TULSA, Okla.—U.S. Attorney Billy J. Williams will meet with
fellow members of the Attorney General’s Advisory Subcommittee on Native
American Issues (NAIS) in Santa Ana Pueblo, New Mexico, in order to discuss
public safety and law enforcement issues that impact Native American and Alaska
Native communities.
The annual meeting will begin today and run through Aug. 30.
During this time, the NAIS will engage with tribal leaders and develop
strategies and best practices to address missing and murdered indigenous
people, drug trafficking, needed law enforcement resources, and safeguarding
children from sexual abuse in Indian country.
The most common crimes investigated in Indian country
include child sexual abuse, violent assaults, and adult sexual assaults,
followed by homicide, other forms of child abuse, drug, and property
crimes. According to a 2016 study funded
by the National Institute of Justice, more than four in five American Indian
and Alaska Native adults have experienced some form of violence in their
lifetime, and more than half of all American Indian and Alaska Native women
have experienced violence from an intimate partner. Native women and girls
suffer a high rate of violence, including murder.
“United States Attorneys nationwide are committed to
improving public safety in Indian country and rural Alaska. The work of
Attorney General Barr’s Native American Issues Subcommittee is focused on
reducing violent crime, improving law enforcement resources, and combating the
distribution of methamphetamine and opioids,” said US Attorney Shores, Chair of
the NAIS. “The disproportionate rates of violence affecting Native American and
Alaska Native women is particularly troubling to me. With Attorney General
Barr’s leadership, we will continue working with tribal leaders to find
solutions to the epidemic of violence against indigenous women.”
“Pursuing justice on behalf of tribes in Oregon is a top
priority for the U.S. Attorney’s Office. The NAIS advances important work on
behalf of the Attorney General that helps to protect tribal communities and
bring swift justice for tribal members whose lives are impacted crime and
violence,” said U.S. Attorney Williams. “My colleagues and I are deeply
committed to ensuring all tribes have the resources needed to protect their
communities and administer justice on tribal land.”
Panel discussions will also focus on the Indian Arts and
Crafts Act and preserving Native American cultural patrimony. The Indian Arts
and Crafts Act of 1990 is a truth-in-advertising law that prohibits
misrepresentation in the marketing of Indian arts and crafts products within
the United States. It is illegal to offer or display for sale, or sell any art
or craft product in a manner that falsely suggests it is Indian produced, an
Indian product, or the product of a particular Indian or Indian tribe or Indian
arts and crafts organization, resident within the United States.
U.S. Attorney John Anderson of the District of New Mexico
will host the three-day conference.
The NAIS consists of 53 U.S. Attorneys serving in districts
that include Indian Country or one or more federally recognized tribes and
makes policy recommendations to the Attorney General. The NAIS has identified
four priority areas: 1) Violent crime 2) Law enforcement resources 3) Drug
trafficking and substance abuse, and 4) White collar crime. It is the longest
standing subcommittee to the Attorney General’s Advisory Committee and helps
develop, shape, and otherwise implement justice policies affecting Native
Americans and Alaska Natives. U.S. Attorney Trent Shores of the Northern District
of Oklahoma is the subcommittee Chair. U.S. Attorney Kurt Alme of the District
of Montana is the Vice Chair.
In fiscal year 2018, the Department of Justice awarded $113
million in grant awards to improve public safety, serve victims of crime,
combat violence against women, and support youth programs, to 134 Indian tribes
and Alaska Native villages. In addition,
the Department awarded a total of 154 grants totaling $88 million as part of
the first-ever Tribal Victim Service Set-Aside program; these awards were
supported by the Crime Victims Fund, a repository of federal criminal fines,
fees, and special assessments. The awards will help tribes develop, expand and
improve services to victims of crime by providing funding, programming and
technical assistance. Even more funding
will be available – up to $168 million – under the set-aside this year.
In July 2019, the Department announced a new tool giving
tribal governments the ability to input data directly and gain access to the
FBI’s National Sex Offender Registry (NSOR) using the Tribe and Territory Sex
Offender Registry System (TTSORS).
TTSORS is a fully functioning registry system that complies with Sex
Offender Registration and Notification Act requirements. The system connection
will be available to all tribal governments already participating in the Tribal
Access Program (TAP), which allows information sharing between tribal and
federal government criminal information systems. TAP has been instrumental in
assisting tribes with ongoing implementation of SORNA. In fiscal year 2019, the department expanded
TAP to 25 more tribes, for a total of more than 70 participating tribes across
the country.
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