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How Meth Took Hold on Indian Reservation

Ask people on the reservation about the Sagaste-Cruz case and most don't know much about it. They seem surprised to learn how sophisticated the operation was.

But mention the Goodman case, and everyone knows. The Goodmans were an entire family, grandparents down to grandchildren, who were dealing meth and prescription drugs here.


Della Aragon stands in front of one of numerous anti-meth posters inside the Arapahoe School Culture Building as she listens to community leaders speak at a meeting of Partners Against Meth on April 4, 2007 at the Wind River Indian Reservation, Wyo. (AP Photo/Wayne Nichols)
Della Aragon stands in front of one of numerous anti-meth posters inside the Arapahoe School Culture Building as she listens to community leaders speak at a meeting of Partners Against Meth on April 4, 2007 at the Wind River Indian Reservation, Wyo. (AP Photo/Wayne Nichols) (Wayne Nicholls - AP)

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Nineteen people, including the tribal judge, were arrested in 2005.

The two cases weren't directly related, but with many Indians already hooked on meth compliments of the Sagaste-Cruz gang, the Goodmans didn't have any trouble finding customers. Assistant U.S. Attorney Kelly Rankin said the Goodmans often had 20 to 50 customers a day come to their house.

Darrell LoneBear Sr., whose sister, Donna Goodman, and her husband, John Goodman, were the ring's leaders, said his relatives fell victim to easy money on a reservation where jobs are hard to find.

He rattles off his family's prison sentences: "John Goodman, 21 years. My sister Donna, 24 years. My nephew James got 19 years. My nephew Darrell got 8.

"It was all of my family," he said.

Thirteen children were sent to live with other relatives. One sister took in six children, another took in three.

"It is a tremendous, added responsibility emotionally and financially," said LoneBear, crime prevention and safety supervisor for the Northern Arapaho Tribal Housing. "All of us have been traumatized by this matter. We all still stay here."

Police Chief Doug Noseep has a police force that can't possibly keep up with every call. He is grateful for the help from outside law enforcement agencies in the raids over the past few years, and believes it has reduced the amount of meth here.

Noseep knows who is trying to get help, who is still using. Once, his officers encountered a 12-year-old girl who was addicted.

"It's sad as hell," he said. "It's here and it's not going to go anywhere. It's never going to go away."


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© 2007 The Associated Press