The 6th Circuit Court of
Appeals has put a hold on an off-reservation gaming case involving the
Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of
Chippewa Indians in Michigan.
The court issued a stay so Attorney General Bill
Schuette can appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. A petition is due May 14, The Lansing State Journal reported.
At issue is whether the tribe can be sued for proposing the $245 million Kewadin Lansing
Casino. The 6th Circuit said nothing in the Class III gaming compact or the Michigan
Indian Land Claims Settlement Act waived the tribe's sovereign immunity.
The tribe has not filed a land-into-trust application with the Bureau of Indian Affairs and hasn't taken other actions that would trigger federal review of the project.
Turtle Talk has posted documents from the case, Michigan v. Sault St. Marie Tribe.
Get the Story:
Lansing casino project on hold after court decision
(The Lansing State Journal 2/25)
Lansing tribal casino again halted amid legal battle with state of Michigan
(MLive 2/24)
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Tribe off-reservation casino case headed to Supreme Court (02/17)