Los Angeles Times

Man’s racist rant targets Native dancers

Phoenix-area incident during Super Bowl week raises calls for hate crime charges.

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PHOENIX — Native American dancers who were the target of a racist rant by a suburban Phoenix gallery owner as they were filmed for Super Bowl week are pushing for hate crime charges.

Gilbert Ortega Jr., owner of Gilbert Ortega Native American Galleries, has been charged with three misdemeano­r counts of disorderly conduct regarding the incident, Scottsdale police said.

Cody Blackbird, a dancer and flutist who filmed the tirade, said his group doesn’t feel safe, and the incident ruined an otherwise celebrator­y week.

“Us performers are now going in different entrances and parking in different places. This man is known,” Blackbird said. “There’s a 10year-old girl who was there. She’s forever imprinted with ‘This is what happened when the Super Bowl came to town.’ ”

The group is seeking the involvemen­t of the FBI, U.S. Justice Department and Arizona attorney general’s office.

The confrontat­ion occurred Tuesday afternoon in Old Town Scottsdale, which has been seeing a high volume of visitors who are in town for the big game and the Phoenix Open golf tournament. Ten dancers were performing in front of the Native Art Market on Main Street. ESPN filmed the group in the store, then had the dancers pose outside by a Super Bowl sign.

That’s when Ortega started yelling at them, Blackbird said. In the video, Ortega can be seen mocking them and yelling, “You [expletive] Indians.”

His shop was closed Friday, and a listed number appears to not be in service. There was no immediate response to messages from the Associated Press seeking comment that were left at phone numbers and email addresses listed for him.

In Arizona, there is no law specific to a hate crime. It can be used as an aggravatin­g circumstan­ce in the commission of a crime in which the motive was bias against a victim’s race, religion, ethnicity, gender, gender identity, sexual orientatio­n or disability.

Disorderly conduct does not qualify for a hate crime designatio­n under the FBI’s definition, according to Scottsdale authoritie­s. The FBI website describes a hate crime as “often a violent crime, such as assault, murder, arson, vandalism or threats to commit such crimes.”

Blackbird, who is of Eastern Band Cherokee and Dakota descent, said some Navajo performers heard Ortega making threats in their language that had violent and sexual innuendos. He alleges that Ortega charged at them and had to be physically restrained. He said he doesn’t see why the incident is not being treated as a hate crime.

“That’s what it’s seeming like, which really creates some horrible precedents, dangerous precedents,” said Blackbird, who has retained an attorney.

Meanwhile, the video has gained traction on social media and brought unwanted attention to Scottsdale. Mayor David Ortega, who is not related to the gallery owner, called the incident “reprehensi­ble and inexcusabl­e.”

“The behavior exhibited by this individual saddens and disgusts the people of our community,” the mayor said in a statement.

Blackbird said there are growing calls on social media for artists to boycott Ortega’s business. He said racism exists even among those whose business hinges on Indigenous people.

“That’s always been a thing in the Indian trader world,” Blackbird said. “They don’t care about the people that are making the items they’re selling and redesignin­g.”

 ?? Alina Hartounian Associated Press ?? CODY BLACKBIRD, performing at Native Art Market in Scottsdale, Ariz., says his dance group feels unsafe.
Alina Hartounian Associated Press CODY BLACKBIRD, performing at Native Art Market in Scottsdale, Ariz., says his dance group feels unsafe.

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