Docs or cops: How should Indian Country treat domestic violence?

Indian Country and Health Care Reform: A new law will put more police and prosecutors into the fight against domestic violence. There's also a public health factor to address.

A public health approach to tackling domestic violence.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

A public health approach to tackling domestic violence.

It's trite to say, "everything is connected." It's a phrase that comes up in the context of family, the environment, or perhaps, philosophy. When the subject is reservation violence, however, that same notion could be rewritten as a blunt question: Docs or cops?

Cops are getting most of the attention after the signing of the Tribal Law and Order Act. At a White House ceremony on Thursday, Lisa Marie Iyotte introduced President Barack Obama. She is an enrolled member of the White Clay People, her father's tribe, but grew up and lives as a Sicangu Lakota or Rosebud Sioux. She had the most difficult task: Describing her own brutal assault and rape that was witnessed by her children. The attack was never prosecuted because of the jurisdictional maze that complicates criminal justice in Indian Country.

"All of you come at this from different angles, but you're united in support of this bill because you believe, like I do, that it is unconscionable that crime rates in Indian Country are more than twice the national average and up to 20 times the national average on some reservations," the president said. "And all of you believe, like I do, that when one in three Native American women will be raped in their lifetimes, that is an assault on our national conscience; it is an affront to our shared humanity; it is something that we cannot allow to continue."

The president cited what will happen next: The hiring of more U.S. attorneys, more victim-witness specialists, a national training coordinator who will work with prosecutors and law enforcement throughout Indian Country, and, more cops. Already the Interior Department reports a 500 percent jump in applications "the largest increase in history," the president said, "and we're working to deploy those officers to the field as quickly as possible."

The bill boosts tribal authority, making it easier for local government to prosecute violent crimes, and the Justice Department will collect and disclose data, including those crimes not prosecuted. The new law will also provide more resources for tribal courts, police departments, and programs to combat drug and alcohol abuse or help at-risk youth.

The new law is worth celebrating. But we should also remember, this law is just one step forward. This effort will not succeed unless Congress and tribes also recognize, support, and fund the public health side of this equation. This is not a problem that can be solved by law enforcement alone.

Last month the Family Violence Prevention Fund and other health agencies (including the Indian Health Service) released a report that documents significant improvements in the public health approach. ?The new report, "Building Domestic Violence Health Care Responses in Indian Country: A Promising Practices Report," represents the other element in this story. As Eileen Hudon, a domestic violence and sexual assault activist, says in the report: "The medical field is a good place to build a response to violence against Indian women because there is a high ethic to confidentiality, privacy, and patient's rights. The thinking embedded in the medical field closely aligns with an advocacy approach to addressing violence against women. So it has the potential to be a safe place to build an effective response to helping and protecting women."

Some examples of model programs include: A Warm Springs initiative that focuses on coaching boys about healthy relationships; a Cherokee Indian Hospital group operating with the strategy of explaining to the community that violence is not just a women's issue; and a Utah Navajo outreach effort in the schools and in churches.

President Obama is right when he said this violence is something that we cannot allow to continue."

So what is it, docs or cops? Sorry, it's the wrong question. If we are to remove the blight of domestic violence from Indian Country it has to be docs, cops, community people, public health, government and tribal leaders, basically, everybody. Then, this is as good a time as any to make it so.


Topics: Crime, Justice / FBI

About the Author

Mark Trahant is a writer, speaker and Twitter poet. He is a member of the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes and lives in Fort Hall, Idaho. You can reach him through www.marktrahant.com. He is the author of "The Last Great Battle of the Indian Wars," the story of Sen. Henry Jackson and Forrest Gerard.

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Comments:

Posted Tue, Aug 3, 9:51 a.m. Inappropriate

Missing, totally, the fact that DV is only in very small part about power and control, and instead is majorly a lack of socialization. Some folks have a naturally higher tempo and volume relationship. Those do NOT include actual violence, but may include higher volume conversations, for example, that fit the legal definition of DV, but do not involve actual violence.

In fact, a CDC report states that in mutually violent relationships, 60-70% is perpetrated and initiated by WOMEN, but of course, we still teach (only) boys to be nice as Mark points out. In young adults, 65% of DV is perpetrated by women, according to a report in the Florida State University Law School publication. It is important to distinguish the peer reviewed and published academic research from the advocacy research that is so often put out by the industry insiders, whose job depends on fomenting additional dissent.

Never do we speak about male victims, even given the large amount of female perpetrated violence. Crotch kicks on TV are still accompanied by laugh tracks. Cops and judges are trained to "arrest the man", and "order ineffective treatment", to the joy of the pot-stirrers and those who make a living from such ineffective programs.

When the DV industry, and yes, it is an industry, full of Hegel-tactic employing operatives, dispensing fallacious stats and repeating them until they must be "true" because we hear them all the time, starts to tell the truth about DV, only then will we be able to end the much less prevalent but real issue than we think it is.

To educate yourself, check out these articles.

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20071027/OPINION03/710270016/-1/OPINION

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20091013/OPINION03/710139998

Geezer

Posted Wed, Aug 4, 4:13 p.m. Inappropriate

A big, BIG part of the domestic violence issue in Indian Country is our acceptance of it as a part of our lifestyle. When we laugh about a black eye and a hickey we perpetuate the problem. Same with drug and alcohol abuse. Our ancestors would NEVER have tolerated a man beating a woman, rape or any of the ugly things we accept as being "Indian" today. These things came along with the ugliness of forced colonization and it's up to us as parents to teach our children NOT TO ACCEPT THE UNACCEPTABLE. But - how do you do that when people with no morals and values have children and raise them with no morals and values. I don't think more cops or more doctors are the answer.

Leetz

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