FROM THE ARCHIVE
Mohawk deal could leave parties out
Facebook Twitter Email
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2002

In what could be a repeat of the Oneida land settlement that has fallen apart, the state of New York has approached one of the parties in the St. Regis Mohawk land claim.

There are four Mohawk groups suing the state. Gov. George Pataki (R) has proposed settling the claim to the St. Regis tribal council but not the others, according to The Albany Times-Union.

Pataki says settling the claim is essential to approval of the tribe's proposed casino in the Catskills region of New York.

Get the Story:
Pataki land claim offer tied to casino (The Albany Times-Union 2/28)

Related Stories:
Pataki: Drop land claims for casino (2/19)
Catskills land-into-trust filed (2/12)
Group wants temporary halt on gaming (1/31)
N.Y. confident on gaming challenge (1/30)
Group sues over N.Y. gaming (1/29)
Mohican compact getting approval (1/25)
Wis. tribe has deal in Catskills (1/24)
Wis. tribe denies land claim-casino swap (12/14)
Senator says Oneida settlement in works (12/13)
Schumer: Oneida Nation wants casino (10/25)
N.Y. approves major gaming deal (10/25)
N.Y. gaming welcomed by some (10/24)
N.Y. 'closer' to Seneca gaming deal (10/23)
Bingo may be enough for Seneca Nation (10/18)
Labor unions oppose Seneca casino (8/31)
Pataki wants casino deal approved (8/29)
Tapping the gaming market (8/27)
Gaming seen as threat to sovereignty (8/6)
Seneca Nation promises open casino talks (8/1)
Catskills casino not done deal (7/31)
Seneca Nation delays casino vote (7/27)
N.Y. confident on Seneca slots (7/25)
Seneca Nation members fight compact (7/13)
Seneca Nation may delay compact vote (7/11)
Cuomo wants unions at Seneca casinos (7/10)
Seneca leaders endorse gaming compact (6/26)
Hurdles left on Seneca gaming (6/25)
N.Y. Senate ratifies Seneca compact (6/22)
Seneca Nation, New York sign compact (6/21)
Seneca Tribe negotiating compact (5/18)