Missing Native American Women

The flip side of this, is the outcry of "racism" when minorities are investigated in minority communities. So? Do they want aggressive investigations? Or would they prefer to be left alone?

That is probably a very hard question to answer as there are several hundred recognized tribal nations in the United States with different situations.

I imagine that there is a percentage of each tribe that feels that the status quo works for them and there is little reason to change it- espescially if it means giving sovereignty in any form.

Other, however, may feel like my Puerto Rican friend who left the island taking his advanced engineering degree with him. He wants aggressive outside investigations regarding generational corruption in the local political "machine".

And other natives or Puerto Ricans may change their views depending on how the question is phrased and what their feelings are on a particular month.
 
The flip side of this, is the outcry of "racism" when minorities are investigated in minority communities. So? Do they want aggressive investigations? Or would they prefer to be left alone?

That is probably a very hard question to answer as there are several hundred recognized tribal nations in the United States with different situations.

I imagine that there is a percentage of each tribe that feels that the status quo works for them and there is little reason to change it- espescially if it means reducing sovereignty in any form.

Others, however, may feel like my Puerto Rican friend who left the island taking his advanced engineering degree with him. He wants aggressive outside investigations regarding corruption in the political "system" as he thinks local sovereignty is meaningless if only a few truly benefit from it.

And other natives or Puerto Ricans may change their views depending on how the question is phrased and what their feelings are on a particular month.
 
My heart breaks reading & knowing that there's so many missing and unidentified native womxn out there. (I'm fully including trans & two spirited folk too.)
I'm angry at our current government, who seems to be pushing the responsibility off to the next person/organization, or what seems to be purposeful stalling of the bills that could provide the funding that local LE or tribes could use.
Totally dumbfounded how there's not one central website/data source for this. Who's gotta step up to finally provide it? It's like not having a missing persons list for our National Parks.
This has been happening for decades, we need justice ASAP.
 
"Editor's note: In this week's issue, PEOPLE featured the cases of six missing Indigenous women, spotlighting a crisis that advocates believe receives far too little attention from law enforcement and the media"


Mom of 4 Ida Beard's 2015 Disappearance Led to Legislation Aimed at Finding Missing Indigenous Women

Ashley Loring Heavyrunner Wanted to Help Find Missing Indigenous Women — Then She Disappeared

'No Resting Until We Get Answers': Transgender Indigenous Woman Aubrey Dameron Vanished in 2019

Indigenous Teen Left for School in 2004 and Never Made It, but Family Clings to Hope of Finding Her

(Only found 4 articles, people magazine won't let me subscribe: -We are unable to process orders to your area.)
:(


Feel free to add the list,,for Non USA/Can members.
TIA
 
My heart breaks reading & knowing that there's so many missing and unidentified native womxn out there. (I'm fully including trans & two spirited folk too.)
I'm angry at our current government, who seems to be pushing the responsibility off to the next person/organization, or what seems to be purposeful stalling of the bills that could provide the funding that local LE or tribes could use.
Totally dumbfounded how there's not one central website/data source for this. Who's gotta step up to finally provide it? It's like not having a missing persons list for our National Parks.
This has been happening for decades, we need justice ASAP.

ITA
It is long overdue, imo

Here is a little progress and hopefully more pursue :

"Ida’s Law, named for the mother of four who was 29 years old when she went missing, prompted changes within the state’s top law enforcement agency. An agent now tracks and investigates cases of missing and murdered indigenous Oklahomans. A victim advocate now supports their families.

But progress will be slow due to a lack of funding... "
(Sigh)

More about Ida's law :
Ida’s Law: The Promise, Limitations of Oklahoma’s Pursuit of Justice for Indigenous People - Oklahoma Watch


Anyway, adding.. more disappearances:

Sumi Gail Juan
Indigenous Mom Was Spotted Walking Away from Calif. Elementary School in 2010, Hasn't Been Seen Since

Alyssa McLemore
Young Indigenous Mom Said 'Help Me' on Frantic 911 Call Before 2009 Disappearance, Aunt Says
 

  • Helen Betty Osborne was 19 years old when she was abducted and murdered on Nov. 13, 1971. (Source: National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation)
Helen Betty Osborne: The Cree woman whose brutal murder helped expose racism in the justice system
November 13, 2021
by Brooklyn Neustaeter
''TORONTO -- A Manitoba community is remembering the life and legacy of a Cree woman who was brutally murdered 50 years ago by four non-Indigenous men while walking home after a night out with friends.

On Nov. 13, 1971, Helen Betty Osborne was abducted near The Pas, Man. The 19-year-old had moved to the community from her home of Norway House Cree Nation to continue her education and become a teacher.

It took RCMP months to discover the names of the four men implicated in Osborne's abduction and killing, and it was not until 1987 – more than 16 years later – that one of the four men was convicted.''

''According to the AJI's final report, Osborne was picked up in the common town practice of targeting Indigenous women "to party." She was forced into a vehicle and at two different locations, she was repeatedly raped, beaten, stabbed and burned by the four men. Her body was then dragged and left in the bush.

Of the four men, only one, Dwayne Johnston, was convicted in December 1987 and sentenced to life in prison for Osborne's murder. His conviction was upheld by the Manitoba Court of Appeal, and the Supreme Court of Canada refused to hear his appeal.''

"Though Helen Betty Osborne was not the first woman to be victimized in the national tragedy of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, her heartbreaking death and the many significant issues during the investigation are often seen as the ground zero of the MMIWG movement in Manitoba," the statement read in part.''
 
Very quickly I skimmed an article this morning and it appears important. Can't link but it's in The Guardian.

Washington State Rep. Debra Lekanoff has come up with some sort of system to ID missing Indigenous Sisters.

Sorry for typos, but know we all care. Someone may want to elaborate? Thank you.
 
Very quickly I skimmed an article this morning and it appears important. Can't link but it's in The Guardian.

Washington State Rep. Debra Lekanoff has come up with some sort of system to ID missing Indigenous Sisters.

Sorry for typos, but know we all care. Someone may want to elaborate? Thank you.
AG Ferguson, Rep. Lekanoff bill will create an alert system for missing Indigenous women in Washington | Washington State
''FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Jan 3 2022 rbbm.
Similar to “silver alerts,” information will be shared on message signs and in highway advisory messages

OLYMPIA — Attorney General Bob Ferguson announced today that he is working with Rep. Debra Lekanoff, D-Anacortes, to propose a bill in the next legislative session to create an alert in Washington state to help identify and locate missing Indigenous women and people.

The alert, similar to “silver alerts” for missing vulnerable adults, will broadcast information about missing Indigenous people on message signs and in highway advisory radio messages when activated, as well as through press releases to local and regional media. The bill is House Bill 1725.

This will be the first alert system specifically for missing and murdered Indigenous women and people in the country.

Indigenous women and people go missing and are murdered at rates higher than any other ethnic group in the United States. In Washington, more than four times as many Indigenous women go missing than white women, according to research conducted by the Urban Indian Health Institute in Seattle.

“The rate of missing and murdered Indigenous women in Washington is a crisis,” Ferguson said. “We must do everything we can to address this problem. This effective tool will help quickly and safely locate missing Indigenous women and people.”

“The unheard screams of missing and murdered people will be heard across Washington state with the implementation of the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW) Alert System,” said Rep. Lekanoff. “Too many Indigenous mothers, sisters, wives and daughters have been torn from their families and their children raised without mothers. This crisis impacts every one of our families and communities and it takes collaboration among all governing bodies, law enforcement and media to bring awareness and stop these horrific crimes.”

Every legislative session Attorney General Ferguson introduces a slate of Attorney General Request bills. “Attorney General Request” is a formal designation for bills proposed by his office. Since 2013, 27 Attorney General Request bills have been signed into law.
Silver alerts have a proven record
Washington is one of 37 states with a “silver alert” system for missing vulnerable adults. States that report data on “silver alerts” report a high success rate. For example:
  • Wisconsin reported a 96 percent success rate for locating missing vulnerable adults with its silver alert system during its first three years (180 of 188 vulnerable adults located);
  • Texas reported a 92 percent success rate during the first year of its silver alert system (48 of 52 missing vulnerable adults located safely).


Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and People Task Force

The Washington State Legislature created the Washington State Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and People Task Force as part of the effort to coordinate a statewide response to the urgent crisis of Indigenous people who go missing, are the victims of homicide or experience other types of gender-based violence in urban and tribal communities.

The Attorney General’s Office is facilitating the task force, providing staffing and support for its work. Rep. Lekanoff is a member of the task force’s executive committee.

Tribes, community members and grassroots activists have done substantial work to identify current challenges regarding data, reporting practices, causes of violence, investigations, prosecutions and direct services that impact the rates of violence against tribal and urban Indigenous communities. The task force will build on these efforts to address barriers and provide recommendations to the Legislature to close these gaps.

Violence against Indigenous women and within Indigenous communities continues to be underreported and misunderstood throughout Indian Country and the United States. Complex issues around jurisdiction and data collection have created obstacles to understanding the full extent of how many Indigenous women have gone missing, been murdered or been the victim of other types of gender-based crime over generations.

The 23-member task force combines the institutional and cultural knowledge of state agencies, tribal nations and Indigenous communities to center the experiences of victims and to approach the work in a way that is responsive to communities and grounded in Indigenous values.

The task force will assess the systemic causes that contribute to disproportionate rates of violence, provide recommendations for addressing barriers and review data collection and reporting protocols. Recognizing that tribal boundaries and communities have extended far beyond contemporary borders, the task force will also address how the surrounding states and Canada are impacted by the jurisdictional and data gaps.''
 
Very quickly I skimmed an article this morning and it appears important. Can't link but it's in The Guardian.

Washington State Rep. Debra Lekanoff has come up with some sort of system to ID missing Indigenous Sisters.

Sorry for typos, but know we all care. Someone may want to elaborate? Thank you.

Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and People Task Force

The Washington State Legislature created the Washington State Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and People Task Force as part of the effort to coordinate a statewide response to the urgent crisis of Indigenous people who go missing, are the victims of homicide or experience other types of gender-based violence in urban and tribal communities.

Thank you so much, Filly and dotr, for posting this. I am from WA and study Native American education frequently, and am trying to find more resources on MMIW. I appreciate information about what my state is doing a lot.
 
It's a start..

" Washington Rep. Debra Lekanoff, D-Anacortes, speaks Thursday, March 31, 2022, before Washington Gov. Jay Inslee signed a bill sponsored by Lekanoff that creates a first-in-the-nation statewide alert system for missing Indigenous people — particularly women, in Quil Ceda Village, near Marysville, Wash., north of Seattle. The law creates a system similar to Amber Alerts, which are used for missing children in many states."

State approves 1st alert system for missing Indigenous people
 
IMO it is tragic for any person to be missing and not be looked for. The lack of investigations for missing Native American women is a nasty smear for society. Juarez Mexico might be the only place with more women missing than our Native American women here. It is offensive to think any person has to beg main stream media to cover a missing family member. Thank goodness we have social media sources and of course WS to help out.
 
Throughout American history, Indigenous women have been in danger from men. The concept of "manifest destiny" decreed that American — usually white — men were destined to expand throughout the rest of the country and tame it. The history of relations between the American government and indigenous tribes that lived on the land before there was a central government is not kind. History paints America as the winner even though such atrocities as the Trail of Tears. However, indigenous women are still exploited today, taken from their communities against their will, and murdered.

The media doesn't take as much notice of this crisis as it should, and differing jurisdictions for reservation land muddle things up (via The Seattle Times and CNN). Police departments are often overly busy, and evidence can be hard to find, according to The Guardian. On the other hand, negative stereotypes also cause people to look less closely than they should — or normally would — if the victim was white (via Native Hope and The Seattle Times).

People continue to get their cues regarding indigenous women from the media, both news programs and fictional entertainment. Most prominent fiction treats Native American women harshly: They are either murdered, raped, or otherwise exoticized on screen, to the subsequent negative treatment of their real-life counterparts (via Women's Media Center). Let's take a look at the reasons for this crisis that many would prefer to turn away from — which is honestly the first problem in and of itself.

 
Red Dress Painting


Michele-Elise Burnett’s “The Red Dress Exhibit” invokes the memory of 13 murdered or missing indigenous women in 13 different indigenous nations around Western New York and Canada. The exhibit is open at Artpark’s Lower Park from Friday through Sunday
 

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