Yuma Sun

Sessions expands program to combat crime on tribal lands

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HELENA, Mont. — U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions moved Tuesday to expand an Obama administra­tion initiative to allow more tribal authoritie­s access to federal anti-crime databases — an action long sought by tribes from the Metlakatla of Alaska to the Oneida of New York.

The attorney general’s announceme­nt was part of a broader package to improve the sometimes strained relationsh­ip between federal authoritie­s and Native America.

Complex historical, cultural and legal relationsh­ips between tribes and the U.S. government have complicate­d that effort in the past.

“Law enforcemen­t in Indian Country faces unique practical and jurisdicti­onal challenges,” Sessions said in a statement, “and the Department of Justice is committed to working with them to provide greater access to technology, informatio­n and necessary enforcemen­t.”

As part of the program, the Justice Department will hold a series of “listening sessions” with tribal leaders and law enforcemen­t officials to better understand the challenges Indian reservatio­ns face in addressing crime.

The department also said it establishe­d a working group, comprised of federal officials from 12 agencies, to increase collaborat­ion between U.S. authoritie­s and those in sovereign Indian nations.

The centerpiec­e of the program is an expansion of an Obama administra­tion program launched in 2015 that gives some tribal nations access to criminal data contained in the National Instant Criminal Background Check System. Nine tribes were already a part of the program that Sessions said in December he would expand to 10 more tribes.

“This cooperatio­n among law enforcemen­t protects all people, not just Native Americans,” said John Dossett, general counsel for the National Congress of American Indians.

Tribal government­s have long sought to expand access to criminal background informatio­n collected by the federal government not only to attack crime but to also help with civil matters such as child custody cases.

While some tribes have access to state criminal informatio­n, access to the federal database will allow tribal authoritie­s to more quickly and more deeply access informatio­n about people.

Access to federal databases will also soon expand to the Metlakatla Indians of Alaska, Navajo of the Southwest and the Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Cheppewa Indians, among other tribes.

Law enforcemen­t officials on the Fort Peck Indian Reservatio­n in Montana began using the federal databases on Tuesday, giving them access to additional background on individual­s, including those who might have crossed state lines.

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