Supreme Court declines to review Public Law 280 dispute
Posted: Tuesday, April 17, 2012
The
U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear
Beaulieu
v. Minnesota, a
Public Law
280 case.
David Beaulieu, a member of the
White Earth Band of Ojibwe
Indians, was deemed to be a "sexually dangerous person" and a "sexual
psychopathic personality " under state law. The determination allows the state
to remove him from the reservation and force him to undergo treatment for an
indefinite duration.
The Minnesota Court of Appeals upheld the designation against Beaulieu in
August 2010. Nearly a year later, the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled in a related
case that tribal members are subject to the state's "civil commitment" laws even
if they reside in Indian Country.
The decision barred Beaulieu from pursuing his case further. He asked the Supreme Court to intervene and clarify whether the state's authority is warranted under Public Law 280. but the justices, without comment, turned down the case in an
order yesterday.
Related Stories:
Supreme Court asks for
state reply in Public Law 280 case (02/21)
Minnesota court subjects
Indian offenders to civil commitment (7/20)
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