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Attack on court comes amid investigation
Tribal leaders and attorneys representing 300,000 American Indian
beneficiaries this week decried the Bush administration's attempt to kick
a court investigator off the bitter trust fund dispute....
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Judge readies decision in Kennewick Man case
Five Pacific Northwest tribes who claim a 9,000-year-old man as an
ancestor should know by September whether they will get to rebury him....
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In The Hoop: Winners, Losers
Is it Friday already? That means it's time for the weekly list of the
movers and shakers in Indian Country and beyond....
Clinton to attend Mohegan ceremony
Former President Bill Clinton will attend a ceremony today at the
Mohegan Sun Casino in Connecticut....
Congress accepts blame for leaks
The lawmakers handling a probe into the September 11 terrorist attacks
accepted blame on Thursday for information leaked to the press....
Peltier lawyer loses appeal
An attorney for imprisoned American Indian activist Leonard Peltier was
turned away by the Supreme Court on Thursday in her quest to hold
government officials accountable for withholding information....
Supreme Court bars execution
The Supreme Court on Thursday overturned decades of precedent and
ruled that the execution of the mentally retarded was unconstitutional....
Judge won't let 'chief' open casino
A woman who claims to be chief of an Alaska tribe can't keep a casino in
New York open for now, a judge has ruled....
Congressman not wearing his whities
Representative Bob Schaffer (R-Colo.) didn't wear his Fightin' Whites gear to Thursday
night's Congressional baseball game....
Reviews: The Fast Runner, Inuit film
"The Fast Runner (Atanarjuat)," the all-Inuit film, continues to get
positive reviews as it opens across the country....
Native corp cleared for casino
Gaming regulators in Nevada cleared an Alaska Native corporation
investment in a Las Vegas casino....
Colo. tribe helps fire evacuees
The Southern Ute Tribe of Colorado has extended a warm hand to
residents forced to leave their homes due to a 53,000-acre fire....
Pequot recognition decisions awaited
The Bureau of Indian Affairs has projected it will finalize recognition
decisions on two Pequot tribes by June 25....
Miccosukee Tribe launches ad campaign
The Miccosukee Tribe of Florida is running ads in several newspapers,
criticizing local officials for questioning recent land buys....
First Native woman doctor gets honor
The first Indian woman to become a doctor will be inducted into the
American Medical Women's Association Hall of Fame....
Tribes propose buyout of mine site
A coalition of tribal and local governments on Thursday proposed that
the state of Wisconsin buy 5,000 acres of land to prevent a huge mine
near a reservation....
Okla. tribes await answer on gaming
Three Oklahoma tribes and a gaming company didn't receive further
guidance yesterday on their bid to keep operating a controversial casino
machine....
Mont. tribe cites $1.9 million in damages
The Blackfeet Nation of Montana on Thursday said reservation ranchers
suffered $1.0 million in damages from this month's devastating
snowstorm....
N.Y. tribe pushes for bingo hall
A state-recognized New York Tribe is promising to share profits from a
bingo hall with a local town....
Tribal police officer found dead
A police officer on the Fort Belknap was found dead in her home on
Thursday....
Japan won't object to Native whaling
The Japanese government says it won't object to indigenous subsistence
whaling any longer....
Seneca land claim dismissed
A federal judge in New York dismissed one of the Seneca Nation's land
claims....
Ariz. wildfire rages on
A out of control fire which started on the White Mountain Apache
Reservation in Arizona has grown to 85,000 acres....
Featured Story
Tribes demand independent trust fund oversight
Already facing doubts in Indian Country, the joint federal-tribal task
force on trust reform will confront a key issue in the upcoming weeks
that could potentially derail the closely watched effort....
Featured Story
Supreme Court asked to take on tribal 'terror'
A non-Indian couple who claims they were harassed by a tribal law
enforcement officer has asked the Supreme Court to clear the way for an
$8 million lawsuit....
Featured Story
In The Hoop: The Beat Goes On
If the name of the federal magistrate who gave a reprieve to three
Oklahoma tribes on a gaming dispute that heats up day by day sounds
familiar, it should....
Tribe and union fight pollution
The Ponca Tribe and a labor union have put a chemical company on
notice for alleged violations of state and federal environmental law....
Minn. tribe lobbies for Yucca Mountain
A casino-rich tribe is actively lobbying
Congress to support the Yucca Mountain
nuclear waste repository in Nevada....
Congress focuses on intercepted messages
A Congressional committee investigating the September 11 terrorist
attacks discussed messages intercepted by the National Security Agency
that warned of some sort of action....
High cost of new department feared
Creating and staffing the new Department of Homeland Security could
cost upwards of $1 billion, according to Congressional estimates....
Sacred site bill was a 'done deal'
Wyoming's House representative missed a vote this week on a bill to sell
federal land to the Mormon Church....
Meeting held to discuss drilling debate
Bureau of Land Management officials met in Montana this week to
discuss coalbed methane drilling in the Powder River Basin....
Tribal DOJ official joins law firm
A tribal member who has been a Department of Justice official has joined
a Washington, D.C., law firm, Judy Sarasohn of The Washington Post
reports....
Wash. nickname targeted for removal
A Washington school board on Wednesday heard debate on removing the
"Indians" nickname from a public school....
Okla. student wins art award
Incoming fifth-grade student Tiffany Sullivan recently took home a first
place award at an Oklahoma pow-wow and arts festival....
Notah Begay returns to the green
Navajo / Isleta Pueblo golfer Notah Begay is playing in the Greater
Hartford Open this week....
Caddo Tribe gets own police
The Caddo Tribe of Oklahoma christened its own independent police force
on Tuesday....
Crow Tribe targets tourist dollars
The Crow Tribe is trying to attract tourists who visit Montana for the
anniversary of the Battle of the Little Bighorn....
N.Y. state park draws complaints
A group calling itself the Muhheconnew National Confederacy is
protesting the opening of a new state park in New York....
Lawmakers oppose Indian image on coin
Lawmakers from Virginia are up in arms about a proposal to put an image
of an American Indian on the reverse side of the nickel, John McCaslin
reports in "Inside the Beltway."
According to McCaslin, the U.S....
Kennewick Man ruling by Labor Day
The federal magistrate overseeing the controversial Kennewick Man case
expects to issue a ruling by Labor Day....
Pueblo sues over casino payments
Pojoaque Pueblo in New Mexico filed a lawsuit last month against the
Department of Interior over a casino compact approved during the
Clinton administration....
Editorial: Clear up 'murky' gaming law
The Daily Oklahoman in an editorial today accuses Oklahoma tribes of
threatening to turn the state into a casino mecca....
Okla. tribes win temporary respite
Three Oklahoma tribes challenging federal Indian gaming regulators
have won the right to continue operating a controversial casino machine
on a temporary basis....
Racism cited in tribal opposition
Racism and fear are being cited as reasons why resident of Maine oppose
a tribal casino....
Mont. reservations see teen pregnancy
Teen birth rates in Montana dropped during a four-year period starting in
1996 but the state's reservations didn't always follow....
Featured Story
NCAI's Hall wants trust records protected
National Congress of American Indians President Tex Hall made an
urgent request on Tuesday night to protect Indian trust records from
potential destruction by convicted accounting firm Arthur Andersen....
Featured Story
Gaming company takes 'hit' from regulators
Executives of a gaming company with close ties to the $10 billion tribal
casino industry moved Tuesday to counteract a growing legal and
financial crisis that threatened its investors and major Indian Country
clients....
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Texas battles against tribes questioned
Two of Indian Country's strongest advocates expressed solidarity with
Texas tribes on Tuesday but said there might be little they could do
about legal battles that have shut down one casino and may close
another....
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Norton sees opposition on trust reform
Secretary of Interior Gale Norton was met with resistance on Tuesday
night from tribal leaders who criticized recent efforts to fix the broken
Indian trust....
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Gaming company shares hold steady
Trading of Multimedia Games Inc (NASDAQ:MGAM) was heavy this
morning as the company revised its earnings estimates due to an
ongoing conflict with federal Indian gaming regulators....
Chief refused entry with eagle bonnet
US authorities forbid a Canadian chief from entering the country with
his traditional eagle feather warbonnet....
Conn. man sentenced for casino theft
A Connecticut man was sentenced on Tuesday for stealing more than
$900,000 from the Mohegan Tribe's casino....
Neb. candidate endorses expanded gaming
A gubernatorial candidate in Nebraska signed a petition to expand
gaming in the state but stopped short of saying he would vote for the
measure if it appears on the November ballot....
EPA Memo: Toxic sludge helps fish
An internal Environmental Protection Agency document claims that toxic
waste in waters is actually good for fish, The Washington Times reports
today....
Bush offers Homeland Security bill
President Bush on Tuesday offered draft legislation to implement the
Department of Homeland Security....
Troubled Army Corps faces overhaul
A bill to overhaul the Army Corps of Engineers was endorsed on Tuesday
by the military commander of the troubled agency and the Senate's top
Democrat....
Other Code Talkers up for medals
The House on Tuesday approved a bill to award Congressional medals to
Code Talkers who served in two world wars....
N.Y. pow-wow canceled
The Grindstone Creek Powwow in upstate New York has been canceled
for lack of vendor interest....
Mont. site was Native butcher shop
Visitors can tour a 2,000-year-old site in Montana where thousands of
buffalo were killed by Native hunters....
State Dept. promises whaling fight
Secretary of State Colin Powell will seek a special meeting of the
International Whaling Commission to ensure Alaska Native subsistence
hunting....
Calif. mascots see protest
A California woman was arrested on Tuesday during a protest against
two public school mascots....
Okla. students hone skills
Oklahoma Indian students are taking advantage of a summer program to
work on their arts and crafts skills....
Tribal stories confirm historic events
Stories among tribes in the Pacific Northwest are being used to confirm
catastrophic events such as earthquakes and tsunamis....
Editorial: Stop denying gang problem
The Farmington Daily-Times in an editorial today criticizes those who
deny a gang problem exists on the Navajo Nation in New Mexico....
Kan. tribes oppose voting map
Four tribes in Kansas filed objections to proposals to redraw four U.S.
House districts....
Norton visits tribal college
Secretary of Interior Gale Norton made good on her promise to a North
Dakota senator and visited the United Tribes Technical College
yesterday....
Okla. tribes challenge gaming agency
Three Oklahoma tribes on Tuesday joined in a lawsuit to prevent the
National Indian Gaming Commission from enforcing a decision on a
controversial casino machine....
Trust reform proposals criticized
The joint federal-tribal trust reform task force updated Indian Country on
Tuesday at the National Congress of American Indians....
Exhibit documents Mohawk building workers
The National Museum of the American Indian in Manhattan is running a
photo exhibit that documents the Mohawk construction workers who
helped erect major buildings in New York City....
Featured Story
Bush administration targets trust fund monitor
Senior Bush administration officials accused a judicial investigator of
bias in a lengthy court filing aimed at ousting the Indian trust reform
monitor from his oversight role at the Department of Interior....
Featured Story
House clears sale of sacred site to church
The House on Monday approved legislation to sell more than 900 acres of
federal land to a religious group over objections that the deal would open
the door to tribes claiming sacred sites....
Featured Story
Featured Story
Tribal leaders raise doubts about overhaul
Tribal leaders today voiced skepticism about recent efforts to correct
mismanagement of Indian trust funds and said alternatives endorsed by
a task force presented few avenues for meaningful change....
Featured Story
Gaming company banks on Indian Country
The stock of a casino game company with close ties to the $10 billion
Indian gaming industry fell several percentage points yesterday despite
optimism over new federal rules seen as favorable to tribes....
Juvenile center could get tribal funds
The Nez Perce Tribe is considering funding a local detention center, a
local official said....
Indian policy changes opposed
First Nations throughout Canada are united in opposition to proposed
changes to federal Indian policy....
Bush promotes minority home ownership
President Bush on Monday called for minority home ownership to
increase by the end of the decade....
Supreme Court Roundup
Religious Freedom
The Court struck down an Ohio law which forbid door-to-door canvassing
without a permit....
Blockade halts company logging
Weyerhaeuser Corporation is promising to meet with the Penticton First Nation
of British Columbia in response to a blockade that has halted logging
around a mountain....
Public backs snowmobile ban
The National Park Service has received what is believed to be a record
number of public comments about a proposal to ban snowmobiles in two
national parks....
Opinion: Don't take mascots seriously
"Although some mascots are embarrassing caricatures, they shouldn't
be taken so seriously as to cause offense....
Historic tribal artwork uncovered
A team of archaeologists has cleaned up a cave that shows ancient
Ohlone art....
Changes sought in U.S. border policy
The federal government is being asked to abandon its Mexican border
policies in response to a spate of deaths of migrants who enter the
Tohono O'odham Reservation in Arizona....
Wash. tribe rebounds from baby crisis
The Shoalwater Tribe of Washington is still seeking answers on a high
rate of infant mortality the reservation endured for a decade....
Challenge to tribal casino win denied
A Michigan tribe on Monday welcomed the Supreme Court's refused to
hear its victory on a casino licensing case....
Yellow Bird: Finding a bargain
"While traveling the back roads in northern Minnesota this past week, I
stopped at a local filling station and convenience store.
With purchases made and gas filled, I turned to leave when a poster of a
woman posing in a white wedding gown caught my eye....
NCAI mid-year session opens in N.D.
The mid-year session of the National Congress of American Indians is
underway in Bismarck, North Dakota....
McCaleb affirms Mohawk leadership
Assistant Secretary Neal McCaleb has affirmed the traditional three-chief
government of the St....
Norton wants court monitor ousted
Attorneys for Secretary of Interior Gale Norton have asked a federal
judge to revoke the appointment of court monitor Joseph S....
In Today's Federal Register
The following documents of note were published in today's Federal
Register....
Mi'kmaq voters go to polls
Voters on the Burnt Church Reserve in New Brunswick went to the polls
this week to choose a new chief and council....
Idaho tribes fight legal challenge
Two Idaho tribes are seeing a legal challenge from state lawmakers and
officials over a ballot initiative to legalize gaming in Indian Country....
Featured Story
Trust fund monitor accused of prejudice
On the eve of her appearance at a tribal convention, attorneys for
Secretary of Interior Gale Norton accused the Indian trust fund monitor
of overstepping his boundaries and asked a federal judge to dismiss him.
"It is with great reluctance that the Interior defendants request that this
court revoke the appointment of Joseph S....
Featured Story
The Week in Review
Indian gaming rules and regulations talk of the town, judge halts work at burial site in response to tribal complaints, education and Indian trust budgets targeted, and federal recognition reforms considered....
Featured Story
Task force faces tough sell on trust reform
A joint federal-tribal task force on trust reform was greeted with
skepticism last week by listeners of a radio program who questioned
whether the Department of Interior can be trusted to correct its
historical mismanagement of Indian funds....
Featured Story
Okla. casinos operate illegal game
Several Oklahoma tribes this weekend defied a federal order to shut
down a controversial casino game whose future could rest on judicial
interpretation of new regulations designed to limit court battles....
Mont. battle site under study
A group of volunteers has undertaken an archaeological project aimed at
mapping the Fetterman Fight, a December 21, 1866 battle in which
Sioux, Cheyenne and Arapaho warriors defeated Army forces....
John Potter: Leave me alone
"Get this: I recently received a book, entitled "The Conquering Indian,"
sent to me by a certain reader who believes that I'm on the road to
eternal damnation simply because I'm not a Christian, and because I
choose to follow my Native beliefs....
Editorial: 'Offensive' stance on remains
In an editorial today, The Sioux Falls Argus Leader criticizes the state of
South Dakota for suggesting that Yankton Sioux tribal members planted
human remains at a work site near the Missouri River....
Yellow Bird: Reform tribal government
fter covering a late-night community meeting where the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa tribal
council and members were at odds, I was driving home and I wondered how many times I had
witnessed that same scene....
Letter: Wayne Smith a hero
"It is horrific to know that the Department of the Interior can do
outrageous things with such impunity....
Speculation on tribal motives
Connecticut Governor John Rowland (R) is being accused of secretly wanting
to open the state's third tribally-owned casino....
Death of grave-digger ruled a suicide
An Alaska man who was convicted of removing the skull of an Alaska
Native child from a grave site, died last month after shooting himself in
the head, authorities said....
FAS study includes reservation
Doctors in Montana are part of a multi-state study on fetal alcohol
syndrome (FAS)....
Blackfeet Reservation digs out from storm
Ranchers on the Blackfeet Reservation in Montana are trying to recover
from last week's snowstorm that crippled power lines and caused loss of
cattle....
Okla. tribe remodels elder's home
The Muscogee-Creek Nation of Oklahoma recently finished remodeling
work on a home for a California Fixico, 100-year-old tribal member....
Conference focuses on language
The Athabascan Languages Conference is being held at the University of
Alaska at Fairbanks this week....
Alaska Native quota to expire
Alaska Native communities can take 75 bowhead whales this year before
their hunting quota runs out....
NCAI's Hall has lofty goals
Tex Hall has worn a lot of hats, no pun intended, in recent years.
Teacher, rancher, and tribal leader....
Accident mars sobriety gathering
The Copper River Native Sobriety Celebration was held during the
Memorial Day weekend late last month, an event organized to combat
alcoholism among Alaska Natives....
Diabetes study tracked children
A study of 86 Aboriginal patients who developed diabetes at a young age
has raised alarm for health researchers....
Okla. tribes targeted in gaming review
Oklahoma's tribes are being asked to prove their casinos are operating
on Indian land, The Daily Oklahoman reports today....
Weak opening for Code Talker movie
Windtalkers, the MGM movie which features the Navajo Code Talkers who
served during World War II, placed a distant third at the box office this
weekend....
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