Editorial: Tribal online lending operations deserve state scrutiny


An image from the Native Kids First campaign that targets the state of Connecticut.

Connecticut newspaper defends enforcement actions against the online lending operations of the Otoe-Missouria Tribe of Oklahoma:
The state Department of Banking is right to issue both fines and cease-and-desist orders to the online lenders. Connecticut caps such short-term loans at a maximum of 12 percent interest.

Those making the loans are Indian tribes who claim immunity to state laws because the tribes are sovereign nations — the same principle that underpins the existence of Connecticut's gambling casinos.

As for whether tribes may legally set whatever rates of interest they choose, last year the U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals (whose territory includes Connecticut) decided in a New York case that prohibiting payday loan-making by tribes doesn't violate the Indian Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution.

The Washington Post noted that quite often the tribes are just a front, a way for others to circumvent state anti-usury laws. The real lenders, the ones who are raking in the incredible profits, are unscrupulous lenders with no claim to sovereignty.

Get the Story:
Editorial: CT Right To Crack Down On Online Loan Sharks (The Hartford Courant 4/13)

Join the Conversation

Related Stories
Otoe-Missouria Tribe wages campaign to protect online lending (4/7)
Jane Daugherty: Tribal e-commerce continues to draw scrutiny (03/26)
Chairman of Otoe-Missouria Tribe disputes fine in lending dispute (03/12)
Chairman of Otoe-Missouria Tribe fined for online loan operation (01/07)
Tribes withdraw Internet lending lawsuit after losing decision (11/04)
Opinion: Tribes turn their acumen to Internet lending industry (10/24)
Law Article: Clash of competing sovereigns in tribal lending case (10/06)
NAFSA puts a positive spin on decision in tribal lending lawsuit (10/2)
2nd Circuit rebuffs tribal online lenders in dispute with New York (10/1)
Jane Daugherty: Tribes lose out in battle over Internet lending (10/09)
Tribes seek expedited appeal in New York online lending suit (10/08)
Judge rebuffs tribal online lenders in case against New York (10/01)
Otoe-Missouria Tribe sees benefits from Internet lending firms (09/16)
Tribal online lenders off to court in lawsuit against New York (09/11)
Otoe-Missouria Tribe defends online payday lending business (08/14)