Help Hannah's Family
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Dear family, friends, and compassionate community members,
We are asking for solidarity and support as we rally behind the Walker family during this
challenging time. They need financial assistance to secure the legal representation necessary to pursue justice for Hannah and to help to ensure awareness and accountability of our elected officials.
Hannah Rose Walker, age 31, was found dead in a shallow, slow-moving creek near Trout Lake, WA on October 12, 2022, after a missing person’s report was called in by a man who was with her when she reportedly went downstream swimming and didn’t come back.
No news outlet has reported Hannah’s death and the Klickitat Sheriff’s Office has issued no release of information to the public.
All investigative records supposedly in existence from Klickitat County, where she died, and Multnomah County, OR, where she lived, demonstrate that virtually no investigation has been performed.
* Crime lab reports confirmed DNA from an unknown individual under both sets of her fingernails.
* Semen was detected via vaginal swab.
* Boot prints were photographed by police at the scene. (All reports indicate Hannah was barefooted and no shoes were recovered)
* No illegal drugs were found in her body.
The family was told that the delay in providing answers lay with a backlog at both the Medical Examiner’s Office and the Washington State Toxicology Lab, but records show those reports were completed in December.
The family made a recent request to the FBI to investigate. However, media outreach and response from people like you is likely this family’s only hope of finding justice for Hannah. Here is a link to current updates on the case:
Hannah Rose was a perpetually compassionate person with contagious laughter and a finely tuned sarcastic wit. She was a top-grade student who had just been accepted to Utah Tech University. She would have studied neurobiology. She was a CNA who cared for the elderly. She loved animals. She loved music and art. She loved swimming. She had a beautiful voice. She would fight for the underdog. She loved broccoli, ketchup, Tomkha soup and fresh salad rolls with peanut sauce. She traveled to Istanbul, Barcelona, and Dublin. She was learning to speak Turkish. She dreamt of inspiring the building of “Trash Island”; a man-made island built from recycled waste. She envisioned a reality TV show documenting a community living there, filled with intellectual residents who collaborate on progressive efforts to save the world.
Organizer and beneficiary
Family Friend
Organizer
Saint George, UT
Aia Walker
Beneficiary