Troy Eid on the Tribal Law and Order Act

from the Denver Post:

WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. — After pressing for months, the chief criminal prosecutor for the Navajo Nation, Bernadine Martin, finally persuaded the U.S. Department of Justice to release its internal statistics on felony investigations. It turns out federal agents last year made just 28 arrests in sexual assault cases on an Indian reservation the size of West Virginia.

That’s an arrest rate in sexual assault cases of about 11 per 100,000 people. By comparison, Denver’s arrest rate in the same category in 2008 was 38 per 100,000. In other words, federal agents investigating sexual assaults on the Navajo Nation made less than one arrest for every three by Denver police.

This kind of unfairness prompted the Tribal Law and Order Act, sponsored by retiring Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., and signed by President Obama last week.

Despite the good intentions of many fine public servants, the federal government isn’t getting the job done. Violent crimes on Indian reservations are two and a half times the national average, yet tribal lands are served by half the number of police as comparable communities.

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Letters of Support for Tribal Law and Order Act

Here:

ABA Letter

Bush U.S. Attorneys letter of Support for TLO

White Mountain Apache Tribal Council to Meet Today re: 2010 Election Violence

Here is the resolution favoring the meeting, which will apparently be in closed session before a public meeting: Request for Executive meeting.

Will keep posting if we receiving any updates.