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Bush administration appealing trust fund case again
Monday, November 3, 2003
Creating another delay in the long-running debacle, the Bush administration
has mounted a challenge to the latest rulings in the Indian trust fund
lawsuit.
In a one-page notice filed on Wednesday, attorneys
for Secretary of Interior Gale Norton announced their appeal of
three decisions issued by a federal judge.
This past September,
U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth ordered an historical
accounting of at least $13 billion in Indian funds
and said he would appoint a judicial
monitor to ensure the federal government is meeting
its obligations to hundreds of thousands of
American Indians.
The notice doesn't state on what grounds the decisions are
being challenged. Norton's explanation will come once she files her opening
brief.
But the appeal comes amid heightened scrutiny of the seven-year-old
Cobell case. Members of Congress have been seeking ways to resolve
the suit, although their approaches have highlighted deep divisions
over how best to tackle a problem that is more than a century old.
Last Thursday, a group of lawmakers in the House nearly brought down a $20
billion budget bill over a provision aimed at overturning
Lamberth's decisions. They argued that the rider, which was
developed in secret, undermines Indian rights.
"The only way we can solve this problem is to sit down and consult, negotiate,
and ultimately lead to a settlement," said Rep. Richard
Pombo (R-Calif.), chairman of the House Resources Committee, which has
jurisdiction over Indian issues.
The provision delays the accounting by one year and
purports to dictate how federal law is to be interpreted
by the courts.
It is scheduled to go before the Senate later today.
At a hearing last Wednesday, Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R-Colo.),
chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee,
said he wasn't entirely satisfied with the way the rider was developed.
But rather than seeking its removal,
he said it gave the plaintiffs, the administration and tribal leaders
one year to work out their differences.
"We have to find a solution or it's just simply going to be
taken away from us," Campbell said.
Through his committee, Pombo is holding a series of hearings
on the case, the latest of which is being held today in Arizona.
He hopes to develop a legislative framework for settlement
by keeping all parties involved.
Campbell and Sen. Inouye (D-Hawaii) have introduced a bill
that would create a new bureaucracy to carry out the
historical accounting.
Both also back mediation of the case, an idea
supported by the plaintiffs and tribal leaders.
Lawmakers who control the federal budget are intent on
imposing their own solutions with no involvement of the key players.
Unwilling to provide the funds to conduct the accounting or
make other fixes, they have made no apologies for
attempting to curtail the suit, which they say has cost
millions at the expense of other Indian programs.
The Bush administration's appeal will delay proceedings
in the case for up to a year, depending on the briefing
schedule and the date of oral arguments.
The appeal will be handled by the D.C. Circuit Court,
which struck down contempt charges against Norton
and former Indian affairs aide Neal McCaleb in
July.
The same court, in February 2001, affirmed
the federal government's duty to conduct
an accounting of "all funds" within the Individual
Indian Money (II) trust. At the Senate
hearing last week, Jim
Cason, the associate deputy Interior
secretary, said the department still needed
guidance on the meaning of the accounting.
Relevant Documents:
Notice of Appeal (October 29, 2003)
Court Decisions:
Historical
Accounting | Fixing the
System | Structural
Injunction
Relevant Links:
Indian Trust: Cobell v. Norton - http://www.indiantrust.com
Cobell
v. Norton, Department of Justice - http://www.usdoj.gov/civil/cases/cobell/index.htm
Indian
Trust, Department of Interior - http://www.doi.gov/indiantrust
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(10/31)
Campbell pushes action on trust fund suit
(10/30)
Battle brews in
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Cobell rallies support for trust fund case
(10/28)
DOI bill halts Indian trust
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Bill targets
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House
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Self-governance tribes fear impact of
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Lamberth lays
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Court report finds undervaluation of Navajo
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Administration eyes
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Tally for private attorney fees in
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Congress hacks Bush's accounting
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Swimmer partly
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Bush official balks at large
settlement for Cobell (7/10)
On trust, lawmakers take Bush
officials at face value (06/25)
Private attorneys reap benefits on
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Norton
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Lamberth criticizes interference
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Bush administration turns to Congress on
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