April
1, 2010
Guardian Angels starting first reservation chapter
By Matt Volz
HELENA (AP) — Fed up with growing gang violence, Montana tribal
leaders this weekend will start the first-ever American Indian
reservation chapter of the Guardian Angels.
The new chapter of the citizens’ crime-watch group - whose
members are known by their red berets in New York, Chicago and other
U.S. cities - will begin training about 50 recruits on the rural Fort
Peck Indian Reservation. The sprawling reservation on the plains of
eastern Montana is home to 6,000 of the approximately 10,000 enrolled
members of the Assiniboine and Sioux tribes.
Chauncey Whitwright III, vice chairman of the Wolf Point
Community Organization, said the children of the 3,200-square-mile
reservation are vulnerable to gangs that have crept in from the
outside.
Other Montana tribes, including the Blackfeet, Rocky Boy, Crow
and Northern Cheyenne, report the same problem, Whitwright said, and he
hopes the new Guardian Angels chapter will eventually expand its
programs and patrols and give teens there an alternative.
“There are all kinds of gangs roaming around up here,”
Whitwright said Thursday. “Our kids are in danger, they’re being
influenced, they’re being targeted. It’s going on every day of the week
... and they’re busy recruiting.”
The Guardian Angels, started in New York City more than 30 years ago, has chapters in 14 countries and 140 cities.
Curtis Sliwa, the outspoken founder of the Guardian Angels,
called it a breakthrough that the traditionally insular Native American
leaders invited the Guardian Angels to the reservation. The new chapter
will be a model for other tribes and reservations in the West and among
Canada’s First Nations, he said.
“We’re dealing with a problem that everybody recognizes, but
most folks haven’t wanted to try anything different,” Sliwa said. “In
this case, the Indians said, ‘We’re going to do it for ourselves.”’
Sliwa plans to be at the Fort Peck reservation for the opening,
when the new chapter plans to select their leaders and start putting
the recruits through background checks and training. Whitwright expects
patrols will start in about six months.
A Justice Department study from last year concluded that most
gangs on reservations have little or no direct ties to national-level
street gangs. Some urban and suburban gangs are expanding drug
operations onto Native American reservations, but most are local gangs
typically composed of Native American youth, according to the study.
But Whitwright and Sliwa say the increased gang violence on reservations is coming from outside the tribes.
The gangs come in because they can exploit the reservations that
have multiple and often confusing law enforcement jurisdictions,
Whitwright said. And once police crack down, the gangs often melt away
and shift to another reservation, he said.
There have been 43 arsons on the reservation since 2009. A few
were ruled accidents, but tribal leaders suspect most are gang-related,
evidenced by the graffiti that appears on the burned rubble the next
day, Whitwright and Sliwa said.
There also has been an increase in the number of elderly
beatings, which Sliwa says is a gang initiation right particular to
Indian reservations - asking young tribal members to pick gang loyalty
over the tradition of respecting their elders.
State Department of Justice spokesman Kevin O’Brien said the
state does not track reservation crime statistics and only gets
involved in criminal investigations at the request of local law
enforcement. Roosevelt County Sheriff Freedom Crawford was not in his
office Thursday afternoon and could not be immediately reached for
comment.
Whitwright decided to invite the Guardian Angels to the
reservation last Thanksgiving, after teens vandalized his niece’s home
and car. He said he walked up and down the reservation with a visiting
Guardian Angels member from Minneapolis, who pointed out the gang
colors teens were wearing and the gang tags written in graffiti.
“I guess we were all in denial,” Whitwright said. “It’s not
just an Indian problem, it’s all our problem, and we’ve got to deal
with it before it gets out of control.”
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