Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) plans to introduce a bill that would effectively rescind Medals of Honors related to the Wounded Knee Massacre.

Warren told indianz.com Tuesday that she will introduce a Senate version of the House’s Remove the Stain Act, which would “rescind the Medals of Honor awarded for acts at the 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre.”

“At the Wounded Knee Massacre, hundreds of Lakota men, women, and children were slaughtered by soldiers who received Medals of Honor,” Warren said in a statement.

“These acts of violence were not heroic; they were tragic and profoundly shameful. Representatives Heck, Haaland, and Cook have already introduced the Remove the Stain Act in the House, and I will introduce it in the Senate,” she continued.

“This bill respects and honors those who lost their lives, advances justice, and takes a step toward righting wrongs against Native peoples,” she added:

"This bill respects and honors those who lost their lives, advances justice, and takes a step toward righting wrongs against Native peoples,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Massachusetts) says of the Remove the Stain Act to rescind Medals of Honor for the 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre. — indianz.com (@indianz) August 20, 2019

Warren is not the only presidential candidate to support revoking the medals. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) said he would “absolutely” back a measure with that goal.

“The answer is absolutely,” Sanders said at a Native American Presidential Forum in Sioux City, Iowa, Tuesday. “Medals of Honor are given rarely, and they’re given to people who do very, very important things.”

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) expressed similar sentiments earlier this week.

He said in a statement:

After reviewing the requests made by Navy veteran and Rosebud Sioux tribal members OJ Semans to President Trump and the leadership of our Congressional Armed Services Committees in February of this year to revoke the 20 stained Congressional Medals of Honor wrongfully awarded to the soldiers responsible for the Wounded Knee Massacre nearly 129 years ago, I am pledging that if elected President, I will revoke and rescind those medals from the historical record.

Warren has long dealt with the fallout stemming from her false claims of Native American heritage, which worsened after a DNA test revealed that she possessed very little – between 1/64th and 1/1,024 – Native American ancestry. Additionally, the results indicated that any Native American ancestors in her line originated from residents of Colombia, Mexico, and Peru, further debunking her claims of Cherokee heritage.

To make matters worse for Warren, her great-great-great grandfather Jonathan Crawford was reportedly part of the Tennessee Militia, which “rounded up Cherokees living there at the time for the Trail of Tears journey to Oklahoma in the 1830s.”

As Breitbart News reported:

This gives Warren a 1/32, or 3.125 percent, Tennessee Militia heritage, at least double the maximum 1.56 percent, minimum 0.1 percent, Native American heritage Dr. Carlos Bustamante said the evidence in the DNA genotypes purported to come from Warrren’s DNA sample “strongly suggests” in his October 10, 2018 report released by Sen. Warren on Monday.

Warren apologized for her past “mistakes” at the Native American Presidential Forum Monday.

“Like anyone who’s been honest with themselves, I know that I have made mistakes,” Warren told the crowd. “I am sorry for harm I have caused.”

“I have listened and I have learned a lot, and I am grateful for the many conversations we have had together,” she added: