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Bill

HR 7490

Tribal Warrant Fairness Act

119th Congress Introduced by Tom Cole and 3 co-sponsors

Establishes federal-tribal coordination procedures for executing arrest warrants in Indian Country to balance law enforcement efficiency with tribal sovereignty protections.

Introduced in House
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HR 7490

Legislative bill overview

HR 7490, the Tribal Warrant Fairness Act, establishes procedures for how federal law enforcement executes arrest warrants on tribal lands and in tribal jurisdictions. The bill aims to clarify coordination protocols between federal agents, tribal law enforcement, and tribal governments when federal warrants are involved in Indian Country.

Why is this important

Warrant execution in Indian Country involves complex jurisdictional questions between federal, tribal, and sometimes state authorities. This bill addresses practical enforcement gaps that can create confusion, delay justice, or undermine tribal sovereignty—issues that affect both public safety operations and tribal self-governance in communities nationwide.

Potential points of contention

  • Tribal sovereignty vs. federal authority: Defining how much deference federal agents must show to tribal preferences when executing federal warrants may conflict with federal law enforcement operational needs
  • Notice and coordination requirements: Mandating federal agents notify or coordinate with tribal authorities could be viewed as burdensome by law enforcement or insufficient by tribal governments depending on specific provisions
  • Jurisdiction disputes: The bill may face disagreement over which governmental authority has primary jurisdiction when crimes involve cross-jurisdictional elements or occur in areas with disputed tribal/federal boundaries

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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