Any person who violates a protection provision contained in an order entered under this division, or of a comparable provision of an order accorded full faith and credit by the Court under Chapter 4.90 CTC, of which the person had actual notice prior to the time of the alleged violation, has committed the crime of violating a domestic violence protection order.
For the purposes of this division, violating a domestic violence protection order shall be considered a crime of domestic violence and shall be guilty of a Class B offense.
Any person who prevents or attempts to prevent a victim of domestic violence or a witness to an act of domestic violence from calling 911 emergency communication system, obtaining medical assistance or making a report to any Tribal, State or Federal Police official, has committed the crime of interfering with the reporting of domestic violence.
For the purposes of this division, interfering with the reporting of domestic violence shall be considered a crime of domestic violence and shall be guilty of a Class B offense.
Any written or verbal threat or any other assault upon a person acting in an official or professional capacity in the protection of victims of domestic violence shall be considered to be an assault of the most serious nature and shall be guilty of a Class B offense.
The person receiving the unwanted contact is intimidated, alarmed, emotionally distressed, or placed in fear that the stalker intends to injure the person or property of the person or of another person and the feeling of intimidation, alarm, emotional distress or fear is one that a reasonable person in the victim's situation would experience under all the circumstances; and
Knows or reasonably should know that the other person being followed, either directly or indirectly, is afraid, intimidated, alarmed or emotionally distressed, even if the stalker did not intend such a result.
Communicating with a third person who has some relationship to the other person with the intent of affecting the third person's relationship with the other person;
All provisions, mandates, and definitions as stated in this division shall be equally applied and enforced with regards to the crime of stalking as to the crime of domestic violence. The crime of stalking is not limited to an intimate partner, family or household members.
The penalties for the crime of stalking shall be the same as the penalties for the crime of domestic violence. All penalties of this division shall apply to the crime of stalking.
The location of the threatening action by a stalking perpetrator, either directly or through a third party, as corroborated through telephone records, email, texts, social media, postmarks, or order/delivery records, and/or witnesses, as being outside the Tribe's jurisdiction will not bar prosecution under this division. The act is considered to be a credible threat when full transmittal of the threat has been completed to the victim, when said victim is within the Tribe's jurisdiction.
Corroborated initial or intervening acts, used to establish a pattern of conduct for the purpose of probable cause under this division, but which occurred outside the Tribe's jurisdiction, may be used to establish and corroborate said pattern for prosecution of a violation under this division. However, initial or intervening acts occurring outside the Tribe's jurisdiction are not prosecutable as separate offenses under this division.