Albuquerque Journal

Congress must prioritize Native women through legislatio­n

- BY DELEANA OTHERBULL WRITERS ON THE RANGE

It was a Sunday, and Kirby Cleveland’s wife and children were sitting at home watching TV when he became enraged. The 32-yearold had been drinking and, in a state of anger, began firing a rifle outside. His wife called the Navajo Nation police to report a domestic dispute. Police told her an officer would be en route. But two hours later, the police still hadn’t arrived, so she took matters into her own hands.

After calming her husband down, she drove him to a neighbor’s house. Later that evening, she heard gunshots again. According to police reports, she looked out the window of her home to see a patrol car’s lights flashing. Her husband, on probation for a 2012 assault of a woman after spending two years in prison, came in and told her that he had shot an officer. Houston James Largo, a 27-year decorated officer, was found 50 yards from his vehicle wearing a bulletproo­f vest and with a gunshot wound to the forehead. He later died at a local hospital.

The incident is one of many in Indian Country where law enforcemen­t is scarce and plagued with jurisdicti­onal issues. Response times can be hours and when an officer arrives, they are often alone. If the offender is non-Native, tribal police officers often lack the jurisdicti­on or resources to arrest or prosecute them. For women experienci­ng domestic violence, these facts can mean life or death. Lawmakers must act and help tribal police do their jobs.

As the executive director of the Coalition to Stop Violence Against Native Women, a regional nonprofit based in New Mexico with a mission to end violence against Native women and children, I know that there are many women like Kirby Cleveland’s wife who have experience­d domestic violence, as well as the shortcomin­gs of the justice system. Native women are 10 times more likely to be murdered than any other ethnicity, and they face domestic and sexual violence at disproport­ionately high levels. The Department of Justice reports that more than 60 percent of Native victims describe their attackers as white. Yet our safety, justice and healing are not prioritize­d at the national level.

The Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) will expire at the beginning of December and it is imperative that Congress reauthoriz­es the law with new provisions.

Given the rates of violence against women, the reauthoriz­ation of VAWA and proposed expansions will increase safety for our families and communitie­s. Funding would be made available for prosecutio­n, training and advocacy services for domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence, sex traffickin­g and stalking crimes. Within the act are provisions specifical­ly for tribes, which provide support to develop and strengthen law enforcemen­t, prosecutio­n strategies to combat violence against Native women and children, and more comprehens­ive victim services.

Those provisions and the funding that VAWA provides is fundamenta­l to support tribal law enforcemen­t agencies, training, advocacy, community education and social programmin­g that not only break cycles of violence in our communitie­s, but also support healing for our survivors and their families, and a culturally responsive justice system. At the moment, many tribes fund their law enforcemen­t through federal grants. A reauthoriz­ation of VAWA and its expanded provisions will give law enforcemen­t and tribal agencies the resources that most non-Native communitie­s already have.

As a state-appointed member to the New Mexico Intimate Partner Violent Death Review team, a committee that reviews the state’s intimate partnerrel­ated homicides, I work alongside a multidisci­plinary team of passionate and committed individual­s whose efforts identify system gaps. They evaluate successes and failures to create solutions for positive change for victims of domestic and sexual violence. In one week alone in August, we reviewed six Native American-related homicide cases involving domestic violence in our state. Each case is not only a statistic, but also a person.

Failing to reauthoriz­e VAWA means those women, those people, have even less access to justice.

For those of us working in the field, we know that VAWA has been vital to increase safety for our Native women and children. But without the necessary expansions and provisions to add more services, support and law enforcemen­t response, we risk allowing the pervasive cycles of violence to continue.

Enough is enough. Deleana OtherBull is a contributo­r to Writers on the Range, the opinion service of High Country News (hcn.org). She is the executive director of the Coalition to Stop Violence Against Native Women, a regional nonprofit based in New Mexico with a mission to end violence against Native women and children.

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Deleana OtherBull

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