American Indian Law Forum
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American Indian communities are being invaded by drugs, gangs, and the violence that comes with it. Drug traffickers have infiltrated Indian land with gangs on reservations throughout America. The reservations are remote and have small Tribal Police forces that must patrol large areas. The Tribal Police just don't have the resources to stop all the drugs coming through the reservation. Drug traffickers can move their drugs through reservation land usually undetected. The traffickers usually recruit young Native teens to help with this process. The traffickers will search for Native teens from fragmented families, abused, depressed, and loners. The Drug traffickers will then offer the teens the gang life as a sense of family. Something the teens were yearning for or missing in their lives. Of course in every family there is chores, in this one you just have to run drugs and hurt people. Money is steadily available so material items are easy to come by, this is another tool Drug traffickers use to trap their victims in with. Drug traffickers and gang runners use a favorite saying which is, "Blood in Blood out". That is pretty much self-explanatory.
The Senate Indian Affairs Committee has been notified about these problems, something must be done. "There exists in Indian Country today the twin scourge of drug abuse and criminal gang activity," said Carmen Smith, police chief for the Warm Springs, Ore., Tribal Police Department. This left untreated will ruin the whole fabric of the Native American society.
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, 39 gangs have led to thousands of gang-related phone calls. What doesn't help the situation is that funding cuts have gotten so bad in the police department, they had to fire about half of the force in the mid-1990's. I don't understand how they can do this at Pine Ridge, this community suffers enough.
The Navajo Nation spans Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah, this reservation equalls 27,000 miles. In this area 225 active gangs roam freely.
Lawmakers are working on legislation that would improve coordination between the Justice Department, the Bureau of Indian Affairs and tribal law enforcement, encourage more aggressive action by federal prosecutors on tribal reservations and allow tribal courts to punish offenders to up to three years in prison. Thomas, Ken "Tribal leaders seek help with Indian gang activity" 2009 The Associated Press
Check out this Documentary about gangs, drugs, hopelessness and the resulting social problems on the White Earth Reservation called the "Seventh Fire". It's streamable on Netflix and Amazon, and ITunes to. The Seventh Fire Drugs and Gangs on Native Reservations
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