A8 OFF PAGE ONE East Oregonian Saturday, July 9, 2022 Coyote: though Cruz was in prison, Coyote was worried that, having stayed in one town for three years, he would fi nd her again. The family hit the road. This time for Salem. Coyote felt that she was a fl oater in Salem, “not here, not there but still trying,” she said. Soon enough, a representative from the Oregon Women of Color Caucus called, asking if she was interested in contracting with the group. They were lacking in Native Americans in the group and they wanted her help fi lling that role. She accepted and became its director in 2000. She also joined Gov. John Kitzhaber’s council on domestic violence, becoming the only Native American woman on the coun- cil. She started traveling around to communities of color and tribal nations, hearing from survivors and seeing what services were lacking. In time, the state called on her so much that she considered herself its “token Indian.” “I was invisible on these teams, but they needed me to represent communities of color and tribal nations,” she said. “I was an object, not something that was important. My voice often was not heard.” In 2001, her mother fell ill. She started driving home to the Umatilla Indian Reservation every weekend to take care of her. Though they had been apart for the majority of Coyote’s upbringing, she had always appreciated how hard her mother had tried to be there for her children. After Coyote’s mother died in 2002 at the age of 62, Coyote moved into her mother’s home on the reserva- tion. She took a job as the tribe’s domestic violence coordinator. She began learning about tribal juris- diction, law enforcement and tribal courts. She started meeting with survivors. More often than not, they would be tribal members, the off enders would be non-Native, and the abuse would have occurred on reservation land, meaning that tribal authorities could not prosecute them due to a 1978 Supreme Court ruling that barred them from doing so. Alongside law enforcement, she would drive survivors out to the spot of their alleged assault. The offi cer would then use maps to see whether it was on or off tribal land, and they would explain who had jurisdiction to take the case. “This job really taught me what it means to be an Indigenous woman,” she said. At the same time, Coyote began learning about tribal customs and traditions. Having grown up in her father’s home and attended board- ing school, she knew little about the traditions of her people. But when she moved to the reservation, she met with elders, attended powwows, and learned about dancing, drum- ming, singing and tribal regalia. Her mother’s land and the people there made her feel at home. Coyote helped the Umatilla tribe gain essential legal protec- tions for survivors. She helped the tribes become authorized for the sex off ender notifi cation registra- tion act and helped tribal authorities regain jurisdiction over non-Native perpetrators of domestic violence on tribal land. She also pushed forward a batterers intervention program to help perpetrators. But much of Coyote’s most nota- ble work has been behind closed doors, away from courtrooms, legislators and police. It has focused instead on the untold number of survivors whose lives she has touched. Coyote changed her last name from Cruz to Coyote in 2012. Coyote still searches for any record of what happened that night in 1991, some written acknowledg- ment that, for her, reaffi rms what happened. What records she fi nds she keeps in a corner of her shed, far enough back so she won’t stumble on them. She keeps them stacked next to the journal she has kept for years, which she used to prove her story of struggle with her children. Reservation, but she would visit jails and prisons, sharing her story with perpetrators, hoping to instill empa- thy. But even today, she wonders what might have happened if the man standing nearby that night had stepped in and saved her. “I’ve always wanted to ask him why he didn’t help me ... I just have not had the courage and opportunity.” Frank saw Coyote speak at a domestic violence conference in Pendleton in the early 2000s. She, like many others, was struck by her bravery and felt encouraged to help others. “She was making change, doing what I wish we could have done in Warm Springs,” she said. There is Kola Shippentow- er-Thompson, a member of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, who said she was raped in Pendleton at age 19 and later experienced domestic violence at the hands of her ex-boyfriend and her ex-husband. One day, she said, her ex-husband hit a clogged duct in her face, causing a severe hema- toma. Her face was so deformed that she needed surgery. A mixed martial arts fi ghter since 2010, she told her friends that it was just an accident from practice. Today, she still can’t feel the right side of her face. In 2016, Shippentower-Thomp- son made a social media post about the alleged domestic abuse, with a photo of her face pre-surgery. The post went viral. Soon, she was speaking with survivor after survi- vor, many of whom were Indigenous women. Now, she travels across the West, providing safety training and self-defense classes for women, while also competing in MMA. “That’s where I felt most at home: fi ghting,” she said. “That’s what most Natives are. We’re fi ghters.” Shippentower-Thompson said that, as she faced domestic violence, she met with Coyote. She helped her feel safe and understood. She, too, was a fi ghter. There is Althea Wolf, the grand- daughter of the late Umatilla Tribal Chief Raymond Burke, a sexual assault survivor. After she had a daughter of her own, she spent eight months contemplating whether to enroll her as a Umatilla tribal member. She worried that, if her daughter was enrolled, she would have fewer protections. Eventually, Coyote helped convince Wolf, to enroll her daugh- ter, saying that her daughter would be safer today than Althea was as a young girl: “We can’t let fear stop us.” But Wolf wanted to help survi- vors like her. So she began working alongside Coyote as an advocate, writing letters to lawmakers for support and raising funds for rape kits for the tribes’ victims services, speaking at annual events around sexual and domestic violence. “It’s almost third world,” she said, “the way women and girls are not protected in Indian country.” Wolf described Coyote as “a graceful fi ghter” who “doesn’t hesi- tate to believe.” The three Indigenous women telling their stories today, all said it was Coyote who empowered them to help others. Continued from Page A1 When the abuse from her aunt ended, her dad returned from a work trip. For the fi rst time, he hit her. She was surprised, and the abuse esca- lated quickly. One day, he thrust her head into a wall, scraping her scalp against a nail, creating a scar that remains on the back of her head. Another escape Coyote was home less than a month before deciding to leave again. Coyote packed a bag and joined her friends on a backpacking trip across the Pacifi c Northwest, visiting Portland, Salem, Yakima and Seat- tle. She began to think of her mother, wondering where she was. About a decade had passed since she had last seen her, just like dad had wanted. Coyote knew her mother had grown up on the Umatilla Indian Reserva- tion, so that’s where she found her. Coyote lived with her mother for six or seven months, but life even there wasn’t safe. Her mother struggled with alcoholism and threw parties full of scary men who would break into her room. Without much of an education to lean on, she decided, at 16, to join the military. Her mother was by her side when she signed the papers. The bulk of Coyote’s service occurred at Fort Riley in Kansas, where she worked in communica- tions. It was here that she met an infantryman from New York, with whom she bonded over daily runs around the base. His name was William Cruz. The two started dating, and when Coyote left the military, they moved into a home in Kansas, where they remained for three years. She took care of their two children as Cruz’s service moved them from Kansas to Germany to New York and back to Kansas. Early on, Coyote said she began to notice the “manipulation and coer- cion that forms a tight rope around the leg.” At first, the signs were subtle. A devout Christian, Cruz only allowed Coyote to listen to Christian music and watch Christian television. She was not allowed to leave the house unless she was going to church. “Being a good Christian woman, I did what I was told,” she said. “Everybody thinks that domestic abuse is a physical thing,” she said. “It’s not ... when they take who you are away, piece by piece, when they Kathy Aney/For Underscore Desiree Coyote lets her thoughts roam as she stands June 10, 2022, near the spot on the Umatilla Indian Reser- vation where her ex-husband assaulted her after kidnapping her from her home at the time in Mission. dehumanize you, make like you’re less than — that’s when it all begins.” Cruz and Coyote arrived in Oregon with their four children in 1983, moving into a home on the Umatilla Indian Reservation near Pendleton. Cruz became a leader at three local churches while work- ing as a student mechanic at Blue Mountain Community College. Coyote worked as a secretary for economic development for the tribe and attended the community college. On the outside, he appeared as a polite husband, walking Coyote to class and taking her to lunch. But life at home was a diff erent story. “For me, as well as all victims, what we’re going to remember is all the holes in the walls, the holes or dents in the doors, because they know not to hit you physically,” she said. But the emotional abuse turned into physical violence, she said. She sometimes called the police two or three times a week, but offi cers seldom responded. She couldn’t take it anymore. She divorced Cruz in 1990 and promptly obtained a restraining order. He moved out. Coyote’s nightmare didn’t end there. She would walk outside to her car and fi nd her tires punctured and parts dismantled, and because Cruz was a mechanic, she assumed it was him. For months, she and her fi ve children stayed in a single room in the four-bedroom house, sleep- ing stacked against the windows and door, hoping to feel the slightest breeze in case he broke in. Soon enough, Coyote’s life appeared to be improving. Her mother had moved in, and Coyote was helping her get sober. She had taken a job with the forest service in nearby Walla Walla and began going on dates with a coworker there. “It was the fi rst time I’d been happy in I don’t know how long,” she said. What happiness she had found would be shattered in a single night. The night she said those familiar hands grabbed her. The night she said Cruz took her up toward Dead- man Pass. The night she’d recount for years to come as an advocate for other women, to help them feel less alone. Her account of that night was documented in a tribal police report. Cruz declined to be interviewed for this story. Coyote comes home After the alleged assault by her ex-husband on the Umatilla Indian Reservation, Coyote feared for her life and was contemplating suicide. About a year later, Cruz was sentenced to federal prison for child sexual abuse. Coyote moved with her fi ve children to New Mexico, where she lived for around three years before moving back to Oregon. In 1995, she began her work in domestic violence services and advocacy while living in Lakeview. It didn’t pay well. It off ered no retire- ment or medical benefi ts. Mean- while, her kids were facing racial harassment in school. And even Voices: Continued from Page A1 The federal data reporting system doesn’t require local police agencies to submit crime statistics, and federal offi cials don’t track why agencies choose to report data or not, according to an FBI spokesper- son. What the data lacks is revealed through an untold number of Indig- enous women in Oregon who share their stories of trauma to empower other survivors. They are now rais- ing their voices. At the center of the women who shared their stories is Desireé Coyote, the manager of Family Violence Services on the Umatilla Indian Reservation. She said she was kidnapped, beaten and sexu- ally assaulted by her ex-husband in the foothills of the Blue Mountains near Pendleton in 1991, as reported to tribal authorities. In the years to come, Coyote would impact the lives of count- less Indigenous people as one of Oregon’s preeminent advocates for survivors of violence, and she would empower many women to help others, too, according to inter- views with state and tribal offi cials. Starting in the early 2000s, she was among the fi rst Indigenous women to work as a victims advocate with the governor’s offi ce and the Oregon Department of Justice. In time, she would spearhead the Umatilla Indian Reservation’s eff orts to gain essential protections that, had they Kathy Aney/For Underscore Althea Wolf weaves a wapas bag Monday, July 4, 2022. Hanging on the tee- pee poles are two items especially meaningful to the Umatilla tribal mem- ber: a jacket her son wears while performing in the Happy Canyon Night Show and a buckskin dress given to her by her mother. Wolf, a sexual assault survivor, helps other survivors by writing letters to lawmakers for support, raising funds for rape kits for the tribes’ victims services and speaking about sexual and domestic violence. been implemented decades earlier, could have helped her. There is Sarah Frank, an Indig- enous woman who grew up on the Warm Springs Reservation and in Pilot Rock, who said she was raped as a 17-year-old by two men at a party on the Warm Springs Reser- vation. As she shifted in and out of consciousness, she could see a man standing nearby. He could have stepped in and stopped them, but he just chose not to, she said. When she came to, she realized that her friends had abandoned her, too. “Nobody was there to help,” she said. “I really think it was a set-up. I feel like I was targeted.” Frank would remain friends with the sister of one of her alleged perpe- trators. One day, she stood alongside her friend and family as the man lay dying from alcoholism in a Madras hospital, a moment she would refl ect on for years to come. “Even now, I look back and real- ize that I was able to forgive him,” she said of that day. She would go on not only to advocate for survi- vors like her on the Warm Springs SHEDS for all your needs! Free delivery and set up within 30 miles Tobias Unruh, owner 600 David Eccles Rd Baker City, Oregon Elkhorn Barn Co. Custom Barns and Storage Sales 541-519 -2968 • Elkhornbarns@gmail.com • 509-331-4558