In a first for Oregon, the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs Tribal Council has unanimously adopted a Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons Tribal Community Response Plan. U.S. Attorney for Oregon Natalie Wight says the plan ensures that all available resources—government, law enforcement, and community members—are quickly deployed in support of a full and thorough investigation. The plan is a guide for how Tribal law enforcement and community members will respond when someone goes missing from a Tribal community, tailored to the needs, resources, and culture of individual Tribal communities. The Warm Springs TCRP establishes four different sets of guidelines relevant to MMIP: law enforcement, victim services, public and media communications, and community outreach. The plan was created in partnership with the Oregon U.S. Attorney’s Office as part of a U.S. Department of Justice national initiative. The District of Oregon is one of six pilot program districts working to develop community response plans in accordance with this initiative.