By Janis Baron
On Facebook 3-19-26
Thanks to David Muir for sharing.
Keetoowah Cherokee Troy Littledeer went to school with Markwayne Mullin, potentially our next DHS Secretary. He has followed Mullin’s life and career closely and wants to tell us what kind of person he is.
Troy Littledeer is a prominent award-winning Indigenous journalist and photographer. He is a member of the United Keetoowah Band (UKB) of Cherokee Indians and is known for his commitment to press freedom within tribal communities. In his words...
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I went to school with Markwayne Mullin.
I am not saying that to establish proximity. I am saying it because it matters to what comes next. When you grow up in a small town in Adair County, a rural county in the northeastern corner of Oklahoma near the Arkansas state line, you know people in a way that no Senate confirmation hearing can replicate. You know how someone carries themselves before they have a title.
You know what they were like when nobody was watching and nobody was voting and the only audience was a hallway full of kids who would remember.
Markwayne was the same then as he is now. He believed he was right. Not that you were wrong. That distinction matters. A person who thinks you are wrong is engaging with you. A person who simply believes he is right has already moved past you. He was already talking before you finished. He was already certain before the facts arrived.
That is not confidence. That is a habit. And habits do not require thought. That is exactly what makes them dangerous.
I have watched this man operate for years from a place I know better than he knows it himself, which is saying something because he grew up here too. I have watched him claim the Trail of Tears as his family’s story and then edit that claim out of his own website when someone asked a follow-up question. The Cherokee Phoenix reported the discrepancy in November 2018.
The language disappeared. No correction was issued. He said the original wording was imprecise. He did not provide his ancestors’ names when asked.
I have watched him insert legislative language targeting the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians, the people most directly descended from the Old Settlers he publicly claimed as his own, into a federal appropriations bill that nobody was supposed to find. The tribe found it anyway. Through a Freedom of Information Act request.
Because that is what you have to do when the person writing the legislation does not want you to know it exists. An internal Bureau of Indian Affairs email obtained through that same FOIA request shows a senior federal official forwarding the language to government lawyers and asking them to confirm what it was designed to do. The man who sent the language to the federal government needed the federal government’s own lawyers to explain it.
I have watched him go on national television four days after an ICE agent shot and killed Renee Good, a 37-year-old woman, outside her vehicle in Minneapolis on Jan. 7, 2026, and declare the shooting justified. He told CNN anchor Jake Tapper that her vehicle became a lethal weapon.
He did not mention that his own brother-in-law, Brandon Rowan, was convicted of aggravated assault and battery upon a peace officer for striking a Westville, Oklahoma police officer with a vehicle at a roadblock in Adair County in December 2015. That case is public record. Adair County District Court, Case No. CF-2015-256. The CNN interview was Jan. 11, 2026. He did not mention it because he does not think about what he does not think about. That is not cynicism. That is the pattern.
I have watched him publicly support the Lumbee Fairness Act, a bill that would have granted federal recognition to the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina through an act of Congress rather than through the established federal process every other tribe has been required to follow. All three federally recognized Cherokee governments, including the Cherokee Nation he claims as his own, formally opposed it. Their objections were entered into the Senate record. The bill continued to advance.
He doesn’t know any better is not an excuse. It is a reason. It is the reason a man who believes he is right without first being certain he is accurate should not be making decisions that affect sovereign nations, federal enforcement policy, and the lives of people who cannot afford the cost of his certainty.
Adair County has a 34% poverty rate. Stilwell’s per-capita income runs about $12,872 a year. The Cherokee Reservation is not a metaphor here.
It is the ground people walk on to get to work, to school, to the clinic. Federal policy is not abstract in a place like this. It arrives. It has consequences. And the people it arrives for deserve representation that starts with listening rather than talking.
I covered this community for more than two decades. I was the media director of the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians in Oklahoma. I wrote an opinion piece about the federal funding freeze and what it was doing to Indian Country.
I was ordered to remove it. Months later, according to an account relayed to a tribal elder whose identity is being withheld to protect them from retaliation, a council member said the chief had conveyed that Mullin’s office indicated the tribe’s position could hurt its relationship with the senator. The elder shared that account with me directly. I have the documentation. The Indigenous Journalists Association gave me a free press award for the piece I was ordered to remove.
I want to be clear about something. This is not about politics. I have covered power in Indian Country long enough to know that the party affiliation of the person holding it matters less than how they use it. This is about a specific man with a specific record in a specific place that I know from the ground up. The record is public. The documents are real. The pattern is consistent.
He has been in positions of power long enough to have done real damage.
Now he is being considered for the cabinet position that oversees U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, border operations that intersect directly with tribal sovereignty, and federal law enforcement in communities that have spent two centuries watching federal power arrive without accountability.
At his Senate confirmation hearing on March 18, 2026, Mullin said in general terms that he respects tribal nations and would work with them on border and security issues.
No senator asked him about the $2.1 million in property his family sold to the Cherokee Nation in 2024. No senator asked him about the legislative rider his office drafted targeting the United Keetoowah Band. No senator asked him what he knew, and when he knew it, about federal enforcement actions involving Native Americans in communities his agency would oversee.
He answered the questions he was asked. That has always been the arrangement.
Here is Troy Littledeer's LinkedIn profile, so you can assess his legitimacy:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/troylittledeer
For readers abroad, Markwayne Mullins is Trump’s nominee for Homeland Security Secretary. He will have to be confirmed by the US Senate that the US Senate.














