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SACRED GROUND ISSUES

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Title: U.S. v. Lara Author: Benjamin Zvenia, Dr. P.H., J.D. Last modified by: Angela Martinez - Legal Services Created Date: 3/31/2004 5:36:02 AM Document ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SACRED GROUND ISSUES


1
SACRED GROUND ISSUES
Presented by Hon. Benjamin Zvenia Tribal Court
Judge (Member NC Nottaway Tribe)
2
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AZ Indian Tribes is 19 (15 represented)
4
Sacred Site
5
Course description
  • To bring forward common issues pertaining to our
    shared goal of equal justice for all that are
    germane to tribal, state and federal court
    systems.
  • This will be accomplished by providing a forum
    for collaboration and interaction on various
    issues

6
Course Issues
  • Tribal jurisdiction
  • State Federal jurisdiction
  • VAWA Domestic Violence Protection Orders (Full
    Faith Credit)
  • Update on AZ-CIDVC Project Passport (NCSC)

7
Jurisdiction defined
  • The term jurisdiction refers to a governments
    power to exercise authority over all persons and
    things within its territory.

8
Tribal Jurisdiction
  • In general, this jurisdiction is regarded as part
    of the inherent sovereign power tribes retained
    to regulate the people and affairs in their
    territory, as independent nations.
  • Specifically, this refers to the power
    authority codified by tribal governments that
    tribal courts have over criminal, civil and
    administrative matters.

9
American Indians Crime
  • USDOJ OJP
  • BJS Statistical Profile, 1999 2002
    (Highlights)
  • American Indians experienced violence at a rate
    (101 violent crimes per 1,000 American Indians)
    more than twice the rate for the Nation (41 per
    1,000 persons), 1992-2001

10
BJS Statistics (contd)
  • Annually, during 1992 to 2001 American Indians
    experienced on average 116,000 violent crimes of
    the estimated 9.1 million occurring among all
    racial groups.
  • This accounted statistically for about 1.3 of
    all violent victimizations annually.
  • On average during 1992 to 2001, American Indians
    age 12 or older experienced annually an estimated
    5,900 rapes or sexual assaults.

11
  • Violence Against Women is not a Native
    Tradition. It was not tolerated and in the rare
    event that it occurred, it was taken seriously.
    Abuse wasnt considered a private family matter
  • Intro from Sacred Circles Handbook - Violence
    Against Native Women is not Traditional

12
Sacred Circle 722 St. Joseph St., Rapid City,
SD 55701. Tel. 877.733.7623
13
Sacred Circle
  • Sacred Circle, National Resource Center to End
    Violence Against Native Women, provides training,
    consultation and technical assistance to Indian
    Nations, tribal organizations, law enforcement
    agencies, prosecutors and courts to address the
    safety needs of Native women who are battered,
    raped and stalked.

14
Sacred Circle (contd)
  • Sacred Circle, provides advocacy to approximately
    3,000 women and children each year and
    approximately 2,400 men who are on domestic
    violence probation as ordered by the Oglala Sioux
    Tribe's Courts.

15
Sacred Circle (Contd)
  • For the last decade Sacred Circle has advocated
    for the safety of American Indian and Alaska
    Native Women, providing training, consultation
    and technical assistance on responding to crimes
    of violence against Native women, particularly
    domestic violence, sexual assault and stalking.

16
Sacred Circle (Points to note)
  • We must deal with the reality that we are hurting
    each other. We must begin to responsibly address
    these issues as Native Peoples.
  • One way that many tribes are attempting to deal
    with how we are hurting each other is through
    domestic violence, violence against women, family
    violence, spouse abuse laws. ABUSE NOT TOLERATED!

17
Indigenous Way VAWA
  • If the Physical, Mental, Emotional and
    Spiritual Well Being of the Women is intact, so
    too is that of the Family, Community and
    Society. - Indigenous Proverb

18
VAWA - Native Orgs. Involved
19
VAWA
  • The Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) 18 USC
    2265 2266 (PL 103-322, 108 Stat. 1930, Sept.
    13, 1994 amended Oct. 28, 2000).
  • Currently, this act was revisited for renewal
    and has been approved by both House Senate)

20
VAWA (contd)
  • 2265 Full Faith and Credit Given to Protection
    Orders
  • (a) Full Faith and Credit any protection order
    issued that is consistent with subsection (b) of
    this section by the court of one State or Indian
    tribe (the issuing State or Indian tribe) shall
    be accorded full faith and credit by the court of
    another State or Indian tribe (the enforcing
    State or Indian tribe) and enforced as if it were
    the order of the enforcing State or tribe.

21
VAWA (contd)
  • 2265 Full Faith and Credit Given to Protection
    Orders
  • (e) Tribal Court Jurisdiction for purposes of
    this section, a tribal court shall have full
    civil jurisdiction to enforce protection orders,
    including authority to enforce any orders through
    civil contempt proceedings, exclusion of
    violators from Indian lands, and other
    appropriate mechanisms, in matters arising within
    the authority of the tribe.

22
Prosecutors Guide to F.F.C. (highlight)
  • While Indian tribes do not have criminal
    jurisdiction over non-Indians, many law
    enforcement officers in Indian Country have the
    authority to arrest non-Indian offenders
    transport them to state or federal authorities
    for criminal prosecution. Tribal courts retain
    their powers to assert civil jurisdiction over
    non-Indians to enforce protection orders.
    Congress affirmed this be passing the 2000
    amendment codified as 18 USC 2265(e)

23
Resource tools
  • Handouts
  • Project Passport Bench cards
  • Prosecutors Guide to F.F.C. P.O.s
  • BATF Bench Cards

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Project Passport (Entities involved)
27
Project Passport
  • Project Passport is an example of communities, in
    this case states, coming together to problem
    solve and develop solutions to some common
    domestic violence issues.
  • In this particular project, we focused on the
    issue of full faith and credit of orders of
    protection.

28
Project Passport (contd)
  • Initially, the project was an eight state
    regional effort. Kentucky is bordered by more
    states than any other in the country, so all came
    together as a region to develop a practical
    strategy to increase the implementation of the
    full faith and credit provision of the Violence
    Against Women Act. States included KY, OH, IN,
    IL, MO, TN, WV, VA, as well as DC who voluntarily
    joined the Project.

29
Project Passport (contd)
KY- initiated with 7 surrounding states and D.C.
30
Project Passport (contd)
  • Initial strategy decided was to attempt to
    implement the development of a recognizable first
    page for those areas orders of protection.
  • Since full faith and credit enforcement is really
    dependent first on law enforcement, and then the
    courts, this enforcement would be enhanced if
    orders of protection from all of our border
    states were readily recognizable to our officer
    and judges.

31
Project Passport (contd)
  • Having the first page of the orders look alike,
    or at least very similar, would certainly help an
    officer, who, at 200 o'clock in the morning, is
    standing there while people are crying and
    possibly bleeding, is handed an order from a
    court, an order that he/she has never seen
    before.
  • It was reasoned that if the officer could easily
    recognize that this was an order of protection,
    it would increase enforceability as if it was an
    order from their state. It was also reasoned
    that this concept would benefit judges too.

32
Project Passport (contd)
  • The ultimate goal of the Project is for the
    regional model to be expanded throughout the rest
    of the country, to enhance the enforcement of
    orders of protection across all jurisdictional
    lines.
  • Since initial concept, this Project has been
    brought to all regions including AZ which has
    agreed to implement 1st page provisions.

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36
I.C.W.A. - Resources
  • www.naicja.org
  • www.ntjrc.org
  • www.nicwa.org

37
DV Resources - websites
  • www.supreme.state.az.us/cidvc/
  • www.abanet.org/domviol/home.html
  • www.safestate.org (CA - see Focus areas)
  • www.sacred-circle.com
  • www.ncsconline.org
  • www.ncjfcj.org
  • www.usdoj.gov/ovw/

38
DV Resources websites (contd)
  • Criminal Statistics DOJ/BJS
  • www.albany.edu/sourcebook/
  • V.P.C. Annual Report When Men Murder Women
  • www.vpc.org/press/0509wmmw.htm
  • Violence Against Women Network
  • www.vawnet.org

39
Final thoughts
  • Megwetch, for participating in this presentation.
  • Questions or comments?
  • I can be reached as follows
  • judgezvenia_at_abanet.org
  • Personal Office (702) 384-0991
  • Cell (702) 493-0151
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