SAN JACINTO, Calif.(AP)
The leader of a Southern California Indian tribe and a
sheriff's department vowed Friday to work together to lower
tensions after three people were killed on the reservation in gun
battles with deputies.
Tribe Chairman Robert Salgado declined to elaborate, citing a
mutual agreement with the Riverside County Sheriff's Department
to remain silent about their closed-door negotiations with a
federal mediator.
Sheriff's policies and procedures would be reviewed at a
meeting tentatively set for next week, said Dale Morris, regional
director of the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Morris called the effort "a first step" after days of
antagonism between the tribe and law enforcement.
The two-hour summit came four days after deputies pursued a man
and woman into the hills of the reservation southeast of Los
Angeles following reports of shots fired at a tribal security guard
shack.
Authorities say the man and woman fired at a sheriff's
helicopter and SWAT team before officers killed them. Tribal
funeral rituals for the pair were scheduled Friday night.
On May 8, deputies killed a former tribal chairwoman's son
who opened fire on them on the reservation.
The Soboba Band of Luiseno Indians has a 3,170-acre reservation
and operates a casino. The tribal Web site says it has about 900
members, but many live in communities neighboring the
reservation.
The Sheriff's Department claims deputies have repeatedly
come under fire on the reservation and have tried to communicate
with tribal leaders. They declined to discuss the ongoing
investigations.
Salgado and other members of the tribe earlier this week accused
deputies of using their land as a practice range and failing to
give them the respect due to a sovereign nation.
Salgado has said he believes deputies may be retaliating against
the tribe for asserting its independence from their authority. In
2006, the tribe met with state officials to discuss replacing
department oversight with tribal enforcement for certain civil
matters, such as domestic violence.
The dispute centers on the sometimes confusing overlap of
authority between the county and the tribe.
Riverside County doesn't have formal operating agreements
with tribal authorities in their jurisdictions, which may have
exacerbated antagonism, an Indian affairs expert said.
"It's a pragmatic matter _ if you show disrespect for
the tribal elder you wind up having long-term difficulties
policing," said Carole Goldberg, a professor of law and Indian
affairs at UCLA who has advised Salgado.
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