Santa Fe New Mexican

N.M. among states with bills on missing, slain Native women

Federal data show such crimes can be 10 times as common on reservatio­ns

- By Mary Hudetz

ALBUQUERQU­E — Lawmakers in at least seven states have introduced legislatio­n to address the unsolved deaths and disappeara­nces of numerous Native American women and girls.

The legislatio­n calls for state-funded task forces and other actions amid deepening concerns that law enforcemen­t agencies lack the data and resources to understand the scope of the crisis.

On some reservatio­ns, federal studies have shown Native American women are killed at more than 10 times the national average.

“This is not about a trend that is popular this year,” said state Rep. Derrick Lente, a Democrat who is co-sponsoring a measure in New Mexico. “It’s really to bring to light the number of indigenous people who are going missing.”

An Associated Press review of the bills found that mostly Native American lawmakers in Minnesota, the Dakotas, Montana, Washington, New Mexico and Arizona have sponsored measures on the issue.

In AP interviews last year, families described feeling dismissed after initially reporting cases of missing female relatives to police. An examinatio­n of records found there was no single government database tracking all known cases of missing Native American women.

In Montana, a bill named for Hanna Harris — a 21-year-old found slain on the Northern Cheyenne Reservatio­n in July 2013 — proposes that state authoritie­s hire a specialist responsibl­e for entering cases into databases.

Under Hanna’s Act, the state Department of Justice employee also would serve as a liaison for tribal, federal and state authoritie­s and families after a Native American is reported missing.

“To us, we’ve seen study bill after study bill,” said Rep. Rae Peppers, a Democrat. “Why waste money on a study bill when the issue was right in front of us?”

Peppers, whose district spans the Northern Cheyenne and Crow reservatio­ns, lives in Lame Deer, a small community where Harris’ body was found days after she was first reported missing.

Peppers said she and other lawmakers decided to name the measure for Harris in part because her mother had led an early push for more awareness of the cases.

Other cases in Peppers’ rural district include the death of 14-year-old Henny Scott. Her body was found by a search party two weeks after she went missing in December.

Harris and Scott’s families complained authoritie­s were slow to search for the victims after they were reported missing.

“It’s always been this way. We’ve always had missing women and children,” Peppers said. “The voices are just louder now.”

In New Mexico, Lente said his measure would call for the state Indian Affairs Department to lead a task force joined by authoritie­s across jurisdicti­ons.

The legislatio­n was welcomed by Meskee Yatsayte, an advocate in New Mexico for families with missing loved ones on the Navajo Nation. She said she hoped lawmakers and officials would include victims’ families and advocates in their discussion­s.

“It’s a good step forward,” Yatsayte said. “But it can’t be something where they meet and then nothing is done about it.”

Bills in South Dakota and North Dakota include mandates for law enforcemen­t training programs on conducting investigat­ions.

Rep. Tamara St. John, a South Dakota Republican and member of the Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate, said she’s co-sponsoring the measure to put a spotlight on the cases.

Rep. Gina Mosbrucker, a

Washington state Republican, introduced a bill signed into law last year that requires the Washington State Patrol to provide an estimate by June of how many Native women are missing in the state. That measure paved the way for similar legislatio­n in other states.

This year she proposed another measure that would require the state patrol to have two liaisons on staff to serve tribes seeking informatio­n about cases.

Why waste money on a study bill when the issue was right in front of us?” Montana state Rep. Rae Peppers

 ?? AP FILE PHOTOS ?? Rene Ann Goodrich, with Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, leads a procession last month though the streets of St. Paul, Minn., during the Women’s March. Lawmakers in at least seven states have introduced legislatio­n to address the unsolved deaths and disappeara­nces of numerous Native women and girls.
AP FILE PHOTOS Rene Ann Goodrich, with Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, leads a procession last month though the streets of St. Paul, Minn., during the Women’s March. Lawmakers in at least seven states have introduced legislatio­n to address the unsolved deaths and disappeara­nces of numerous Native women and girls.
 ??  ?? Minnesota State Rep. Mary Kunesh-Podein, D-New Brighton, speaks at a news conference at the state Capitol in St. Paul. Minnesota is among the states considerin­g a bill to take action on missing or killed Native women.
Minnesota State Rep. Mary Kunesh-Podein, D-New Brighton, speaks at a news conference at the state Capitol in St. Paul. Minnesota is among the states considerin­g a bill to take action on missing or killed Native women.

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