Testimony shows Burgum didn’t want DAPL to escalate into a standoff
By Mary Steurer
North Dakota Monitor
BISMARCK, ND – Gov. Doug Burgum opposed removing Dakota Access Pipeline protesters by force, he testified Monday.
An email shown in a federal court trial indicated Burgum favored using humanitarian outreach to the camps as a means to end the protests that drew thousands of people from across the country.
“He doesn’t want a clearing out of the camps, doesn’t like the optics,” Col. John Henderson of the Army Corps of Engineers wrote in the email, which recounted a meeting with Burgum that took place in January 2017.
According to the email, Burgum told Henderson he didn’t want the protests to end up like Wounded Knee — referring to the 1890 massacre of an estimated 150 to 300 Lakota people by American soldiers, as well as the 1973 demonstrations on the South Dakota site of the massacre. Those demonstrations resulted in an armed standoff and the killing of two Native Americans by federal law enforcement.
During his testimony, Burgum clarified that he meant he didn’t want the response from law enforcement to be heavy-handed for fear it could cause clashes between protesters and police.
“We didn’t want this to inflate into a conflict,” he said.
In previous testimony, witnesses for the state have criticized federal officials over similar concerns, arguing that they were too tolerant of the demonstrations. Burgum said Monday that the protests were prolonged and exacerbated due to “a lack of action by the federal government.”
North Dakota is suing the United States for $38 million in an attempt to recover money it says it spent policing protesters opposing construction of the project, often referred to as DAPL. The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe opposes the pipeline and the water crossing under the Missouri River because of concerns for the tribe’s water supply.
The state claims the federal government is at fault for not offering more assistance to North Dakota and working to end the demonstrations sooner, especially given that the largest protest camp was located on land managed by the Army Corps of Engineers.
Attorneys for the United States argue North Dakota is overstating both the cost of the protests and the federal government’s influence on demonstrators.
A bench trial overseen by U.S. District Court Judge Daniel Traynor began Feb. 15. Testimony is expected to continue through the first two weeks of March.
The governor helped bring an end to the demonstrations by issuing an evacuation order on Feb. 15, 2017. The Army Corps of Engineers sent out a similar notice to protesters nearly two weeks prior on Feb. 3, though Burgum didn’t recall the Corps taking that step while on the witness stand Monday.
Both orders gave protesters until Feb. 22 to leave Corps land.
Demonstrators were offered free bus rides to Bismarck, medical care, food and hotel rooms, among other accommodations, Burgum said. Those who refused to get on the buses or leave the camps by other means were arrested.
The evacuation followed an unsuccessful attempt by Burgum’s predecessor, former Gov. Jack Dalrymple, to remove protesters from Corps property in November 2016.
Burgum said the impending threat of snowmelt flooding the camps may have given the February order a sense of urgency that Dalrymple’s did not.
Burgum also speculated that the transition from President Barack Obama to President Donald Trump in 2017 may have resulted in a White House more receptive to North Dakota’s point of view.
The court on Monday also played a recorded deposition of former Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell.
Jewell and other federal officials were repeatedly criticized by witnesses for the state, including Burgum, Dalrymple and Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier, who claim the United States did not provide North Dakota any meaningful support during the protests — both when it came to requests for backup from federal law enforcement and for financial assistance.
In her deposition, Jewell said that the agency simply did not have much to offer. It was a busy time for the Department of the Interior, she recalled, noting the DAPL protests came on the heels of the occupation of Oregon’s Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in early 2016.
“We had the resources that we could spare helping out the situation at Standing Rock,” she said.
Jewell also said she didn’t support dispatching additional law enforcement because she believed it could incite conflict. She recalled a conversation with former Gov. Dalrymple in 2016 in which she advised him not to activate the National Guard in response to the DAPL protests.
“I was concerned that a strong and visible response, particularly if it involved the National Guard, would inflame tensions,” she said.
The occupation was a “largely peaceful protest of what began to be a tribe raising awareness of its rights,” Jewell said.
Special Assistant Attorney General Paul Seby asked Jewell whether or not she was aware protesters were trespassing on Army Corps of Engineers land.
Jewell said at the time of the protests, her staff only informed her of broad-strokes details about what was going on. She said she wasn’t given much information about where the protesters were located.
Dalrymple ultimately activated the North Dakota National Guard in early September 2016.
Maj. Gen Alan Dohrmann, adjutant general for the North Dakota National Guard and director of the North Dakota Department of Emergency Services, testified Monday that the decision was made to provide administrative relief for law enforcement so they could be deployed elsewhere.
Dohrmann said between 200 to 300 members of the Guard were called up and some Humvees and other equipment were used during the protests.
Michael Achterling contributed to this report.
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