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Supreme Court case impacts homeland security proposal
Tuesday, July 29, 2003
The Bush administration is urging the Supreme Court to affirm the inherent powers of tribal governments in a case with ramifications for homeland security legislation being debated this week.
The Department of Justice wants to overturn a decision
that struck down dual tribal
and federal prosecution of an American Indian man who
committed a crime on a North Dakota reservation.
The 8th Circuit Court of Appeals in March held that the Spirit Lake
Nation lacked jurisdiction over him because
he was a member of another tribe.
In a July 22 brief, government attorneys argue that
the ruling conflicts with the 9th Circuit,
which affirmed tribal jurisdiction over
all American Indians.
Unless the Supreme Court steps in and reconciles
the decisions, "law enforcement in Indian Country will be
significantly undermined," Solicitor General Ted
Olson wrote.
At issue is legislation enacted in 1991 that recognizes
the sovereign power of tribes to exercise criminal jurisdiction over
"all Indians," regardless of membership.
Commonly referred to as the "Duro fix," it was
named after the Supreme Court's 1990
Duro v. Reina decision, which held that tribes,
lacking Congressional or treaty support, have
authority only over their own members.
The theory behind Duro fix is the same being applied to legislation
that will be debated before a Senate committee tomorrow.
Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii) has introduced legislation
that recognizes tribal sovereign powers over non-Indians.
Many tribal leaders support the bill, in the form of amendments
to the Homeland Security Act of 2002, because it would counteract
a series of negative Supreme Court decisions that have chipped
away at their authority.
They say it ensures that Indian Country is prepared
for terrorist or biological attacks because tribal governments,
as first responders, would have the same powers of local
and state governments.
"The exclusion of tribal governments in implementation of a national
homeland security strategy places both Indian and non-Indian
populations at risk," said National Congress of American
Indians (NCAI) President Tex Hall in a statement about the bill.
The Justice brief backs the underpinnings of the Duro fix,
which was in the form of an amendment to the Indian Civil Rights
Act (ICRA) of 1968.
"Nothing in the Constitution," Olson writes, "prevents Congress from
prospectively redefining the scope of tribal sovereignty
as it did in the ICRA amendment, to include the power
to prosecute non-member Indians."
The 9th Circuit isn't the only court to recognize inherent tribal
authority. In a decision this past
March, the 7th Circuit upheld the criminal jurisdiction of the Menominee
Nation, whose federal status was terminated, then later
restored, by Congress.
The Supreme Court has given Billy Jo Lara, the defendant
in the 8th Circuit case, until August 21 to reply
to the Bush administration's petition for writ of certiorari.
If accepted, the case would likely be heard next year.
Get the Brief:
Petition: U.S. v. Lara
(July 22, 2003)
Relevant Documents:
Docket
Sheet: No. 03-107 (Supreme Court) | Tribal
Government Amendments to the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (S.578)
Get the Decision:
8th Circuit:
U.S. v. Lara (en banc) (March 24, 2003) | U.S. v. Lara (panel) (June 20,
2002)
Related Decision:
7th
Circuit: U.S. v. Long (March 20, 2003) | 9th
Circuit: U.S. v. Enas (June 29, 2001)
Related Stories:
Tribal jurisdiction faces test
before Supreme Court (07/03)
Court
rulings on tribal jurisdiction are in conflict (04/16)
Inouye ties sovereignty to homeland
security (02/25)
Tribes seek
to overturn Supreme Court (2/27)
Native man denied by Supreme Court
(01/22)
Court upholds dual tribal,
federal prosecutions (7/2)
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