logo
Crime novelist explores MMIW in 'Where They Last Saw Her'

Crime novelist explores MMIW in 'Where They Last Saw Her'

Yahoo15-05-2025
Frank ZufallWisconsin Examiner
Marcie Rendon, author of 'Where They Last Saw Her,' spoke at the Muir Library in Winnebago in southern Minnesota last Tuesday, where a group of 15-20 white women from a conservative, Republican-leaning farming community came to hear the Native American author talk about her recently published book.
The crime novel explores the theme of Native American women who are missing or murdered.
Rendon is a member of the White Earth Nation in northwest Minnesota who now lives in Minneapolis.
The story begins with the protagonist, Quill, a Native American wife and mother of two, who is jogging on the reservation when she hears a woman scream. That scream sends her into panic, which later leads to an investigation.
Rendon told the admiring audience that she is a crime junkie who loves to create page-turners, and that her goal with the new book wasn't to provide a sociological study of Indigenous life, but to tell a good story.
However, Rendon framed the book's accounts of missing Native American women taken from a reservation and an infant kidnapped from a Walmart to the movement recognizing the issue of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Relatives (MMIW/R).
Early on, Crow, Quill's husband, expresses concern about his wife risking her safety chasing down information on the possible identity of the woman she heard screaming:
'We've been hearing these horror stories of four thousand, maybe five thousand women missing across Canada. Missing down here. The stories of what has happened to women and children' – he emphasized children – 'in the man camps over the Dakotas. And they are here now.' He jabbed two fingers onto the table when he said the word now. 'Those same men are here now.' He jabbed the table again. 'I don't want anyone from my family to go missing. To end up dead in a ditch or a river. No. Not on my watch.'
When the book club members had an opportunity to ask Rendon questions, they didn't focus on the plotline of the story but on the larger MMIW/R issue, what's behind it and what could be done to address it.
In mainstream culture, Rendon responded, Native Americans are seen as invisible and their problems have not been taken as seriously.
'When I go out East to talk, most people out there think we're all dead; that we disappeared with, I don't know, the Black Hills gold rush, which also makes it easier for us to disappear if people don't think we exist,' she said. 'How can you disappear if you don't exist?'
Although the MMIW/R issue has benefited from more public discussions, such as the May 5 MMIW/R Day of Awareness, Rendon said, when she was recently in Madison, she met a college professor who had never heard of the issue.
'Where They Last Saw Her' is an example of a work of fiction that raises awareness of a real crisis and provides insights into subcultures and their struggles.
In 2018, as part of a statewide program called Wisconsin Reads, several book clubs around the state collectively read and discussed 'The Round House' by Louise Erdrich, a member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians in North Dakota. That book also raised awareness of struggles on Native American reservations and, in particular, the complication of prosecuting a crime when there are competing jurisdictional authorities between a tribal nation and county and state authorities.
Rendon is also the author of the 'Cash Blackbear' series, which involves a Native American 19-year-old woman who solves crimes in the Red River area of Minnesota/North Dakota in the 1970s. She said her editor at Bantam asked her about writing another book outside the series.
'She said, 'Well, what's the current issue in Indian Country?' and I said, 'missing and murdered Indian women.''
However, Rendon was initially reluctant to write a story around the MMIW/R issue.
'I said, 'there's no resolution. If somebody's missing or murdered, there's no happy ending,' she said. 'There's no resolution to the story. They're either dead or they're still missing.''
Rendon's story is set in Minnesota at a fictional tribe on the outskirts of Duluth, Minnesota, where in real life there had been a major pipeline project on a reservation in the area, like the one in her book — the replacement of Line 3 by Enbridge on the Fond du Lac Reservation, completed in 2021.
Prior to the Line 3 permit being approved, there had been concerns by Native American groups about man camps and violence and harassment against Native women.
A 2021 article by The Guardian, 'Sexual violence along pipeline route follows Indigenous women's warnings,' reported that a local crisis center for survivors of violence had 'received more than 40 reports about Line 3 workers harassing and assaulting women and girls who live in northwestern Minnesota.'
Rene Ann Goodrich, a member of the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians, and a member of the Wisconsin MMIW/R Task Force is one of several Ojibwe women from Northern Wisconsin who have also expressed concern over Enbridge replacing a portion of Line 5, currently located on the Bad River Reservation, but Enbridge has filed for permits to build outside the reservation. Besides environmental concerns, the new project could result in a man camp in the area and possible assaults against Native women.
Rendon said there is a strong relationship between the extractive industry and the MMIW/R issue, and she makes a strong correlation between the two in her book.
'Anytime you have an extractive industry, like the pipelines, gold mines, uranium mines, anytime you have an extractive industry where large groups of men are pulled in to do the extraction, there's no police force. They show up without their wives and families. They show up without ministers or priests. It's just like the Wild West,' she said. 'There has to be something done about the extractive industries and this use of men in large groups to actually go out and do these extractive industries. I don't know how you change this. But I think that awareness is a piece of it.'
However, Rendon said she had heard that some oil companies have responded to concerns about man camps by putting men up in hotels with their families.
'Talk about the power of women, right? Bringing your wife and she'll make you go to church,' she said.
Rendon said it was vital for her to portray Native American women in a community. In the story, three women, Quill and her friends Punk and Gaylyn, often travel together as they pursue information about missing women or help with searches.
'In Native communities, you almost never do anything alone,' she said. 'You know, if I'm going to go to the grocery store, somebody's with me. There's one family that, if you see them at the pow wow — if you see them at the grocery store, if you see them downtown, in the courthouse — it's the mom, the grandma, the kids, you know; it's like, it's a whole group,' she said.
Regarding Native women and community, Rendon notes it was Indigenous/First Nation women in Canada who first gathered together and spoke out about the phenomenon of Indigenous women missing around the man camps of oil pipelines and mining operations.
'I knew that in this story about missing and murdered Indian women, what was important to me was a community of women, and so I knew that it wasn't going to be just one person,' she said.
Rendon said she has received some criticism for including a male Native American who is abusive.
'We have bad people in our communities, too,' she said, 'and then there's the thing about domestic abuse, it happens in every community and in smaller communities. People know that it happens, but people don't talk about it, or there's this secrecy and stuff that happens around it.'
In Minnesota, the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) reports there were 716 Indigenous persons missing in that state in 2024, 57% of whom were women.
In Wisconsin the exact number of missing Indigenous persons is not published, in part because the state does not have a clearinghouse like Minnesota for gathering that data.
Rendon praised efforts in Minnesota to create an MMIW/R office that tracks MMIW/R cases, works with families, and provides support and even rewards for information. And she noted that in Minneapolis, the Indigenous Protectors Movement, a branch of the American Indian Movement, is active in putting out flyers and organizing searches for missing persons.
In researching the novel, Rendon said she was surprised by how often white women who went missing were blamed for causing their own victimization through their behavior, including having multiple sexual partners. In Native American communities, she said, there isn't that cloud of guilt over women.
'The Native community clearly has said, 'I don't care what our women were doing, nobody deserves to be trafficked. Nobody deserves to end up dead in a ditch or in a gunny sack in the Red River Valley,'' she said. 'So there's a difference, a cultural difference that I saw, which surprised me.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

State Rep. Stephanie Kifowit joins growing Democratic field running for Illinois comptroller
State Rep. Stephanie Kifowit joins growing Democratic field running for Illinois comptroller

Chicago Tribune

time3 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

State Rep. Stephanie Kifowit joins growing Democratic field running for Illinois comptroller

Stephanie Kifowit, a 12-year state lawmaker from Oswego, entered Monday the still-growing race to become the Democratic nominee for state comptroller, a post incumbent Susana Mendoza is retiring from for a potential bid for Chicago mayor. A former financial planner and Marine veteran, Kifowit's tenure in the Illinois House has included serving on legislative spending panels, and she currently is chair of the House Personnel & Pensions Committee. The comptroller is the state's top fiscal officer. 'Washington's a bit dysfunctional these days and chaotic. Frankly, I think that we need a comptroller that has a bit of a backbone. I'll be your fiscal drill instructor,' Kifowit said in her announcement video on social media. 'I'll bring integrity, strength of character and leadership to the office to stand up for you.' Kifowit joins a field that includes House colleague, state Rep. Margaret Croke of Chicago, Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim and Champaign County Auditor George Danos. State Sen. Karina Villa of West Chicago is also expected to enter the contest. Croke narrowly won the endorsement of Cook County Democratic slatemakers last month. Kifowit called herself 'one of the few fiscal experts in the General Assembly' and said she has been 'the voice of fiscal responsibility since that day I got there.' In October 2020, Kifowit called for the resignation of then-House Speaker Michael Madigan as the longtime speaker found his continued leadership under fire over a growing federal corruption investigation after Commonwealth Edison admitted to federal prosecutors that it had engaged in a yearslong bribery scheme to curry Madigan's favor. Kifowit also at the time announced her own candidacy to replace Madigan as speaker. Madigan eventually resigned and was convicted on corruption charges and sentenced in June to seven and a half years in prison. Kifowit's bid for speaker was unsuccessful as current House Speaker Emanuel 'Chris' Welch was selected to succeed Madigan. But Kifowit continued on in the legislature. In 2018, Kifowit made a public apology to then-state Rep. Peter Breen of Lombard, a Republican, who cited fiscal concerns in opposing her legislation to offer higher compensation to victims of a deadly Legionnaire's disease outbreak at the Quincy Veterans Home. 'I would like to make him a broth of Legionella and pump it into the water system of his loved one, so that they can be infected, they can be mistreated, they can sit and suffer by getting aspirin instead of being properly treated and ultimately die. And we are talking about our nation's heroes,' Kifowit said. Afterward, Kifowit contended her words were misheard, misrepresented, misinterpreted and mischaracterized. But a day later, she offered a formal apology and said, as a veteran, she had felt 'very passionate' about the victims of the outbreak. At the time of her apology, she was a member of then-incoming Gov. JB Pritzker's transition committee on veterans issues. Mendoza, the current Democratic comptroller, announced last month she wouldn't seek a fourth term in 2026. She first won the office in a 2016 special election to fill the unexpired term of the late Republican Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka. Mendoza used the position to sharply criticize one-term Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner's fiscal policies, including a dispute Rauner had with Madigan that led to the state going two years without adopting a budget. During her announcement last month that she wouldn't run for reelection as comptroller, Mendoza said she was 'excited to leave the door open' to challenge Brandon Johnson in what would be her second bid for Chicago mayor.

Of course Trump wants to flex on D.C. Where are the Democrats to stop him?
Of course Trump wants to flex on D.C. Where are the Democrats to stop him?

Los Angeles Times

time3 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Of course Trump wants to flex on D.C. Where are the Democrats to stop him?

Remember 'I alone can fix it'? Donald Trump, who made that laughable statement in his 2016 convention acceptance speech, is now testing the theory in Washington. Trump and his party have been threatening a D.C. takeover for years and made it part of the Republican platform last year. But it was all just empty talk and random uppercase words until a former staffer at the Department of Government Efficiency was reportedly attacked in an attempted carjacking in the wee hours of Aug. 3 in a busy area of bars and restaurants. It doesn't matter at all to Trump that D.C.'s violent crime rate fell to a 30-year low last year and is down another 26% so far this year compared with 2024, or that a police report suggests police saw the incident and intervened. This particular victim — a teenage Elon Musk protégé and notorious DOGE operative — gave this particular president the 'emergency' he needed to declare a 'public safety emergency.' Of course, he called it 'a historic action to rescue our nation's capital from crime, bloodshed, bedlam and squalor and worse.' He has federalized the city's Metropolitan Police Department and deployed 800 members of its National Guard (to start). Over the weekend he sent 450 federal police officers from 18 agencies to patrol the city. It's the second time this year that Trump has played the National Guard card to show who's boss. He sent 4,000 Guard troops and 700 Marines to Los Angeles in June, over the objections of Gov. Gavin Newsom and Mayor Karen Bass, ostensibly to restore order amid immigration raids. But the move sparked new tensions, protests and at least one surreal foray by armed, masked agents into a park where children were attending summer camp. It also drew a legal challenge from Newsom, which is unfolding in court this week. There will be no similar lawsuit in D.C., where I've lived for decades. That's because the U.S. president controls our National Guard. The hard truth is that though Wyoming and Vermont each have fewer people than D.C.'s 700,000-plus residents, D.C. is not a state. It's still in a semi-colonial status, with a mayor and city council whose actions can be nullified by Congress, and with no voting representation in that Congress. In fact, Congress accidentally slashed $1.1 billion from D.C.'s budget — our own money, not federal dollars! — in its cost-cutting frenzy last spring. A promised fix never came, forcing cuts that affect public safety and much else. And yet the city's crime rate has continued to fall. Compared with California, an economic juggernaut of more than 39 million people located thousands of miles from Washington, D.C. is a minuscule and all too convenient target for an executive aiming to prove his manhood, show off to autocrats in other countries or create headlines to distract from news he doesn't like. I could go off on Trump for his lies, overreach and disrespect for D.C. and its right to govern itself. Or the various Republicans who have imposed conservative policies on D.C. for years and now are trying to repeal its home rule law. But what really enrages me is the lack of Democratic nerve — or even bravado — that has left D.C. so vulnerable to Trump and conservative-run Congresses. Where was the modern-day Lyndon Johnson (the 'master of the Senate,' in Robert Caro's phrase) in 2021, to whip support in the narrowly Democratic Senate after the House passed a D.C. statehood bill for the second year in a row? Trump has no mastery beyond bullying and bribery — but those tactics are working fine with Congress, corporations, law firms, academia and sovereign nations across the globe. As former House Speaker Newt Gingrich put it last week: 'You have this rock standing in the middle of history called Donald Trump. And he's saying: 'Do you want to do it my way, or do you want to be crushed? I prefer you do it my way, but if you have to be crushed, that's OK.' ' Gingrich correctly characterized most responses to Trump as 'You know, I've always wanted to be part of the team,' and added: 'If he can sustain this, he's moving into a league that, other than Washington and Lincoln, nobody has gotten to the level of energy, drive and effectiveness that we see with Trump.' Unfortunately, Trump is aiming to speed-raze what Washington and Lincoln built. (He keeps claiming it's 'Liberation Day' for D.C., but the last 'Liberation Day' — his April 2 tariff announcements — tanked the stock market.) The only conceivable antidote is to elect a mad-as-hell Democratic Congress in 2026 and, in 2028, an arm-twisting, strong-arming, terror-inspiring Democratic president who's in a hurry to get things done. Someone who's forceful, persuasive and resolved to use the power they have while they have it. The top priorities, beyond reversing as much institutional and constitutional damage as possible, should be structural: Supreme Court term limits and ethics rules with teeth, a national gerrymandering ban, a sensible and uniform national voter ID policy, and minimum national standards for early voting and mail voting — to protect the will of the people and the republic itself. Equally important, make D.C. the state of Douglass Commonwealth, named after the abolitionist Frederick Douglass rather than the colonizing Christopher Columbus. Rural America has wielded disproportionate power since the late 1800s, when Republicans added sparsely populated states and permanently skewed the Senate. Two new D.C. senators would help correct that imbalance. The problem is that the next president, or even the next Congress, might arrive too late for D.C. Trump has already begun the federal takeover he has threatened so often for so many years. He took over the Kennedy Center. He took over Congress. We should have expected we'd be next. Back in March, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) proposed that D.C. seek temporary sanctuary with Maryland, which ceded most of the land to create the capital in the first place. 'You'd definitely be safer,' he said he told Mayor Muriel Bowser. That offer, joke or not, practical or not, is looking increasingly inviting by the day. Jill Lawrence is a writer and author of 'The Art of the Political Deal: How Congress Beat the Odds and Broke Through Gridlock.' @

By sending troops to D.C. and eyeing Oakland, Trump continues targeting Black-led cities
By sending troops to D.C. and eyeing Oakland, Trump continues targeting Black-led cities

San Francisco Chronicle​

time4 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

By sending troops to D.C. and eyeing Oakland, Trump continues targeting Black-led cities

When President Donald Trump announced Monday that he will deploy National Guard troops to the streets of Washington D.C. to combat crime, he named several other cities where he might take similar action. 'We have other cities also that are bad. Very bad,' Trump said during the White House news conference. 'You look at Chicago, how bad it is. You look at Los Angeles, how bad it is. We have other cities that are very bad. New York has a problem. And then you have, of course, Baltimore and Oakland. We don't even mention that anymore there.' Trump and other members of his administration, while often using false or misleading statistics, have cited rampant crime as the justification for deploying federalized troops within U.S. cities. But these cities share another commonality: They're led by Black mayors. Critics don't think that's a coincidence. Trump's focus on Washington D.C., Chicago, Baltimore, New York and Oakland is part of a larger pattern in which the president has suggested cities with majority-Black populations, or those led by Black leaders, are hotbeds of crime and corruption and symbols of American decline. 'I see this as a political dog whistle to his base, evoking long-running stereotypes that Black mayors cannot adequately govern or are soft on crime in their cities,' said Jordie Davies, a professor of political science at UC Irvine. 'Donald Trump is engaging in political theater so he can be seen as responding to the racist ideas that these cities are poorly run and overrun with crime — even as statistics demonstrate that violent crime in major U.S. cities, including D.C., is down this year.' Reports of violent crimes — homicides, robberies, assaults and sexual abuse —have seen steep declines over the last two years, the Washington Post reported. 'If he is going to start lying about major American cities to justify sending the military there, it is not surprising to me that he would pick cities with Black leadership and significant Black populations,' state Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, said Monday. 'That is straight up Donald Trump's alley and straight out of his racist playbook.' Crime is also falling in Oakland, a trend that Mayor Barbara Lee cited Monday in arguing that Trump was less interested in facts than in scoring 'cheap political points by tearing down communities he doesn't understand.' Oakland experienced a 6% increase in reported violent crimes in 2024, but saw a decrease in homicides and property crimes, according to a Chronicle analysis. So far in 2025, violent crimes including homicides are down significantly in the city. 'We're making real progress on public safety in Oakland, and while we acknowledge we have more work to do, we are doing this work each and every day,' Lee said. 'Our comprehensive public safety strategy is working — crime rates are coming down even though we still face many challenges. And let me repeat, President Trump is wrong.' Before Trump accepted the Republican presidential nomination at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee last year, he reportedly called the city 'horrible.' 'Trump is a lot of things but he certainly isn't subtle—all of the cities he denigrates have one important thing in common: they all have significant Black populations,' DNC Chair Jaime Harrison said in a statement to the Daily Beast at the time. In 2020, Trump said of Detroit, Oakland and Baltimore, 'these cities, it's like living in hell.' 'And everyone gets upset when I say it, they say, 'Is that a racist statement? ' It's not a racist,' Trump told Fox News. 'Frankly, Black people come up to me, they say, 'Thank you. Thank you sir for saying it.'' Davies, the UC Irvine professor, said using the fear of crime — especially the idea of 'Black crime' — has always been an effective political message in the U.S. It was a message Trump hammered consistently in the 2024 election, a race in which he doubled his share of Black voters from 2020. (still, Trump's opponent, then-Vice President Kamala Harris, won 83% of Black voters.) 'Crime evokes fear and fear provides a political vacuum that can be filled with state violence,' Davies said. 'It will be important for experts, politicians, and journalists to call out Trump's lies about crime in these places and name this for what it is: a racist attempt to dominate Black cities and a performance of power for his base.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store