"The span between the signing of the law legalizing casino gambling in Massachusetts and the filing of its first legal challenge was measured in hours, not days. It likely won’t be the last challenge, either.
Meanwhile, lawyers defending the state have unwittingly stepped into a bitter gambling showdown in Washington state. The Washington dispute shows that Indian gambling - the cause of the first challenge to the Massachusetts casino law - is a legal minefield. All the blind optimism in the world can’t change that fact.
The federal government is getting hit from all sides in the dispute. It’s being sued by a county in Washington state, by the city of Vancouver, and a group of casino opponents. It is also being sued by the Grand Ronde, an Indian tribe that operates a casino outside Portland, Oregon. The force uniting all these characters is a trial balloon floated by the Department of the Interior, which tried testing the Supreme Court’s reach.
A year ago, Interior processed a reservation application for the Cowlitz, a tribe in southern Washington. Interior also ruled that this new reservation could be used for gambling. It was Interior’s first land-taking on behalf of the tribe, which was federally recognized in 2002. The problem: In early 2009, the Supreme Court said Interior couldn’t take reservation land for tribes."
Get the Story:
Paul McMorrow:
Tribal casino? Not so fast
(The Boston Globe 12/13)
Another Opinion:
Stephen Franklin White:
Letter: On casino, feds disregard state laws
(The Columbian 12/13)
Related Stories:
Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe eager to
negotiate casino deal (12/12)
Mashpee Wampanoag
Tribe still on the hunt for a casino site (12/8)
Developers line up to bid on casino
licenses in Massachusetts (12/7)
Magazine: The Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe takes
a big gamble (11/22)
Mashpee
Wampanoag Tribe defends provisions in gaming bill (11/18)
Editorial: Tribal provisions place region
at casino disadvantage (11/17)
Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe welcomes approval
of gaming bill (11/16)
Final vote
planned for gaming legislation in Massachusetts (11/15)
Casino Stalker | Opinion
Column: Land-into-trust a big issue for Wampanoag casino
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Stay Connected
Contact Us
indianz@indianz.com202 630 8439 (THEZ)
Search
Top Indian Gaming Stories
Trending in Gaming
1 Catawba Nation continues work on controversial casino in North Carolina
2 Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes move forward with casino expansion
3 Poarch Band of Creek Indians said to be on Trump's radar
4 Hopi Tribe officially joins Indian gaming industry with approved compact
5 Seminole Tribe paid just $50M for casino Donald Trump built for $1.2B
2 Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes move forward with casino expansion
3 Poarch Band of Creek Indians said to be on Trump's radar
4 Hopi Tribe officially joins Indian gaming industry with approved compact
5 Seminole Tribe paid just $50M for casino Donald Trump built for $1.2B
More Stories
Gun Lake Tribe heads to Supreme Court for casino dispute Seneca Nation agrees to arbitration over gaming revenues
Indian Gaming Archive