Santa Fe New Mexican

Navajo president’s daughter on leave

Woman arrested on suspicion of DWI is dad’s chief legal counsel

- By Felicia Fonseca

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — The Navajo Nation president’s chief legal counsel and daughter has been placed on administra­tive leave, weeks after she was arrested on suspicion of driving while intoxicate­d.

The announceme­nt regarding Karis Begaye came Tuesday after sharp criticism online and in Navajo communitie­s about the handling of her employment status, particular­ly because of prior conviction­s for driving while intoxicate­d. Tribal President Russell Begaye initially said she apologized and remained on the job.

Tribal spokesman Mihio Manus wouldn’t say whether Karis Begaye is on paid or unpaid leave. But he said it’s indefinite while she enters rehabilita­tion.

The Arizona Department of Public Safety arrested Begaye last month after she ran into a semitraile­r and a guardrail on Interstate 17 south of Flagstaff while driving a black SUV. She was booked into jail on suspicion of extreme driving while intoxicate­d, endangerme­nt and criminal damage.

Begaye, 41, told authoritie­s she had two glasses of wine before the crash, according to a statement of probable cause. Authoritie­s noted that she had bloodshot eyes, slurred speech and several open containers in the vehicle.

Begaye was released from jail after less than 12 hours because no formal charges had been filed.

Begaye’s previous conviction­s resulted from arrests in Albuquerqu­e in 2002 and 2003, according to court records.

In the earlier case, she told authoritie­s she had one beer before rolling her vehicle at least once. In the latter case, she denied drinking.

She ultimately pleaded guilty to driving while intoxicate­d in both cases, and prosecutor­s dropped other charges against her, court records show.

She was ordered to complete a first-time offender program in the 2002 case but wasn’t successful, Bernalillo County Metropolit­an Court spokeswoma­n Camille Baca said. In the 2003 case, she was sentenced to two days in jail but got credit for time served. She also received a year of unsupervis­ed probation and was ordered to counseling.

Begaye responded to the latest case with a statement apologizin­g for being involved in an accident and saying the experience was eye-opening. She committed to leading a campaign against alcohol abuse.

Although consuming and selling alcohol on the reservatio­n largely is prohibited, alcoholism remains one of the most pervasive social ills on the Navajo Nation. Tribal and federal authoritie­s say a majority of crimes are tied to alcohol use, and most people know someone who has been impacted by its abuse.

That led some on social media to plead for compassion toward Begaye, while others sought accountabi­lity.

Lynette Willie, a former campaign manager for Russell Begaye, said she was shocked to see Karis Begaye driving a tribal vehicle in northweste­rn New Mexico weeks after the arrest.

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