The administration of President Barack Obama received some
good news on Wednesday with the end of a potentially troublesome
land-into-trust case.
The U.S. Supreme Court, without comment, declined to hear
MichGo v. Kempthorne, a lawsuit that tested the ability of the federal government to acquire land for tribes.
The order from the high court came only a few minutes after Ken Salazar, a former
senator from Colorado, started
his job as the Secretary of the Interior Department.
The move effectively settles a debate that has
haunted Interior as far back as the Clinton administration.
For years, tribal foes have argued that the land-into-trust
provisions of the Indian
Reorganization Act are unconstitutional.
Every court that has taken up that question has
rejected it. So the action yesterday
indicates the justices aren't interested in overturning
the 1st, 2nd, 8th, 9th, 10th and the D.C.
circuits, whose combined jurisdictions cover nearly every tribe in the
country.
One tribe, the Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band of
Pottawatomi Indians, was particularly pleased with the latest development.
The tribe's efforts to create a reservation and open a casino were
hindered for years by a group called Michigan Gambling Opposition.
"We are very happy with the Supreme Court's decision to reject MichGO's
appeal," said Chairman D.K. Sprague. "It is, however, bittersweet
because the tribe and thousands of its supporters were irrevocably
harmed by this lawsuit."
Despite the favorable news, another land-into-trust issue
remains in limbo. Last fall, the Supreme Court heard
Carcieri
v. Kempthorne,
a case that could change the way Interior deals with
tribes that gained federal recognition after the passage of the IRA
in 1934.
Department of Justice lawyers who were appointed by President George W.
Bush filed a brief with the Supreme Court last month
that anticipated more
hurdles for tribes like the Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band,
whose recognition became final in 1999. The brief said
Interior would have to determine whether a post-1934
tribe was under federal supervision despite not being
formally recognized.
Sprague answered that question yesterday by citing a treaty
Chief Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish signed with the U.S. in 1795.
The Bush-authored brief said treaties were one way to determine
whether a recently recognized tribe qualifies for the land-into-trust
process.
But the Obama administration may take a different approach to
addressing the post-1934 issue if Carcieri goes
against tribal interests. Or the Supreme Court could
rule that the IRA applies to all tribes, regardless of
the date of recognition.
Between 1887, the start of the allotment period, and 1934,
tribes lost 90 million acres of their land. Since the IRA,
only about 5 million acres has been reacquired in trust.
Tribes complain that the land-into-trust process takes too long to complete,
in part because existing regulations do not impose deadlines
on Interior. A recent report from the Government Accountability
Office cited an application that took nearly 20 years for
the Bureau of Indian Affairs to resolve.
Litigation can also tie up an application for years, as
was the case with three Michigan tribes, including
the Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band, also known as the
Gun Lake Tribe. All three lawsuits were resolved in
favor of tribal interests.
Briefs in MichGO v. Kempthorne:
Petition
| DOJ
Opposition | Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish
Band Opposition
D.C. Circuit Decision:
MI
Gambling Oppo v. Kempthorne, Dirk (April 29, 2008)
Related Stories:
Land-into-trust case
awaits Supreme Court action (1/13)
Turtle Talk: More thoughts
on land-into-trust cases (01/13)
Supreme Court rejects two Indian law cases
(1/12)
DOJ brief argues 1934
land-into-trust issue again (12/16)
Supreme Court takes on first Indian law case of
term (11/04)
Turtle Talk: Poor outlook on
land-into-trust case (11/4)
Rhode Island optimistic on
land-into-trust case (11/04)
Oregon tribes await outcome
of land-into-trust case (11/04)
Appeals
court delays casino for Michigan tribe (8/18)
Appeals court judge strikes blows against Indian
rights (5/5)
Appeals court backs Gun Lake
land-into-trust (4/29)
Appeals court
backs Michigan land-into-trust acquisition (7/5)
Appeals court sides with tribe in trust land
dispute (1/9)
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