Sequim Police investigators report they continue to submit items for DNA and fingerprint evidence to discover person behind the murder of Sequim’s Valerie Claplanhoo in January 2019. (Rebecca Ruby)

Sequim Police investigators report they continue to submit items for DNA and fingerprint evidence to discover person behind the murder of Sequim’s Valerie Claplanhoo in January 2019. (Rebecca Ruby)

Claplanhoo homicide investigation ongoing

Alliance with Missing and Murdered Indigenous team continues

SEQUIM — Six years into the homicide investigation of Valerie Claplanhoo, police investigators say efforts keep moving forward and physical evidence continues to open and close paths in the case.

The Makah Tribal member, then 57, was found dead on Jan. 2, 2019, in her one-room apartment at the Sunbelt Apartments on South Fifth Avenue in Sequim. She died from an attack by a knife or a sharp object, Sequim police investigators said.

Her homicide is the most recent in the city of Sequim since 2004.

Family members have described Claplanhoo as patient and fun, and that she enjoyed traveling and family.

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Through the years, police said they have submitted large amounts of evidence to the FBI and Washington State Patrol’s crime labs. Sequim Police Chief Mike Hill said they’ve submitted what would most likely be involved with Claplanhoo’s death for DNA and/or fingerprint evidence.

“For some of the items tested, certain areas of those items might have been tested and now we’re seeing if another portion of that evidence was swabbed or examined,” he said.

“For example, you can take a piece of paper and three people touch it, but you may only test one corner so then it shows only one person.”

As for what’s being tested and awaiting testing, Hill said it’s a gamut of things from Claplanhoo’s apartment.

“The results received from the crime laboratory have led to further investigation and we will continue to assess where the facts and evidence lead,” he said.

Sequim Police Department remains the lead agency and continues to partner with the Washington State Attorney General’s Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and People Task Force, a statewide team that specializes in cold cases involving indigenous people.

Sequim police started speaking with the unit in 2023, and they first met with them on Feb. 6, 2024.

“They’re helpful,” Hill said. “We’ve talked with one of their investigators who has investigated homicides himself … (and may) make recommendations we may have not thought of.”

Hill said Sequim investigators speak with the task force’s investigator periodically.

“It’s a good relationship,” he said. “Whenever more is revealed from the crime lab, we check back in.”

Mike Faulk, deputy communications director with the Attorney General’s office, said via email the Cold Case Unit has five investigators assigned regionally, and a Victim Advocate/Case Navigator who happens to be Makah.

They are investigating 22 active cold cases at this time, Faulk said.

“Since the inception of the task force, the state has passed a Missing Indigenous Persons Alert (MIPA), the Tribal Warrants bill (Senate Bill 6146), and have conducted field research with over 60 MMIWP families and survivor interviews,” he said.

They anticipate a report on this sometime in June, and staff are in the process of working with legislators to secure a bill for a two-year, no-cost extension, Faulk said.

Cindy Lee Claplanhoo, Valerie’s sister, said in an interview last year she and fellow family members want peace and closure with the case because “Valerie needs to rest in peace.”

She also has a memorial service planned once a suspect is tried in court.

Cindy Lee said much of Valerie’s childhood stories are unknown to her as she didn’t learn Valerie was her biological sister until she was in her early 20s. Valerie lived in Sequim, Forks and Port Angeles at different times.

Feb. 14 is Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls and Two-Spirit Peoples (MMIWG2S+) National Day of Action and Awareness during which activist groups organize and participate in marches around the country to remember and honor those groups and protest disparity, racism, inequality and violence against Native Americans.

May 5 is National Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Day during which individuals wear red to marches, rallies, bike rides, fundraisers and more to raise awareness.

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Matthew Nash is a reporter with the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which is composed of Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum. He can be reached by email at matthew.nash@sequimgazette.com.

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