Last Friday in Rapid City there was a peaceful rally and march against police brutality. Some twenty-four hours later, a Lakota man was shot and killed in an altercation with Rapid City police. These events occurred fifteen years after the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights held hearings in the Black Hills. They resulted in the report, Native Americans in South Dakota: An Erosion of Confidence in the Justice System.
Joining a discussion of criminal justice in South Dakota fifteen years after the report were Brendan Johnson, U.S. Attorney for South Dakota; Elsie Meeks, founder of the Lakota Fund on Pine Ridge, a former member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights and currently the state director for USDA Rural Development; Melaine Stoneman, a Sicangu Lakota who helped organized the Rapid City rally and march last week; and Ken James, a Santee Sioux and former Rapid City police officer and Flandreau police chief.