Law enforcement agencies failed to notify the FBI about nearly
half of homicides of American Indians and Alaskan Natives committed from 1999
to 2017, according to a study by the nonprofit Murder Accountability Project
(MAP).
The study found Indian murders are the least likely of any
racial group to be reported to the federal Supplementary Homicide Report (SHR) which
is part of the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report, the nation’s official accounting for
major crimes. These records are valuable to local, state and federal
authorities for identifying and responding to challenges facing law
enforcement.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgApkF5NDejna_TRi5WNsQP99tcpdiwBMqrf2v_BU-u2MR8zKgK9Uj3dZU1QM0hkC6bQ-g5FmV349VsdLx6xC7lPb6KXB6wfswcaqlxikf-PotzR9akXPLREhhVoqsaEN82Wt4pgAmqCNDa/s320/IndianBarChart.jpg)
reported by medical authorities to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) and homicides reported by police to the Supplementary Homicide
Report.
MAP representatives met with U.S. Assistant Secretary for Indian
Affairs Tara Sweeney and other Interior Department leaders on February 4 to
discuss these reporting failures. MAP’s
study resulted from a request by Interior officials who also sought a briefing
on the findings. Interior officials declined to comment publicly on the
findings of this report.
Source link