Blog — Galanda Broadman

Washington State Ends Racially Disproportionate Juvenile Sentencing Enhancements

Yesterday Governor Jay Inslee signed HB 1324 into law, ending Washington state’s judicial practice of automatically enhancing criminal sentences against adults based on crimes they committed as juveniles.

Nearly 400 Indigenous persons incarcerated in the Washington State Department of Corrections (DOC) are subject to a sentence that has been lengthened based upon a juvenile felony commitment. They represent 41% of the Indigenous persons in the DOC—the highest rate of unduly long sentences suffered by any racial group in Washington state.

As the ACLU explains: “Eliminating the use of juvenile records to automatically give people longer sentences will reduce racial disparities, account for discoveries in developmental brain science, and stop punishing people twice by no longer counting juvenile points in adult sentencing calculations.”

Unfortunately the Senate amended HB 1324 to eliminate the bill’s retroactivity.

The importance of retroactivity to Indigenous families, communities, and nations in Washington state is explained in a recent Everett Herald op-ed authored by Derrick Belgarde, Gabe Galanda, and Winona Stevens. The full text of that op-ed is below.

Members of the Washington State Legislature have committed to introducing a bill in the 2024 legislative session to make the new law retroactive.

Comment: Counting juvenile crimes against adults unjust to many

The Washington State Legislature has an opportunity to move beyond performative Tribal land acknowledgments and renew hundreds of Indigenous lives. HB 1324 would end automatic sentence enhancements for adults who fell down as adolescents.  But for that reform to matter—for Indigenous life to matter—it must be both forward and backward looking.

Citing the intergenerational historic trauma suffered by all Indigenous persons in our state, eight Tribal governments and Indigenous social justice organizations have urged the Legislature to pass HB 1324.

We know that youth are different from adults – it’s why we have two separate state systems of “justice” in the first place. Because a child’s brain is not fully developed, and won’t be until they are at least 25 years old, they are more likely to be impulsive, susceptible to peer pressure, and less able to weigh the causes and effects of their actions.

Those realities are compounded for Indigenous youth due to the intergenerational trauma inflicted upon Tribal communities as a result of our country’s original sin: colonization.  

The rate of Indigenous fetal alcohol syndrome is more than eight times the national average. Psychological factors, such as the fear experienced by pregnant Indigenous mothers who are battered, create physiological changes that negatively impact brain development. 

From the moment they are born, many Indigenous children suffer neurological harm.  By the time of adolescence, many Indigenous youth suffer an inability to decipher right from wrong or the repercussions of poor decisions.  And when they falter as adolescents, the Washington state criminal “justice” system catapults them into our state’s prison pipeline rather than helping them rehabilitate.

Indigenous adolescents are [three times] more likely to be referred into our state’s juvenile justice system than white adolescents.  In turn, Indigenous persons disproportionately suffer life or long sentences in Washington. The number of Indigenous persons serving long sentences is two and a half times the percentage of Washington’s Indigenous population. 

Those life and long sentences correlate to the fact that of nearly 1,000 Indigenous persons in Washington state prisons today, 41% of them suffer a juvenile felony adjudication on their offender score.  That is the highest rate of disproportionate sentencing enhancement suffered by any racial group in our state carceral system.

The sordid history of Tribal displacement and Indigenous family separation at the hands of the U.S. government has created a cycle of intergenerational trauma that manifests in substance use and domestic violence within Tribal communities. It all now compounds through mass incarceration.

As historic trauma and carceral institutionalization synergize, our peoples endure spiritual devastation and grow weaker. Those dynamics lead to institutional mindsets and cumulative group trauma and, in turn, further disproportionate criminal prosecution and incarceration. Rinse, repeat.

Still, our Tribal communities and Indigenous families are trying their hardest to break the cycle.  But our people, especially our youth, need a break.  We need time and space.  We need hope and healing.  We need our relatives, especially those who made mistakes when they were young, to come home.  Our organizations stand ready to help our relatives successfully reenter society and avoid recidivism.

Last month, the State House of Representatives passed HB 1324 to apply retroactively to people currently serving unjust life or long sentences.  But when the bill reached the Senate last week, the bill was amended so it would only apply to future cases. That was a missed opportunity for justice for our peoples, and healing for our relatives. 

If Washington sincerely cherishes Indigenous people and culture as part of our state’s fabric, or seeks to atone for the historic harms that have befallen our state’s original peoples, HB 1324 presents a real opportunity.  Our elected representatives in the Senate should pass an amendment to restore retroactivity to the bill and support a fresh start for Indigenous youth and families.

Derrick Belgarde is the Executive Director of Chief Seattle Club in Seattle. Gabe Galanda is the Chairman of Huy’s Board of Advisors in  Seattle.  Winona Stevens is the Executive Director of Native American Reentry Services in Tacoma; she serves on the Washington Statewide Reentry Council.

New State Law Guards Against WDFW Tribal Sovereignty Violations

By Gabe Galanda & Henry Oostrom-Shah 

Today, Governor Jay Inslee signed House Bill 1369 into law. The bill allows off-duty Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife (WDFW) fish and game enforcement officers to work security for private companies.

During the legislative session, the prime sponsor of HB 1369 explained that WDFW officers would be allowed to work, in their state uniforms, at “large construction projects” throughout the state, which could include projects on Tribal trust or reservation lands. 

Several Washington Tribes feared House Bill 1369, as originally proposed, would have created a Trojan Horse in Indian country: WDFW officers entering sovereign tribal lands without authorization in the guise of private security guards.  As such, Tribal rights advocates requested—and the Legislature approved—two consequential changes to the original legislation.

First, pursuant to an amendment offered by Senators Claudia Kauffman (Nez Perce) and Javier Valdez, any private employer hiring off-duty WDFW officers to work private security on Tribal trust or reservation lands “must have obtained permission from the affected federally recognized Indian tribe.”

Tribes have always protected their people by controlling who enters their territory. This amendment means that WDFW and private companies must respect that fundamental tenet of Tribal sovereignty. In recent years, WDFW has violated Tribal Treaty rights and sovereignty by entering Tribal trust and reservation lands without notice or permission. Tribes can condition their permission on training, culturally-informed procedure, and other best practices to ensure the safety of Indigenous peoples and others on Tribal lands.

WDFW Sergeant Wendy Willette testifying in Skagit County Superior Court in late 2021 regarding her unauthorized entry upon Tulalip Reservation trust lands for investigation and surveillance purposes.

Second, pursuant to an amendment offered by Representative Chris Stearns (Navajo), any WDFW officers seeking to work  private security on Tribal trust or reservation lands must have received training on the history of police interactions with Indigenous communities.

Tragically, people of color in our state suffer disproportionate violence at the hands of the police. Consider the January 2023 report that Spokane Police Department commissioned, which found that the Department used force disproportionately against Black and Indigenous Spokanites. As of late 2022, WDFW did not offer its officers any training on racism in policing or our society, or even on bias more broadly. Anti-bias training can reduce police brutality and improve citizen safety, especially in Indigenous communities.

These successful amendments show that Tribal input matters in Washington state lawmaking, especially when channeled through Indigenous leaders like Sen. Kauffman and Rep. Stearns in Olympia. House Bill 1369 also shows how the voices of the people most affected by the criminal system—Indigenous peoples and other communities of color—can and should be centered in the state legislative process.

Gabe Galanda is the Managing Lawyer of Galanda Broadman, an Indigenous rights law firm.

Henry Oostrom-Shah is a student law clerk with Galanda Broadman. After graduating from Boston University School of Law this month, he will work as a public defender in Portland, Oregon.