
A Montana man linked to the case of Alicia Navarro — the girl who walked into a police station four years after she vanished as a teenager — was sentenced to 100 years in prison in an unrelated child sex abuse case. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading.
Main Idea: Edmund Davis was sentenced to 100 years in prison, with 50 years suspended, in a child sex abuse case tied to the investigation into Alicia Navarro’s disappearance.
Key Points:
The case shows how child sex abuse can harm families and raise public fears about hidden threats in communities.
The long prison sentence may improve public safety by keeping a convicted offender off the streets for decades.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Primary subject of the sentencing and the child sex abuse case described in the article.
Her disappearance and later reappearance are central to the context linking Davis to the broader story.
State agency that issued the release describing Davis’s sentencing and evidence found in the investigation.
The prison where Davis was sentenced to serve 100 years, making it a concrete actor in the punishment.
Navarro’s mother, quoted reacting to the sentencing and confirming Navarro is with her.
Location of the reported reappearance of Navarro and part of the factual backdrop of the case.
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