With violence on Indian reservations more than two times the national average, the Tribal Law and Order Act signed Thursday by President Barack Obama is expected to combat the problem. The bill passed the U.S. Senate on June 23 and the House on July 21. Its backers believe it will help in a number of ways. Among the law’s provisions: • Authorizes appointment of special assistant U.S. attorneys to prosecute crimes in tribal communities in federal court. • Provides tribal courts with tougher sentencing powers. • Allows some tribal police officers to enforce federal laws on Indian lands, as well as increases recruitment and retention efforts of the Bureau of Indian Affairs and tribal law officers. • Requires tribal and federal officers serving Indian Country to be trained in interviewing victims of sexual assault and collecting evidence at crime scenes. • Requires federal investigators and prosecutors to maintain information on cases that occur on Indian lands that are closed or declined for prosecution in federal court and share that information with tribal justice officials. U.S. Sen. Jon Tester, who attended Thursday afternoon’s bill signing, said the legislation will combat a serious problem on reservations. “We’ve got some issues of violence in Indian Country,” said Tester, a Montana Democrat and one of the bill’s co-sponsors. “This will address those issues and will reduce violence, making communities safe, allowing business to grow and families to thrive. “The bottom line is you don’t have economic growth with unsafe communities.”...more
“The bottom line is you don’t have economic growth with unsafe communities.”
Senator Tester should tell that to the Senators who represent folks who live in the vicinity of the Mexican border.
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