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MMIW Cold Case Office Opens In Billings

A poster with the missing notice for Selena Not Afraid blows in the wind on a blue road sign for Interstate 90.
Olivia Reingold
/
Yellowstone Public Radio
A poster with the missing notice for Selena Not Afraid blows in the wind on a blue road sign for Interstate 90.

A federal office to investigate cold cases of missing and murdered Indigenous people opened in Billings on Aug. 6.

The office is part of the Trump Administration’s Operation Lady Justice Task Force.

Montana is one of seven states to get a Cold Case Task Force office aimed at solving the high number of cases involving missing and murdered Native American people. It’s the latest step in slow moving systemic change spurred by grassroots efforts in communities with significant Native American populations, like Billings.

Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples advocate Charlene Sleeper, who’s Southern Cheyenne, Arapaho and Crow, says she’s thankful the office is available.

“I’m hoping in the long term that it achieves some sort of healing for the families that have cold cases and that it facilitates community healing because we suffer from the grief at a level that we all feel it in within our tribes," Sleeper said.

She says she’d like to see the office connect with Native American communities to ensure open communication and sensitivity to the tribes’ cultural differences.

ACLU Indigenous Justice Organizer Angeline Cheek, who’s Dakota-Lakota of the Fort Peck Assiniboine & Sioux Tribes of Montana, says it’s important that the Cold Case Task Force office make local connections.

“I hope that they’re able to solve a lot of cases, but again there are community leaders who have been doing this for a long time and they need to be recognized and they need them to ask them to help," Cheek said.

According to Bureau of Indian Affairs spokesperson David Conrad, two BIA special agents will be assigned to the Billings office. He says they’ll coordinate with state, local and tribal law enforcement agencies as needed to cover cases in the Rocky Mountain region.

The office is part of the multi-agency initiative President Donald Trump established by executive order last year. The other states chosen for office locations are Alaska, Arizona, Minnesota, New Mexico, South Dakota and Tennessee.

Kayla writes about energy policy, the oil and gas industry and new electricity developments.