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Accountability Looking at law enforcement alone

 Accountability Looking at law enforcement alone, then, deputization agreements ought to have an impact on the accountability of state/count...




 Accountability Looking at law enforcement alone, then, deputization agreements ought to have an impact on the accountability of state/county policing on reservations. They allow for tribally employed police officers to patrol reservations and enforce state criminal laws, which, according to our data, should lead to greater availability of law enforcement according with tribal priorities, more thorough investigations, and more culturally sensitive and respectful law enforcement (see Chapters 6 and 11). Furthermore, deputized tribal officers have clear authority to arrest non-Indians on reservations, a power that allows tribes to prioritize enforcing the law against such individuals. However, the accountability gains are limited by several factors.


 First, only state certified police officers can be deputized, which may make it difficult for some tribal officers who are tribal members to qualify, even though they have passed through federal law enforcement training. Second, the tribal officers are still enforcing state law, which means that community members who mistrust the state system may not cooperate in reporting crimes and participating in investigations. Third, the agreements establish liability standards that effectively require tribal officers acting as deputies to operate according to state standards. To that extent, they are precluded from following the directives of the tribal communities themselves. 


Deputization agreements could conceivably have an impact on the accountability of state/county police in PL 280 jurisdictions if terms of the agreements obligated county law enforcement to learn more about tribal communities and be more responsive to their concerns. However, deputization agreements rarely include provisions mandating cultural-awareness training or similar education for county police. They also do not include provisions for tribal involvement in police hiring or the review of complaints against individual officers. With respect to accountability, police services agreements take a different approach. They do not empower tribal police to enforce state law, but rather turn the county police who enforce that law into a tribally hired force. Because the tribe is paying for the service, it’s much more common to find provisions in such agreements allowing the tribe a role in hiring of officers and responding to complaints.


 Likewise, specific cultural training is often required of county deputies assigned to the reservation. However, the officers are still part of the county system, certified and promoted according to its standards rather than to tribal conceptions of proper policing. Lingering mistrust of county sheriff’s departments may impede the effectiveness of the officers 390 This document is a research report submitted to the U.S. Department of Justice. This report has not been published by the Department. Opinions or points of view expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the official position or policies of the U.S. Department of Justice. assigned to the reservation. Furthermore, as with deputization agreements, the fact that the officers are enforcing state law may hinder crime reporting and investigations. Finally, the fact that the tribe is not maintaining its own police force may diminish its symbolic sovereignty, which can adversely affect its control over policing and other aspects of tribal governance.

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