Interview: Tribal Council Mismanagement and Millions Missing
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http://www.hrw.org/news/2015/01/12/interview-tribal-council-mismanagement-and-millions-missing
JANUARY 12, 2015
On South Dakotas impoverished Lower Brule Sioux reservation, $1.2 million of US government funding dedicated to providing the tribe with drinking water has disappeared. Roughly $2.6 million in federal money earmarked for education and other social programs went missing after which the reservations school system performed so poorly it had to be overhauled.
Then there was the scandal involving the Tribal Governments purchase of a nearly insolvent Wall Street firm, a federally backed loan, and about $20 million that hasnt been accounted for. At the center of this financial chaos is the reservations Tribal Council, a group of six elected officials, some of whom have held their position for a decade or longer. Three are still in office, while three others lost their seats to reform candidates in September 2014.
For years now, the council has only released select information about its actions. Since 2007, it has refused to share any documentation about its spending with members of the tribe, including some members of the council itself, despite repeated requests. In 2007, tribe members began writing their senators and the Bureau of Indian Affairs requesting a formal investigation, to no avail. Two years ago, the Human Rights Watch business division director, Arvind Ganesan, began probing allegations of abuse on the reservation, helping unravel the tale of the councils shady dealings. He talks with Amy Braunschweiger about the new report, Secret and Unaccountable, and about how last falls elections have turned the tribe upside down.
What made you want to research this topic?
This came out of nowhere. I was researching predatory lending practices on US Indian reservations throughout South Dakota and elsewhere. While I was at the Crow Creek reservation, directly across the Missouri River from Lower Brule, a woman approached me, and began telling me about allegations of secrecy and mismanagement at Lower Brule, asking me to investigate. Later that day, I was in an office when another woman called, asked for me, told me that I needed to investigate what was happening in Lower Brule, then hung up. In general, when people approach you with allegations, you have to be skeptical. They could have political motivations or they could simply be unhappy. But I decided to go to the reservation and check it out to see why people were asking me to look into this.
FULL story at link.