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Russell Means: Lakotah grand jury will not indict
Republic of Lakota will spend one year gathering evidence.
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Grand juries convened by the Republic of Lakotah on seven reservations in South Dakota will spend several months gathering evidence of alleged abuses against the Lakota people, according to organizer Russell Means.
The grand juries will investigate allegations of graft and corruption on the reservation, police brutality and of discrimination against the Lakota people in housing, health and education, Means said during a Monday morning news conference in Rapid City's Memorial Park.
Means said the grand juries will be small and will go from community to community, beginning on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, to hear testimony.
"This investigation is going to take a year or more to gather all the evidence to substantiate our charges of genocide against the United States of America," Means said.
Means said the grand jury will not issue indictments.
"We are a peaceful, non-confrontational republic," he said. "We don't attempt to use police power to brutalize anyone, either physically or mentally."
Means and others announced formation of the independent republic in December. The group has said its boundaries would encompass land in the Dakotas, Montana and Nebraska as outlined in the 1851 Fort Laramie treaty. The group does not have the backing of the Lakota tribes in South Dakota.
The grand juries will gather evidence that will be turned over to state and federal authorities, including Congress, Means said.
"More importantly, we're going to the international community," he said. "Even more important than that, we're going to the Web because that has been the Republic of Lakotah's strength."
Means said one hearing had been held in Chadron, Neb., and another is pending.
"We're going to be investigating the so-called border towns around the Sioux Indian reservations for racism and hatred," he said.
Statistics uncovered in Nebraska confirm there are income and education disparities for all racial groups. Incarcerations and police stops in Nebraska for Native Americans point to those disparities, he said.
With Means at the press conference were Earl Tall and Betty Janis of Manderson. The brother and sister's experiences with tribal law enforcement speak to the need for the investigation, Means said.
Tall said that he and other members of his family have been arrested and jailed on different occasions, but no charges have ever been filed against him.
Complaints filed against tribal officers have been ignored, Tall said, which is why he turned to Means for help.
After an accidental shooting at Manderson, Janis, who has rheumatoid arthritis, said tribal officers came to her home demanding to search the house for Tall's grandson. According to Janis, she was arrested and charged with assaulting an officer after she stepped between an officer and her grandson.
Tall's grandson was eventually located and spent eight days in jail before being released without any charges being filed.
People on the reservation are afraid to speak out against the abuses they have suffered, Janis said.
"They fear retaliation from police officers and their families," she said. "They're all tied together."
There are no checks and balances of tribal government of any kind or any of the programs the federal government sponsors on the reservations, Means said.
"There's lawlessness among the law," he said.
Some tribal police are running rampant, according to Means.
The Bureau of Indian Affairs refuses to live up to its federal responsibilities on reservations, Means said. "Congress is our only recourse."
Contact Andrea Cook at 394-8423 or andrea.cook@rapidcityjournal.com


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