The Pascua Yaqui: the 1st to use new authority to prosecute non–tribal members for domestic violence
TUCSON, Ariz. For many of the women on the Pascua Yaqui reservation, life before the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act brings up one very common memory.
The offenders knew nothing would be done, said Gloria Zazueta. So when they were arrested, they would just be like, OK, give me a ride to the Circle K.
The Circle K is a small four-pump gas station located just feet beyond the northern border of the reservation. For many years, it was a common destination for tribal law enforcement officers to take nonNative Americans accused of domestic abuse because the officers often lacked the jurisdiction to do anything more.
That was our remedy back then for law enforcement, said Alfred Urbina, the Pascua Yaqui Tribes chief prosecutor. He explained that until recently, their tribal courts did not have criminal jurisdiction over nonNative Americans, so that trip to Circle K was the most an officer could do in that situation unless the case was severe enough to be prosecuted by a federal court.
http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2014/4/23/for-one-arizona-tribeachanceforjusticeafterdecadesoflegallimbo.html