered
niece Carla.
Lisa helped police track down the killer.
She's helped locate dozens of missing people.
Some of them alive.
Some not.
You've seen so many cases like this.
Right. It's like one wrong move, one miscalculation,
and there's a person missing.
What happened that evening with Navea happens all the time.
Lisa lives in North Dakota, almost 400 miles from Bemidji,
but she knew the area where Navea was last seen very well.
It was Teresa Jordaine that reached out to me first
and said, are you aware that there's a young lady missing in the area, Naveya
Kingbird? And I said I was not."
Five years before Naveya disappeared, Lissa had come to Bemidji to help Teresa search
for her 17-year-old son, Jeremy. Like Naveya, he'd vanished after leaving a party. Police
found Jeremy's backpack lying in the middle of the road, but no trace of Jeremy himself.
Detective Seaburg told us there's no evidence the disappearances are related.
But Lysis says the similarities are uncanny, not least that Jeremy vanished less than a mile from the trailer park.
It's daunting. It's pretty haunting.
Lysis swung into action.
Over the phone, she and Teddy and Daniel strategized and made a plan.
Then, she drove more than six hours with her cadaver dogs to help Daniel and the rest of
the family search.
In a video, Daniel recorded, but Doe trots ahead of him.
Noose close to the snow.
Being him bed partnered up for five days now,
covered a lot of ground, past four or five days.
Daniel tried to hold out hope that his niece was still alive.
But following behind the dogs, he knew if they found Navea,
they would most likely find her body.
Me and my girlfriend, we found a tarp laying in the middle
of the snow.
It was on top of the snow and they looked
about the right size.
I walked up and I grabbed it and I went to pull it.
And my heart almost, I thought I was ready.
You know what?
Did you think it was Navea?
I was just ready, ready for it to be something, and you know, and it ended up being a dog
frozen there, but it's good to be out of me like that.
So unsettling, even finding a frozen dog is awful.
Did Lissa's searches turn up anything?
Did they help at all?
We found Nevea's eyeliner and her lighter.
We're at least an eyeliner that was the same brand
that Nevea always carried with her.
With each search, Daniel felt like they were making progress.
He said it was helpful even when the dogs found nothing
because he trusted their keen sense of smell.
I was able to have that peace of mind
that there's nothing there that we can move to the next spot.
But it was something else Lissa did that Daniel says has changed his life.
Before Lissa came to town, Daniel had been too shy to share Navea's story with strangers.
Lissa didn't have any patience for that.
And I tell them, look, Navea is not here to speak for herself.
You are her voice. We don't got time for being shy. You have an
audience here and you got one chance to make them care about Navea as much as you do.
Listen nudged Daniel and Tutti to ask neighbors and strangers too for tips and information.
Daniel and Teddy to ask neighbors and strangers too for tips and information. There's something that keeps a lot of families from going and knocking on the door.
And so, I and Daniel and Teddy basically started knocking on doors.
You get this feeling that people don't care, you know, other people around Bemidji.
But you go door to door and you talk to them and some of them start crying
and they get you crying.
It's crazy how much people that actually do care and want to help."
As time went on, Daniel says he noticed other families in his community suffering, missing
a loved one like he was.
He felt like his eyes had been open to the epidemic right in front of him and across the country.
According to the FBI's National Crime Information Center,
Navea was just one of more than 6,000 indigenous children
and teenagers who were missing in 2021.
He began going to marches and rallies to raise awareness,
not just about Navea, but other young women like her.
That was good walk. That was good little walk.
He also started giving speeches. just about Navea, but other young women like her. That was good walk. That was good little walk.
He also started giving speeches.
You have gone, Daniel, from someone who,
from what I understand, hated public speaking.
And now you've turned into an activist.
You are like a different person almost since this happened.
Yeah, you know, it's, like I said,
I'm doing it for Navea and her siblings and my sister, but yeah, because nobody
else is, you know.
We asked Detective Seaburg if Daniel was right to think that the family was on its own.
There's, you know, the thought that Naveya didn't get the attention that say a white girl would have gotten.
I mean, some people may believe that, but that is not the case in this.
The detective told us he has worked the case tirelessly, chasing down dozens of tips
and keeping the family informed.
The family says, you know, they went out and searched that winter in the brutal temperatures.
They don't understand why the authorities didn't go out. And that's a In the, you know, the brutal temperatures, they don't understand
why the authorities didn't go out.
And that's a conversation I had with family. I informed them that we couldn't expand,
expand the resources walking through knee deep snow when we would just have to redo it
again in the spring.
And he said police did do a few small searches that winter, looking for any animal activity
that might signal the presence of human remains.
They didn't see anything.
We also asked Detective Seaburg about the frozen genes the family found and what police
had done with them.
They don't want to appear to be the genes she was wearing no.
Were they tested at all or is this just eyeballing? Eyeballing in the fact that the condition of the genes,
they appeared to have been in the woods longer than just over a month.
So you don't think those were Neveia's genes?
I don't believe so, no.
As for the sweatshirt that looked like Neveia's grandmothers,
the detective sent it to the lab for testing.
He said the hair did not belong to Navea.
He's waiting for results to come back about the eyeliner.
In May 2022, seven months after Navea went missing,
the snow had melted, and Detective Seaburg
launched a series of new searches.
And this time, law enforcement showed up with planes,
ATVs, and underwater search equipment.
They were armed with GPS tracking devices, dog teams, and drones.
They scoured 1100 acres.
And on a warm spring day, Navea's family joined them. Instead of his snow gear,
Daniel was there in a t-shirt sweating in the sun.
Another day, sir, can you pray for us?
Get some answers today.
They didn't, but this time the family felt like investigators were working with them,
working to find their navea.
You want to solve this case?
Yes, I do.
Seems obvious.
Yes, I want closure won't close her for
Teddy and her family. These types of cases are not fun for whichever
investigator is the primary on it. It's something that sits there
and it's something that you see and work with every day. And it's
difficult to know that a 15 year old just disappeared.
old just disappeared. Ten months after she vanished, Nevea's family and friends celebrated her 16th
birthday without her.
Happy birthday! Happy birthday!
They gathered in a park.
Children released balloons that rose into the summer sky.
Lecaeli says she thinks about her sister every day.
She's working hard to do what Naveia always wanted to do.
Graduate high school.
Because you two were going to do it together.
Yup. We were. Do you have a we're gonna do it together. Yep.
We were.
Do you have a message for Navea if there was any chance
that she heard this?
Just thought, you know, her family's still here,
and we're not gonna give up until we find out what happened
and we're not met.
Yeah.
But we're hurting, definitely hurting.
Nevea's mother says that hurt never leaves her,
but she also has some hope these days.
She feels supported by advocates like Lisa Yellibard
and hurt by Detective Seaburg.
She has faith that she might get answers one day.
Naveya is heaven spelled backwards?
Yes, Naveya's heaven spelled backwards.
Do you think that...
Naveya's in heaven now?
I don't know.
Honestly. I don't know. Honestly, for a while there I did, but like I said, I got hope again, where I'm hoping that she will come home someday.
Daniel Wind says he will do whatever it takes to bring her home.
How badly do you want someone to come forward and say,
yes, I know something. What's your plea to them?
Yeah, I pray every day like like I tell people, you know, I don't lock people up.
I just want to find my I just want to find my niece.
You know what I mean? I just want to bring her home.
She got siblings that miss her, you know, and her mom misses her.
You know, we miss her.
We just want answers.
I'm not going to quit.
Uncle's going to find her.
Here's where you can help.
Naveya Kingbird is five foot four,
and at the time of her disappearance,
she weighed 120 pounds.
She has brown eyes and dark brown hair with blonde streaks.
She has a scar on her left eyebrow
and another on her left eyebrow and another
on her left thigh, and was last seen in the Nymor neighborhood of Bemidji, Minnesota.
If you know anything or saw something, please call the Bemidji Police Tip Line at 218-333-9111.
Or, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children at 1-800-The Lost.
To see a photo of Nivea 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.
Thanks for listening.
See you Friday's on DatINE on NBC.
Missing in America is a production of DATELINE and NBC News. Kate Vidick is the producer of this episode.
Brian Drew is the audio editor.
Keani Reed is associate producer.
Liz Brown is senior producer.
Adam Gorfane is co-Executive Producer,
Liz Cole is Executive Producer,
and David Corvo is Senior Executive Producer.
From NBC News Audio, Rice and Barnes is Technical Director,
sound mixing by Bob Mallory, Nina Bisbano,
is Associate Producer.
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