House lawmakers push office for missing Indigenous people

Associated Press
Posted 2/24/21

PIERRE (AP) – The South Dakota House on Tuesday passed a proposal to create an office under the attorney general to coordinate tribal, state and local law enforcement agencies in tackling the crisis of missing Indigenous people.

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House lawmakers push office for missing Indigenous people

Posted

PIERRE (AP) — The South Dakota House on Tuesday passed a proposal to create an office under the attorney general to coordinate tribal, state and local law enforcement agencies in tackling the crisis of missing Indigenous people.

Democrat Rep. Peri Pourier, a member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, proposed the office as part of an effort to solve how a disproportionate number of Indigenous people go missing and are murdered in the state. She said that of 179 missing people statewide, 77 are Indigenous.

Pourier's bill would create a one-person office within the attorney general's office to specialize in coordinating law enforcement efforts across agencies. The attorney general's office assisted in writing the bill, but declined to support it because funding was not addressed, Pourier said. However, the lawmaker said that tribal governments have committed to seeking federal funding for the office.

She pointed out that the federal government and tribes have made the issue a priority, saying, “This is an opportunity for the state to come to the table.”

Oglala Sioux Tribal President Kevin Killer said there is an “epidemic” of women and girls going missing from Native communities, both on reservations and in urban areas.

The bill will next proceed to the Senate.