Tribal leaders and prosecutors in Cherokee will now have stronger tools to mete out justice to criminals on the reservation, thanks to a bill signed into law by President Obama last year.
The Tribal Law and Order Act of 2010, approved by Congress and the president in July of last year, gives tribal governments and court systems such as the ones in Cherokee increased power and flexibility in fighting crimes that are committed on their lands.
In the past, the jurisdictional tangle surrounding justice for crimes committed on the reservation, along with limited allowances on punishments, have meant that criminals donโt always get the penalties they may deserve for offenses in Cherokee.
Under old law, the harshest sentence a tribal court could impose for any charge was one year in prison and a $5,000 fine, which pales in comparison to the maximum penalties allowed at the state and federal level.
Now, tribes are free to approve penalties of up to three years and are allowed to stack up to three charges. That means that, if adopted by Tribal Council, multiple severe offenders could see as much as nine years of prison time.
To Tribal Prosecutor Jason Smith, this is a huge accomplishment for tribal justice and will change the face of many of his cases.
โItโs the biggest change that the new law has brought about as far a criminal liability is concerned,โ said Smith. โIโm hopeful that it will allow the tribal court to prosecute and to punish a broader range of crimes more appropriately, to more appropriately and effectively deal with more serious crime than they have done in the past.โ
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A convoluted court
Committing a crime in Cherokee โ and being prosecuted for it โ isnโt as cut and dried as it would be outside the reservation. Not everyone who breaks the law in Cherokee can expect to go to tribal court for it, nor can everyone expect that theyโll be held accountable by state or federal law enforcement. As Smith puts it, โjurisdiction is a huge quagmire. Itโs not as simple as that.โ
To begin with, only enrolled members of the Eastern Band, enrolled members of other federally recognized tribes and non-U.S. citizens can be punished by tribal courts. In Cherokee, they have an extra provision for others who want to fall under the tribeโs authority โ a waiver of jurisdiction, in legal speak โ but itโs entirely optional and not without controversy.
Everybody else โ which includes non-Indian local residents, American tourists, casino patrons โ will get pursued by the long arm of some non-Native law, be it local for piddly offenses such as speeding, state for bigger but still victimless crimes, or federal for more major crimes or those perpetrated by Indians against non-Indian victims, and vice versa.
To call it a quagmire is putting it kindly, but according to Smith and Don Gast, his cohort in the U.S. Attorneyโs office who prosecutes Cherokeeโs federal cases, they do a good job of working within that framework.
According to Gast, his office doesnโt decline tribal cases in the same way they would with non-tribal cases. Of the many cases that come across a normal federal prosecutorโs desk, many are just too small-time to warrant attention in federal courts.ย Gast doesnโt do that with cases that come to him from Cherokee.
โWe donโt decline cases in our districts on the basis of crimes being not big enough in scope like we do on state cases,โ said Gast, because they realize that for these cases, many of which are violent crimes such as rape and child abuse, federal court is their one chance to bring the alleged criminal to justice.
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Bringing order out of chaos
Such crimes are the very reason the Tribal Law and Order Act was created. An Amnesty International study found that Native American women were more than twice as likely to suffer domestic abuse than other women in the United States, and a separate Department of Justice study found that one third of Native American women will experience rape in their lifetime.
Although neither of these unusually high statistics is caused by the difficult maze of prosecution and justice tribal jurisdiction creates, both named it as a barrier to lowering those high rates.
In light of that, the other important provision the law makes is a recommendation for formalized procedures for sending cases to federal court and closer communication with the local U.S. Attorneyโs office. Thereโs even a provision for cross-training a tribal prosecutor as a Special Assistant U.S. Attorney, or SAUSA, who would be able to follow cases off the reservation and into federal court and prosecute them there.
In Cherokee, theyโre keen to see more cases federally prosecuted. At a special meeting on law and order held last week, more than one member expressed frustration at what they perceive as a high number of cases that donโt get taken to federal court, leaving victims without justice.
Council Member Teresa McCoy believe that some of the burden for making sure fewer cases fall through the cracks should fall to the council.
โWell, if weโre telling our public it just wasnโt big enough for the feds to take, then our laws should handle it,โ said McCoy, advocating for adoption of the stiffer penalties the new federal law allows and possible banishment from the reservation for non-tribal members who canโt be prosecuted in tribal court.
โEvery time thereโs a dismissal thereโs a victim and that victim got no help,โ she said.
โWe still have a way to help ease the pain of the public.โ
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No state โsafety netโ
Gast wouldnโt entirely agree with that assessment. Heโs firm on the fact that he prosecutes any and every tribal case that comes before him unless itโs out of his jurisdiction or itโs a bad case. And, he said, because of the nature of many of the crimes โ domestic, child and sexual abuse, among other violent crimes โ there are more bad cases than a normal federal prosecutor, who mostly deals with proactive cases like sting operations, would see.
The sad truth, said Gast, is that often victims wonโt or are afraid to speak, recant their stories or donโt want to prosecute their attackers. And this is true across the nation, not just on the reservation.
He maintains that, while tribal cases may be declined more often than non-tribal federal cases, that declination rate isnโt really any higher than the rates for similar crimes in state courts. Unreported or unprosecuted violent crimes are part of a broader, national trend that often has nothing to do with the prosecutor and everything to do with the victim.
โThe mission of the U.S. Attorneyโs office is to prosecute crime,โ said Gast. โAnd in Indian country, the scope of that mission is broader because we donโt have the safety net of the state court.โ
Still, in Indian Country, many would like to see the cracks that criminals have long slipped through closed, in whatever way they can.
Though Gast doesnโt see a need for it, Smith said heโd like to look into the possibility of a SAUSA for Cherokee. โItโs certainly something I think a lot of the public here would be in favor of,โ said Smith, an observation that was proven true by public sentiments expressed at last weekโs meeting.
But overall, Smith echoed Gast, noting the good working relationship that he enjoys with Gastโs office, a benefit not enjoyed by many western tribes, who are laboring with overworked prosecutors in huge districts.
โWeโre in better shape than a lot of places and a lot of reservations because we have that cooperation and we have had with the U.S. Attorney,โ said Smith. โBut could it be better? Absolutely.โ
