OrdinaryLife
New Member
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2003
- Messages
- 5,675
- Reaction score
- 36
I am part Cherokee and grew up near Tulsa/Claremore and do know about Okla tribal territory vs civilian and the issues in presents in LE but most readers here at WS do not. And many here were not ALIVE (Or Adults) when the Girl Scout Murders happened (a case which has a few similarities sadly). I was just trying to give the basics so others would understand the challenges OSBI may face with a rural area, a Native American Male POI driving a PU/Truck in Oklahoma....on several fronts. I would suppose there are 100 people around the wider general area of the murders that match the description of the suspect - and not all would be 100% Native American (or tribal members) either. And the truck may, or may not, be owned by the POI.
The area is part of the Creek (Muscogee) Nation Jurisdiction Tribally. It's not a heavily populated stretch of counties from the TX border to Okmulgee - even less so since oil and gas went bust in the 90's and not a lot of industry or businesses for people to work at - that's why the avg income is so low. The location where this happened is just off two Interstates - not real far from the Creek Turnpike either -all are heavily traveled by many people NOT from the immediate area. On a sunny Sunday afternoon, well, it could have been anybody from NE Oklahoma in the area...plus assorted lost meth heads, gun nuts doing target practice and general partiers....all added to the "locals".
It's likely the POI is local, but not guaranteed. And if he has a brain he has cut his hair and the truck is gone or isn't readily identifiable any more. An ID would HAVE to come from someone who KNOWS him and if he is a criminal - they may be scared to ID him for many reasons - perhaps they fear what he knows on THEM? And there is always the chance the POI only SAW what happened and for whatever reason - including his own past record and not wanting to be incriminated - does not want to come forward.
It's all so "open" right now but there is one thing - if it is a tribal member the POI can hide for a very long time on tribal land and NEVER be found OR reported by his family.
My Opinion
Thank you, FlowerChild, for sharing another Oklahoma perspective. It's refreshing!
