Jancita Eagle Deer In 1974, a month before the election for state attorney general for which Janklow was a candidate,
Jancita Eagle Deer filed a petition through her attorney Larry Leventhal and tribal advocate
Dennis Banks to disbar Janklow to keep him from practicing in tribal court. According to Banks, in early 1967, Eagle Deer, then a 15-year-old Lakota schoolgirl at the Rosebud Boarding School on the
Rosebud Indian Reservation, reported to her school principal that Janklow, her legal guardian and for whom she was working as a babysitter, had raped her on January 13. The
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), then responsible for law enforcement on the reservation, allegedly sent the police investigation case file of the rape (for which it had custody) to its
Aberdeen, South Dakota office to keep it away from the Rosebud Sioux Tribal Court. Judge Mario Gonzalez of the Rosebud Indian Reservation tribal court granted Eagle Deer's petition to disbar Janklow from practicing law on the Rosebud Reservation. At the request of Eagle Deer's attorneys, the tribal court "issued a misdemeanor arrest warrant for Janklow based on sworn testimony on Eagle Deer's behalf (since it was generally believed at the time that tribal courts had jurisdiction over non-Indians)", but no arrest was made. Ford's appointment of Janklow, to LSC's board as its first president was later confirmed by the Senate. In April 1975, Jancita Eagle Deer was killed at night in a hit-and-run collision in southern Nebraska. After her death, Jancita's step-mother, Delphine Eagle Deer, sister of
Leonard Crow Dog, advocated on the young woman's behalf. Delphine Eagle Deer was murdered in a still-unsolved case about nine months later in 1976.
Libel suits In the 1980s, Janklow filed libel suits against the author
Peter Matthiessen and
Viking Press for a statement included in the book
In the Spirit of Crazy Horse (1983), and another suit against
Newsweek magazine for its coverage of the alleged rape. The publications had included statements of
Dennis Banks, founder and leader of the
American Indian Movement (AIM). In each case, the courts upheld the freedom of speech principle for the authors and publishers under the
First Amendment. Matthiessen included a statement by Banks about the rape accusation, as well as allegations that during the same period, Janklow had been arrested on the Rosebud reservation for driving drunk and shooting pet dogs. Janklow, by then serving as governor, sued both the author and publisher
Viking Press for libel, which delayed publication of the paperback version of the book until 1992. Janklow's complaint, referring to the statement by Banks about rape, "cited a 1975 letter from
Philip Buchen, head of the Office of Counsel to the President of the United States, to the Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, saying that three Federal investigations found the allegations against him 'simply unfounded.' The Senate committee was considering Mr. Janklow's nomination as a director of the
Legal Services Corporation..." ==Post-political career==