Yuma Sun

Arizona gallery owner won’t be charged in racist rant against Native American dancers

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

SCOTTSDALE – Authoritie­s in a Phoenix suburb will not pursue criminal charges against a gallery owner whose racist rant last year was caught on video while Native American dancers were being filmed.

Officials in Scottsdale called the confrontat­ion last February “a nauseating example” of bigotry but said that Gilbert Ortega Jr.’s actions did not amount to a crime with a “reasonable likelihood of conviction.”

Ortega, the owner of Gilbert Ortega Native American Galleries, had been facing three misdemeano­r counts of disorderly conduct in connection with the confrontat­ion in Old Town Scottsdale ahead of last year’s Super Bowl game.

A message left Friday at a phone number listed for Ortega’s gallery was not immediatel­y returned.

The Scottsdale city attorney’s office said Friday in a statement that it closed its investigat­ion after reviewing evidence in the case, including cellphone and surveillan­ce videos and police reports. The FBI also assisted in the investigat­ion.

“The suspect’s behavior was vulgar, very upsetting to all those involved, and tarnished the reputation of the Scottsdale community,” the city attorney’s office said. “However, the incident did not rise to the point of criminalit­y.”

A group of dancers had been performing in front of the Native Art Market on Main Street as ESPN filmed the group and had them pose by a Super Bowl sign. That’s when Ortega started yelling at them, authoritie­s said.

In the video, which gained traction last year on social media, Ortega can be seen mocking the dancers and yelling “you (expletive) Indians” at one point.

According to the city attorney’s office, a Navajo speaker in the office and the FBI both concluded that comments made by Ortega to the dancers in Navajo weren’t threatenin­g and therefore did not support additional charges being filed.

In Arizona, there is no law specific to a hate crime. It can be used as an aggravatin­g circumstan­ce in a crime motivated by bias against a person’s race, religion, ethnicity, gender and gender identity, sexual orientatio­n or disability.

“While the legal review has concluded, it is clear that the conduct as recorded on video in this incident was a nauseating example

of the bigotry that sadly can still be found in this country,” the city said Friday in a statement. “Our community rejects racism

and hate speech in all its forms, instead choosing to embrace and celebrate a Scottsdale that welcomes and respects all people.”

 ?? ALINA HARTOUNIAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? GILBERT ORTEGA’S AUTHENTIC INDIAN ART Galleries in Scottsdale is seen closed on Feb. 10, 2023. The gallery owner’s racist rant last February while Native American dancers were being filmed in a Phoenix suburb is “a nauseating example” of bigotry, city officials said Friday, but criminal charges will not be filed in the case following a year-long investigat­ion.
ALINA HARTOUNIAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS GILBERT ORTEGA’S AUTHENTIC INDIAN ART Galleries in Scottsdale is seen closed on Feb. 10, 2023. The gallery owner’s racist rant last February while Native American dancers were being filmed in a Phoenix suburb is “a nauseating example” of bigotry, city officials said Friday, but criminal charges will not be filed in the case following a year-long investigat­ion.

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