Scene from a protest outside UNM Law School in 2023. Courtesy photo
Women, children and elders protesting outside UNM Law School in 2023. Courtesy photo
By DARLENE GOMEZ
MMIWR Activist/ Attorney
For decades, Indigenous families across New Mexico have lived with a heartbreaking reality: daughters, sisters, and mothers along with sons, fathers, uncles and cousins vanish, and too often the system fails to find them or bring justice. As an attorney representing families of Murdered, Missing, Indigenous Women and Relatives (MMIWR), I have sat across kitchen tables with parents who still leave a porch light on for a loved one who never came home. I have heard the same painful question again and again: Why doesn’t anyone with power do more?
That question is especially painful when we talk about Deb Haaland.
When she became the first Native American to serve as Secretary of the Interior, many Indigenous families hoped that finally someone in Washington understood the crisis personally and would move mountains to fix it. Symbolically, it was historic. But symbolism alone does not solve cases.
Yes, the Interior Department created a Missing and Murdered Unit within the Bureau of Indian Affairs to coordinate federal efforts. At the time, they never consulted the tribes to take on the jurisdiction to investigate. And the reality on the ground for families in New Mexico has barely changed. Cases still languish. Jurisdictional confusion still slows investigations. Tribal police departments remain under-resourced. And families still do much of the searching themselves.
In a state with 23 federally recognized tribes and nations and one of the highest rates of missing Indigenous people in the country, we needed relentless leadership and measurable results. Instead, too many families feel the crisis remained a talking point rather than the top priority it should have been.
What Indigenous communities need is not another press conference or task force. They need a governor who will treat this crisis like the public-safety emergency it is.
Three years ago, when Deb was asked to speak at the UNM Law School, families of the murdered and missing Indigenous women and relatives showed up to speak with her. Not only did she not speak with us, but she banned us from entering the building, which is a public building. She had a heavy police presence (UNM, State and Secret Service) inside and outside the building, she left us outside in the rain, and the police banned us from going inside. We felt intimidated. We were women, children and elders.
Deb had her assistant pass out a few business cards, but when we called, she never answered. Never scheduled a meeting with us. That’s not fierce. That is fear.
New Mexico has made very little progress assigning resources and money to the MMIWR crisis. Acknowledgment is not justice.
Justice is solved cases.
Justice is accountability.
Justice is families finally getting answers.
For too long, Indigenous families have waited.
It’s time for leadership that delivers results.
Our daughters, sisters and mothers along with our sons, fathers, uncles and cousins deserve nothing less.