The president of the Oglala Sioux Tribe has walked back claims he made in a memo and press release earlier this week that immigration enforcement arrested four tribal members and that the federal government tried to extract an ‘’immigration agreement’’ out of the tribe in return for information about their members’ whereabouts.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said it can’t verify claims that any of their officers arrested or ‘’even encountered’’ members of the Oglala Sioux Tribe or found anyone in their detention centers claiming to be a tribal member. They denied asking the tribe for any kind of agreement.
Tribal President Frank Star Comes Out has not responded to repeated requests for comment, including after his updated memo was released on Thursday.
The accusations of arrests came at a time when many Native Americans are already concerned over the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement agenda and racial profiling by federal agents ensnaring them as well, and as some tribes have grappled with whether to engage in agreements with DHS tied to the crackdown.
Star Comes Out said Tuesday in a message on Facebook that the men were arrested in Minneapolis, where Immigration and Customs Enforcement has launched its biggest operation ever and is increasingly clashing with protesters and residents angry at the agency’s tactics.
Star Comes Out also said that when the tribe reached out about the arrests, ‘’federal officials told us that the Tribe could access that information if we entered an immigration agreement with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.’’
But in the memo Thursday, Star Comes Out said his earlier statement had been ‘’misinterpreted’’ and that there was no such demand from federal officials. He said the tribe had been in ‘’cooperative communications’’ with federal officials about the issue and that federal officials had said that ‘’one option for the Tribe to have easier access to information is to enter into an immigration agreement’’ with Immigration and Customs Enforcement and DHS. He did not specify what type of agreement.
He also said the tribe was ‘’working with Tribal, State, and Federal officials to verify’’ reports that tribal members living in Minneapolis were arrested by ICE. Earlier in the week he said he had been ‘’made aware that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detained four Oglala Sioux tribal members in Minneapolis’’ and that the tribe had their first names. He called the arrests ‘’a treaty violation.’’