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Elizabeth Flock is a Peabody and Emmy-nominated journalist, author, and documentary filmmaker who focuses on stories about gender and justice. Design updated in A statue of a pioneer family stands in front of the state capitol building in Bismarck, North Dakota. A mother cradles a baby, a son leans against a wagon wheel, and a father peers into the distance. The monument represents the settlers who built lives on the banks of the Missouri River after staking their claim to land occupied for centuries by the Mandan Indian tribe.
Americana is ubiquitous here. The Burleigh Morton County Detention Center, a concrete complex next to a field of heat-withered grass, flies the flag, too. On a July morning in , I drove there to interview a prisoner whose story is uniquely American, though perhaps not in the way many North Dakotans like to think of the word. Her name is Red Fawn Fallis, and her arrest was the kind of dramatic incident that splashes across the media and is replaced just as quicklyโa story of limited interest to most people, but a crisis for those affected by it.
In Indian country, including much of North Dakota, this pattern is all too familiar. Fallis is a member of the Oglala, one of seven bands of the Lakota Sioux. A tattoo of a galloping horse covered the left side of her neck. At the jail, a clerk directed me to a back room, where a row of stiff plastic chairs faced what looked like pay phones with video screens.
When she spoke, her voice was soft but certain. She was sure of the story she wanted to tell. I asked her to take me back to October , to the day she was accused of firing a gun at a police officer.
Instead, she began a few months earlier, when she met a man named Heath Harmon. As she said his nameโ Heath โher tongue stuck between her teeth for an instant, as if encountering a bone. Harmon had stopped Fallis short the moment she met him, with his clean-cut good looks and his offer to help as she and thousands of other protesters fought the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline at the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.