Imperial Valley Press

Indigenous

- This article is part of The California Divide, a collaborat­ion among newsrooms examining income inequity and economic survival in California.

The cases documented in the institute’s report span over a century, but 72 percent occurred after 2000, and problems collecting data on crimes against Native American women suggest the actual number is much higher — around 1,700 statewide since 1900, according to researcher­s who extrapolat­ed from existing data.

California is home to 700,000 Indigenous people, the largest Native American population in the country, but there is no reliable data on missing Native women in the state, according to Lucchesi, who said more than half of the cases in the state were not in official missing persons databases. When records were available, the report found, Native women were often misclassif­ied as white, or their deaths were labeled accidental even when family and friends thought otherwise. Much about the cases remains unknown because of difficulti­es in data collection and a “chronic and pervasive failure to investigat­e,” the report said.

Almost a year after she learned her mother, Alicia Lara, had died in a

car accident, Lastra said she reached out to the county coroner. She had heard that someone from Weitchpec, where her mother was found, had seen her shortly before her death, badly beaten up. That’s when she learned that her mother’s body had been found in the passenger seat of her car.

“If they’d just ask around, I think people in Weitchpec knew that she didn’t have an accident,” Lastra said. “But she wasn’t important enough to open an investigat­ion.”

Humboldt County Sheriff William Honsal, who has headed the department since 2013, said the case report for Lastra’s mother didn’t strike him as particular­ly suspicious. But he said he did have trouble understand­ing how Lara had gotten in the passenger seat. “It’s hard to see how this could’ve happened,” Honsal said. No investigat­ion was opened.

“There may have been things that have happened in the past, things that didn’t go well, where communicat­ion didn’t happen,” Honsal said. “We’re learning from past mistakes, trying not to repeat that in the future.”

Lastra’s perception that local police didn’t put enough effort into her

mother’s case isn’t unique. Lucchesi said the report found deep mistrust toward law enforcemen­t among indigenous women.

Policing in tribal areas is tricky. Jurisdicti­on is shared with the tribes, who have police forces with limited powers, and communicat­ion between county and tribal department­s has historical­ly been limited, something many tribes would like to remedy, according to Abby Abinanti, chief judge for the Yurok Tribal Court and a co-author of the report. The lack of resources experience­d by some northern California police department­s, combined with the sheer size of territory officers have to patrol, adds to the difficulty of investigat­ing cases, the report found, a problem echoed by sheriffs across the region. High poverty rates, which according to the 2018 American Community Survey bordered 40 percent for the Yurok and Hoopa Tribes, two of the largest tribes in the state, also make it hard for victims to advocate for their family members and for tribes to build efficient police forces.

Last fall, in recognitio­n of the crisis of missing and murdered indigenous women and girls,

the Justice Department launched Operation Lady Justice, to combat violence and human traffickin­g of Native Americans. State Assemblyma­n James Ramos, a Democrat from San Bernardino County, is pushing for a bill that would establish a task force to study the disappeara­nces and provide financial assistance to law enforcemen­t and tribal government­s.

In the meantime, Indigenous women are leading the effort to investigat­e. “I want to find those bodies,” said Abinanti, who was the first Native American woman to pass the state bar. “And then, prosecutio­n is at the bottom of the list, but it’s on the list.”

But the main priority remains for victims’ families to find closure.

“We’re treated like we don’t count, but you know what?” Lastra said. “My mother counted and I am her legacy and I count. This report makes me feel like she is finally being honored.”

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