Native American Actress Detained at Airport Amid Claims Her Tribal ID is 'Fake'
A 1990s TV star and recent guest on a hit show, Indigenous actress Elaine Miles, has spoken out about being detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after they questioned the legitimacy of her tribal ID. The document in question is a federally recognized tribal enrollment card from the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, which serves as both a member of her nation and a US citizen.
This case highlights the pervasive issue of Native Americans being treated as outsiders by their own government. Although Congress granted US citizenship to all Native Americans in 1924, federal agencies have historically doubted Indigenous identity and documentation. From border crossings to law enforcement interactions, many Native people have had to prove their belonging in their own country, a reality that has been documented by historians and scholars.
Advocates point to inconsistent training on tribal IDs as a major contributor to these incidents. Tribal governments are recognized as sovereign nations with the authority to issue identification, but federal officers often receive inadequate guidance on how to verify it. As a result, even legally recognized citizens can be detained or delayed due to discrepancies between their documentation and what federal officials expect.
Miles' case underscores a stark contradiction: people whose ancestors inhabited this land for millennia are still treated as outsiders in the eyes of the law. It is a glaring example of how legal recognition and federal enforcement often fail to align in practice, leaving many Native Americans vulnerable to detention and marginalization.
A 1990s TV star and recent guest on a hit show, Indigenous actress Elaine Miles, has spoken out about being detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after they questioned the legitimacy of her tribal ID. The document in question is a federally recognized tribal enrollment card from the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, which serves as both a member of her nation and a US citizen.
This case highlights the pervasive issue of Native Americans being treated as outsiders by their own government. Although Congress granted US citizenship to all Native Americans in 1924, federal agencies have historically doubted Indigenous identity and documentation. From border crossings to law enforcement interactions, many Native people have had to prove their belonging in their own country, a reality that has been documented by historians and scholars.
Advocates point to inconsistent training on tribal IDs as a major contributor to these incidents. Tribal governments are recognized as sovereign nations with the authority to issue identification, but federal officers often receive inadequate guidance on how to verify it. As a result, even legally recognized citizens can be detained or delayed due to discrepancies between their documentation and what federal officials expect.
Miles' case underscores a stark contradiction: people whose ancestors inhabited this land for millennia are still treated as outsiders in the eyes of the law. It is a glaring example of how legal recognition and federal enforcement often fail to align in practice, leaving many Native Americans vulnerable to detention and marginalization.