The Maui News

Empower tribal justice, ex-Justice Department official says

- By LINDSAY WHITEHURST

WASHINGTON — A quarter-century ago, the Justice Department had few meaningful relationsh­ips with Native American tribes.

While the federal government worked with state and local police and courts, tribal justice systems did not have the same level of recognitio­n, said Tracy Toulou, who oversaw the department’s Office of Tribal Justice from 2000 until his recent retirement. “They were essentiall­y invisible,” he said.

Attorney General Merrick Garland said Toulou built the office from an idea into an “institutio­n within the Justice Department.”

Its relationsh­ips with the nation’s 574 federally recognized tribes are important, in part because federal authoritie­s investigat­e and prosecute a set of major crimes on most reservatio­ns.

Public safety statistics reflect the serious challenges. Native Americans and Alaska Natives are more than twice as likely to be victims of a violent crime, and Native American women are at least two times more likely to be raped or sexually assaulted compared with others.

For Toulou, a descendant of the Washington statebased Confederat­ed Tribes of the Colville Reservatio­n, part of addressing those grim realities is expanding the power of tribal justice systems.

Tribes had been barred, for example, from prosecutin­g non-Natives under a 1978 Supreme Court decision, even if the crime happened on reservatio­ns, making it harder to seek justice in many cases. That changed somewhat in 2013 with a federal law that allows tribes to prosecute non-Natives in a limited set of domestic violence cases. The authority was expanded in 2022 to include cases such as violence against children and stalking.

“That was a key change … tribes were now viewed as participan­ts in the justice system on a more or less equal basis with everybody else, which should never have changed,” said Toulou, who was a federal prosecutor in Montana early in his career.

Still, much works remains to be done.

Tribal police and courts are stretched thin and are coping with conflictin­g jurisdicti­onal issues and underfundi­ng, leaders told the Senate Indian Affairs Committee at a session last month that drew more than 600 comments.

Police Chief Algin Young of the Oglala Sioux Tribe in South Dakota said he has six to eight officers to patrol nearly 4,700 square miles (12,200 square kilometers) against an “influx of guns, illegal drugs including fentanyl, methamphet­amine and heroin, and violent crime that can only be described as shocking and extremely dangerous.”

“Our people don’t feel safe in the communitie­s, and our visitors do not, either,” he said.

The challenges comes against a historical backdrop of injustices committed by the federal government against Native Americans, including massacres, forced assimilati­on of Native children in abusive boarding schools and the removal of many tribes from their ancestral land.

One of Toulou’s personal regrets is he does not speak his tribe’s language because his grandparen­ts were sent to boarding schools, breaking the links that would have passed it down through generation­s.

“We have a unique responsibi­lity to Indian tribes,” Toulou said, partly due to obligation­s the U.S. made in treaties, through Congress and other acts. “There is a moral responsibi­lity that is underpinne­d by those treaties to support those tribal nations and interact with them on a government-to-government basis.”

In recent years, that has meant heeding calls to address the crisis of Indigenous people who have been killed or gone missing. Thousands of those cases remain unsolved, hundreds have been closed due to issues such as jurisdicti­onal conflicts and many families say authoritie­s regularly fail to communicat­e about the status of pending cases.

Toulou was a leader in the effort to create a federal strategy to respond to violence against Native people in 2022, after the passage of the Not Invisible Act and Savanna’s Act.

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