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Yurok Tribal Court releases 3rd and final report on Missing and Murdered Indigenous People

Groundbreaking report provides first MMIP response protocol in California


Published today, the Yurok Tribal Court’s To ’Kee Skuy ’Soo-Ney-Wo-Chek’ (I will see you again in a good way) Project ’s third and final report on Missing and Murdered Indigenous People (contains the first ever roadmap to guide tribal, state and federal agencies’ response to new and existing MMIP cases.


“The purpose of the third report was to lay a concrete, comprehensive and culturally relevant foundation from which to confront the ongoing crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous People in California. I believe we have achieved this objective,” said Yurok Tribal Court Director Jessica Carter. “I would like to thank the multidisciplinary team of indigenous scholars who created this invaluable resource, which will serve tribal communities for many years to come.


Informed by local law enforcement, a distinguished detective from Missoula, Montana (another area where MMIP cases are prevalent) and the National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center, as well as recent missing persons cases, traditional cultural knowledge keepers and many other sources, the Tribal Community Response Plan TCRP) prescribes a set of actions for agencies to employ starting at the moment someone is reported missing and /or foul play is suspected and through out the duration of a long term missing person or a homicide case The Plan provides strategies to protect vulnerable individuals. It also outlines how and where local community members should make such reports. Co-written by Dr. Blythe George, a Yurok citizen, Assistant Professor of Sociology at UC Merced and Harvard University graduate, the response protocol published in the 120 page foundational document covers numerous scenarios involving missing persons and murder cases, ranging from child runaways to the extemporaneous location of human remains.


“The Year 3 report offers a blueprint and tools for Tribes to coordinate with law enforcement and justice system partners on the development of customized community response plans that meet their unique needs and circumstances,” said Co-author Dr. Blythe George. “Similar to my fellow co authors, I know first hand the challenges that ensue when a beloved friend or family member goes missing or worse. When we were writing the report, my dear friend Emmilee Risling went missing, which was/is indescribably devastating Featured heavily in the report, Emmilee’s case illuminates an urgent need for additional mental health and law enforcement resources in our rural area.


The authors of the Year 3 Report developed significant sections of the detailed response protocol based on the disappearance of Emmilee Risling and a recent, local abduction. Emmilee was last seen on the Yurok Reservation in October of 2021. The Yurok and Hoopa Valley Tribes and their respective police departments, as well as the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office and concerned community members have worked tirelessly to find Emmilee Despite extensive search efforts, including a week long deployment of 10 cadaver dogs, no signs of her have been uncovered. In her early twenties, the Hupa woman graduated college and entered adulthood with all of the promise in the world. A few years after she moved home to work for her Tribe, Emmilee’s life trajectory spiraled as a result of serious mental health issues and substance abuse The second case referenced in the report involved a minor, who was located and returned to her family with assistance from the Yurok Tribal Court. Due to the individuals tender age, further details cannot be shared.


In addition to the adaptable response procedures, the report also propose s a series of policy changes to remove systemic barriers that prevent California’s 110 federally recognized Tribes from mounting a full response to MMIP and limit tribal governments’ capacity to keep their people safe. For example, tribal police currently do not have the same authority as state law enforcement even though they are equally qualified and Peace Officer Standards and Training (POST) certified. The Yurok Tribe is working on state legislation to address this longstanding injustice. Humboldt County Sheriff William Honsal is in favor of the much needed legislative solution and is seeking support from the California State Sheriffs’ Association. “They should have that same authority. I’m really hoping that this year, this happens and I’ve been making a lot of progress with the State Sheriffs Association. We have lots of Sheriffs that are onboard with this law…I’m really optimistic that if this actually gets written, there will be support at the state sheriffs’ level Sheriff Honsal stated in the Year 3 report. For context, some museum security personnel are considered state peace officers.


Additionally, tribal justice systems are prevented from participation in the California Law Enforcement Telecommunications System (CLETS). With access to CLETS, Tribal courts and police would be able to enter and verify missing person’s cases. Tribal Courts could input protective orders for all law enforcement to see, which is particularly pertinent when it comes to restraining orders related to domestic violence. The Yurok Tribe is working on a policy change that would allow all California Tribes access to this vital public safety tool The third year report also recommends the creation of a statewide alert system to notify police and the public when native people are missing or endangered. In May of 2022, Yurok Chairman Joseph L. James and Dr. Blythe George advocated for the alert system at a California Assembly Select Committee on Native American Affairs hearing titled “California’s Response to the Crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous People.” In June, California Assembly member James C. Ramos’s Feather Alert law passed in Senate Public Safety Committee .


“We strongly encourage the legislature to swiftly pass this important bill,” said Chairman James. “The time for action is now. We cannot stand idle while so many Native people are missing and so many families are suffering.”


Meaningful progress is occurring in other areas too. In California Governor Gavin Newsom’s proposed budget there is a $15 million allocation for the Yurok Tribal Court to build a culturally centered Wellness Center. Highlighted as a major part of the solution in the Year 3 report, a center like this would significantly increase the Tribe’s capacity to proactively assist at risk individuals like Emmilee Risling before it’s too late. If funded, the center will offer holistic mental health and drug treatment services.


“I would love to see the tribe actually have its own detox center, so instead of bringing somebody to jail, who's under the influence, unable to care for themselves, we bring them to a detox facility. Using this woman as an example, I had her ready to go. If we have detox, if we have temporary beds, mental health at the ready, we can actually then walk her across the hall to the mental health side, put her in a bed, start that treatment, start that trauma informed care to deal with the trauma, addiction and/or alcoholism. And then we don't have to wait. We can take a proactive, immediate response to help our own people,” stated Greg O’Rourke, the Chief of the Yurok Tribal Police Department and Yurok citizen in the third report.


California Tribes are unifying efforts to address MMIP. In July, Yurok Chairman James convened a meeting with 10 Tribal Chairpersons and more than two dozen Tribal Council Members representing Tribes from every corner of the state to discuss a collective response to the MMIP crisis. The Tribes are now meeting on a regular basis and will soon announce the plans to act on specific provisions in the Year 3 report.


Background on To ’Kee Skuy ’Soo-Ney-Wo-Chek’ project


In 2019, the Yurok Tribal Court received funds from the US Department of Justice’s Coordinated Tribal Assistance Solicitation (CTAS) to start the To ’Kee Skuy ’Soo-Ney-Wo-Chek’ Project , which released the first report in 2020. The first year report featured an in depth examination of the MMIP crisis in Northern California. The primary topics of the analysis included: data collection, interagency coordination, investigatory resources, law enforcement and justice system accountability, legislative considerations, support services, protective factors, and community strength building. In the second year report the authors started developing the protocols for the MMIP intervention, prevention and postvention plans. In the second report, the authors also identified five new areas for analysis, including: foster care and violence against youth, mental health impacts, intergenerational trauma, culturally informed ideas of justice and healing, and family and survivor centered justice and healing Building upon the above mentioned research, the Yurok Tribal Court’s To ’Kee Skuy ’Soo-Ney-Wo-Chek ’ Project ’s third and final report proposes to facilitate improvements to specific aspects of external criminal justice and health care systems, which put indigenous people at risk. To read the full report, please visit https://bit.ly/3PDK6sN


Author and Researcher Bios


Dr. Blythe K. George is a member of the Yurok Tribe and currently serves as an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of California Merced. Her research focuses on processes of adversity and resilience in tribal communities, with an emphasis on qualitative methodologies and database creation and management. Dr. George received a B.A. in Sociology from Dartmouth College in 2012, and an M.A. in Sociology and Ph.D. in Sociology & Social Policy from Harvard University in 2016 and 2020 respectively. Dr. George has twice been recognized by the National Science Foundation, the Social Science Research Council’s Mellon Mays Initiatives, the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, and Indigenous Education, Inc. for her work on prisoner reentry on tribal reservations. In 2021 22, Dr. George and Judge Abby Abinanti were honored alongside Yurok Tribal Court Director Jessica Carter as Circle 3 Intergenerational Indigenous Women’s Fellows by the Spirit Aligned Fellowship Program for their efforts in helping others build their own tribal justice systems. In May 2022, Dr. George testified to the state regarding MMIWP from the level of the data to the personal. She will bring this expertise statewide as she works with the California Department of Justice to determine how to increase state criminal justice protective and investigative resources for reporting and identifying missing Native Americans in California.


Jessica Elm, Ph.D.


Dr. Jessica Elm is a citizen of Oneida Nation, descendant of Stockbridge Munsee Band of the Mohicans, sole proprietor of Twehsaks Consulting, and affiliate of Life Paths Research Center. Dr. Elm is a social and health scientist and serves as a subject matter expert (SME) in the areas of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), tribal research, and diversity, equity, and inclusion. She has served Indian Country in various capacities for over 15 years including research, legislative advocacy, behavioral health administration, strategic planning, a nd direct social work practice. In this time, she has honed her skills to provide tailored services in research, evaluation, grant writing, project and program planning, and training/instruction. Dr. Elm’s professional priorities are supporting tribal self governance especially access to and use of data for informed decision making and improving the lived experiences of the most vulnerable American Indians through research, evaluation, education, and program development. Her research examines accumulation of myriad stressors including discrimination, violence, and ACEs and risk for substance misuse and mental health challenges. She also investigates the moderating effects of opportunity and ability to resolve stressors and cultural and social resources on behavioral health outcomes across the life course.


Nan Benally, M.C. Researcher, Consultant, Counselor


Nan Benally has spent a lifetime acquiring experience around passionate and purposeful people. The constant and driving passion for Nan has been in t he world of research the desire to learn, the desire to explore and the desire to create. Coupled with her passion in bringing healing to people who have been through traumatic/stressful events has guided her research in the areas of social justice. Utilizing her role as a researcher has created outcomes of direct application and influence in resolving concrete problems and meeting community based needs, transforming the status quo of institutions and challenging stakeholders in addressing these issues collaboratively, leading to a multidisciplinary commitment to enact change. Through her experience and education, Nan has gained training in various therapeutic treatment modalities, utilized her background in areas of social justice in helping to create outcomes of direct application and influence in resolving concrete problems and meeting community based needs, transforming the status quo of institutions and challenging stakeholders in addressing these issues collaboratively, leading to a multidisciplinary commitment to enact change. Nan has continued her passion for learning and has her Master of Counseling degree from Arizona State University. She continues to work on her doctoral degree and pathways toward professional licensure. She is a member of the Dine’ Tribal Nation and leads her own consulting firm, N.A.N. (Native American Narratives) Consulting. Her membership in professional organizations such as the American Psychological Association, the Society of Indian Psychologists of the Americas, National Congress of American Indians, and Alpha Pi Omega reinforces her ties to remain abreast of evolving trends and to continually develop her professional alliances as a unique network base to push forth the collective voices of transformation.

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