Round Valley Weeps: Emotional Standing Room Only Meeting After Recent Murder in Covelo

Round Valley. Covelo

Round Valley. [Image from the University of California College of the Law, San Francisco website]

The Round Valley community is reeling from the brutal murder of twenty-year-old Nicholas Whipple early Wednesday morning. At a standing-room-only press conference at the Round Valley Tribal Administration Building yesterday, tribal members called out drugs and alcohol, a reluctance to report crimes to law enforcement, and law enforcement itself, for the many unsolved crimes on the reservation.

Tribal council members wept as they pleaded with the community to come forward if they witnessed Whipple’s murder. Lewis Whipple, Vice President of the Round Valley Indian Tribes, listed the names of murdered community members as Nicholas Whipple’s aunt held up pictures of her nephew and women wailed.

Nicholas Whipple

20-year-old Nicholas Whipple, found dead early Wednesday morning. [Photograph provided by Round Valley Tribe Vice President Lewis Whipple]

“Our people want to cover for these people?” he demanded. “Come on, you guys, I grew up in this community. You raised me. We need you to stand up. Speak!”

One after another, people objected that they have reported crimes, but the violence continues. After the press conference, Valerie Britton, Nicholas Whipple’s great-aunt, predicted that, “After this case, I’ll guarantee you, they’re gonna say, they didn’t have enough evidence to convict him. Regardless of how many witnesses come forward.”

Another woman who did not share her name added that, “That’s why people are afraid to come forward, though. They make a stand, and say something, and then they get retribution.”

Tribal Council member Michelle Downey urged people not to be afraid, even as the community grieves the 2021 shooting murder of Kenneth Whipple, another member of the same family. “We just want to make sure that our community knows how important it is to stand up and speak up for what is right, and know that it’s the right thing to say if you’ve seen who took another person’s life,” she said. “Don’t be afraid. Be strong. We heard from the aunt of Nick today, and she said to be that strong warrior woman. I see we have become those strong warrior women, standing up for our community.”

Details about the crime have not emerged, but as of yesterday afternoon, Sheriff Matthew Kendall said the murder victim was beaten so badly he could not yet confirm if he had also been shot. Asked if witnesses could be protected if they do come forward, he said, “We do a lot of different things to offer anonymity,” like sealing search warrants. He added that during trials, the District Attorney’s Victim Witness Office “works to make sure our victims and witnesses are taken care of.”

Valerie Britton remains skeptical, stating that, “We don’t get services up here. I said that loud and clear in that meeting, because we don’t.” She added that after Whipple’s murder, she counted eighteen law enforcement vehicles in town. “What have they done? Who have they arrested? For that many resources to sit there after a kid was killed?” In addition to two of her nephews, Britton’s brother Michael Pina was killed in 2014. His murder has still not been solved. “You can’t even get over one death before there’s another,” she said. “And then the sheriff’s department wants to come up here and do what? Give us lip service. I’m tired of their lip service.”

Kendall said that, “Some of the things I heard today actually had not ever been reported…you have to remember, sometimes people say, well, I called the Sheriff’s Office, but in fact, they left a message for the Tribal Police Department, or they said, I called Tribal, but they had spoken with one of my deputies. So there is a little confusion there…you know, I think everyone has an absolute right to say that we don’t have enough sheriff’s office presence throughout the county. We’re running on a crew that’s as low as any I’ve ever seen, and we’re still doing better than many other counties.”

Britton says familiarity with death comes all too early in Round Valley, saying, “Our young kids are very aware of what death is, and how parents and nieces and nephews and aunts and uncles don’t come back.”

Laura Betts, another tribal member, worries that if the most recent crime isn’t solved soon, it could lead to further violence. “We try to be supportive,” she said; “to say please, think of your younger kids, please don’t go sit in a jail, please don’t go hunt them down.”

Both women believe that people in the community know who the killer is. “I think a lot of people know who committed this crime,” Britton said. “Absolutely.”

A commenter, Marline Fulwider, on this story posted by MendoFever on the Covelo Community Breaking News Facebook page wrote,

Many ppl have a tendency to ask for what they themselves are unwilling to give, especially when it’s their own family doing these atrocities. It’s our own family members who commit these crimes sometimes, yet the silence and love for the offenders outweigh our need for justice THEN. Y’all don’t want to see them go to prison, don’t tell me it’s because everyone is scared. I call bull sht. Sometimes it’s because you know who’s involved so you’re willing to look the other way. Yeah, we’re sitting on our own hypocrisy of denial.

Kendall wouldn’t say if there is a suspect. But he thinks yesterday’s meeting may turn up some useful leads. He said his hopes before the press conference were that, “A lot of our tribal leaders would reach out to people in the tribe and say, this affects us. Stop the prison mentality. If you see something, say something. Be a good resident, be a good tribal member, be a good community member. And that was the message that a hundred percent of the tribal council gave, and we already started getting calls of extremely viable witnesses. People who can tell us exactly what happened.”

Note: Edited by Kym Kemp to include Marline Fulwider‘s comment.

UPDATE: Autopsy Determines Badly Beaten Round Valley Man Also Shot

Earlier: 

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58 Please improve the conversation by disagreeing thoughtfully and backing your claims with facts
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Farce
Guest
Farce
3 years ago

Remember when Sheriff Kendall came into office. He made a big deal about how he was going to clear out all the huge grows of Covelo. He was from Covelo and he couldn’t believe how bad it had gotten and gosh darn he was going to make a difference! And then he made a couple busts. Okay. And then…..crickets for years. We hear more about killings in Covelo then busts. Why?

Guest
Guest
Guest
3 years ago
Reply to  Farce

Police can’t fix a community. Only the community can and then only once they decide what they want.

Country Joe
Member
3 years ago
Reply to  Guest

Spot on.

Tom Brown
Guest
Tom Brown
3 years ago
Reply to  Guest

All the trolls need to be quiet… Round Valley, Covelo has many unique problems and there really isn’t a lot of easy answers no matter what anyone from the outside thinks. I agree that there should be more accountability, but nothing is as easy as it seems… and just talking shit doesn’t do anyone any good

Jamie Spokane
Guest
Jamie Spokane
3 years ago

Hm

Last edited 3 years ago
Guess
Guest
Guess
3 years ago

The cartel is in cahoots with the tribal police so if I were them I wouldn’t say shit either unless they want to end up like the rest.

Jen
Member
Jen
3 years ago
Reply to  Guess

I heard the same thing from a Native from Covelo today. Hhhmmmm….

Guess
Guest
Guess
3 years ago
Reply to  Jen

I have some friends from around there I heard it from them awhile ago, apparently it must be fairly common knowledge

Just Sayin
Guest
Just Sayin
3 years ago
Reply to  Guess

To degenerate morons who think of themselves as intelligent ?

Just Sayin
Guest
Just Sayin
3 years ago
Reply to  Jen

Lmfao, oh well that makes it a fact. A pos contributing to the slide of his community has information for you! Ctfu!

Jen
Member
Jen
3 years ago
Reply to  Just Sayin

I never said it was a fact, I just said I had been told the same thing. And how do you know that the person I spoke to was a POS? Obviously my comment touched a nerve with you. Why is that?

LRex
Guest
LRex
3 years ago
Reply to  Guess

Facts!

Alf
Guest
Alf
3 years ago

What I see in this article is blaming it on the SO. How come there is no mention of the Tribal Police apparently also failing to solve these crimes? Since there is a greater likelihood that tribal members would talk to their own police maybe they should be taking the lead. If there is a shortage of Tribal Police then recruit more people and send them to the academy. I guarantee you the shortage of solved crimes isn’t just on reservations. It’s everywhere.

peter boudoures
Guest
peter boudoures
3 years ago
Reply to  Alf

That’s federal land leased to the tribe. Where is the fbi

Kym Kemp
Admin
3 years ago
Reply to  Alf

This article is not blaming anyone. This article is reflecting what occurred at the meeting.

Guest
Guest
Guest
3 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

IDK. It seems like the article is nothing but reporting of a litany of blame. Complaint about that shouldn’t be take personally by the employer of the author.

Alf
Guest
Alf
3 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

I don’t think RHBB is passing blame. However, as is typical of tribes, there is a tremendous amount of blaming others instead of taking self responsibility being reported in this article.

Guest
Guest
Guest
3 years ago
Reply to  Alf

Some did but some don’t. Like with drugs abuse itself, it takes just a few of enablers to screw up life for everyone else.

Just Sayin
Guest
Just Sayin
3 years ago
Reply to  Alf

Easier to point a finger than take a stand. Then they wonder why they have the situation they have down there. Accountability and morals go a long way from a young age…..

Jallen
Guest
Jallen
3 years ago

When will the people of Mendocino and Humboldt County come to realize that the people in charge are inept and asleep at the wheel? They act like they are knowledge authority but instead continue to show that they are incompetent. It’s because their position of power as well as education makes them better than the average citizen. It really should be evident at this point that the people hired to represent us are not capable! It’s time to fire, i.e. dispose of through elections or recalls, all lame ducks. Our future depends on competent effective government that doesn’t continue to act like the enemy of the people working for the benefit of the oligarchy.

Last edited 3 years ago
Guest
Guest
Guest
3 years ago
Reply to  Jallen

The inability to herd cats is in the nature of the cats. Not the herders.

Steve Koch
Guest
Steve Koch
3 years ago
Reply to  Jallen

If “Our future depends on competent effective government”, there is no hope for the future. You will continue to get incompetent, ineffective, corrupt, oppressive government forever.

Your only hope is to radically shrink the size and power of government and then watch them like a hawk.

Country Joe
Member
3 years ago
Reply to  Steve Koch

As I mentioned earlier, the only way to achieve your talking points and enforce laws is to vote republican across the board in 2024. Otherwise, we can expect more of the same irresponsibility and neglect.

John
Guest
John
3 years ago
Reply to  Jallen

Not just a humboldt county thing, more of a government thing. I’d say corrupt government thing, but corrupt is no longer worth writing, kinda like wet water

Country Joe
Member
3 years ago
Reply to  Jallen

The only way to achieve your talking points and enforce laws is to vote republican across the board in 2024. Otherwise, we can expect more of the same irresponsibility and neglect.

D'Tucker Jebs
Member
3 years ago
Reply to  Country Joe

Republican-led states have the highest rates of homicide in the country.
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/pressroom/sosmap/homicide_mortality/homicide.htm

Zack
Guest
Zack
3 years ago
Reply to  D'Tucker Jebs

Only in blue districts. The most dangerous places in the country, and much of the world, is democrat districts in the USA

Mega
Guest
Mega
3 years ago
Reply to  Zack

This is absolutely correct

Zack
Guest
Zack
3 years ago
Reply to  D'Tucker Jebs

outkick.com/usa-most-dangerous-cities-are-run-by-democrats/

fred krissman
Guest
fred krissman
3 years ago
Reply to  D'Tucker Jebs

Good one! Wonder why all those extra guns hasn’t cut homicide rates in Repub states?

raiconlan@gmail.com
Member
3 years ago
Reply to  D'Tucker Jebs

Not true and murders in Portland and SF democratic bastions have doubled prepandemic 40 to over 101 with an increase this year over last while Missoula Montana and billings Montana have homicide rates per 100,000 at less than 1/4 of Portland’s record setting 2022 so that is a outright fabrication.

Chris
Guest
Chris
3 years ago
Reply to  Country Joe

Is it really a Republicans versus Democrat problem? I think not. It’s a us problem, we the people who keep electing the same incompetent folks into office. Red or blue they work for us, not the other way around.

LRex
Guest
LRex
3 years ago
Reply to  Jallen

Rise like lions,
After slumber
In unvanquishable number.
Shake your chains to Earth,like dew,
Which, in sleep, has fallen on you.
Ye are many,
They are few…

Just Sayin
Guest
Just Sayin
3 years ago
Reply to  Jallen

You people are laughable. Blame California as a whole. You can’t just let crime and drug run rampant because of equity and bleeding hearts. Leftism is a mental disorder and it has more than infected this state. People deny accountability and point fingers, it’s sort of what they do.

Guest
Guest
Guest
3 years ago

There was some valuable self criticism. “Yeah, we’re sitting on our own hypocrisy of denial.” And “another tribal member, worries that if the most recent crime isn’t solved soon, it could lead to further violence.” It takes courage to step up to brutality but way too many feel that it’s the job of police to protect them from their neighbors so they shouldn’t need the courage. Unfortunately that would require total control of the information by the police, which would be immediately also be denounced. Can’t possibly work like that and shouldn’t be an excuse.

guest`
Guest
guest`
3 years ago
Reply to  Guest

If they actually tackled their problem with violence against women they would also put a real dent in the violence problem in general. Same people do the same things.

Zipline
Guest
Zipline
3 years ago

Maybe the Seventh Calvary???

Guest
Guest
Guest
3 years ago
Reply to  Zipline

That’s a pretty obscene comment. You sure you don’t want to delete it.

Zipline
Guest
Zipline
3 years ago
Reply to  Guest

Just stirrin the pot. Somethings gotta change.

Actually
Guest
Actually
3 years ago
Reply to  Zipline

Bullshit. That is extremely offensive and you know it. Do you also do the whole “just asking questions geeze” bit that holocaust deniers love to do?

Yeah your stirring the pot but ruining the soup with your own shit covered hands.

fred krissman
Guest
fred krissman
3 years ago
Reply to  Actually

Hear hear!
But racists are never racist… Just pot-stirring, which has worked so well during the past half millennium. If you don’t count all the genocides, which continue to occur today!

Expanding Insignificance
Guest
Expanding Insignificance
3 years ago
Reply to  Actually

Quashing debate is extremely offensive. No wonder nothing gets fixed.

CNP
Guest
CNP
3 years ago
Reply to  Zipline

Really?? SMH?

Steve Koch
Guest
Steve Koch
3 years ago

Tangential fact I ran across while researching stats from (bia is bureau of Indian affairs):
https://www.bia.gov/service/mmu/missing-and-murdered-indigenous-people-crisis

“According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, the murder rate for women living on reservations is ten times higher than the national average”

guest`
Guest
guest`
3 years ago
Reply to  Steve Koch

It’s horrible. They don’t even call it Violence Against Women and Girls anymore. It’s called Violence Against People now. Have to be inclusive or you are a bigot, never mind naming the real problem is part of the real solution. How can anyone be helped if they can’t talk honestly about what they saw, experienced, and who exactly did what to who if they can’t be specific and precise?

D'Tucker Jebs
Member
3 years ago
Reply to  guest`

You’ve got quite the imagination when it comes to making up stuff to be outraged about.
Just last year Congress reauthorized the Violence Against Women Act. https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/03/16/fact-sheet-reauthorization-of-the-violence-against-women-act-vawa/

guest`
Guest
guest`
3 years ago
Reply to  D'Tucker Jebs

Congress doesn’t know what a woman is.

guest`
Guest
guest`
3 years ago
Reply to  D'Tucker Jebs

And it will expire again because women always have to fight the same fights over and over and over again.

Mendocino Mamma
Guest
Mendocino Mamma
3 years ago
Reply to  guest`

It’s all fun and games until somebody dies from messing with somebody’s whatever and it pissed them off. People flip the script over the simplest things that shouldn’t even matter. People have to quit being so sensitive to everything and costing someone their lives. Words don’t kill. Actions and guns do. Then the ones that speak up for what’s right getting made fun of or are called rude or idiots when they’re just telling the truth. And 100% nobody wants to see their cuz or whoever go to jail for a long time for acting a fool but it’s more common than you think. It’s a tragic sad bunch of BS that shouldn’t be happening. Too many young people lost this can’t keep happening. How about you only get your per capita if you’re appropriate. If you’re arrested beating on women, having to chase other people down with guns you don’t deserve it. Rewarding bad behaviors cannot keep continuing. Please.

jean65
Member
jean65
3 years ago

My son came up missing in covalo he is native Indian him and my grandson went hunting up there oct 23 2021 his car was parked at the 8 bridge they were camped a mile from David Callahan place it rained hard that night so on the 24th my son told my grandson to drift the raft they had back to the car with the backpacks on it and he would meet him at noon but never made it back to the car we told the cops where he was last seen and who the last person to see him was David that they were searching the wrong side of the river but never listened to us said they can’t go on other side cause it is private property but seems to me if someone is missing there they could have went there

Guest
Guest
Guest
3 years ago
Reply to  jean65

That sounds strange. Searching for a missing person should be a priority. Who csaid the couldn’t search? This him? https://kymkemp.com/2021/10/25/searchers-look-for-missing-humboldt-county-hunter-near-covelo-but-only-find-his-dog/

jean65
Member
jean65
3 years ago
Reply to  Guest

The owner of the property

Jaye
Guest
Jaye
3 years ago

Are the Feds involved yet? They oversee tribal lands. The Feds could easily bulldoze any cartel grows.

Just Sayin
Guest
Just Sayin
3 years ago

I see the tribe blaming everyone, but I don’t see them taking responsibility and changing things. Yes it’s easier to blame law enforcement for you lack of morality. But things change for the better when good people have had enough of the bad and stand tf up and take back what’s theirs. Quit listening leftist rhetoric, drug addicts have responsibilities and need to be held accountable just the same as everyone else. Quit catering to people who’d tether destroy society than build it up………..

Mega
Guest
Mega
3 years ago
Reply to  Just Sayin

“ I see the tribe blaming everyone, but I don’t see them taking responsibility and changing things. ”

You never will either.
Until everyone calls them out on it.
When it’s everyone else’s fault all the time but your own it’s probably your fault.

Guest
Guest
Guest
3 years ago
Reply to  Mega

However it was also what a tribal member said in the article-“Our people want to cover for these people?” he demanded. “Come on, you guys, I grew up in this community. You raised me. We need you to stand up. Speak!”” It’s a hard road to actually enforce actions against other members of a small community. If you don’t, people hold it against you and, if you do, other people hold it against you. In a small community, especially one that sees itself surrounded by enemies, there’s no escape.

The only possible way forward is to see standards of behavior (ie morals) as more important than personal relations for the survival of everyone. That a person doing evil is not to be protected from blowback, even if personally sympathetic. But that is not in line with the current social push of tolerance for everything being called good and intolerance for anything being objectionable. And then refusing to be outraged when it goes wrong.

Mendocino Mamma
Guest
Mendocino Mamma
3 years ago
Reply to  Guest

Agreed. If you can lay around and party 24/7. No need to earn money for rent , a house payment or anything responsible. Housing passed down . 3 genns under 1 roof. Every cent spent on clothes, video games, TVs, party supplies and NIKE branded gear to pile as broken trash in the yard later. Don’t spend a dime on a dump run. A Mercedes or a Lexus you wreck not too long after you get it. No worry call your cuz the tow truck driver to drag your ass out before the tribal or the other cops get there. Tribal watches, yet sets no standards. Then add the “cartel” scum. Mostly undocumented, mostly on meth, mostly posted up on rez lands, mostly “married” to locals, mostly not sending any of their kids to school, mostly driving drunk, DUIs on the 162 daily. The cartel has helped Covelo a lot! Now what?

Last edited 3 years ago
Nkwiss
Member
Nkwiss
3 years ago

This absolutely nails the current scenario. My friend’s daughter is married into this crap.

Race is irrelevant, anybody born into that scenario could make those same choices.

Unfortunately, we can’t have an honest conversation about this outside of rhbb comments section, as you’re immediately branded a far right wing MAGA white supremacist.

Last edited 3 years ago