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Domestic Violence: Rulings Could Stem Epidemic On American Indian Reservations

Rulings Could Stem Epidemic Of Domestic Violence O

By DAVE KOLPACK   12/12/11 10:15 AM ET   AP

FARGO, N.D. -- On the day after Christmas last year, a drunken Roman Cavanaugh Jr. beat up his 11- and 12-year-old sons, punching both in the face. The older boy was hit so hard he couldn't speak for a full day because his jaw was swollen shut.

At the time, Cavanaugh was a free man on North Dakota's Spirit Lake Indian Reservation, even though he had three convictions in tribal court for domestic violence. Had he been charged for those crimes off the reservation, he probably would have been in prison.

Despite a well-known epidemic of domestic violence on American Indian reservations, federal authorities have long been stymied in their pursuit of abusive parents and spouses. That may change if recent rulings in Cavanaugh's case and a similar matter are upheld, allowing U.S attorneys to act instead of watching abuse convictions pile up at the tribal level.

That's a change, advocates say, that could save lives.

"There's a gap in what we can do because domestic violence is a crime that occurs in steps," said Timothy Purdon, the U.S. attorney for North Dakota. "First you slap someone. Then you punch them. Then you get a stick. Then you get a gun."

Tribal courts generally provide for a maximum sentence of a year in jail on domestic violence convictions. It's a different world in federal court, which allows for more severe punishment. But to prosecute there, authorities must show a defendant is a habitual domestic offender or that a gun was involved in the crime.

Because tribal courts are not required to provide the same services as federal and state courts, such as providing a public defender, the convictions there often fail to qualify as a past conviction in federal court.

It's a frustration for federal prosecutors such as Purdon, who point to an epidemic of domestic abuse on Indian reservations that are often also awash in poverty and substance abuse.

An American Indian woman born in the United States has a 1-in-3 chance of being sexually assaulted in her lifetime, compared with 1-in-5 for the country as a whole, according to the Justice Department. And on some reservations, women are murdered at a rate more than 10 times the national average, a federal study of death certificates showed.

Sophia Renville Brown, a domestic abuse survivor who manages a women's shelter on the Sisseton-Wahpeton reservation in the Dakotas, said she suspects those numbers are too low. Most cases of domestic violence go unreported because women are too ashamed to come forward, said Brown, whose shelter – which holds up to 15 women and children – is routinely full.

Brown had surgery in August to straighten her nose, which she said had been broken by a past partner. She plans to enroll in tribal law college courses so she can help other women. "I feel it's my purpose," she said.

Cavanaugh was convicted of domestic abuse offenses in March 2005, April 2005 and January 2008 – all in tribal court.

When federal prosecutors tried to prosecute him for a July 2008 incident in which he was accused of slamming the head of his common-law wife against the dashboard of his car and threatening to kill her, a judge threw out the indictment. Because Cavanaugh did not have a lawyer when convicted in tribal court, the judge ruled, he could not be charged as a habitual offender.

Purdon's office appealed the decision and it was overturned in July. Meanwhile, a second federal appeals court reached the same conclusion in a case from Utah involving a member of the Ute tribe who resides on the Uintah and Ouray reservations.

Adam Shavanaux was indicted for assaulting his domestic partner after having been twice convicted in tribal court of domestic assault. Shavanaux did not have a lawyer in tribal court. A judge threw out the indictment, a decision a federal appeals court also overturned in July, saying the tribal convictions were obtained through "procedures compatible with due process of law."

"Protecting Indians from domestic violence is unquestionably a legitimate government interest," appellate Judge Carlos F. Lucero wrote. "Congress has found that Indian women are subject to physical and sexual abuse at higher rates than other groups in the United States."

Both Cavanaugh and Shavanaux have appealed the decisions reinstating their indictments to the U.S. Supreme Court. Cavanaugh's attorney, Alexander Reichert, said those decisions come at the expense of stripping Indians of their civil rights.

"This goes to a much larger issue, and that is the fact that Congress has refused to acknowledge the fact that Indians have the right to counsel," Reichert said. "It is unbelievable to me that Indians are treated as second-class citizens by the federal government."

William Zuger, a tribal court judge at the Standing Rock reservation in North Dakota and South Dakota, said the reason tribal courts only impose one-year maximum terms is because the tribal system is not required to provide public defenders and could not pay for them if they were required.

Standing Rock is a rare exception, Zuger said, because its tribal court provides a free lawyer and the defendant does not have to prove he or she is too poor to afford one. But "we're the only jurisdiction I've ever heard of who does that," said Zuger, who believes every defendant should have a lawyer.

Purdon declined to talk specifically about the Cavanaugh case, but hopes the recent rulings will make it easier for federal prosecutors to indicting offenders on Indian reservations.

In the meantime, Cavanaugh and Shavanaux are waiting to hear whether the U.S. Supreme Court will consider their appeals. In a separate assault case involving his two children, Cavanaugh was sentenced Friday to 52 months in prison.

"Violence starts out small and gets bigger," Zuger said. "This stuff escalates and gets out of control before it gets to the level where it can be adequately addressed by U.S. attorneys."

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlairCase
05:34 PM on 12/12/2011
According to the 2010 Census, there are about 2.78 million Native Americans. Only about one-third of them still live on reservations. Native Americans are the nation's biggest land owners. The reservations cover 55.7 million acres. This works out to about 20 million acres per person. If the Native Americans were allowed to sell their land, even for as little as a dollar per acre, they would all be very rich, at least for a gneration or two. Of course, the tribes would never agree to an equal distribution of wealth.
10:37 PM on 12/12/2011
wut?
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newworldman777
What would our future 7th generation think of us?
04:55 AM on 01/10/2012
Check your math. If reservations cover 55.7 million acres, how can each of the country's 2.78 Native Americans own 20 million acres, if the land is equally divided among them? You should have said 20 acres per person (55.7 million/2.78 million = 20). If they sold their land for $1 per acre, then they would each get $20...that's not much money.
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03:56 PM on 12/12/2011
"Reichert said. "It is unbelievable to me that Indians are treated as second-class citizens by the federal government.""

Why is this so unbelievable? Look at our own history! We have never learned from our own mistakes,
and we keep repeating them. Both at home, and abroad.
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Diane Hawes Gout
I can only be me!
03:43 PM on 12/12/2011
I am amazed at the level of vitriol in the comments. First and foremost, the people of this country must acknowledge the GENOCIDE that American Indians experienced and the aftermath. The issues of substance abuse, domestic violence, sexual abuse, suicide, etc. cannot be fully understood without understanding and acknowledging not only HISTORICAL TRAUMA but the ONGOING trauma as well. The Major Crimes ACT made the federal government responsible for the prosecution of felony crimes committed on Native lands with the exception of PL 280 states. The reason that tribes are trying these cases (which was limited to the maximum sentence of 1 yr but was amended to 3 years with the passage of the Tribal Law and Order Act in 2010) is that the feds AREN'T doing their job! In places where Tribal Justice systems exist, they can exercise concurrent jurisdiction. MOST cases go unprosecuted at the federal level and YES, it is their job! If they don't want the job, then the US Government needs to grant FULL SOVEREIGNTY to the Tribal Nations and not just on paper! They should be entitled to their own resources and should be able to charge the government for using said resources. This would likely go a long way to ensuring their own prosperity. Native people are remarkable resilient, regardless at all of the attempts to annihilate and assimilate, I am sure they could figure out how best to handle issues with THEIR people on THEIR land without interference from the federal government.
09:54 PM on 12/12/2011
" I am sure they could figure out how best to handle issues with THEIR people on THEIR land without interferen­ce from the federal government­." That seems to be the problem, they are not handling their issues well. I have spent a lot of time on reservations out west. Due to the crime rate with women I always have to have someone with me. Alcoholism is rampant and most live in squalor. Indians themselves are begging young people to "get off the reservation". They run ads constantly hoping to bring them out of a very, very, bad situation.
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Diane Hawes Gout
I can only be me!
08:39 AM on 12/13/2011
Part of the reason they can't handle the issues is that they haven't been granted full sovereignty. How many people could successfully raise a family without any resources or ability to protect their family. The other part is that the federal government has failed to do its job. The government is responsible for schools, health care, housing, food, etc. and look at conditions that exist. They require the resources necessary to help their people. The government had a significant role in creating the conditions they are forced to endure today with the boarding schools, termination, forced sterilization, etc. If anyone is owed reparations, it is the American Indians. It is a complicated issue at best.
03:08 PM on 12/12/2011
Native Americans have been screwed by the government for many, many years. The poverty on reservations is horrible. If we can help, we should. Enough rude comments.
gwbsucs1
use your head for sumthin other than a hatrack
02:09 PM on 12/12/2011
this all comes down to the question of "what do these people want the feds to do ?" i'm sure if you ask the victims , they want somethin done - but if ya ask the tribal leaders , they probably don't want any outside influence - these are still territories of the united states - create jobs for these people and allow them to build their own prison system - if anything - i can't "even " imagine gettin so mad at a child that i would hit mim ( or her) so hard that their jaw would swell shut , - i would say do the same to the perpertrator , but they probably wouldn't learn a thing from it !!
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newworldman777
What would our future 7th generation think of us?
05:02 AM on 01/10/2012
The anger that results in one of these parents hitting their child probably arose from some other incident or situation, maybe with outsiders who have slighted or insulted them. As a Native American myself, I know all about the racism that we must deal with living in this society, and the resulting anger can manifest itself in many different ways. Thankfully, I chose to have no children, for I didn't want to condemn yet another generation to the misery that I have suffered while living here among the European Americans.
gwbsucs1
use your head for sumthin other than a hatrack
09:11 AM on 01/10/2012
i have no idea why i recieved this in my e-mail , this was an article posted over a month ago and someone responded and huffpost is now postin it ?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KRoach
01:43 PM on 12/12/2011
When it comes to Native issues some people say any old racist thing they want and it seems well tolerated. Some people need to learn about tribal politics and tribal culture and stop thinking in lazy stereotypes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kympathy
01:33 PM on 12/12/2011
This is such a sticky situation. Yes, the Native population is it's own "sovereign nation", but as such, they need to develop a letter of law which is universal, known to all, aand has clear-cut consequences. The problem is, like another writer pointed out, you disagree with the tribal leaders, and they suddenly decide to throw you off the reservation and deny you all rights - that happened out here in Cali with the Casinos, when a LOT of natives suddenly weren't eligible for the revenues from the profits...greed takes everyone, no matter what the nationality. As it is, since Natives are ALSO US citizens, because they don't need passports to travel off the reservation, then they need to abide by US law as well, and murder, rape, and abuse are not acceptable.
BTW, they don't get "handouts" any more than it is a handout for me to be paid by the buyer when I sell my house, or by a client who purchases goods from my store. The contract the US had was to pay the native tribes for the lands we stole and the resources we took....maybe if the US would live up to their side of the bargain, instead of assuming the Natives are unable to manage their money and resources, there wouldn't be the poverty on the reservations, and the incidence of abuse would lessen.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Brent Christiansen
01:03 PM on 12/12/2011
Their is no reason for a Native to have a lawyer since not having one saves them form doing jail time.
03:08 PM on 12/12/2011
Pity the poor victims.
12:39 PM on 12/12/2011
This is laughable. Our courts do not keep our populace safe. How many times are felons of all sorts, child molesters, rapists etc.kicked back out on the streets? Besides that. They have no business sticking their nose in where it does not belong. They "helped" the Indians by sticking them on the reservations. Any where the feds stick their nose it is more about control than "helping".
01:54 PM on 12/12/2011
So it is ok for the murders and brutal assaults of women and children to continue at a high rate Because the male tribal elders don't protect them....................allowing male abusers to escape responsibility for their abuse
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thanadar
Notary Sojac
03:09 PM on 12/12/2011
You want to live in a traditional male dominated tribal society, or you want to live in a "civilized" western society? Which is it? You can't have it both ways..
12:33 PM on 12/12/2011
This has to be addressed, exposed, discussed and worked on. With the economy in free fall, substance abuse skyrocketing and no services available for those who need them most, this is another hot topic our nation has to face and deal with. I came across a woman who stems that problem by her bown, for more than 6 years, and is now traveling from reservation to reservation, from shelter to shelter: Jennie Lake, a teacher, author, friend and speaker of great wisdom and with a determination that is truly unique. Follow her trip, spread the word and see if you can host a meeting with her in your church, community center or own backyard. www.unitedbyhumanity.org
"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will be at peace." -Jimi Hendrix
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stellablu
Justice!
12:08 PM on 12/12/2011
Earlier I addressed the domestic violence against women! After pondering their path I now turn to the children! Violence against the children we are seeing everyday in all cultures! However, Native Americans are gettin a slap on the wrist by their court for the horendous abuse of children. If the father had killed his sons, what then! I am appalled that the elders do nothing about this behavior and how can that be? They need to take responsibility and do the right thing for their people or yes the feds will push to get in. So Native Americans you are becoming your own worst enemy!
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04:09 PM on 12/12/2011
Well! Good!
wstrvlr
Trust nothing you hear & only part of what you see
11:58 AM on 12/12/2011
I read so many comments this morning on this topic & I find so many don't have a clue about native peoples. Some say they are taking handouts. This is not true. They are only receiving some of what was spelled out in the various treaties, which ARE, legal contracts, folks.
Unfortunately, the federal government of the USA has NOT lived up to its end of these treaties. Thank goodness a Blackfoot sister spent 14 long years with her lawsuit against the government & finally won this long, drawn out case.

It did not rectify all the theft & mismanagement by a long shot, which was estimated to be in the range of 100 BILLION dollars over the past 100 years by the BIA & it's various reservation agents. At least there WAS a token award for native peoples that involved something like 3-4 billion dollars.

Native peoples do NOT need the US government telling them what they need to do since native peoples ARE their own sovereign nation. Besides, Indian Nations have some highly educated people among their membership.

True, there is violence on reservation lands. Those who are this way are shameful & a disgrace to their peoples & their families. More should be happening with those who are violent on native lands, BUT, that is for the various Indian Nations to step up to the plate & make those decisions; NOT the federal government of the USA.
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weebils
I like jalapenos and hot sauce
12:37 PM on 12/12/2011
It's rigged and you know it. Speak up and risk getting kicked off the reservation and losing your rights. Sanctions by council members can be harsh and permanent. Could you imagine what would happen if members of congress could just vote and strip of citizenship anyone who criticizes them? Or take away away other rights such as voting. That is what it is similar to. Expose and bring light to corruption and abuse. These are the only nations in which no appeal can be made of their decisions. All over the world there are sovereign nations that can bring abuse and other issues to courts outside their countries.
wstrvlr
Trust nothing you hear & only part of what you see
07:54 PM on 12/12/2011
It's not always rigged. It is true though that on some reservations there is just plain out open corruption & nepotism. I guess it can be kind of like the Good Old Boy system of the South & in politics. In the old days I believe these people were called Loafs about the fort. They sold out their own people & some of them were the scouts for the white military of the US government.

On some reservations it can be a fine line to walk. Trust me, if the people of a tribe want you off that reservation they WILL run you off. If you don't leave of your own free will things happen to you & yours that CAN cause you to want to leave.
01:58 PM on 12/12/2011
Well said!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
peg2584
Is it November yet?
11:57 AM on 12/12/2011
"This goes to a much larger issue, and that is the fact that Congress has refused to acknowledge the fact that Indians have the right to counsel," Reichert said. "It is unbelievable to me that Indians are treated as second-class citizens by the federal government."

This statement doesn't make sense since it is the tribal court that does not provide defendents with an attorney. The US government does not have jurisdiction on Indian reservations. However, if a Native American is found quilty under their procedures, why shouldn't that stand up in an US court? Or change the way they handle things in the tribal courts!
01:16 PM on 12/12/2011
White man has always spoken with crooked tounge . Talk about abuse. Wow the indians got a good deal, Right !!
11:54 AM on 12/12/2011
If Indian reservations are a country in and by themselfs, What is the American Govt. doing in any of these cases??. Although I Think any knd of family violance is a Haines crime, I think there are 2 sets of rules here. Again, I say there is NO PLACE in this world for these kinds of actions against anyone, and would want to see everyone who commits these crimes be locked away for a very long time. I find it hard to understand why these 2 seperate sets of rules interact with each other. If you will, countrys that have laws in place, can be adjudicated by the United Sates Govt.?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
flyingonclippedwings
12:17 PM on 12/12/2011
What is a Haines crime??
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Avice Mendenhall Woodard
12:30 PM on 12/12/2011
The American government PUT them on those reservations.
firstamendment3
Ex pede Herculem
11:54 AM on 12/12/2011
You can't always predict who will commit domestic violence, but you can pretty much recognize a loser from the get-go. Women need to stop hooking up with losers for all the wrong reasons.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
plantwomyn
Fighting for full citizenship
01:52 PM on 12/12/2011
Way to minimalize the issue and blame the victim.
firstamendment3
Ex pede Herculem
02:58 PM on 12/12/2011
Way to enforce the perpeptual victimhood of women.
02:06 PM on 12/12/2011
Boy you said it. There are too many great guys out there, the losers eventually show their true colors just watch them around their parents, siblings and other people.