Pubdate: Sun, 04 Jan 2004
Source: Charlotte Observer (NC)
Copyright: 2004 The Charlotte Observer
Contact:  http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78
Author: Renee Ruble

BANISHMENT BEING REVIVED AT SOME TRIBES

Punishment Being Used To Deal With Gang, Drug Activity On Reservations

MINNEAPOLIS - Banishment, long regarded as the ultimate punishment among 
American Indians, is making a comeback among tribes trying to find more 
effective ways to deal with gangs and drugs.

Generations ago, banishment meant casting offenders out and making them 
fend for themselves in the forest or on the plains.

The modern version means ordering troublemakers off the reservation, but 
can also include stripping them of their tribal membership -- a painful 
penalty in tribes that share casino profits with members.

Minnesota's Grand Portage Band of Ojibwe is one of the latest to revive the 
practice. The band approved a banishment law last fall and used it against 
three young people convicted in a series of assaults. Indian leaders feared 
the violence could lead to the formation of gangs.

"When people cross that line and the community says we've had enough, it's 
a process we can use to deal with it," said Norman Deschampe, the band 
chairman.

The National Tribal Justice Resource Center has no count of how many tribes 
recently have adopted or revived banishment laws. But the number appears to 
be on the rise.

At least seven of Minnesota's 11 Indian bands -- all are either Ojibwe or 
Dakota -- have either passed or used banishment-type laws within the past 
decade. The Lummi Nation, in Washington state, announced over the summer 
that it would use banishment more often to deal with rampant drug use.

One reason tribes are turning to banishment is that federal law does not 
allow tribal courts to impose sentences of more than a year in jail and a 
$5,000 fine.

Banishment is typically imposed by the tribal courts, where people can 
defend themselves and petition for reinstatement.

Where the laws exist, they are used sparingly. Most tribal leaders call 
banishment a last resort. But when it is used, it can hurt.

Kay Commodore, a Lummi Indian, was stripped of her tribal membership and 
banished from the reservation after she was convicted of drug trafficking 
in 1992. Commodore, 67, served three years in prison and said banishment is 
worse. She is allowed on the reservation only to visit a plot of land she 
holds. She is forbidden to visit family members.

"They're taking away a piece of who I am," Commodore said.

The nation's largest tribe, the Navajo Nation, has kept a banishment-type 
law on its books since 1940. But Donovan Brown, assistant attorney general, 
can recall it being used only once -- about five years ago, for a person 
involved in gang activity.

The Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe recently used banishment for the first time 
in about 75 years, casting out two young members for starting fights and 
causing other trouble on the Minnesota reservation.

Some Indian leaders argue that banishment simply pushes a tribe's problems 
elsewhere. Others worry the punishment could be misused to silence 
political opponents; that was one reason Minnesota's Leech Lake Band of 
Ojibwe decided not to revive the punishment in the late 1990s.

Federal and state authorities oversee the prosecution of non-Indians who 
commit crimes in Indian country, but Indian leaders say some crimes, such 
as drug possession or domestic violence, may not be considered a priority.

Last fall, the Bois Forte Band of Ojibwe in Minnesota banished a non-Indian 
accused of bringing drugs onto the reservation. A tribal prosecutor said it 
was only the second time in his 13 years that the band had banished someone.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens