"Let's see. The last full-blooded Schaghticoke was buried on the reservation in Kent in 1913. By 1926, the state was referring to the tribe as a "remnant." There are huge, decades-long gaps in the tribe's leadership and continuity as a political community.
Like most or all of the other tribes in Connecticut, the Schaghticokes are a reconstituted tribe. Such groups are not supposed to receive federal recognition.
Nonetheless, the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs reversed an earlier finding and granted recognition and "government-to-government relationship" to the Schaghticokes. This is absurd, it is wrong and it must be stopped."
Get the Story:
Tom Condon: Time For Feds To Recognize The Harm Of Casino Tribes
(The Hartford Courant 2/8)
pwlat
Related Stories:
House Resourcess to hold
recognition hearing (2/6)
Gover
praises BIA for not bowing to pressure (2/2)
Lack of evidence addressed in
recognition bill (02/19)
Sweeping recognition reform bill
offered (02/07)
At
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BIA recognition still hard to prove for
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McCaleb
delivers aggressive recognition plan (10/03)
BIA role in recognition
decisions under review (06/13)
BIA Budget: Doing more with less
(3/26)
Bush budget cuts
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McCaleb takes on recognition
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Inside the BIA,
plenty of drama (3/4)
Ashcroft urged to charge BIA officials
(3/1)
Solutions sought for
'hijacked' recognition (11/9)
Solutions sought for 'hijacked'
recognition (11/9)
Gover:
Recognition study 'cooked' (11/1)
Reforming federal recognition
(10/26)
Gover takes on
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McCaleb decision sure to draw scrutiny
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Column: Tribes seeking recognition only for 'big wampum'
Monday, February 9, 2004
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