<description>&lt;p&gt;Tonight on &lt;em&gt;Lost Girls&lt;/em&gt;, hosted by LaDonna Humphrey and Amy Smith, we are bringing you the story of Bonnie Three Irons—a Native American mother whose life was taken in 2017, and whose case still sits without answers.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Bonnie’s body was found near the Wolf Mountains on the Crow Reservation in Montana, a place that should have held familiarity and safety, not violence and loss. She was more than a name in a case file. She was a mother to her son, Faron Enemy Hunter III, and she was deeply loved by her family, including her mother, Jennifer White Bear, who continues to search for the truth about what happened to her daughter.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;This case is not just about one woman. It exists within a larger, deeply troubling pattern—the crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women. Cases like Bonnie’s are too often overlooked, under-investigated, or allowed to go cold without the urgency they deserve. Behind every one of these cases is a family waiting, a story unfinished, and a life that mattered.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Tonight, we are going to talk about Bonnie. About who she was. About what we know. And about what still hasn’t been answered.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Because someone knows what happened to her.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;And it’s time that silence is broken.&lt;/p&gt;</description>

Lost Girls

Lost Girls

The Suspicious Death of Bonnie Three Irons

APR 25, 20268 MIN
Lost Girls

The Suspicious Death of Bonnie Three Irons

APR 25, 20268 MIN

Description

Tonight on Lost Girls, hosted by LaDonna Humphrey and Amy Smith, we are bringing you the story of Bonnie Three Irons—a Native American mother whose life was taken in 2017, and whose case still sits without answers.Bonnie’s body was found near the Wolf Mountains on the Crow Reservation in Montana, a place that should have held familiarity and safety, not violence and loss. She was more than a name in a case file. She was a mother to her son, Faron Enemy Hunter III, and she was deeply loved by her family, including her mother, Jennifer White Bear, who continues to search for the truth about what happened to her daughter.This case is not just about one woman. It exists within a larger, deeply troubling pattern—the crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women. Cases like Bonnie’s are too often overlooked, under-investigated, or allowed to go cold without the urgency they deserve. Behind every one of these cases is a family waiting, a story unfinished, and a life that mattered.Tonight, we are going to talk about Bonnie. About who she was. About what we know. And about what still hasn’t been answered.Because someone knows what happened to her.And it’s time that silence is broken.