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Click Here to View Presenter
Biographies. |
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Wednesday, December 10,
2008 |
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9:00 ─ 4:30 pm |
Pre-Conference Institutes
(Separate registration required) |
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Sam English
(Turtle Mountain Ojibwe)
Conference Poster Artist |
Healing Through Art
This session, led by Turtle Mountain Chippewa artist Sam English, will
provide cultural communication opportunities and explore American Indian
expression at both Tribal and Urban levels about alcohol, drugs and
violence and overcoming the pain of victimization. Participants will
learn how to expose inner feelings without feeling afraid of criticism
through making art. This session will produce a group piece of art to be
displayed during the conference. |
Andreas |
Dianne Barker Harrold
Dave Rogers |
Team Building for Law
Enforcement and Advocates (Morning Session)
This workshop will provide skills to forge a cohesive team of law
enforcement and advocates. Discuss the importance of law enforcement and
advocates working closely together. Attendees will obtain skills in
collaboration, forming a team, dynamics of a team, how to prioritize
roles of the team, and resolving conflicts. |
Pueblo A |
Gayle Thom
Pam Moore |
Critical Incident and Team
Trauma Debriefing (Afternoon Session)
This workshop will provide information and skills to responders on mass
casualty, critical incident and traumatic events. Topics include school
shootings, natural disasters, multiple homicide victims or agency
related events. Discussions will focus on what happens during the event
and addresses how responders and service providers are affected and
follow up needed to address these issues. |
Pueblo A |
Hallie Bongar White
Kim Day |
Creating Indian Country
Sexual Assault Forensic Evidence Technicians
Training and utilizing Tribal community Sexual Assault Forensic Evidence
Technicians (SAFE-Ts) can help offset many of the problems arising from
the severe shortage of sexual assault nurse examiners (SANEs) in Indian
Country. Using traditional healthcare delivery systems, Tribal
communities can create their own SAFE-T programs to preserve important
forensic evidence for prosecution while improving the delivery of
healthcare and other services to Native victims. This presentation will
explore ways Tribal communities can develop this innovative program and
train community and traditional health care providers to improve
healthcare, justice, and safety for Native sexual assault and abuse
survivors.
PowerPoint
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Chino A |
Christine Stark
Noya Woodrich
Suzanne Tibbets Young
Sherry Sanchez Tibbetts
Sarah Curtiss
Nicole Matthews |
Trafficking of Native Women
and Children
This pre-conference institute will engage participants in a discussion
regarding prostitution and trafficking of Native women, including a
broad overview of prostitution and trafficking and establish it as a
form of violence against women. We will present data from a recent
report published in Minnesota regarding trafficking of Native women, and
we will also discuss how to effectively provide services to Native
prostituted women and children and developing a coordinated community
response to trafficking of Native women and girls. |
Chino B |
Leslie Hagen,
Senior Counsel,
SMART Office
Joshua J. Breedlove
M. Brent Leonhard |
Indian Country Sex Offender
Registration and Notification (Sponsored by
SMART Office)
Before passage of the Adam Walsh Act, federal law provided national
standards for state sex offender registration programs. However, it had
no similar provisions concerning sex offenders convicted in tribal
courts or those who enter tribal jurisdictions following a conviction
elsewhere. It was difficult for tribal authorities to receive
notification of sex offenders entering their jurisdictions, to track
those offenders, or to make information about those offenders available
to community members. This session will provide substantive information
on implementation of the Federal Sex Offender Registration and
Notification Act in Indian Country as it pertains to the 197 non-PL 280
tribes that elected to function as sex offender registration
jurisdictions under the federal law. (View
Agenda)
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Mojave |
4:00 ─ 9:00 pm |
On-Site Conference
Registration
Wyndham Hotel Lobby |
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7:00 ─ 9:00 pm |
Conference Reception - Spa
Hotel (Optional)
Sponsored by: Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians
Morongo Band of Mission Indians
Salt River Pima Maricopa Tribe (No federal funds utilized) |
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Cultural Performance
Bearspring Singers/Dancers (Youth) |
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Thursday, December 11, 2008 |
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7:00 ─ 9:00 am |
On-Site Conference
Registration
Wyndham Hotel Lobby |
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9:00 ─ Noon |
Opening Plenary Session |
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Emcee: Sarah Deer (Mvskoke)
Visiting Professor, William Mitchell College of Law
Consultant, Tribal Law and Policy Institute |
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Opening Invocation
Ernest Siva (Serrano/Cahuilla)
Bird Singer |
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Flag/Honor Song
The Boyz |
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Welcome
Moraino Patencio (Agua Caliente)
Secretary Treasurer, Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians |
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Opening Remarks
John W. Gillis
Director, Office for Victims of Crime
U.S. Department of Justice |
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Opening Keynote Address
The Role of Tribal Courts in Promoting Safety, Justice, and Healing – A
Tribal Justice Perspective
Stacy Leeds (Cherokee)
Professor of Law, University of Kansas |
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Short Video Excerpts
Pathway to Hope: Healing Child Sexual Abuse
Listen to the Grandmothers: Incorporating Tradition into Contemporary
Responses to Violence Against Native Women |
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Cultural Ceremony
Honoring Ceremony for Victims/Survivors of Violence
Jim Clairmont (Sicangu Lakota)
Spiritual Leader |
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Noon ─ 1:30 pm |
LUNCH (on your own) |
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1:30 ─ 3:00 pm |
Workshops A |
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Pamela Romrell
Sandy Carlsgaard
Jeanne Thomas |
"Empowering the Child
Victim" Your MDT Can Make it Happen (Sponsored by
Federal Bureau of Investigation)
This workshop will focus on developing community partnerships that
ensure effective and productive service outcomes for child abuse
victims. Participants will be familiarized with the Multi-Disciplinary
Team (MDT) as a means to understanding the child's victimization and to
fostering communication and respectful cooperation among service
providers.
PowerPoint
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A1
Santa Rosa |
Cathy Baldwin-Johnson
Margaret Volz |
The Medical Evaluation for
Drug and Alcohol Endangered Children
This workshop will review what is currently known about the health
effects of drug and alcohol exposure on children, and recommendations
for medical evaluation and testing in these situations.
PowerPoint,
FASPowerPoint
|
A2
San Jacinto |
Patricia McGeshick
Coleen Clark |
A Horse Called Midnight
Promotes Safety, Justice and Healing
Midnight was the disciplinarian to promote good values and acceptable
standards of behavior. Midnight teaches effective response to victims
through collaboration to promote safety and healing by focusing on
justice, accountability, resources, and cultural practice. |
A3
Andreas |
Joan Eliel
Winona Tanner
Angela Russell |
Tribes and State -
Partnering For Justice (Sponsored by
Montana Department of Justice)
Presenters share their experience building a respectful collaboration
between two Montana Tribes and the State of Montana in combating
domestic violence. Successful collaborations include: Uniform Coversheet
for Orders of Protection; local and national training/education
opportunities; integration of technology and communication between state
and tribal entities; and standardized business practices. |
A4
Chino |
Tracy Mullins
Dave Rogers |
Promoting Justice, Safety
and Healing through Community Supervision of Tribal Offenders
(Sponsored by Bureau of Justice
Assistance)
Recognizing the resiliency of the healing success of tribal communities,
this workshop will discuss how community supervision of tribal offenders
has become a desirable alternative to monitor and enforce interventions
designed to address offenders’ substance abuse issues, help change
offenders’ behavior, promote restoration and healing, and protect victim
and public safety. |
A5
Pueblo |
Leslie Hagen |
Indian Country Sex Offender
Registration and Notification (Sponsored by
SMART Office)
Before passage of the Adam Walsh Act, federal law provided national
standards for state sex offender registration programs. However, it had
no similar provisions concerning sex offenders convicted in tribal
courts or those who enter tribal jurisdictions following a conviction
elsewhere. It was difficult for tribal authorities to receive
notification of sex offenders entering their jurisdictions, to track
those offenders, or to make information about those offenders available
to community members. This session will provide substantive information
on implementation of the Federal Sex Offender Registration and
Notification Act in Indian Country as it pertains to the 197 non-PL 280
tribes that elected to function as sex offender registration
jurisdictions under the federal law. |
A6
Mojave |
Jim White
Montie Deer |
Providing Safety and
Justice for Native Victims of Non-Indian Perpetrators: Creative Tribal
Court Civil Remedies
Lack of criminal jurisdiction over non-Indians often results in no
punishment or consequences for perpetrators of violent crime in Indian
Country. However, Tribes have expansive civil jurisdiction over
non-Indians and can employ innovative civil legal strategies to address
safety and security for their citizens, residents, and visitors. This
presentation explores ways in which Tribes can work within current
jurisdictional limitations to impose significant, meaningful, and
effective consequences for non-Indian offenders in Indian Country. Ways
that Tribes can incorporate customary and traditional consequences into
civil orders against non-Indians will also be discussed.
PowerPoint
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A7
Catalina |
Kathleen Sanchez
Corrine Sanchez |
Use of Culture and
Tradition for Healing Abused Relations: An Overview of Tewa Women United
Program
In this “life journeying” workshop, we will share how our program
operates and as parts are contrasted, a symbolic butterfly emerges. We
will learn about fluidity and flexibility of realistic use of
traditional ways in our spheres of changing battered women’s lives. |
A8
Pasadena |
Roe Bubar |
Interviewing Young Children
in Child Sexual Abuse Cases in Indian Country
This workshop will cover a variety of developmental considerations when
conducting forensic interviews of young children in child sexual abuse
investigations. |
A9
Sierra |
Dianne Barker Harrold
Rose Mary Shaw
Pam Moore |
Promoting Your Program with
an Eye on Sustainability
For rural, underserved or tribal programs to survive they must provide
community education to garner support. This workshop will provide low
cost and practical ways for attendees to get the message out, and
helpful hints to involve tribal leaders and governing boards to
strengthen community support and long-term sustainability after grant
funds end. |
A10
Ventura |
3:00 ─ 3:30 pm |
BREAK (Sponsored by
Morongo Band of Mission Indians) |
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3:30 ─ 5:00 pm |
Workshops B |
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Kimber Evensen
Jim Miller |
Is it Harder for Boys to
Tell? Understanding Male Sexual Abuse Survivors
This workshop will focus on understanding the differences in etiology,
social and emotional dynamics, and healing paradigms of male sexual
abuse survivors. |
B1
Santa Rosa |
Cathy Baldwin-Johnson
Margaret Volz |
Bruises, Burns and Broken
Bones: Accident or Abuse?
This case-based workshop will discuss key elements for evaluating
injuries in children, including the history, medical and developmental
factors, and exam findings so that abusive injuries can be accurately
identified.
PowerPoint |
B2
San Jacinto |
Sarah Henry
Christina Marie Entrekin |
Full Faith and Credit for
Protection Orders
This workshop will provide information on the Violence Against Women
Act’s full faith and credit provision and different protection orders.
Discussion will focus on issuance and enforcement of protection orders
and recent changes in the law. Challenges and best practices in the
protection order process will also be covered.
PowerPoint
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B3
Andreas |
Hallie Bongar White |
Testifying as an Expert
Witness in Tribal, State, and Federal Courts
This presentation will demonstrate how victim advocates, law
enforcement, and other professionals working with Native victims of
crime may already possess the experience, training, and expertise
necessary to qualify as an expert witness in Tribal, State, and Federal
Courts. This interactive presentation will discuss development of an
expert witness c.v. or resume, confidentiality, and effective courtroom
testimony. Expert witness testimony can and does increase justice for
victims.
PowerPoint
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B4
Chino |
Rebecca St. George
Sterling Harris
John Beyer
Sarah Curtiss |
Duluth's Safety and
Accountability Audit of Sexual Violence
A Safety Audit is tool developed by Praxis International and used by
interdisciplinary groups and advocacy organizations to further their
common goals of enhancing safety and ensuring accountability when
intervening in cases domestic and/or sexual violence. Mending the Sacred
Hoop and the Program for Aid to Victims of Sexual Assault (PAVSA) out of
Duluth, MN, recently completed an audit of the criminal justice response
to Native women in and around Duluth who report rape to the police. In
this workshop, we will more fully explain how a safety and
accountability audit works, and walk you through the journey that we
took in Duluth.
PowerPoint,
HandOuts
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B5
Pueblo |
Christopher B. Chaney
Roi Holt
Diane Humetewa |
Closing the Gap in Indian
Country: Criminal Jurisdiction and its Impact on Victim Services
(Sponsored by Office of Tribal
Justice and
Bureau of Indian Affairs)
Presenters will discuss the complex framework of criminal jurisdiction
in Indian Country and how it affects the provision of services to crime
victims. Topics of discussion will include: the Major Crimes Act, the
Indian Country General Crimes Act, the Indian Civil Rights Act, and the
Violence Against Women Act.
HandOuts
|
B6
Mojave |
Carole Goldberg
Duane Champagne |
Strategies for
Administering Indian Country Criminal Justice: Some National Comparative
Data (Sponsored by National
Institute of Justice)
We are conducting a national comparative study of different models for
administering policing, criminal courts, and detention in Indian
country. Our premise is that which government controls different
elements of criminal justice will affect outcomes related to community
safety and satisfaction. This workshop will present preliminary findings
from that research.
PowerPoint
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B7
Catalina |
Bonnie Clairmont
Jim Clairmont |
Listen to Our Grandmothers:
Utilizing Cultural Traditions in Our Response to Violence Against Indian
Women
In this workshop, presenters will discuss some of the ways in which
cultural traditions can be used to address violence against women in
tribal communities. Both presenters will present their perspectives and
invite participants to share lessons they obtained from their
grandmothers and how those lessons and other cultural traditions can be
useful in forming our response to violence against Indian women.
Workshop participants will have the opportunity to view a newly released
video produced by the Tribal Law and Policy Institute, “Listen to Our
Grandmothers.”
PowerPoint
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B8
Pasadena |
Teresa Foster
Leslie Hagen |
Prosecuting Sex Crimes
Against Adults and Children: Strategies for Successful Outcomes
Most tribal communities face an array of challenges in the investigation
and prosecution of sex crimes against children and adults. Whether
prosecution is handled by the state or federal system, there are
specific strategies that increase success in prosecuting these crimes.
In this workshop we will examine several case studies to address the
challenges for successful prosecution of both adult and child sex
offenses, as well as strategies to meet them.
PowerPoint
|
B9
Sierra |
Renee Williams
Melissa Riley |
Collaboration, Coordination
and Outreach: Increasing Compensation and Assistance in Native
Communities
The goal of the workshop is to provide participants an understanding of
the Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) Compensation and Assistance program;
provide tools for completing compensation applications and information
on establishing assistance programs in tribal communities. Participants
of this workshop are encouraged to bring questions and provide
recommendations that will be instrumental to increasing services to
crime victims in tribal communities.
PowerPoint
|
B10
Ventura |
5:00 ─ 7:00 pm |
Wiping of Tears Ceremony
(optional)
Jim Clairmont (Sicangu Lakota)
Spiritual Leader |
Santa Rosa |
7:00 ─ 9:00 pm |
Conference Banquet
California Grand Ballroom |
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Emcee: Ada Pecos Melton
(Jemez Pueblo)
President, American Indian Development Associates |
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Cultural Performance
Oshkii Giizhik Singers
Lyz Jaakola (Anishinaabe/Finnish) |
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Native Youth Essay Award
Contest Winner |
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Victim Advocacy Award
(Including Bonnie Heavy Runner Award) |
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Cultural Performance
Arizona/California Territorial Birdsingers |
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Keynote Speaker
Diane J. Humetewa (Hopi)
United States Attorney for the District of Arizona |
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Cultural Performance
Joanne Shenandoah (Oneida Nation)
Grammy Award Winning
Singer/Performer/Composer/Actress/Lecturer |
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Friday December 12, 2008 |
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8:30 ─ 10:00 am |
Workshops C |
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Kimber Evensen |
Child of Water, Child of
Stone: The Obvious and Subtle Impacts of Sexual Abuse on Developing
Children
This workshop will provide the participant with an intermediate level of
understanding of the dynamics of sexual abuse, how a child victim
responds to abuse, why some children seem to react more intensely than
others, and how other important adults in the child's life can
positively or negatively impact the child's ability to heal.
PowerPoint
|
C1
Santa Rosa |
Linda Logan
Lisa Thompson |
Native Child Advocacy
Centers: A Close Look at Success Programs (Sponsored by
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention)
This workshop features the successes, creativity and challenges that
Native American child advocacy centers experience. Learn how child
advocacy centers (CACs) are fundamentally changing the process for
investigating cases of child sexual abuse. |
C2
San Jacinto |
Sarah Curtiss
Rebecca St. George |
Homelessness and Violence
Against Native Women: Community Partnerships
This workshop looks at addressing the housing needs of battered Native
women beyond immediate shelter. There is an undeniable link between
homelessness and violence against Native women, but most programs focus
on one or the other.
PowerPoint
|
C3
Andreas |
Art Martinez |
Trauma Survivorship and the
Cycle of Violence
The workshop will outline issues of treatment and risk reduction in the
treatment of abuse reactive adults and minors. Particular attention will
be placed on the special reactive issues of men and women adult
survivors as distinct treatment populations of the community. The
implications of treatment will be the focus of the workshop in reviewing
the protective and resiliency treatment services that involve the
confluence of culture and healing.
PowerPoint
|
C4
Chino |
Pauline Lucero-Esquivel
Dick Lefevre |
Forensic Interviewing of
Adults and Children with Disabilities (Sponsored by
Administration on
Developmental Disabilities in the Administration on Children and
Families)
Victims with disabilities can be accurate reporters and viable
witnesses. It requires interviewers to use a special skill set that
allows them to tell their story to the best of their abilities. Content
in this workshop includes pre-interview considerations, learning about
the most common disabilities and how to adapt the standard interviewing
protocol for clients with special needs.
PowerPoint,
PowerPoint
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C5
Pueblo |
Richard VanBoxtel
Andrea LeStarge |
Wisconsin Tribal
Initiatives to Address Drug Endangered Children
Wisconsin state agencies and tribes have begun to work together to
address drug endangered children from tribes in Wisconsin and this
session will discuss the steps that the state and tribes have taken thus
far, the highlights of the first tribal-state conference and join
activities that have been shared, and any formal agreements and
protocols that are in place or underway as a result of this partnership. |
C6
Mojave |
Joe LaPorte |
Utilizing Information
Sharing to Improve Public Safety in Indian Country (Sponsored by
Office of Tribal Justice)
Presenter will discuss the concept of information sharing and how it can
be used to improve law enforcement in Indian Country. The presenter will
discuss both the "hardware" side of improving communications systems and
institutional "culture" changes that may be needed to improve chances
for successful implementation. |
C7
Catalina |
Renee L. Fasthorse-Iron Hawk |
The Way of Healing from
Multi-Generational Trauma
This presentation will share about multi-generational trauma and grief:
the definition, the causes, the symptoms, the behaviors, and the healing
approaches that can include restorative measures. This presentation will
give a holistic approach to addressing this way of living within native
American communities.
PowerPoint
|
C8
Pasadena |
Roe Bubar |
Native Youth and Sexual
Health: Implications for Sexual Assault Risks
This workshop will present original 2008 data from a qualitative study
on Native Youth accessing media for information on sexual health and the
resultant implications for sexual assault uncovered in this study. |
C9
Sierra |
Mary Jo Speaker
Dianne Barker Harrold |
After the Homicide: Meeting
the Needs of Victims and Survivors
This workshop is designed for all levels of advocacy. The needs of
survivors and families of homicide victims are numerous and diverse. How
advocates meet those needs and how tradition and culture can be used to
support them will be discussed. |
C10
Ventura |
10:00 ─ 10:30
pm |
BREAK (Sponsored by
Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian
Community) |
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10:30 ─ Noon |
Workshops D |
|
Kimber Evensen |
The Difficult Connection:
Understanding How Abuse Impacts a Child's Ability to Develop Healthy
Attachments
This workshop will inform participants about attachment disturbances
between parents and children, and how to address these in a way that can
promote healing and improved relationships.
PowerPoint
|
D1
Santa Rosa |
Arlana Bettelyoun
Chad (Miner) Rattigan |
Wakanyeja na woope
(Children's Advocacy and Laws)
Presenter and co-presenter will showcase the impact of advocating for
Indian children who, at no fault of their own, find themselves in the
court system. Also, we will share the experience and benefit of a
children's code that is customized for traditional, natural law. |
D2
San Jacinto |
Darlene Marie Wilcox
Susan LeClaire |
Healing Strength for
Survivors
Healing Strength for Survivors is a presentation on different types of
healing and help that a victim/client/patient can receive to get well.
The presenters will talk about Lakota ceremonies and different types of
western medicine and resources that are available to help victims of
abuse. |
D3
Andreas |
Lisa Thompson
Eva Fallis |
Peers Helping Peers
Wiconi Wawokiya, Inc. was instrumental in developing the Peers Helping
Peers program in conjunction with other agencies. Peers Helping Peers
focuses on teens in the community who are interested in helping their
peers with issues of dating violence, family violence, sexual assault,
child abuse, and substance abuse issues. This presentation will show how
agencies work together to provide services, education and intervention
to teenagers. Participants will learn how to work with teens and provide
services. |
D4
Chino |
Montie Deer |
The Role of the Tribal
Judiciary in Responding to Victims of Crime
Judge Montie Deer will engage participants in a discussion about the
role of tribal judges in responding to crime victimization. While judges
must remain objective and unbiased throughout the course of a criminal
case, there can be special considerations when a victim of trauma must
participate in the trial process, such as safety, privacy, and
compassion. Judge Deer will also cover how court rules can be crafted in
a way that protects all people from further victimization. |
D5
Pueblo |
Ed Reina
Dave Raasch
Joe LaPorte
Milton Bianas |
Law Enforcement and How We
Can Improve Victim Safety and Services
This workshop is designed to assist the participants in identifying how
law enforcement responses and practices to crime can be improved or
modified to enhance victim safety and services. This workshop will: 1)
expand participants understanding of how the jurisdictional restrictions
affect law enforcement handling victims of domestic violence and the
innovative solutions used to overcome the barriers; 2) expand
participants understanding of how law enforcement's response to victims
of crime impacts victim safety and offender accountability; 3) improve
the participant’s skills for prioritizing and recognizing training needs
to improve law enforcements capacity to respond to victims of crime; 4)
improve the participants understanding of how interdisciplinary
coordination and cooperation improves their ability to respond to crime. |
D6
Mojave |
Leslie Hagen |
Federal Prosecution of
Indian Country Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Cases (Sponsored
by SMART Office)
The federal government prosecutes crimes of domestic violence and sexual
assault occurring in Indian Country. This presentation will cover
applicable federal offenses, to include the General Crimes Act, the
Major Crimes Act, and crimes created by the Violence Against Women Act.
Investigation of these offenses and the Federal Rules of Evidence will
also be covered. |
D7
Catalina |
Pat Sekaquaptewa
Maureen White Eagle
Diane Payne |
Tribal Legal Code
Resources: Children's Codes, Domestic Violence Codes, and Sexual Assault
Codes
This workshop will provide an overview of the Tribal Code Resource
Guides that have been developed by the Tribal Law and Policy Institute,
including the Resource Guide to Revising or Developing Tribal Criminal
Codes Addressing Crimes Against Children, the Civil Child Abuse Code
Resource Guide, the Domestic Violence Code Resource Guide, and the
Sexual Assault Code Resource Guide. The resource guides are developed to
provide a community-based process for identifying the components of
tribal codes while incorporating custom and tradition into tribal law
and practice. These guides are designed for use by non-attorneys.
PowerPoint
|
D8
Pasadena |
Michelle Garcia |
Stalking and Sexual Assault
(Sponsored by Office on Violence
Against Women)
Research indicates that there is a connection between stalking and
sexual assault – both pre- and post-assault. This workshop will explore
the nature of stalking, including the intersection of stalking and
sexual assault. We will also discuss ways in which this information
should impact our responses to and services for victims.
PowerPoint
|
D9
Sierra |
Renee Williams
Melissa E. Riley |
Counseling and Faith-Based
Services: Collaboration, Communication, and Implementation of Services
for Crime Victims in Indian Country
Unified Solutions Tribal Community Development Group, Inc. (USTCDGI) in
coordination with the Office for Victims of Crime, is pleased to
announce and showcase a Best Practices Video in response to the
"Counseling and Faith-Based Services for Crime Victims in Indian
Country" Grant Program. The "Best Practices" Video is a representation
of the first-ever federally funded project supporting faith-based
counseling for crime victims in Indian Country. The grantee program
managers will also speak about their vision of including faith services
within victim services, why it is important for Indian people, what
their goals have been, how they have succeeded, and how they overcame
obstacles. |
D10
Ventura |
Noon ─ 1:30 pm |
Working Luncheon
Calabrese Terrace |
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Emcee: Elton Naswood (Navajo)
Coordinator, Red Circle Project at AIDS Project LA (APLA)
Consultant, Tribal Law and Policy Institute |
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Cultural Performance
Taliah Begay (Navajo)
Drummer |
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Luncheon Keynote
Honor Victims and their Helpers through Laughter
James Junes (Navajo) and Ernest Tsosie III (Navajo) |
|
1:30 ─ 3:00 pm |
Workshops E |
|
Cathy Baldwin-Johnson
Margaret Volz |
Myths and Realities About
Child Sexual Abuse
This workshop will discuss common myths about child sexual abuse
including how children tell, what the exam will and won't show, and
issues around forensic evidence collection in children. Case
presentations and photographs will be used to demonstrate key
principles.
PowerPoint
|
E1
Santa Rosa |
Diane Payne |
Pathway to Hope: Healing
Child Sexual Abuse
In this session, we will discuss the challenges Tribal communities have
faced in ending silence about child sexual abuse. We will share the
knowledge and discuss strengths we have that help us to begin open
dialog about protecting children from sexual abuse and setting community
standards that promote safety for children and hold offenders
accountable. Participants will have an opportunity to view the video
produced by the Tribal Law and Policy Institute "Pathway to Hope:
Healing Child Sexual Abuse." |
E2
San Jacinto |
Lisa Thompson
Tatum Joseph |
The Purple Shawl
The purple shawl is a 15 minute skit about teen dating violence and a
power point presentation on how to work with teens in your community.
PowerPoint
|
E3
Andreas |
Kathleen Lacey
Jolene Bronkhurst |
Trafficking of Native Women
and Children: The Investigator's Perspective
This session will provide a glimpse of the shocking real world of the
enticement and prostitution of Native women and children through the
experience of law enforcement investigators in Alaska that have recently
completed a multi-year investigation that revealed a large number of
victims. We share some startling statistics and will talk about the
recruitment and grooming of victims, especially juvenile runaways and
other strategies used by perpetrators to entice victims. We will talk
about the factors that make victims vulnerable to this crime as well as
provide information that will help law enforcement develop necessary
evidence in this crime. We will discuss the essential relationship
between law enforcement officers and victim advocates and share tips for
members of the families and communities of these victims. |
E4
Chino |
Doug George-Kanentiio
Joanne Shenandoah |
The Akwesasne Justice Code:
How Traditional Laws May Work in the 21st Century
The Akwesasne Justice Code was drafted by the Mohawk Nation in response
to the need to make traditional laws applicable in the 21st century and
beyond. It responds to instances of human conflict using ancestral
resolution techniques rooted in the Iroquois' Great Law of Peace. |
E5
Pueblo |
Christine Crossland
Winnie Reed
Jaclyn Smith
Angela Moore |
The National Institute of
Justice's (NIJ) Research and Evaluation Program Development on American
Indian and Alaska Native Crime and Justice Issues (Sponsored by
National Institute of Justice)
This workshop will discuss NIJ's crime and justice research agenda
informed by focus groups with tribal leaders, representatives and other
stakeholders. The discussion will also explore guiding principles for
conducting research with tribal communities to help ensure culturally
appropriate methods and results.
HandOuts
|
E6
Mojave |
Michelle Garcia |
Teens and Stalking
(Sponsored by Office on Violence
Against Women)
This session will address issues unique to stalking among teens,
including recent research on the use of technology in stalking and
harassment against teens. Particular attention will be paid to the use
of online social networking sites, such as MySpace and Facebook, and how
they are impacting stalking among teens. We will also discuss other ways
dating violence and stalking are affecting teens in our country and
explore the social normalization of stalking among youth.
PowerPoint,
OnlineSafety,
SocialMedia
|
E7
Catalina |
Anna Rogers-Stott
Lori Jump |
Use of Traditional Crafts
in the Healing Process for Victims of Crime
Individuals participating in this workshop will learn how to use
traditional crafts when working with victims in the healing process.
Individuals will be given the opportunity to learn how to make a
traditional craft and the cultural teachings of that craft. Participants
will also gain an understanding of the relevance of a traditional
give-away and the opportunity to partake in one. This workshop is
limited to 20 individuals. |
E8
Pasadena |
Renee Williams |
CJA 101: Understanding and
Applying for the FY 2009 Children’s Justice Act Grant Program
The Children’s Justice and Assistance Act of 1986 was passed to provide
states funding to establish programs to effectively handle child abuse
cases. In 1988, the Anti-Drug Abuse Act amended the Victims of Crime Act
of 1984, authorizing the use of a portion of the state CJA funds to help
tribal communities develop and establish programs to improve the
investigation and prosecution of child abuse, sexual abuse and physical
abuse cases, while lessening the trauma to child victims. To date,
tribal programs have made a number of systemic improvements in the
handling of child abuse cases. |
E9
Sierra |
Natalia Tseteesia
Frank Goes Behind Yitiatelwat
Kym Goes Behind |
Compassion Fatigue: Using
Traditional and Cultural Methods to Heal
This workshop concentrates on providing skills for trauma workers on
controlling compassion fatigue. This is an interactive workshop where
participants will share knowledge and experience using Native methods
for maintaining health, such as storytelling and laughter. We will make
a dream catcher to keep balance and harmony and we will learn how to
utilize working with women and teen in healing groups. |
E10
Ventura |
3:00 ─ 3:30 pm |
BREAK (Sponsored by
Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian
Community) |
|
3:30 ─ 5:00 pm |
Workshops F |
|
Cathy
Baldwin-Johnson
Margaret Volz |
The Medical Evaluation for
Child Sexual Abuse
This is an advanced workshop for medical providers on techniques for
child sexual abuse exams, differentiating between normal, abnormal and
indeterminate findings, forensic evidence gathering, and sexually
transmitted infection testing and treatment. |
F1
Santa Rosa |
Roe Bubar |
Forensic Supervision in
Child Sexual Abuse Interviews in Indian Country
This workshop will highlight effective strategies for providing
professional supervision in forensic interviews in child sexual abuse
investigations. |
F2
San Jacinto |
Ada Pecos Melton
Nikki Finkbonner |
NIJ’s Tribal Victim
Assistance Evaluation Findings (Sponsored by
National Institute of Justice)
This session will cover evaluation methods and findings of a NIJ funded
evaluation of two OVC Tribal Victims Assistance programs at the Lummi
Nation, WA and Passamaquoddy Tribe, ME. The presentation includes
perspectives from indigenous researchers assisting with onsite data
collection. |
F3
Andreas |
Nancy Bordeaux
Sandra White Hawk |
Valuing Women and Mother
Earth
In this workshop, we will discuss how to honor and let no harm come to
Mother Earth as we would honor and let no harm come to our Mothers. We
will learn how the natural healing environment of Mother Earth is
essential to our well-being. We will create an awareness of the parallel
between violence against women and violence against mother earth. |
F4
Chino |
Diane Payne |
Beginning the Journey to
Healing from Child Sexual Abuse: A Community Based Approach
During this workshop we will share the phenomenal process that occurred
in 2007-2008 when the first statewide summit of Alaska Native people was
held to end silence and begin healing from child sexual abuse. We will
share stories and lessons learned with the hope of encouraging others to
begin this journey. |
F5
Pueblo |
Noya Woodrich
Suzanne Tibbetts Young |
Phoenix Project: Working
with Trafficked and Prostituted American Indian Girls
The Phoenix Project is a collaborative effort between the Division of
Indian Work, Minnesota Indian Women's Resource Center and the
Minneapolis Police Department. This innovative project is designed to
work with young American Indian girls as they are first being coerced
into prostitution. The goal of the program is to divert them out of
prostitution. |
F6
Mojave |
Bonnie Clairmont
Jim Clairmont |
Listen to Our Grandmothers:
Utilizing Cultural Traditions in Our Response to Violence Against Indian
Women
In this workshop, presenters will discuss some of the ways in which
cultural traditions can be used to address violence against women in
tribal communities. Both presenters will present their perspectives and
invite participants to share lessons they obtained from their
grandmothers and how those lessons and other cultural traditions can be
useful in forming our response to violence against Indian women.
Workshop participants will have the opportunity to view a newly released
video produced by the Tribal Law and Policy Institute, “Listen to Our
Grandmothers.”
PowerPoint
|
F7
Catalina |
Philmer Bluehouse |
Healing for Victims Using
Natural Laws and Traditional Strategies
The Dinĕh of the Southwestern United States have a series of Ceremonial
Narratives, Songs, Chants, Rituals, Ritual Object Preparation and Use to
express the fundamental traditional and cultural information related to
victimization and victims. Much of what is taught about this issue is a
process of healing from the abuse/injury. It is a justice system which
is healing and not punitive in its application. |
F8
Pasadena |
Nicole Matthews
Cristine Davidson
Guadalupe Lopez |
Creating Safety and
Resilience with Youth Through the Teachings of our Grandmothers
The Minnesota Indian Women's Sexual Assault Coalition shares examples of
creating safety and resilience with youth by engaging the teachings of
our grandmothers to strengthen Native identity. While encouraging youth,
adults, and elders to work together during traditional seasonal
activities, we gently engage in dialogue about self-respect, setting
boundaries, and recognizing what sexual violence is.
PowerPoint
|
F9
Sierra |
Sheri Frederick
Betty Davis |
Officer Involved Domestic
Violence
In this presentation Officer Frederick will share with you the details
of her brutal assault by her husband, an officer with the BIA, the lack
of services provided to an officer when they become the victim and how
dealing with an officer as a victim can be a unique situation for
advocates, prosecution, and the responding officers.
HandOut
|
F10
Ventura |
8:00 ─ 9:30 pm |
Special Cultural
Performance ─ Wyndham Hotel
Fully funded by the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians (No federal
funds utilized)
Joanne Shenandoah (Oneida Nation)
Grammy Award Winning
Singer/Performer/Composer/Actress/Lecturer |
|
Saturday, December 13, 2008 |
|
8:00 ─ 11:30 am |
Closing Plenary Session
California Ballroom |
|
|
Emcee: Sarah Deer (Mvskoke)
Visiting Professor, William Mitchell School of Law
Consultant, Tribal Law and Policy Institute |
|
|
Working Breakfast
Presentation
Coordinated Approaches for Child Victims
Thomas F. Sullivan, Region 8 Administrator
Administration on Children and Families (ACF)
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) |
|
|
Cultural Performance
Red Nation Drum Group |
|
|
Panel Presentation
Victims’ Rights in Tribal, Federal, and State Court Systems
PowerPoint
|
|
|
Bonnie Clairmont (Ho-Chunk),
Moderator
Victim Advocacy Program Specialist
Tribal Law and Policy Institute |
|
|
BJ Jones
Chief Judge, Sisseton-Wahpeton Tribal Curt
University of North Dakota, Tribal Judicial Institute |
|
|
Joe LaPorte (Little River
Band of Ottawa Indians)
Director of Public Safety,
Little River Band of Ottawa Indians |
|
|
Leslie Hagen
Senior Counsel
Office of Sex Offender Sentencing, Monitoring, Apprehending,
Registering, and Tracking (SMART Office) |
|
|
Abby Abinanti (Yurok)
California State Court Judge
Chief Judge, Yurok Tribal Court |
|
|
Diane Barker Harrold (Cherokee)
Program Manager
Unified Solutions Tribal Community Development Group, Inc. |
|
|
Keynote Speaker
Traditional Teachings about Justice
Lonna Stevens (Tlingit)
Director, Sheila Wellstone Institute |
|
|
Closing Remarks
John W. Gillis
Director, Office for Victims of Crime
U.S. Department of Justice |
|
|
Closing Invocation
Jim Clairmont (Sicangu Lakota)
Spiritual Leader |
|
View agendas from the
Eighth (2002),
Ninth (2004),
and
Tenth (2006)
National Indian Nations Conference. |
|