New Mexico launches investigation of forced sterilization of Native American women

EDGEWOOD, N.M. (AP) — In the 1970s, the U.S. agency that provides health care to Native Americans sterilized thousands of women without their full and informed consent, depriving them of the opportunity to start or grow families.

Associated Press Jean Whitehorse testifies about forced and coerced sterilization of Native American women at the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues on April 2019, as Anthony Gonzales, right, executive director of the American Indian Movement listens. (Keely Badger via AP) Gallup Indian Medical Center, a hospital run by the federal Indian Health Service, is shown, Friday, Feb. 20, 2026, in Gallup, N.M. (AP Photo/Maya Bernadett-Peters)

Native American Women Sterilization

Decades later, the state of New Mexico is set to investigate that troubling history and its lasting harm.

New Mexico legislators approved a measure this week to have the state Indian Affairs Department and the Commission on the Status of Women examine the history, scope and continuing impact of forced and coerced sterilizations of women of color by the Indian Health Service and other providers. The findings are expected to be reported to the governor by the end of 2027.

"It's important for New Mexico to understand the atrocities that took place within the borders of our state," said state Sen. Linda Lopez, one of the legislation's sponsors.

It's not the first state to confront its past. In 2023, Vermont launched atruth and reconciliation commissionto study forced sterilization of marginalized groups including Native Americans. In 2024, California beganpaying reparationsto people who had been sterilized without their consent in state-run prisons and hospitals.

The New Mexico Legislature also laid the groundwork to create a separate healing commission and for a formal acknowledgment of a little known piece of history that haunts Native families

Sarah Deer, a professor at the University of Kansas School of Law, said it's long overdue.

"The women in these communities carry these stories," she said.

Outside of a 1976 U.S. Government Accountability Office report, the federal government has never acknowledged what Deer calls a campaign of "systemic" sterilizations in Native American communities.

The Indian Health Service and its parent agency, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, did not respond to multiple emails requesting comment on New Mexico's investigation.

A troubling history

In 1972, Jean Whitehorse was admitted to an Indian Health Service hospital in Gallup, New Mexico, with a ruptured appendix. Just 22 and a new mother, Whitehorse said she remembers experiencing "extreme pain" as providers presented her with a flurry of consent forms before rushing her into emergency surgery.

"The nurse held the pen in my hand. I just signed on the line," said Whitehorse, a Navajo Nation citizen.

A few years later when she was struggling to conceive a second child, Whitehorse said she returned to the hospital and learned she had received a tubal ligation. The news devastated Whitehorse, contributed to the breakdown of her relationship and sent her spiraling into alcoholism, she said.

Advocates already were sounding the alarm about women like Whitehorse who were entering IHS clinics and hospitals to give birth or for other procedures and later finding themselves unable to conceive. The activist group Women of All Red Nations, or WARN — an offshoot of the American Indian Movement — was formed in part to expose the practice.

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In 1974, Choctaw and Cherokee physician Connie Redbird Uri reviewed IHS records and alleged that the federal agency had sterilized as many as 25% of its female patients of childbearing age. Some of the women Uri interviewed were unaware they had been sterilized. Others said they were bullied into consenting or misled to believe the procedure was reversible.

Uri's allegations helped prompt the GAO audit, which found that the Indian Health Service sterilized 3,406 women in four of the agency's 12 service areas between 1973 and 1976, including in Albuquerque. The agency found that some patients were under the age of 21 and most had signed forms that didn't comply with federal regulations meant to ensure informed consent.

GAO researchers determined that interviewing women who had undergone sterilizations "would not be productive," citing a single study of cardiac surgical patients in New York who struggled to recall past conversations with doctors. Because of the lack of patient interviews and the narrow purview of the GAO's audit, advocates say the full scope and impact remains unaccounted for.

A venue to tell their stories

Whitehorse didn't share her experience for nearly 40 years, she said. First, she told her daughter. Then, other family.

"Each time I tell my story, it relieves the shame, the guilt," Whitehorse said. "Now I think, why should I be ashamed? It's the government that should be ashamed of what they did to us."

Whitehorse now advocates publicly for victims of forced sterilization. In 2025, she testified about the practice to the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues and called for the United States to formally apologize.

Whitehorse hopes New Mexico's investigation will offer more victims a venue to tell their stories. But advocates like Rachael Lorenzo, executive director of the Albuquerque-based sexual and reproductive health organization Indigenous Women Rising, say the commission must be careful to avoid re-traumatizing survivors across generations.

"It's such a taboo topic. There's a lot of support that needs to happen when we tell these traumatic stories," said Lorenzo.

In a New Mexico legislative hearing earlier this month, retired Indian Health Service physician Dr. Donald Clark testified that he has seen patients in their 20s and 30s "seeking contraception but not trusting that they will not be irreversibly sterilized" because of stories quietly passed down by their grandmothers, mothers and aunts.

"It's still an issue that is affecting women's choice of birth control today," Clark said.

A pattern of disenfranchisement

A 1927 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Buck v. Bell upheld states' rights to sterilize people it considered "unfit" to reproduce, paving the way for the forced sterilization of immigrants, people of color, disabled people and other disenfranchised groups throughout the 20th century.

According to Lorenzo and Deer, the sterilization of Native American women fits into a pattern of federal policies meant to disrupt Native people's reproductive autonomy, from the systemic removal of Indigenous children into government boarding schools and non-Native foster homes to the 1976 Hyde Amendment, which prevents tribal clinics and hospitals that receive federal funding from performing abortions in almost all cases.

In Canada, doctors have beensanctionedas recently as 2023 for sterilizing Indigenous women without their consent.

Deer said New Mexico's investigation could pave the way for accountability. But without cooperation from the federal government, Deer said the commission's fact-finding abilities would be limited.

New Mexico launches investigation of forced sterilization of Native American women

EDGEWOOD, N.M. (AP) — In the 1970s, the U.S. agency that provides health care to Native Americans sterilized thousands o...
Conan O'Brien breaks silence on Rob Reiner murder after explosive fight at Christmas party

Conan O'Brien has finally weighed in on the deaths of friends Rob and Michele Reiner after they famouslyattended his annual Christmas partyin Los Angeles the night beforetheir murders on Dec. 14, 2025.

Page Six

"It's just so awful," hetold the New Yorkerin a newly published interview.

"And I think about how Rob felt about things that are happening in the country, how involved he was, how much he put himself out there—and to have that voice go quiet in an instant is still hard for me to comprehend."

Conan O'Brien, seen here in West Hollywood earlier this month, commented on the deaths of Rob and Michele Reiner. A24 via Getty Images

He also reflected on his relationship with the iconic "Princess Bride" director and his wife.

"I knew Rob and Michele, and then increasingly got closer and closer to them, and I was seeing them a lot," he shared.

"My wife and I were seeing them a lot, and they were so—they were just such lovely people. And to have that experience of saying good night to somebody and having them leave and then find out the next day that they're gone. . . . I think I was in shock for quite a while afterward."

Rob and Michele's daughter, Romy, found the couplestabbed to deathin their home on Dec. 14. Rob was 78 and Michele was 70.

Rob and Michele, seen here at the Human Rights Campaign Gala in 2019, were found stabbed to death by their daughter Romy on Dec. 14. / SplashNews.com

It was revealed at the time that their deaths occurred afterthey had argued with their son Nickat O'Brien's holiday party the previous night.

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Nick, 32, wasarrestedandcharged with two counts of first-degree murderwith a special circumstance of multiple murders.

The aspiring director faces a maximum sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole or the death penalty.

It was subsequently revealed that their son Nick, seen here with the Reiner family at the Los Angeles Premiere of Nick was arrested and charged with two counts of first-degree murder with a special circumstance of multiple murders. / SplashNews.com

He was being medicated fordiagnosed schizophrenia; however, the medication had the effect of making him "out of his head." Nick alsohas a long history of drug addiction.

Nick was scheduled to be arraigned last month. However, his lawyer — famed criminal defense attorney Alan Jackson —quit the case just before the court hearingon Jan. 7. The arraignment has been rescheduled for Monday.

Jackson laterdiscussed his reasons for dropping the case.

Nick, seen here with his family at a New York event in 2014, faces a maximum sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole or the death penalty. REUTERS Nick's arraignment has been scheduled for Monday. MediaPunch / BACKGRID

"That's a confidential communication between a lot of folks that I'm not willing to disclose," he told Billy Bush during a January appearance on the "Hot Mic" podcast.

When Bush asked if it had to do with money, Jackson responded, "You can't say that something happened with the retainer because I've never said that."

"Obviously, something happened with my ability, and my team's ability, to continue the representation, but I don't want you, your audience or anybody else to start speculating as to what that might be," he added. "I have not said a word about it."

Jackson continued, "Once I'm done, I'm done. I've withdrawn."

Conan O’Brien breaks silence on Rob Reiner murder after explosive fight at Christmas party

Conan O'Brien has finally weighed in on the deaths of friends Rob and Michele Reiner after they famouslyattended his...
Alan Cumming Says

Robin L Marshall/Getty

People Alan Cumming Robin L Marshall/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • While Alan Cumming has been in many successful movies, there's one he believes would have done better at the box office if it had been marketed better

  • Cumming says 2001's Josie and the Pussycats was "ahead of its time" but poorly promoted

  • "It could have found its audience sooner, and it could have been a much more commercially successful film if they hadn't blown it in the marketing department," he said

There's one filmAlan Cummingbelieves would have done better at the box office if it had been marketed better.

During a chat withInStyle Magazinelast month, theTraitorshost, 61, said he felt like theJosie and the Pussycatsmarketing team missed the mark when it came to promoting the 2001 musical comedy.

"My strongest memory and feeling aboutJosie and the Pussycatsis that it was a marketing disaster," he said. "It was totally marketed to the wrong audience."

While the movie "was marketed to tweens," he noted that "it's a very adult film."

Alan Cumming in 'Josie and the Pussycats' Everett

"It's about sort of adult themes about the way that commerce is infiltrating our culture — it's a fun comedy, but it's got this underlying message that I don't think was appropriate or appreciated by the audience that it was targeted to," Cumming said.

However, thankfully, in the last 25 years, the film has "found its audience and people really appreciate it and are obsessed with it," which he "loves."

"I actually love being in films where people don't get it initially, and years go by, and it's sort of the gift that keeps on giving," he continued. "It could have found its audience sooner, and it could have been a much more commercially successful film if they hadn't blown it in the marketing department. Sorry to the marketing department, I'm sure you're all lovely, but you got it wrong."

He went on to say that the film was "very much ahead of its time."

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"It talks about the way that we are sold things through culture. We're actually all used to that; that's not a new thing, but then, 25 years ago, it was not really so common," theCabaretactor added.

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Josie and the Pussycats, based on the Archie Comic series of the same name, debuted in 2001. It starred Rachael Leigh Cook, Tara Reid and Rosario Dawson as the titular band members.

The movie debuted to poor reviews and a dismal box-office run, but the campy flick has since become a cult classic.

Alan Cumming in 'Josie and the Pussycats' Everett

The satirical musical comedy also starredParker Posey, Gabriel Mann, Paulo Costanzo andMissi Pyle.

In 2024,CookandReidreunited atAwesome Conin Washington, D.C., where they spoke about the movie's impact and teased a possible reunion or remake project. Cook shared her appreciation forJosie and the Pussycats'devoted fanbase, helping the film stay relevant and reach cult classic status.

"You guys are a testament that the movie worked all these years later," she said. "This is all about making that movie. So, thank you!"

"If this movie came out now, it would have been huge," Reid added. "But I really feel like this movie was ahead of its time."

Read the original article onPeople

Alan Cumming Says “Josie and the Pussycats ”Could've Been More Commercially Successful If the Marketing Team Hadn't 'Blown It'

Robin L Marshall/Getty NEED TO KNOW While Alan Cumming has been in many successful movies, there's one ...

 

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