Missing & Murdered Indigenous People Search

A respectful place to search and share reviewed MMIP public profiles.

MMIPS helps families, authorized advocates, Tribes, and communities organize public awareness information without turning grief into rumors, unsafe details, or public accusations.

Emergency and legal notice: MMIPS is a public-awareness and family-support resource. It is not law enforcement, it does not collect or investigate tips, it does not replace calling 911, and it does not replace filing a police report, submitting to NamUs, contacting tribal law enforcement, BIA MMU, FBI, or local authorities.

Start with emergency help

MMIPS does not replace calling 911, filing a police report, contacting Tribal/local/federal law enforcement, BIA MMU, FBI, or submitting to NamUs.

Families keep control

Submissions are reviewed before publication, and family members or authorized contacts can request corrections, safety edits, or removal review.

No rumor board

MMIPS does not publish public suspect accusations, exact unsafe locations, graphic details, or information that could endanger a person, family, or investigation.

How it works

Simple, reviewed, and careful.

The site is designed for people who may be under stress. Pages use plain language, clear next steps, and careful review before public sharing.

1

Submit for review

Families, advocates, Tribal representatives, or official contacts submit information for public awareness review.

2

Verify and protect

MMIPS checks consent, safety risks, official contacts, and whether details should be hidden, softened, or clarified.

3

Publish carefully

Only approved public profiles appear in search, with correction/removal review available afterward.

Public profiles

Approved profiles will appear after review.

Public profiles are not created from raw submissions. Approved profiles can include a safe location summary, official tip contact, source notes and an official-information checklist.

Shareable public profiles

Clear links and public profiles make it easier to share verified facts without copying private or unsafe details across social media.

Correction/removal review

Families and authorized contacts can request changes if information is wrong, unsafe, outdated, or should not be public.

Official information checklist

Public profiles can show missing pieces like agency report/case number, NamUs number, Tribal notice, and last public update.