Rappahannock Tribal Jail

Rappahannock Tribal Jail Information

Cahuilla are Takic [Uto-Aztecan] people who arrived in southern California between 2,000 and 2,500 years ago. They were peaceful mountaiAn and desert hunter-gatherer tribes. They covered the entire San Bernardino basin, the San Jacinto Mountains, the Coachella Valley, and parts of the southern Mojave Desert.

Tribe: Rappahannock Tribe, Inc.

Phone: 804-769-0260

Physical Address:
Rappahannock Tribal Jail
5036 Indian Neck Rd
Indian Neck, VA 23148

Mailing Address (personal mail):
Inmate's First and Last Name
Rappahannock Tribal Jail
5036 Indian Neck Rd
Indian Neck, VA 23148

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About the Rappahannock Tribal Jail
Cahuilla are Takic [Uto-Aztecan] people who arrived in southern California between 2,000 and 2,500 years ago. They were peaceful mountaiAn and desert hunter-gatherer tribes. They covered the entire San Bernardino basin, the San Jacinto Mountains, the Coachella Valley, and parts of the southern Mojave Desert.
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Directions / Map to the Rappahannock Tribal Jail
Understanding US Bureau of Indian Affairs

Because the legal system in ‘Indian Country’ operates outside of the legal jurisdiction of the cities, counties and states where the individual Indian Reservations are located, and the land is wholly owned and governed by the Tribes, the jails and detention centers on those lands are maintained and run by the individual Tribes. The police that provide the security and enforce the laws and the courts that mete out justice are also controlled by the individual Tribes.

There are over 90 jails and detention centers throughout Indian Country, of which, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) Office of Justice Services (OJS) staffs and operates a quarter of these facilities. The remainder are operated by Tribes through the PL 93-638, Self-Governance Compacts and a few are fully funded and operated by a tribe. Each jail is unique in operation and location.

Indian Reservation and Tribal laws also fall under the legal jurisdiction of the federal government. If a federal law has been broken, the Department of Justice may get involved. In that case, a convicted person from a crime committed on Indian Lands may be required to serve their time within the BOP (Federal Bureau of Prisons).

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