'Everybody's tired': South Dakota tribe sues US over crime

FILE - People participate in a march in downtown Rapid City, S.D., Thursday, Feb. 14, 2019, to call attention to missing and murdered Native American women and girls. Violent crimes across the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota have increased in recent years. The Oglala Sioux Tribe says there are only 33 officers and eight criminal investigators responsible for over 100,000 emergency calls annually. (Ryan Hermens/Rapid City Journal via AP, File)

Holly Wilson had just left to pick up soda for a steak dinner for her nine grandchildren last May, when a barrage of bullets was fired into her home on the largest Native American reservation in South Dakota.

Her 6-year-old grandson, Logan Warrior Goings, jumped from the family's loveseat and raced across the room to his grandfather — and was shot in the head. It took at least 15 minutes for a single tribal law enforcement officer to arrive, but by then, the drive-by shooters were gone, and Logan — a “kind and gentle†boy who loved Xbox and his Siamese cat, Simon — was dead.

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