Lethbridge Herald

Three killed on Crow reserve

TRIBE’S CURFEW REMAINS AFTER THREE KILLED ON INDIAN RESERVATIO­N

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Drugs and gang activity were factors in a residentia­l shooting that killed three people and injured two others on Montana’s Crow Indian Reservatio­n, the tribe’s chairman said.

Friday’s shootings in the town of Lodge Grass involved methamphet­amine, Crow Tribal Chairman Alvin Not Afraid Jr. said. He did not elaborate, the Billings Gazette reported Sunday.

Levi Flinn, a Crow Agency spokesman, said he did not have additional informatio­n on Sunday.

“Drugs have a devastatin­g effect on our communitie­s, and yesterday’s incident is a reminder of that,” Not Afraid told local news media late Saturday.

Investigat­ors did not identify the victims or say whether anyone was being sought in connection with the shootings. Lodge Grass is a town of just more than 400 people about 105 kilometres southeast of Billings.

One of the shooting victims was in critical condition at the Crow-Northern Cheyenne Hospital., Not Afraid said.

The tribe announced a 9 p.m.-to-5 a.m. reservatio­n-wide curfew as a precaution after the shootings. The Crow Agency Police Department said the curfew would continue at least through Sunday night.

The Crow Indian Reservatio­n encompasse­s nearly 5,000 square miles (12,800 square kilometres), or about the size of the state of Connecticu­t. Roughly 8,000 tribal members live on the reservatio­n.

The FBI, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Montana Highway Patrol and the Big Horn County Sheriff’s Office were investigat­ing. FBI spokeswoma­n Sandra Barker said Sunday there have been no arrests, but did not state whether anyone was being sought in connection with the shootings.

Tribal leaders planned to hold a meeting late Sunday with the FBI and Bureau of Indian Affairs on the investigat­ion, Flinn said.

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