CARLTON, Minn. — Two northern Minnesota tribes will issue license plates intended to capture attention for persistent but often overlooked crimes against Indigenous people.
The Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa and the Bois Forte Band of Chippewa created plates that bear the letters MMIR, an acronym for missing and murdered Indigenous relatives. The plates were unveiled in a ceremony last week at Black Bear Casino Resort here.
"This affects me directly," said Fond du Lac Chair Kevin Dupuis. "My sister, years back — Trina Langenbrunner of Fond du Lac — was murdered and found on the side of the road."
Langenbrunner, 33, was the mother of three children. She was brutally killed near Cloquet, Minn., in 2000, in what became a cold case for 13 years. A neighbor eventually confessed to the killing and was sentenced to nearly four decades in prison.
The plates are for women like Langenbrunner, and the untold number of missing Native Americans stemming at least to the boarding school era, where Indigenous children were forcibly separated from their families, said Cathy Chavers, chair of the Bois Forte Band.
"It goes way, way back," she said. "Anishinaabe have been invisible ... for far too long."
The plates, for now available to Fond du Lac and Bois Forte citizens who live on their respective reservations, are part of a larger movement in recent years to raise awareness of the under-reported reality that often includes trafficking.
A first-in-the-nation state office — the Office for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Relatives tasked with addressing the problem — opened this year. State Sen. Mary Kunesh, DFL-New Brighton, was instrumental in its creation. And now, the Standing Rock Lakota descendant, one of only a handful of Indigenous legislators, is trying to pass legislation that would create similar state-issued license plates.