National
Complete, dysfunctional chaos: Oklahoma reels after Supreme Court ruling on Indian tribes
By Annie Gowen and Robert Barnes
Yesterday at 9:00 a.m. EDT
Kyle Willis hadnt seen Kimberly Graham in years, since the day she was sentenced to 107 years in prison after she drunkenly plowed her truck into a group of motorcyclists in Tulsa, killing five people, including his mother and stepfather.
So it was a shock when he saw her at a court hearing last month tanned, dressed in a frilly purple top and jeans and laughing a free woman. Graham, who is Native American, was let out of prison in April after a Supreme Court decision last year that found that a large part of eastern Oklahoma is still Indian country. Despite a century of state and local prosecutions, the court ruled that crimes there were the province of federal and tribal courts.
Shes enjoying life as if nothing ever happened, said Willis, 34, of Broken Arrow, Okla., who said the sight of Graham left him numb. Its bizarre. Its crazy.
The Supreme Courts landmark
decision in
McGirt v. Oklahoma said prosecution of Native Americans for crimes in the expanded Indian country must be carried out in federal and tribal courts, rather than by state or local officials. It was celebrated across the country by Native Americans last July, who saw it as a historic affirmation of treaties signed with the U.S. government in the 1800s.
But in the year since, the ruling has upended Oklahomas criminal justice system, imperiled convictions in thousands of cases, sowed confusion for police and emergency responders and led to the direct release of more than 50 criminals convicted on charges including second-degree murder and child abuse, state records show.
And there may be wider impacts for the region, which covers 19 million acres in eastern Oklahoma, includes a portion of the states second-biggest city, Tulsa, and is home to 1.8 million people.
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By Annie Gowen
Annie Gowen is a correspondent for The Post's National desk. She was the India bureau chief from 2013-2018. Twitter
https://twitter.com/anniegowen
By Robert Barnes
Robert Barnes has been a Washington Post reporter and editor since 1987. He joined The Post to cover Maryland politics, and he has served in various editing positions, including metropolitan editor and national political editor. He has covered the Supreme Court since November 2006. Twitter
https://twitter.com/scotusreporter