Indianz.Com > News > Attorney General discusses tribal issues and public safety in speech
Attorney General discusses tribal issues and public safety in speech
Monday, August 12, 2024
Indianz.Com
The following is the text of remarks as prepared for delivery by Attorney General Merrick B. Garland at the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Albuquerque, New Mexico, on August 12, 2024. The text was provided by the Department of Justice.
Thank you, Alex, for that generous introduction. And for your leadership.
Earlier today, Department of the Interior Secretary [Deb] Haaland and I visited the headquarters of the Unit in the Interior Department’s Bureau of Indian Affairs that is dedicated to combating the crisis of Missing or Murdered Indigenous Persons. We were briefed by experts from the Unit and prosecutors from this office who work every day to make Indian Country safer. And we all underscored our commitment to ending these tragedies and helping Tribal communities heal.
Then we met with Tribal Leaders from the Eight Northern Pueblos of New Mexico to learn about what each Tribe is experiencing in its community. Since 2021, the Justice Department has provided $12.9 million to support a number of Tribal justice initiatives across the Northern Pueblos. We are committed to working with our partners to ensure that all members of Tribal communities feel safe.
Now, I am grateful to be able to meet with the federal, state, local, and Tribal law enforcement partners gathered around this table.
This group of leaders represent the law enforcement officers across the state who make daily sacrifices to protect the people of New Mexico. This also represents the collaborative approach that is at the heart of the Justice Department’s strategy to combat violent crime.
When I became Attorney General three and a half years ago, I knew that the most powerful tool we would have to address violent crime would be our partnerships. That was my experience as a line attorney prosecuting violent crime and narcotics trafficking in the early 1990s, and as a Justice Department official organizing and supervising those efforts later in the 1990s. So, we built an anti-violent crime strategy rooted in strengthening our collaboration across federal law enforcement; with state, local, and Tribal law enforcement; with partner agencies like Albuquerque Community Safety; and with the communities we all serve. And we fortified those partnerships by bringing to bear the latest technologies for identifying and prosecuting the criminals who represent the greatest danger to our communities. Now we have seen results. According to the Albuquerque Police Department, there was about a 19% decrease in homicides and a 41% decrease in robberies in 2023 compared to 2022. This is consistent with what we have seen nationally, where last year, we saw one of the lowest violent crime rates in 50 years nationwide. That included the largest drop in homicides in 50 years. But we know that progress in Albuquerque and many communities is still uneven. And of course, there is no acceptable level of violent crime. The Justice Department is working here in New Mexico and across the country to arrest violent felons, disrupt violent drug trafficking, and prosecute the individuals responsible for the greatest violence.Attorney General Garland, Secretary Haaland of the Department of the @Interior Highlight Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples and Human Trafficking Crises in New Mexico Visit
— U.S. Department of Justice (@TheJusticeDept) August 12, 2024
🔗: https://t.co/bsliA77Oy0 pic.twitter.com/BnviY4Bs8W
Last month — working with the Albuquerque Police Department, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), and FBI — this U.S. Attorney’s Office successfully prosecuted a felon who unlawfully possessed a firearm and shot a woman in the back of the head at a Walmart. She survived, but she required emergency surgery and extensive rehabilitation. Thanks to the work of this office and its partners, the defendant was sentenced to 15 years in federal prison. Also last month, this office secured a six-year sentence for a man who illegally possessed firearms and used them to threaten his wife. The defendant in that case was under a court protection order that prohibited him from harassing, stalking, or threatening his wife. Despite that, he went to the family residence, stockpiled an arsenal of weapons, and held his wife in the garage against her will. Their son overheard and called 911. And after hours of negotiations, law enforcement arrested the defendant. The man’s conduct violated a federal statute that prohibits firearm possession by those who, like the defendant, are under court protection orders that prohibit them from harassing or threatening intimate partners. That is the same statute the Department successfully defended before the Supreme Court just a few months ago. This case underscores why that statute is so important to the Department’s work to combat domestic violence in New Mexico and across the country. We will continue to combat violent crime and firearms offenses that endanger our communities.Attorney General Merrick B. Garland Statement on Major Cities Chiefs Association #ViolentCrime Survey
— U.S. Department of Justice (@TheJusticeDept) August 12, 2024
🔗: https://t.co/e4jksr5zWn pic.twitter.com/jZEdtXCPhs
Search
Filed Under
Tags
More Headlines
Ryman LeBeau: Native nations must remind America of the truth
Native America Calling: Storytelling season
Native America Calling: Tribes celebrate major landback wins
VIDEO: S.5355 – National Advisory Council on Indian Education Improvement Act
VIDEO: ‘Nothing about me, without me’
VIDEO: H.R.1101 – Lumbee Fairness Act
VIDEO: S.3857 – Jamul Indian Village Land Transfer Act
Native America Calling: A look at 2024 news from a Native perspective
AUDIO: ‘The Network Working Against the Lumbee Tribe’
VIDEO: ‘The Network Working Against the Lumbee Tribe’
Tribal homelands bill on agenda as 118th Congress comes to a close
Native America Calling: Solving school absenteeism
‘The time is now’: Lumbee Tribe sees movement on federal recognition bill
Cronkite News: Program expanded to cover traditional health care practices
NAFOA: 5 Things You Need to Know this Week
More Headlines
Native America Calling: Storytelling season
Native America Calling: Tribes celebrate major landback wins
VIDEO: S.5355 – National Advisory Council on Indian Education Improvement Act
VIDEO: ‘Nothing about me, without me’
VIDEO: H.R.1101 – Lumbee Fairness Act
VIDEO: S.3857 – Jamul Indian Village Land Transfer Act
Native America Calling: A look at 2024 news from a Native perspective
AUDIO: ‘The Network Working Against the Lumbee Tribe’
VIDEO: ‘The Network Working Against the Lumbee Tribe’
Tribal homelands bill on agenda as 118th Congress comes to a close
Native America Calling: Solving school absenteeism
‘The time is now’: Lumbee Tribe sees movement on federal recognition bill
Cronkite News: Program expanded to cover traditional health care practices
NAFOA: 5 Things You Need to Know this Week
More Headlines