{
	"type": "rich",
	"version": "1.0",
	"provider_name": "Action Network",
	"provider_url": "https://actionnetwork.org",
	
	"html": "<link href='https://actionnetwork.org/css/style-embed-v3.css' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' /><script src='https://actionnetwork.org/widgets/v6/letter/dhs-tribal-affairs-director?format=js&source=widget'></script><div id='can-letter-area-dhs-tribal-affairs-director' style='width: 100%'><!-- this div is the target for our HTML insertion --></div>",
	"author_name": "Native Organizers Alliance Action Fund",
	"author_url": "https://actionnetwork.org/groups/native-organizers-alliance",
	"title": "DHS Tribal Affairs Director",
	"thumbnail_url": "https://can2-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/groups/default_facebook_images/000/022/886/original/NOA_ActionFundBanner2.png?1668645803",
	"description": "Outrageously, ICE has detained three enrolled members of the Oglala Sioux Tribe for a week and counting. This is illegal and unconstitutional. As the Tribe’s President explained, “All Native people born within the territorial limits of the United States are recognized as U.S. citizens by birthright.” ICE -- and the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE -- have no authority to arrest, detain, or deport U.S. citizens. The Tribe has reached out directly to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) making it clear that the agency has no jurisdiction over enrolled Tribal members, requesting information about the men’s status, and demanding their immediate release. In response to the Tribe’s requests, the DHS only shared the first names of the three detained men. Before providing more information, the federal agency said that the Tribe would need to enter into an immigration agreement with the DHS. Oglala Sioux’s President, Frank Star Comes Out, said the Tribe would not enter an agreement with the DHS. Instead, he explained, the Tribe already has a treaty-based relationship with the U.S. government, and is therefore entitled to this information. He’s also asserting that this ongoing detention is a “breach of the United States’ duty of protection,” known as the federal government’s trust responsibility to Tribes. Here’s what the Tribe is still demanding: More information on Oglala Lakota detainees’ status The immediate release of all enrolled Tribal citizens in ICE custody “Written assurances that such unlawful detentions will cease” Immediate government-to-government consultation between the U.S. government and the Oglala Sioux Tribe We’ve drafted a message that you can send directly to Rodney Lockett -- the DHS’s Director of Tribal Affairs -- to lift up the Tribe’s demands. If you can, please add a sentence to personalize it so it’s even more powerful. Click “START WRITING” to send a message to the Department of Homeland Security’s Tribal Affairs Director, demanding he Immediately release the three Oglala Sioux men in ICE custody.",
	"url": "https://actionnetwork.org/letters/dhs-tribal-affairs-director"
}

