From the Arizona Journal of International and Comparative Law:
Notes
“Jurisdictional Ambiguities Among Sovereigns: The Impact of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act on Criminal Jurisdiction on Tribal Lands”
Guadalupe Gutierrez, Ph.D.
From NPR (miigwetch to A.K.):
The federal government has recently announced plans to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to improve medical clinics, buy more rape kits and bolster the police response to what authorities say is an epidemic of rapes on Indian land.
The February stimulus bill injected $500 million into Indian Health Services, the agency that handles most medical needs for Native Americans, while the appropriations bill that passed in March is also adding funds. The March bill increases the budget for the Bureau of Indian Affairs by $85 million to provide additional law enforcement on reservations.
Meanwhile, Congress is attempting to strengthen the authority of tribal police with a new bill that would grant Native American tribes greater police powers.
Advocates say it would be a sea change for tribes, which are largely dependent on the federal government when it comes to law enforcement on their lands.
INTERLOCHEN PUBLIC RADIO (2009-04-21) In the US, we’ve come to expect that if someone does something wrong – and they’ve been found out – the crime won’t go unpunished. But that’s not always true in Indian Country, where there are complicated laws about which governments are allowed to deliver what punishments, against whom. Some even say, on some reservations, a white person might do just about anything and get away with it. But not in West and Northern Michigan. IPR’s Linda Stephan reports.
Listen here.
The ICT piece quoting Sarah Deer notes that the Tribal Law and Order Act (text here) could go further. I agree. The way it’s drafted now, it wouldn’t do a whole lot for Indian women. It’s a statute designed to combat drug trafficking more than anything. A statute designed to cut into crime rates against women would have improved tribal court authority, such as authority to prosecute all on-reservation perpetrators.
There are good steps in the right direction re: crimes against women, such as improved training and cooperation, more funds for tribal law enforcement. But the key provisions to the statute would increase the capacity of federal not tribal prosecutors in Indian Country. I tend to agree that the feds should be dealing with major drug trafficking in Indian Country, but the law doesn’t do anything to solve the practical limitations that federal prosecutors face in prosecuting crimes against women.
First, they have to prove additional elements to the crime — jurisdiction and the Indian identity of the perpetrator and victim. Second, the distance between the federal courts and the crimes is often too far for a proper prosecution, let alone investigation. The best jurisdiction to deal with these local crimes are Indian tribes, and until Congress recognizes tribal court jurisdiction over non-Indian criminal defendants in these crimes, everything is a half-measure.
From ICT:
Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., introduced major bipartisan legislation April 2 aimed at strengthening law enforcement and justice in Indian communities. Some Indian justice advocates said it could be strengthened, but generally agree it is a step in the right direction.
Congressional officials said the legislation is needed in response to violent crime that has reached extreme levels on some reservations due to chronic underfunding of law enforcement and justice programs, and a broken, divided system for policing Indian lands.
“The increase in violence on some reservations is epidemic,” said Dorgan, chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, upon introducing the bill to Congress.
“Violence against women is growing and now one in three women on Indian reservations will be a victim of rape or sexual assault during their lifetime. That is intolerable and we have to stop it.
“We cannot ignore the fact that drug traffickers are now targeting Indian reservations as safe havens because of the lack of police presence and the disjointed system of justice that is in place.”
Thirteen senators from both parties joined Dorgan in offering the legislation, which is called the Tribal Law and Order Act. Similar legislation was introduced last summer, but did not pass Congress.
Continue reading
Originally printed at http://www.indiancountrytoday.com/home/content/41971652.html
WASHINGTON – The American Constitution Society for Law and Policy, a progressive legal organization, has distributed an issue brief entitled, “Addressing the Epidemic of Domestic Violence in Indian Country by Restoring Tribal Sovereignty.”
The brief’s author, Matthew L.M. Fletcher, argues that domestic violence and physical assaults experienced by American Indian women on reservations are related to unjust Supreme Court decisions and to lacking federal laws.
Indian victim advocates said the information is especially important for policy makers, both at the federal level and in Indian country, to review. Research indicates that American Indian women experience physical assaults at a rate 50 percent higher than the next most victimized demographic, African-American males.
Fletcher, director of the Indigenous Law and Policy Center at Michigan State University, notes the Supreme Court has held that tribal governments do not have jurisdiction over domestic violence misdemeanors committed by non-Indians in Indian country.
The situation causes a major dilemma, especially for Indian women, since approximately one-quarter of all cases of family violence against Indians involve a non-Indian perpetrator. It’s a rate of interracial violence five times that involving other races.
“The law simply has to change,” said Kirsten Matoy Carlson, staff attorney for the Indian Law Resource Center based in Helena, Mont. “Tribes are in the best position to investigate and prosecute these crimes, yet the law prevents them from doing so.”
“Tribes must be able to prosecute and sentence violent perpetrators to protect Native women from the alarming rates of domestic violence and sexual assault. As it is, perpetrators of violence against Native women often face no consequences for their crimes. Studies report that violent offenders are likely to commit further violence when they are not held responsible for their crimes, and that domestic violence escalates over time. Sexual and domestic abusers know they can get away with committing heinous violent crimes against Native women and they regularly exploit this by targeting Native women.”
Fletcher, an enrolled member of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, closely monitors Supreme Court and other legal decisions involving Indian issues. He writes in the brief that among the traditional powers retained by Indian tribes under tribal sovereignty is the power to establish tribal courts and to prosecute criminal offenders for acts committed within Indian country.
He notes that traditionally, tribal sovereignty is inherent and undiminished unless the tribe has voluntarily divested itself of some aspect of its sovereignty, or if Congress has affirmatively acted to divest the tribes of a part of their sovereignty.
However, the Supreme Court changed these rules when it held in 1978 that Indian tribes may be divested of their sovereignty by a decree from the high court. This means that tribal governments do not actually have jurisdiction over domestic violence misdemeanors committed by non-Indians in Indian country.
“The Supreme Court has created – and Congress has not done enough to solve – a terrible irony,” Fletcher writes. “The law enforcement jurisdiction closest to the crime and with the greatest capacity and motivation for responding quickly, efficiently and fairly, has been stripped of the authority to react, leaving Indian women to suffer, and crimes of domestic violence to remain unresolved and unprosecuted.”
Fletcher says the scenario leaves Indian women who are the victims of domestic violence and physical assault by non-Indians in a quandary when federal and state authorities do not prosecute these crimes, which they often are not able to do because of a lack of resources and other factors.
Carlson says this “stripping of tribal criminal jurisdiction and refusal to ensure the prosecution of these crimes has grave consequences for the safety of Indian women.” This legal framework, she says, places Native women at increased risk for further victimization, and leaves them unprotected and without any legal recourse.
“There is no justice for Native women, and there won’t be until the law changes,” warned Carlson.
The brief proposes that Congress fix the situation by enacting legislation that recognizes tribal court jurisdiction over domestic violence and related misdemeanors committed by non-Indians in Indian country.
According to legal experts, Congress has not taken such action due to opposition from the Department of Justice and from various state governments that generally oppose tribal government activities.
Under Fletcher’s plan, tribal prosecutions for such crimes would proceed as do other tribal prosecutions.
The legal expert also proposes that Congress would condition the recognition of tribal sovereignty on a requirement that Indian tribes provide adequate constitutional and criminal safeguards. Tribes would have the ability to “opt-in” to the system.
Fletcher believes Congress has the constitutional authority to “untie the hands of Indian tribes” and permit them to once more enforce criminal laws against non-Indians in Indian country and stop the epidemic of violence against Indian women.
“Each day, an Indian woman is victimized by a person who likely will never be prosecuted,” he concludes in the brief. “It is time to act.”
From the American Constitution Society:
ACS is pleased to distribute an Issue Brief by Matthew L.M. Fletcher, Director of the Indigenous Law and Policy Center and Associate Professor at the Michigan State University College of Law, entitled, “Addressing the Epidemic of Domestic Violence in Indian Country by Restoring Tribal Sovereignty.” In this Issue Brief, Professor Fletcher argues that American Indian women residing on Indian reservations suffer from domestic violence and physical assaults at rates that far exceed those faced by other women, and that the perpetrators of these crimes often go unpunished. Professor Fletcher contends that the current state of federal Indian law has contributed to this epidemic of domestic violence in Indian Country. The author first notes that the Supreme Court has held that tribal governments do not have jurisdiction over domestic violence misdemeanors committed by non-Indians in Indian Country, and second that although federal and state authorities may prosecute these crimes, they often do not do so because of a lack of resources and other factors.
Benjamin J. Cordiano published “Unspoken Assumptions: Examing Tribal Jurisdiction over Nonmembers Nearly Two Decades after Duro v. Reina” in the Connecticut Law Review. Here is an excerpt from the abstract:
This Note examines the Supreme Court’s reasoning in Duro and uses nearly twenty years of anecdotal evidence, case law, and congressional findings to show that the Court relied on flawed assumptions about the nature of nonmember criminal jurisdiction in the modern tribal context. By examining the modern realities of two tribes, the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians and the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, this Note concludes that the Supreme Court’s reasoning in Duro is flawed and that criminal jurisdiction over nonmember Indians is crucial to tribal self-governance and maintenance of reservation life.
From the ABA:
On February 12, 2009, at the request of American Bar Association President, H. Thomas Wells, Jr., Mary L. Smith will testify at the “State of Diversity in the Legal Profession” hearing at the ABA Mid-Year Meeting in Boston, MA. Ms. Smith will discuss issues of concern to women and Native Americans in the legal profession, particularly, the crisis situation of public safety issues in Indian Country and also the “box checking” issue on law school applications.
Ms. Smith is the National Native American Bar Association’s delegate to the ABA House of Delegates and is the first tribally-enrolled Commissioner and Chair of the Women of Color Committee for the ABA’s Commission on Women in the Profession. (As many of you already know she is also one of our council members and very active in the work of the committees).
Here is her prepared testimony — diversity_hearing_testimony1
Bill Moyers Journal (thanks to Mike):
Friday, November 14, 2008 at 9PM on PBS (check local listings <http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/about/airdates.html> )
Bill Moyers Journal and Exposé: America’s Investigative Reports follow a team from the Denver Post reporting on how antiquated laws have affected Native American reservations. The piece examines how felonies committed on ‘Indian country,’ which fall under federal – not tribal or local – jurisdiction, are often left uninvestigated and un-prosecuted, leaving murderers, rapists, child molesters, and burglars at large in some of the nation’s poorest and highest-crime areas.
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