FROM THE ARCHIVE
Cayuga tribes seek $1.7B for N.Y. land claim
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WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2003 The Cayuga Nation of New York and the Seneca-Cayuga Tribe of Oklahoma have asked a federal appeals court to award them $1.7 billion in trespass damages and to evict state and private landowners as part of their 64,000-acre land claim. The tribes argue that a federal judge miscalculated the amount they are owed for the land. They also say eviction is a rightful remedy as part of their case. The state of New York and two counties are also appealing the case. They want the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals to reverse the ruling in favor of the tribes, and to reduce the amount the state owes. U.S. District Judge Neal P. McCurn awarded $247 million in an October 2001 decision. Get the Story:
Cayugas Appeal Cases (The Syracuse Post-Standard 7/16) Related Stories:
Treaty cloth and $44 for Cayuga Nation land (05/09)
N.Y. bill seeks to tax Cayuga Nation business (05/01)
For Cayuga Nation, a day a century in the making (4/30)
Cayuga Nation reacquires former reservation (4/29)
Land claim appeal says tribes aren't real (04/09)
Cayuga Nation joins Catskills casino race (04/08)
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Appeals court considers Cayuga land claim (01/28)
Landowners and county join Cayuga case (12/13)
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Cayuga land claim appealed (5/2)
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Cayuga Nation wants $20M more for land (10/16)
Anti-treaty group blasts Cayuga ruling (10/9)
Cayuga claim still involves landowners (10/5)
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Tribe could have homeland (5/4)
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State tried to step out of land claims (11/6)
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