Las Vegas Review-Journal

Native American activist Frank Lamere dies at 69

- By Josh Funk The Associated Press

OMAHA, Neb. — Frank Lamere, a Native American activist who fought for a variety of causes and crusaded to close beer stores near a dry South Dakota Indian reservatio­n, has died. He was 69.

Lamere’s daughter, Jennifer Lamere, said her father died Sunday at an Omaha hospital.

Lamere, who was a Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska member, worked for decades to shutter the four stores in Whiteclay, Nebraska, that sold millions of cans of beer near the dry Pine Ridge Indian Reservatio­n. Regulators closed the stores in 2017.

Lamere also spoke out against the proposed Keystone XL and Dakota Access pipelines.

Winnebago Tribal Chairman Frank White said Lamere’s death is a “great loss for the tribe.”

“Frank was instrument­al in bringing to light a lot of issues concerning Native Americans,” White said.

Judi gaiashkibo­s, executive director of the Nebraska Commission on Indian Affairs, said Lamere also had a talent for connecting with people, regardless of their views.

“He could get along with all kinds of people, and I think that was why he was so effective,” she said.

Lamere was also a prominent critic of how the Omaha Police Department treated Zachary Bearheels, a mentally ill Native American man who died in 2017 after officers punched and shocked him with a stun gun.

Lamere was also active in the Nebraska Democratic Party. He served on the Democratic National Committee from 1996 through 2009 and was a delegate for multiple party convention­s. He was a member of the American Indian Movement.

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Frank Lamere

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