Red Lake elects new tribal leader

Longtime chairman Floyd Jourdain Jr., who led the Chippewa band at the time of the 2005 school shootings, is being replaced by Darrell Seki.

May 17, 2014 at 9:56PM
Photo by Richard Sennott, Star Tribune: Red Lake, Minnesota--April 2, 2007-- Red Lake Tribal Chairman Floyd Jourdain Jr., at right, speaks at a press conference Monday morning about the discovery over the weekend of the bodies of Tristan White, 4, and Avery Lee Stately, 2. They were found near a beaver lodge on Thunder First Lake about one-fourth mile from the boys home. (Red Lake Tribal Administrator Lea Perkins is at left.)
Jourdain (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

The Red Lake Band of Chippewa Indians will soon have a new leader.

Members of the northern Minnesota band last week elected Darrell G. Seki as tribal chairman, replacing chairman Floyd "Buck" Jourdain Jr., who held the post since 2004.

Seki, who now serves as tribal council treasurer, will take the post in June.

Jourdain, now 49, was the youngest person to be elected to the post when he took office a decade ago. He served as chairman when, in the spring of 2005, the reservation was thrust into the national spotlight because of a school shooting. Jeff Weise, 16, killed his grandfather and grandfather's girlfriend at their home, then drove to the school and opened fire, killing seven others before taking his own life. Jourdain's 16-year-old son was arrested in connection with the shootings and pleaded guilty in federal court to making a threatening communication.

Seki, 67, has an associate degree in junior accounting and is a Vietnam veteran. He has worked for the Red Lake Nation for more than 40 years, including as executive administrator.

Seki said in a telephone interview that when he campaigned, members told him they wanted more jobs.

"The first thing I'd like to do is a feasibility study for what kind of business would work on our closed reservation," Seki said. "People want jobs, jobs, jobs."

Seki beat three candidates for the post. Unofficial election results showed Seki with 1,907 votes, almost 54 percent. Jourdain received about 36 percent of the votes with 1,284. The tribe has a membership of more than 11,000.

Pam Louwagie • 612-673-7102

about the writer

about the writer

Pam Louwagie

Reporter

Pam Louwagie is a regional reporter for the Minnesota Star Tribune. She previously covered courts and legal affairs and was on the newspaper's investigative team. She now writes frequently about a variety of topics in northeast Minnesota and around the state and region.

See Moreicon