A top Interior Department official whose handling of the Indian trust tainted his controversial tenure in Washington, D.C., announced his resignation on Tuesday.
After three years as the department's deputy secretary, the number
two position, J. Steven Griles told President Bush that it
was "a great honor" to serve within the Bush administration.
He said he plans to leave by the end of January 2005 or sooner,
if a replacement is confirmed by the Senate.
In a letter, Interior Secretary Gale Norton praised her deputy's
tenure, singling out his "exemplary" efforts to improve the management
of billions of dollars of Indian trust assets and 54 million acres
of trust land.
"I know that the frustrations of Indian trust litigation have taken
a toll on you and the other dedicated employees who labored
countless evenings and weekends with you," she wrote.
Norton said Griles helped the Bush administration achieve "much progress"
on trust reform but his time at the department was stained by several controversies.
Upon joining the department in July 2001, he quickly found himself
in trouble with tribal leaders, the plaintiffs in the Cobell v. Norton
trust fund lawsuit and the federal judge handling the case.
"No one thought it could get worse but under Norton and Griles' leadership it
has," Keith Harper, a Native American Rights Fund lawyer handling
the Cobell case, said in an interview yesterday.
On November 14, 2001, Griles proudly swore under oath in a court affidavit that
he was in "charge" of the Indian trust. But without prior consultation
of tribes or individual Indians, the department proposed a reorganization
that would strip the Bureau of Indian Affairs of its
fiduciary duties and hand them to a new agency called
the Bureau of Indian Trust Assets Management.
Griles and former BIA chief Neal McCaleb, who resigned in November 2002,
quickly rushed to the National Congress of American Indians conference
two weeks later to defend the proposal before an angry crowd of tribal
leaders. It was a scene that would repeat itself several times over
the next two years as Norton became less involved with the
trust and Griles became the public face of the department.
It was an uncomfortable role for Griles, a well-paid Republican lobbyist
more accustomed to working with executives of top energy companies
than leaders of the Indian Country. Following the BITAM fiasco, he
served as co-chair of a task force whose goal was to develop a solution
in cooperation with tribes
but which ultimately fell apart in late 2002 when Griles and other officials
refused to embrace standards for the trust fund.
By that time, Griles had become a target in the Cobell v. Norton lawsuit
for trying to smear a court investigator whose reports embarrassed
the Bush administration. In September 2002, U.S. District Judge
Royce Lamberth slammed Griles for coming "perilously close to perjury"
for submitting a sworn affidavit against court monitor Joseph S. Kieffer
III, a former military intelligence specialist who was later taken off
the case.
Griles also found himself on the defense for a rider
in Interior's 2002 appropriations bill that would have severely
limited the government's fiduciary obligations to individual
Indians.
Along with other officials, he
denied involvement with the language, which was eventually
removed, but a year later, the
administration backed another rider that delayed an accounting
of the Indian trust for a year.
Griles' past efforts at Interior during the Reagan administration
came back to haunt him as well. In the 1980s, he oversaw a mining
division whose scientists backed the Navajo Nation in a royalty
dispute with Peabody Coal. Political appointees suppressed support
for the tribe, leading to a $600 million breach of trust lawsuit that
was the subject of a U.S. Supreme Court in March 2003.
Earlier that year, Griles told member of Congress that the case, one
of two heard by the court, would resolve the debate over trust standards.
But the administration's arguments were rejected by the court and
the department has done little to address the issue since then.
The controversies took a toll on Griles, whose last meeting with tribal
leaders on the task force came in December 2002, shortly before McCaleb left the
department. Since then, he hasn't played a role in any major Indian
Country initiatives, attended NCAI meetings
or testified before Congress on trust issues. Norton hasn't been
visible on Indian affairs either.
In 2003, Griles was consumed by criticism for his prior role
as a lobbyist for the oil, gas and coal industry. Despite recusing himself
from dealings affecting former clients, he continued to meet with them
and was being paid $284,000 a year for work he had done for
them before joining the administration.
An 18-month investigation by Interior Inspector General Earl E. Devaney
turned up numerous instances in which Griles had questionable dealings
with old clients. The March 2004 report, however, did not accuse Griles of
violating any laws but called his appointment a "train wreck waiting to happen."
Griles is the second top-level Interior official to announce his resignation
since Bush's re-election last month. Bennett Raley, the assistant secretary
for water and science, left this past Friday.
Norton's fate is still unknown as the Bush administration waits for a second
ruling in the Cobell lawsuit. Last Friday, the D.C. Circuit Court of
Appeals rejected the Bush administration's attempt to exclude information
technology from the scope of the case. The court is set to rule on
a structural injunction that the administration opposes.
Inspector General Report:
J.
Steven Griles Investigation (March 2004)
From the Indianz.Com Archive:
Norton
stripping BIA of trust duties (November 16, 2001) | Tribal leaders
in uproar over proposal (November 16, 2001) |
Griles taking
lead on trust reform (November 5, 2001)
Indianz.Com Profile:
Deputy Secretary: J.
Steven Griles (3/9)
Top Interior official resigns from Bush administration
Wednesday, December 8, 2004
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