Originally
aired April 3, 1998
Another
Man's Poison:
Profit and Loss in White Clay
Reported
by Bill Kelly, STATEWIDE Correspondent
 It could be
the first week of any month of the year when paychecks and government
support checks are cashed on the Ogallala Sioux reservation. A lot of
that money makes its way to four little stores with licenses to sell
beer.
[Don Schwarting, liquor store owner] "The Ogallala Sioux
people are fun loving, humorous, good-natured people. They enjoy getting
together and having a good time or going places and having a good time.
And this involves alcohol usually."
Don Schwarting knows he runs one of the most controversial
businesses in Nebraska. Public opinion doesn't much matter to him when
his customers cast their votes with dollars.
[Schwarting] "There's not anybody that's walked in here
tonight that's made me the bad guy. Has there? No, not a one. It's not
because they're customers or nothing, it's because they live here. But
the guys that don't live here are making us look like the bad guys.
They don't live here and they don't work here and don't want to."
None of the customers at the Arrowhead Inn cared to share
their opinion with us that night. At the same time rush hour begins
in White Clay, Officer John of the Ogallala Sioux tribal police is coming
on duty.
 [John
Mousseau, Pine Ridge Police Dept.] "Very seldom do we come across
an incident that isn't alcohol-related.
His tour of duty stpers with a triple on the two-mile stretch
of road between Pine Ridge and White Clay, once calculated to be the
deadliest stretch of road in America.
[Mousseau] "We used to go up top of the hill because
I lived where we could walk up top of the hill and we used to watch
maybe about -- every weekend maybe two, maybe three car wrecks a week.
A lot of them are fatalities, you know, so I grew up knowing a lot of
negativity on this road, you know. I would hear a lot of people saying
they're going to White Clay, automatically I would think of a car wreck,
you know. A lot of people I knew that got killed on this road, you know."
This is a trading post in its classic sense. White business
owners have been here since at least the turn of the century. It straddles
a length of Nebraska State highway and begins where the reservation
land ends. As soon as you cross the border out of South Dakota, Pine
Ridge Reservation, you pass into Nebraska and you're in White Clay.
It's unincorporated, only about 30 people live here if that, and there
aren't very many businesses. The very first business you come across
after that scrap yard, the Arrowhead Inn, one of the four liquor stores.
They've got two grocery stores, one on either side of the road, an auto
ppers store, a couple of other shut down businesses and then three other
liquor stores on the other end of town. After only about a minute, you
have passed out of White Clay, and you're heading south to Rushville.
If you stop for a while and not many non-Indians do, you can see what
causes such pain and outrage. It's obvious the liquor sales are steady
and often in unsettling quantities. The State of Nebraska estimates
that four million cans of beer a year are sold here, probably the highest
per capita sales in the entire state. The effects are obvious as well.
[Ambulance driver] "I'm barely 25 and there's guys up
there younger than me now and they look like 40, 50 years old."
The teams that work as paramedics on the tribe's rescue squad
expect at least one call a day off the reservation. When you hear that
you've got a call coming from White Clay, how does it make you feel?
[Ambulance driver] "We try to figure out which one is
it. After a while you get to know them by first name, you know who you're
going after. I guess some of them don't stay down there, but they always
come up here. They just go down there to get it and bring it back up
here. It's kind of reservation-wide, I would say, because people still
take it home and do the same thing, but they're just not staying up
there. Just the regular ones that are up there all the time."
At the headquarters of tribal police, the officers and their
acting chief of police think there's a link between other crimes --
thefts and burglaries -- in the sad cycle of alcohol abuse at White
Clay.
[Wendell Yellow Bull, Acting Police Chief] "A lot of
property is taken from our area and exchanged for alcohol. It kind of
creates that clientele for a lot of things that happen here. You ask
anybody, .....'Did you ever have something stolen?' ...'Yeah, I have.'
Where do you think you would look for it? ..'Oh, I would go to White
Clay and I would stop and go over to the beer establishment to see if
it was taken there, pawned there."
[Kelly] "Why?"
[Yellow Bull] "Because that's where the majority of the
stuff goes."
They are charges often made -- stolen property, even sex given in trade
for beer. Often made but never proven. What is beyond question is that
alcohol has taken a horrible toll on the Ogallala Sioux and most of
the alcohol comes from White Clay in four little stores.
[John Yellowbird Steele, Ogallala Sioux, Chairman] "I
had Mr. Little Jaw Means just the past few months murdered there. It
was identified he was hitting the head with a blunt object. Mr. Thomas
Twist, Mr. Berdoe in prior years murdered. The State of Nebraska doesn't
seem to care in looking into or trying to resolve this."
The chairman of the Ogallala Sioux, John Yellowbird Steele,
testified at the beginning of the year before the State's Liquor Control
Commission. All four of the license holders were called before the board
that requires businesses which sell liquor to follow the law. Once again
law enforcement says their hands are tied. There have been no formal
complaints about any of the stores.
[Terry Robbins, Sheriff, Sheridan Co.] "There ain't an
officer that works for me that wouldn't say a liquor violation in a
heartbeat if they seen it or had somebody complain or, you know, to
get a conviction. It don't do no good to give a citation if you can't
get a conviction."
The liquor license holders remain silent. Their attorney said
they have done nothing wrong. Their business is legal.
[Don Dunn, Atty. for liquor stores] "We also recognize
that we need to be a part of a plan of action to address those areas
of concern."
The people most harmed, the Ogallala Sioux, admit they frequently
won't work with the system and the system in this case, local and state
regulators and law enforcement, have a history of letting things be
in White Clay. That's been acceptable to the store owners.
[Kelly] "Is there anything you can do?"
[Schwarting] "I'm open to suggestions. What's your suggestions?"
[Kelly] "Your attorney said that you would be willing
to do something."
[Schwarting] "I'm asking you what your suggestion would
be?"
There are a lot of suggestions. At the same meeting, Frank
Lemere of Nebraska' Winnebago tribe insisted the State take extreme
action.
[Frank Lemere, Winnebago Tribe] "I have an answer to
the problem in White Clay. We need to shut White Clay down. We need
to shut it down tomorrow."
That won't happen. Liquor sales in White Clay won't stop without the
complaints made, proof found, and legal proceedings completed.
[Highway Patrol Officer] "They
are passed out all along this building right here and sitting outside
drinking and there were a lot of cars parked there."
The commander of the Nebraska State Patrol took Governor Nelson on a
tour last fall.
[Gov. Nelson] "Are most of the residents who live here,
are they Native American?"
[Highway Patrol Officer] "All white."
The other business owners in town, and there are other businesses,
told the Governor additional police patrols could take the edge off
the problem that they see more a matter of public relations than public
safety.
[Business Owner] "We're really taking a hit here, you
know. I don't think anybody is doing anything illegal. Just maybe more
visibility, you know, with some units and stuff like that."
[Gov. Nelson] "If you could change anything, what would
you change?"
[Business Owner] "I think just a little more visibility
probably."
[Gov. Nelson] "Law enforcement, you mean?
"It's not something that just sits here to serve alcohol
totally just to try to destroy somebody. It's definitely not there to
do that."
Just up the road minutes later when the Governor tried unsuccessfully
to speak with a clerk at one of the liquor stores, one of the customers
did take a moment of the Governor's time to ask for spare change.
[Gov. Nelson] "I don't think I can help you out, I'm
sorry. I don't have any extra money. I'm just getting ready to go to
Asia."
Money is another issue here. For the State Patrol, Captain
Tussing pointed out that spending more time in a town with barely 30
people diverts troopers from other far flung panhandle towns. The Sheridan
County sheriff has limited resources and an all white corp of deputies
who get little cooperation.
[Native American elder] "We're not dogs and we're not
monkeys... you know!"
[Highway Patrol Officer] "We're trying to figure out
how we can help you."
[Native American elder] "Us Indians we help ourselves.
Just stay out of the business... and no more cameras."
In a backwards sense, the tribe itself has created White Clay.
Alcohol cannot be sold on the reservations. In an effort to protect
its people from liquor, it has handed a business opportunity to Nebraska's
white entrepreneurs.
[Mousseau] "A lot of people don't like to talk about
it but I think legalizing alcohol down here is one of the solutions
they should seriously look at. What they could do is do the same thing
and take that money they're making and open up treatment centers."
[Mousseau] "Hello. Somebody reported Tom as being drunk
and driving all over. Is he okay?"
[Woman at door]"Mm-hmm."
It is not likely the tribe will lift its ban on alcohol in light of
the bitter history of alcohol and Native Americans.
[Wendell Yellow Bull] "Legalize it and bring it here,
then whose problem is it next? It's going to be ours. Once it's ours,
then the question is the money that we generate, is it truly going to
help our tribe or do we just become a formalized drug sale."
[Mousseau] "Let's go... give you a nice warm place to
sleep... ..c'mon... let's go. There's a lot of kids here... let's go.
Let's go out this way. Come on...right over here. See where my car is
parked. Come on. I will help you walk."
There is clearly a need for treatment of alcoholics on the
reservation and it frustrates tribal leaders that of the tens of thousands
of dollars paid in liquor taxes to Nebraska, none of it is used to help
native people get the treatment needed to break their cycle of addiction.
The only convenient option in the panhandle is a tiny clinic over in
Gordon.
[Judy Morgan, NE Indian Commission] "Nebraska is benefiting
financially and those establishments, those owners, their family are
generation after generation making millions of dollars and the tribe
isn't and the people aren't and they're not getting any dollars for
rehab for alcohol treatment.<"BR> The director of Nebraska's Indian Commission has been working
with tribal leaders from Pine Ridge and State officials to find if not
solutions at least some responses to reduce the impact of Nebraska's
alcohol on the Sioux people.
[Morgan] "Well, I don't think it's hopeless and I think,
you know, I'm not going to buy into that well, it's always happened
so let's just let it go on happening."
Meanwhile there hasn't been much change in the nightly routine
of the tribal police officers dealing with White Clay's customers.
[Mousseau] "I mean, if they want to drink, they're still
going to get it. White Clay, you know, if maybe more patrol up there
but shutting down White Clay, I don't think it is going to solve anything
but it might be a step."
Captioning by
Nebraska Captioning Center, Lincoln, Nebraska. |