Ron His Horse Is Thunder, chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux tribe, says that as long as the tribe must depend on the federal government to police and prosecute people on their own land, anyone who comes to Standing Rock may well be able to rape or assault women and get away with it.
(Photo: Amy Walters)
One in three Native American women will be raped in her lifetime. This two-part series tells the story behind this shocking statistic — a story of both human tragedy and systematic failure of criminal justice on and off of reservations. This series led to the reopening of a sexual assault case, Congressional hearings, and the launching of a website to manage donations to help sexual assault victims living in the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.

Part One: Rape Cases on Indian Lands go Uninvestigated
07/25/2007
Laura Sullivan reports from Standing Rock Sioux Reservation on the story of Leslie Ironroad. Five years ago, Ironroad was brutally beaten and raped. Before slipping into a coma and dying, she managed to scratch out a statement for a Bureau of Indian Affairs policeman who came to question her in the hospital. Yet her rape and murder remained uninvestigated until this story was aired on NPR. As Sullivan reports, Ironroad’s story is typical rather than exceptional.
» Listen to part 1 MP3

Part Two: Legal Hurdles Stall Rape Cases on Native Lands
07/26/2007
Sullivan investigates the legal system that has failed to respond to sexual assault cases like Leslie Ironroad’s. She finds a convoluted system: tribal police can’t charge non-Indians with crimes, while the US Attorney’s office, which can, rarely does. The result is what one tribal police chief calls “almost a lawless community.”
» Listen to part 2 MP3
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