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US Attorneys To Gather For Conference On Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault

Kansas U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom (r), with Wyandotte Co. D.A. Jerome Gorman (l) and KCK Police Chief Rick Armstrong, detailing charges against police.(click to enlarge)
photo by dan verbeck
Kansas U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom (r), with Wyandotte Co. D.A. Jerome Gorman (l) and KCK Police Chief Rick Armstrong, detailing charges against police.(click to enlarge)

U.S. Attorneys from Kansas, Nebraska, and Iowa will gather next week for a conference centered on domestic violence and sexual assault in Indian Country. 

U.S. Attorney for Kansas Barry Grissom says the statistics on violence against women and girls in tribal communities can only be described as shocking.

“It’s much larger than the national average, if you will,” said Grissom. “From what I understand, nearly half—that’s one half—of all American Indian women have been physically assaulted, raped, or stalked by their partner, and more than one in four have actually been raped.”

Grissom says Attorney General Eric Holder has declared that level of violence “unacceptable”, and has launched an effort to step up prosecution of such crimes.   In fact, says Grissom, since Holder took over at the Justice Department in 2009, there’s been a 54 per cent increase in criminal prosecution of domestic violence and sexual assault cases in tribal communities.

The 2013 Indian Country Conference takes place next Tuesday and Wednesday in Sloan, Iowa. 

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