Indianz.Com > News > Press Release: Winnebago Tribe wins decision in NAGPRA case
In Victory for Tribe Versus the U.S. Army, Court Confirms NAGPRA Applies to Children’s Remains
Thursday, May 14, 2026
Indianz.Com
The following is the text of a May 14, 2026 press release from the Winnebago Tribe, the Native American Rights Fund, Big Fire Law and Policy Group and Cultural Heritage Partners.
Richmond, Virginia — The Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska, represented by the Native American Rights Fund (NARF), Big Fire Law & Policy Group LLP, and Cultural Heritage Partners, PLLC is celebrating today’s decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit vacating the lower court’s dismissal and holding that the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) applies in Winnebago v. Department of the Army. The ruling allows the Tribe to proceed with its lawsuit against the U.S. Army seeking repatriation of the remains of Samuel Gilbert and Edward Hensley, two Winnebago boys who died at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School more than 125 years ago.
In the Fourth Circuit’s first decision interpreting NAGPRA, the Court rejected the government’s argument that NAGPRA does not reach Native children buried without consent in the Carlisle boarding school cemetery and held that NAGPRA’s repatriation protections can apply there. The court recognized that these remains are part of a “holding or collection” under NAGPRA and made clear that the Tribe’s request is exactly the kind of remedy Congress intended when it enacted the law to address the long history of Native burial desecration and the retention of Native remains without consent.
In the opinion, Judge [Pamela] Harris wrote, “At the end of the day, the U.S. government kept and buried the remains of two Native American schoolchildren, Samuel Gilbert and Edward Hensley, without their families’ or tribe’s consent after forcing them from their homes and after they died in the government’s care. Nearly a century later, Congress passed a statute that, by its terms, entitles their tribe finally to bring their remains home and to bury them according to their tribal and religious traditions. Nothing in the statute’s text or purpose forecloses that outcome. Quite the opposite: All signs indicate that the Tribe’s repatriation request is precisely the kind of remedy of historic wrongs that NAGPRA was designed to facilitate.”
This decision is a powerful affirmation of Tribal sovereignty, dignity, and the right of Tribal Nations to bring their children home. It acknowledges the profound injustice inflicted on Native families through the federal boarding school system and reinforces that NAGPRA is not limited to museum shelves or boxed collections. NAGPRA applies where federal agencies have retained Native children’s remains without the consent of their families or their Tribe.

4th Circuit Court of Appeals Decision
Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska v. U.S. Department of the Army (May 14, 2026)
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