Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Community Outraged After Signs On South Dakota Indian Reservation Vandalized With Racist Graffiti

Community Outraged After Signs On South Dakota Indian Reservation Vandalized With Racist Graffiti
Marina Bettelyoun/Facebook

Three signs welcoming highway drivers into the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation near Kadoka, South Dakota were recently covered in spray painted messages containing expletives, racist imagery and attacks against President Joe Biden.

According to KOTA News, the vandalized billboards sit along Highway 73, a common route taken by motorists passing them through the reservation.


When not debased by racist hatred, the signs welcome drivers to the Oglala Lakota Nation.

One reads:

"You are entering the Land of Red Cloud...Pine Ridge Indian Reservation...Home of the Oglala Sioux Tribe."

That same sign was covered by a swastika symbol and the words "F'KKK Biden," which was written using the letter "K" enough times to make a nod to the White supremacist organization the Ku Klux Klan which is commonly abbreviated as "KKK."

Pine Ridge resident Marina Bettelyoun took photos of the three desecrated signs and posted them to Facebook.

She shared her feelings on the hate crime.

Marina Bettelyoun/Facebook


Marina Bettelyoun/Facebook


Marina Bettelyoun/Facebook

People that saw Bettelyoun's post shared her outrage.

Sidney Toppah/Facebook


Deanna Huber Clayborne/Facebook


Ronatta Hurtado/Facebook


Leighton Thomas/Facebook

KOTA News spoke with Bettelyoun directly, and she expanded on the sentiment she expressed in that post.

"The sign itself can be replaced—it can be restored—but the message it leaves behind is lasting."
"That's a deep wound."

Her husband, Alexander Bettelyoun, shared his thoughts as well.

"For me, personally, I feel like I got desensitized to it."
"[The] first [time] seeing this, I was like 'Oh, wow. No big deal,' but that's only because you're just so used to it. Seeing the hate—especially like this."




The Oglala Sioux Tribal President, Kevin Killer, and the tribe's Department of Public Safety also responded to the vandalism with the following statement:

"As President of the Oglala Sioux Tribe and former member of the South Dakota legislature, I and all members of the Oglala Lakota Nation, vehemently condemn the hate-filled vandalism to the signs located on South Dakota State Highway 73, just south of Kadoka at the borderline."
"These signs serve as our welcoming emblems to visitors and guests of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, and depict the pride we have for our culture and traditions as a sovereign nation. Over the past 24-hours, the signs have been spray-painted with a derogatory term involving President Joseph Biden, the letters 'KKK', and a swastika painted over our tribal flag."
"The Oglala Lakota Nation would like those individuals
responsible to be held accountable for their actions, and be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law."
"As a sovereign nation within the boundaries of the State of South Dakota, the Oglala Sioux Tribe continues to extend a hand of friendship to those wanting to make a positive impact on this and future generations. We look forward to sharing our new signs welcoming visitors from around the world shortly."

As KOTA News' coverage of the story spread on the internet, the community's anger only swelled.

Kristin E Trask/Facebook


Severt Long Soldier-Sitting Bear/Facebook


James Tyler Morris/Facebook


Heather Armstrong/Facebook

Hopefully the new signs will prove the racist vandals only ensured the creation of more beautiful welcome imagery than ever.

More from Trending

Sarah McBride; Nancy Mace
Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images; Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Nation's First Trans Congresswoman Slams GOP's Proposed Bathroom Ban At U.S. Capitol

Sarah McBride, who is the first openly transgender person to be elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, called out a proposal by South Carolina Republican Representative Nancy Mace that would prohibit transgender women from using women's bathroom facilities at the U.S. Capitol.

Mace introduced the resolution shortly after Delaware elected Democrat McBride as the first openly transgender member of Congress.

Keep ReadingShow less
Charlotte Clymer; Nancy Mace
Shannon Finney/Getty Images for Briarcliff Entertainment; Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Trans Activist Has Blunt Reminder For Nancy Mace About Trans Women During Trump's First Term

Transgender activist Charlotte Clymer posted a truth bomb about where transgender women in the Capitol went to the bathroom during the first Trump administration after South Carolina Republican Representative Nancy Mace announced she would seek to ban transgender women from the women's bathroom.

Mace introduced a resolution to bar members of Congress, as well as congressional officers and employees, from using single-sex facilities that do not align with their biological sex. The proposal was clearly designed to target Sarah McBride, who recently secured Delaware's lone seat in the House and will become the first openly transgender member of Congress.

Keep ReadingShow less
man sitting on sofa
Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash

People Describe The Most Unforgettable Thing Their Therapist Ever Told Them

*The following article contains discussion of suicide/self-harm.

According to a study in 2022, about 55.8 million adults in the United States received mental health treatment, including counseling, medication, or inpatient or outpatient treatment.

Keep ReadingShow less
Barron as an 18-year-old; screenshot of 4-year-old Barron from CNN video
Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images; CNN

A Resurfaced Clip Of A Young Barron Trump Speaking Is The Internet's Latest Obsession

An old CNN clip of President-elect Donald Trump's son Barron is making the rounds on the internet after surprising people with the childhood accent Barron seemed to have had.

The clip, which came from a 2010 episode of Larry King Live, shows a four-year-old Barron talking with his mother Melania Trump in heavily-accented English.

Keep ReadingShow less