(1) The land is included in the tribe's first request for newly acquired lands since the tribe was restored to Federal recognition; orInterior said the tribe had already benefited from the exception twice since regaining federal recognition in 1984 so the land wasn't part of a "first request." Additionally, the parcels were purchased in 2004 and 2010, so the 25-year test would not have covered the 2010 parcel. The temporal connection also depends on a tribe conducting gaming on "no other lands" under the Section 20 regulations. The tribe already operates a casino, Interior noted. The tribe went to court to fight the decision but Judge Samuel Conti ruled in favor of the Obama administration last week. He said the tribe failed to show why Interior was wrong and also failed to show that the Section 20 regulations went beyond the intent of Congress. An appeal is possible. Conti is "just wrong," the tribe's lawyer told The Redding Record-Searchlight. Get the Story:
(2) The tribe submitted an application to take the land into trust within 25 years after the tribe was restored to Federal recognition and the tribe is not gaming on other lands.
Redding Rancheria loses federal lawsuit; tribe sought casino application (The Redding Record-Searchlight 2/24) District Court Decision:
Redding Rancheria v. Salazar (February 16, 2012)