LRB-3210/1
JK:skw
2021 - 2022 LEGISLATURE
June 24, 2021 - Introduced by Senators Smith, Felzkowski, Agard, Bewley,
Carpenter, Pfaff, Ringhand, Roys, L. Taylor and Larson, cosponsored by
Representatives B. Meyers, Mursau, Snodgrass, Anderson, Andraca,
Baldeh, Bowen, Conley, Drake, Emerson, Hebl, Hesselbein, Hong, Milroy,
Neubauer, S. Rodriguez, Shankland, Shelton, Sinicki, Spreitzer, Subeck,
Vining, Vruwink, Cabrera, Tauchen, Stubbs and Considine. Referred to
Committee on Senate Organization.
SJR51,1,2 1Relating to: designating May 5, 2021, as Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women
2and Girls Awareness Day in Wisconsin.
SJR51,1,53 Whereas, according to a 2016 report from the National Institute of Justice, 84
4percent of American Indian and Alaska Native women have experienced violence in
5their lifetime, and more than half of whom experienced sexual violence; and
SJR51,1,96 Whereas, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
7homicide is the third leading cause of death among American Indian and Alaska
8Native women between 10 and 24 years of age and the fifth leading cause of death
9for American Indian and Alaska Native women between 25 and 34 years of age; and
SJR51,1,1210 Whereas, in 2016, the National Crime Information Center reported nearly
116,000 cases of missing American Indian and Alaska Native women and girls, but the
12U.S. Department of Justice was tracking only about 100 cases; and
SJR51,2,213 Whereas, although no reliable data exists on the actual number of missing
14Indigenous women and girls in the United States, instances of violence continue to

1be directed against Indigenous women, living both on and off tribal lands, at high
2rates; and
SJR51,2,73 Whereas, Wisconsin has been ranked sixth in the nation for sex trafficking
4according to the Human Trafficking Institute, with urban centers being the hubs in
5the I-90/94 corridor and international shipping areas, such as the ports of Duluth
6and Superior, which has led to many Indigenous women and girls to be to exploited
7by traffickers; and
SJR51,2,138 Whereas, Indigenous women experience racism and prejudice through
9invisibility, which is driven by a lack of media coverage. Instead of nationwide
10manhunts, alerts, and round-the-clock news coverage when an affluent white
11woman goes missing, news coverage can be minimal to nonexistent when an
12Indigenous woman or girl goes missing. Many missing and murdered Indigenous
13women remain unnamed and their disappearances unknown or unheard of; and
SJR51,2,2014 Whereas, Indigenous women often hesitate or are unable to access help and
15needed services after experiencing gender-based violence because their unique
16needs are often not understood or met by mainstream agencies. Structural factors
17such as racism, stigma, and criminalization of substance use and mental health
18issues, culturally incongruous shelter policies, siloed programming, and gender
19inequality interact in complex ways, resulting in inefficient and inadequate services
20for Indigenous women; and
SJR51,3,721 Whereas, some of the missing or murdered Wisconsin Indigenous women we
22know of include Bad River Ojibwe members Angeline Whitebird-Sweet, murdered
23in 1989, Charlene Couture, missing since 2009, Sheila St. Clair, missing since 2015,
24and Tess White, murdered in 2016; Lac du Flambeau Ojibwe members Susan
25Poupart, murdered in 1990, LaVonne Frank, murdered in 1997, Donna (LaBarge)

1Peterson, murdered in 2004, and Emily Anne Marie Wayman, murdered in 2010; Ho
2Chunk members Jennifer Wesho, murdered in 1989, Jacinda Muir, murdered in
32015, and Kozee Decorah, murdered in May 2020; Menominee members Lisa
4Ninham, missing since 1990, Rae Elaine Tourtillott, murdered in 1986, Ingrid
5Washinawatok, murdered in 1999, Katelyn Kelley, murdered in July 2020, and
6Stephanie Greenspon, murdered in August 2020; and, Oneida member Lorraine
7Brown Bear, murdered in 2016; and
SJR51,3,108 Whereas, the Wisconsin Department of Justice formed the Missing and
9Murdered Indigenous Women Task Force in 2020 to collect and study data and
10identify solutions; and
SJR51,3,1411 Whereas, we commemorate the lives of missing and murdered American Indian
12and Alaska Native women and girls whose cases are documented and undocumented
13in public records and the media and demonstrate solidarity with the families of the
14victims in light of those tragedies; now be it
SJR51,3,20 15Resolved by the senate, the assembly concurring, That the members of the
16legislature recognize May 5, 2021, as Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and
17Girls Awareness Day in Wisconsin. This is a day we mourn and call attention to the
18many missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, as well as those who have
19experienced violence and assault, and resolve to act to prevent further victimization;
20and
SJR51,3,22 21Be it further resolved, That certified copies of this resolution be transmitted
22to the governor.
SJR51,3,2323 (End)
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