Pubdate: Thu, 06 Apr 2006
Source: Montana Standard (MT)
Copyright: 2006 Montana Standard
Contact:  http://www.mtstandard.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/609
Author: Noelle Straub, Lee Washington Bureau
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

METH A CRISIS IN INDIAN COUNTRY, SENATORS TOLD

WASHINGTON -- Federal officials and tribal leaders testified at a 
congressional hearing Wednesday that the methamphetamine problem in 
Indian country urgently requires increased funding for prevention and 
treatment programs and more law enforcement coordination.

"The situation can be described in a single word: crisis," said 
Robert McSwain, deputy director of the federal Indian Health Service, 
at the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs hearing.

Methamphetamine has contributed to the high rate of violent crime in 
Indian country, devastated native families and strained resources of 
tribal law enforcement, health and social services programs, said 
Matthew Mead, the U.S. attorney for the District of Wyoming.

Sen. Craig Thomas, R-Wyo., who sits on the Indian Affairs Committee, 
asked Mead and the other witnesses what the special obstacles are to 
dealing with meth on reservations.

"Indian country is unique because of, and this is not an exhaustive 
list, the size of the reservation, wide dispersal of residents, 
limited numbers of law enforcement officers and the distinctive 
heritage and culture of the Native Americans," Mead said.

Mead said 80 percent of meth consumed in this country comes from 
"super labs," capable of producing at least 10 pounds of meth within 
a production cycle, run by Mexican traffickers in that country or in 
California. The other 20 percent is made in small labs in the United 
States, often by meth abusers.

Gangs have begun to infiltrate native lands, Mead said, with some 
Mexican criminals marrying Native American women in order to gain a 
foothold on reservations.

On Indian lands, Mead said, there are fewer than two law enforcement 
officers per 1,000 residents, compared with a range of 3.9 to 6.6 
officers per 1,000 residents in non-tribal lands.

He also noted that the difficulty of bringing in outside undercover 
agents for stings on tight-knit reservations. He said families come 
under great pressure not to cooperate with officers.

Although not a member of the committee, Sen. Conrad Burns, R-Mont., 
attended the hearing. He said the meth problem is compounded in 
Indian country by a number of factors, including poverty.

"One need only look at the Billings area to see this problem," Burns 
said. "The median household income for families on reservations near 
Billings is around $14,000 a year. (That) affects families' ability 
to provide nutrition, health care and housing for their children." 
Burns said the number of addicts seeking treatment exceeds the 
capacity of treatment facilities and that there are no treatment 
centers on Montana reservations.

"In order to receive help, Montana's Indian youth are taken out of 
the communities that they know and are placed in facilities dominated 
by non-tribal members," he said.

Law enforcement efforts have been "fractured," and a lack of 
resources have also affected the spread of meth in Indian country, Burns added.

Mead cited two recent Wyoming cases show how federal, state, local 
and tribal law enforcement can work together. Last year saw a 
crackdown on the Goodman drug trafficking organization, a family-run 
criminal organization on the Wind River Indian Reservation.

The organization served 20 to 50 drug customers a day and distributed 
at least one pound of meth per month on the reservation, Mead said, 
but 22 of the 25 federal defendants now have been convicted.

Mead also cited the breakup of a Mexican drug trafficking 
organization and the successful prosecution last year of its leader, 
Jesus Martin Sagaste-Cruz.

Ivan Posey, chairman of the Eastern Shoshone Business Council, missed 
the hearing because of airline problems, but submitted written testimony.

Posey called for education, additional treatment facilities and 
funding for prevention and social services programs, including foster care.

"What is needed in Indian country are residential treatment 
facilities that address chemical dependency in sometimes a cultural 
and traditional manner," he said. "Eighty percent of all residents in 
the Rock Springs, Wyo., treatment facility are from Fremont County, 
where we reside. This facility is 2.5 hours away from our home." He 
said four homicides in 2004 involved meth use on the Wind River 
Reservation. He also cited 284 drug-related misdemeanors in 2004 and 
99 in 2005.

Indian Affairs Vice Chairman Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., said he and 
Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz., would introduce an amendment to make 
tribal governments eligible for grants under the Patriot Act for 
anti-meth programs.

Kathleen Wesley-Kitcheyan, chairwoman of the San Carlos Apache Tribe 
of Arizona, talked about her reluctance to testify, saying it felt 
like airing her family's dirty laundry.

But she felt compelled after learning that 64 of the 256 babies born 
to tribal members in 2004 were addicted to meth, and that the number 
increased in 2005, she said.

She also cited cases of a 9-year-old boy using meth, a mother on meth 
who stabbed her baby to death, and meth-related suicides among the 
approximately 13,000 tribal members.
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