Amber Halldin on Tribal Civil Responses to Non-Indian Violence Against Women

Amber Halldin (my former student at UND!) has published “Restoring the Victim and the Community: A Look at the Tribal Response to Sexual Violence Committed by Non-Indians in Indian Country through Non-Criminal Approaches” in the North Dakota Law Review. An excerpt:

This article will examine how tribes respond to non-Indians that commit sexual violence against Native people in Indian country. Jurisdictional issues create particular problems for tribes to remedy the violence committed in their communities, because tribes are often forced to rely on non-criminal prosecution remedies. Through the use of traditional tribal punishments and newly developed tactics, Indian tribes are working towards better protecting their members despite federal law barriers.

Amnesty Letter to NYTs Editor re: Indian Justice

From NYTs:

Re “Broken Justice in Indian Country” (Op-Ed, Aug. 11):

N. Bruce Duthu rightly points to the need to restore tribal authority over cases of rape and sexual assault committed against Native American and Alaska Native women and to ensure that perpetrators are brought to justice.

Senator Byron L. Dorgan of North Dakota recently introduced legislation that would be a tremendous step in this direction. The bill should be strengthened in collaboration with tribal leaders and then passed.

It is also critical to ensure that all available forensic evidence is gathered promptly and correctly after these crimes are reported. Amnesty International researchers have found that often it is not.

Native women who report rape may not get a police response for hours or days, especially in rural areas. Many Indian Health Service hospitals lack personnel trained to provide emergency services to victims of sexual assault. If a rape kit is not administered or is administered improperly, the chances that the perpetrator will be brought to justice are greatly diminished.

Congress should help by increasing financing to ensure that there are enough police officers on tribal lands to respond to these crimes and that sexual assault nurse examiner programs are established in all Indian Health Service hospitals. Larry Cox

Executive Director

Amnesty International USA

New York, Aug. 12, 2008

Bruce Duthu NYT Op/Ed on Tribal Justice

From the NYTs:

ONE in three American Indian women will be raped in their lifetimes, statistics gathered by the United States Department of Justice show. But the odds of the crimes against them ever being prosecuted are low, largely because of the complex jurisdictional rules that operate on Indian lands. Approximately 275 Indian tribes have their own court systems, but federal law forbids them to prosecute non-Indians. Cases involving non-Indian offenders must be referred to federal or state prosecutors, who often lack the time and resources to pursue them.

The situation is unfair to Indian victims of all crimes — burglary, arson, assault, etc. But the problem is greatest in the realm of sexual violence because rapes and other sexual assaults on American Indian women are overwhelmingly interracial. More than 80 percent of Indian victims identify their attacker as non-Indian. (Sexual violence against white and African-American women, in contrast, is primarily intraracial.) And American Indian women who live on tribal lands are more than twice as likely to be raped or sexually assaulted as other women in the United States, Justice Department statistics show.

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NPR on Tribal Law and Order Act

From NPR:

Native American women are far more likely to be raped than other women — and tribal officials say many incidents on reservations across the country go unreported and uninvestigated, NPR’s Laura Sullivan reported a year ago on All Things Considered.

The Justice Department estimates that 1 in 3 Native American women will be raped in her lifetime, and most victims who do report their assaults describe their attackers as non-Native. Legally, tribal authorities can do little to stop them. Chickasaw Tribal Police Chief Jason O’Neal told NPR in 2007 that “many of the criminals know Indian lands are almost a lawless community that they can do whatever they want.”

For the past year, the Senate has held hearings on reservations nationwide on how to stop the assaults. The resulting legislation, called the Tribal Law and Order Act, was introduced in the Senate on Wednesday by Byron Dorgan, a North Dakota Democrat, who is chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee.

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Senate Indian Affairs Hearing on Adam Walsh

From Indianz:

The Senate Indian Affairs Committee is holding an oversight hearing this morning on tribal implementation of the Adam Walsh Act.

The hearing starts at 10am and will be broadcast at http://indian.senate.gov/public/webcast.ram The witness list follows

Panel 1
THE HONORABLE RON SUPPAH
Chairman, Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation, OR

THE HONORABLE RONALD LOPEZ
Vice Chairman, Tohono O’odham Nation, Sells, AZ

THE HONORABLE ROBERT MOORE
Tribal Councilman, Rosebud Sioux Tribe, Mission, SD

MR. WILLIAM GREGORY
Tribal Prosecutor, Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians, Harbor Springs, MI

MS. JACQUELINE JOHNSON
Executive Director, National Congress of American Indians, Washington, DC

Eastern Cherokee Judge Martin on Tribal Criminal Jurisdiction

Here is the article from the ABA Judicial Division Record — inside-the-maze.

This story highlights the problem of violence against women in Indian Country, with the Amnesty Report (available here) as a jumping off point.

Part II of Billings Gazette Special Report on Tribal Sovereignty

From the Billings Gazette (Part I is here):

Three days a week, a dozen or so defendants in criminal cases appear before a Crow Tribal Court judge.

They could be charged with anything from a traffic violation to murder, and they could be there for a five-minute guilty plea or a weeklong trial. It’s all in the mix of a court schedule that begins at 8 a.m. and sometimes stretches into the evening.

Last year, the court handled 3,410 criminal cases, 335 civil cases, plus an intensive drug court and juvenile proceedings for a total of more than 4,200 cases, according to Associate Justice Julie Yarlott. During most of that year, the court was operating with just two judges. A second associate judge position is in the process of being filled.

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WSJ Article on Tribal Judges

Thanks to Mike McBride and June Mamagona Fletcher, you can download the entire article here without having to register with the Journal:

Wall Street Journal Article on Tribal Judges and Federal Indian Law

Denver Post Profile on Tribal Justice

From the Denver Post:

 

1885 law at root of jurisdictional jumble

Much of the law that governs America’s Indian lands starts with a trade-off.

In the 18th and 19th centuries, tribal chiefs signed treaties giving away their rights over vast stretches of territory, and in turn the federal government took on specific obligations. Much of Indian Country policy since has been an effort to resolve the inevitable tensions: the federal government as guardian of Indian interests versus the tribes’ view of themselves as sovereign peoples.

Nowhere is the myth of sovereignty so apparent as the sphere of justice. Shocked that the murderer of a Brule Sioux chief was set free under tribal custom, Congress in 1885 gave the federal courts power to prosecute the most serious crimes in Indian

 

 

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  • Watch video and see photos that detail the justice crisis that plagues Native American reservations in the United States.

Country, declaring that many Indians would “be civilized a great deal sooner by being put under (federal) laws.”The reach of that power was codified in a series of court cases and laws stretching over the next 90 years, which limited tribal court sentences to one year and stripped tribes of any authority to arrest or prosecute non-Indians.

One result was to create perhaps the most complicated jurisdictional regime in the country. It’s the only legal system under which the race of the victim and perpetrator determines the court of jurisdiction.

Police working on or around Oklahoma’s patchwork reservations have to carry GPS devices because the change by a few feet in the location of a crime can determine whether it’s under state, tribal or federal authority.

Another result was to short-circuit the relationship between prosecutors and the communities they serve. There are no elected district attorneys accountable to the community. And it’s among the rare arenas where federal prosecutors routinely deal with ordinary violent crime, usually the purview of state courts.

It’s a job the federal system wasn’t designed to do, experts say, and in many cases does poorly.

Blurred lines of responsibility

Take the case of the investigation of major crimes.

With several agencies potentially involved – both tribal and federal – major investigations offer an opportunity for broad mutual support. Instead, they are hampered by cross-cutting jurisdictional lines, poor communication, thin resources and a vast lack of accountability.

Strictly speaking, the FBI is responsible for serious Indian Country crime. In practice, lines of both authority and responsibility often blur.

Both tribal police and the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs have the authority on some reservations to investigate felony crime, alongside the FBI. The agencies often cooperate, but there are few hard-and-fast rules to allocate cases, and with all three elements badly undermanned, serious crimes tumble through the cracks.

For those felony crimes that are fully investigated and forwarded to U.S. attorneys for prosecution, two- thirds are rejected out of hand. If both the victim and defendant are American Indian, the cases can be taken through tribal court and the suspects charged with any crime covered by the tribe’s legal codes – including murder, arson, rape and drug trafficking. But limitations on sentencing effectively turn all of those crimes into misdemeanors, and tribal jails’ chronic overcrowdedness can reduce the time behind bars to a few months, even weeks.