Tenth Circuit Allows IGRA Suit by Comanche against Fort Sill to Proceed

Here is the opinion in Comanche Nation v. Ware.

Briefs:

Opening Brief

Answer Brief

Reply

Ninth Circuit Rejects Federal En Banc Petition in Sho-Ban v. DOI but Some Judges Have Thoughts

Here is the order and accompanying, dueling opinions in Shoshone-Bannock Tribes v. Dept. of the Interior.

En banc stage briefs:

US En Banc Petition

Tribal Response to En Banc Petition

Panel materials here.

Tenth Circuit Rejects Challenge to Indian Status in Indian Country Crimes Case

Here is the opinion in United States v. King.

Briefs:

Indian Peaks Band Files to Protect Tribal Water Rights

On April 1, 2026, the Indian Peaks Band of the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah filed a Notice of Appeal and Petition for Stay with the Interior Board of Land Appeals (IBLA), challenging the Bureau of Land Management’s March 2, 2026, approval of the Pine Valley Water Supply Project.

The filing seeks review of BLM’s decision authorizing a large‑scale groundwater extraction and pipeline project in southern Utah and asks the IBLA to stay the project approvals while the appeal is pending. The Band argues that the decision violates federal law, including the National Environmental Policy Act, and unlawfully threatens the Band’s federally reserved water rights and culturally significant resources.

You can see more here.

Patrice Kunesh (Brookings) Report on ICE Detentions of Indian People in the US

Patrice Kunesh of the Brookings Institute has posted “Native Americans are getting swept up in immigration raids. Homeland Security Secretary Mullin has an opportunity to fix it.”

New Scholarship on Bordertowns and the Bad Men Clauses

Taylor Graham has published “Bad Men in the Bordertown” in the New Mexico Law Review.

Here is the abstract:

In nine treaties signed by Tribal Nations and the United States between 1867 and 1868, the United States promised redress to Native Americans for wrongs committed against them by “bad men among the whites.” Today, Native Americans are more likely to be killed by police than any other group, with much of this violence concentrated near the borders of Tribal Nations. Although claims brought under the “bad men” treaty clauses offer an avenue for combatting this epidemic of violence, courts have begun interpreting the clauses to apply only when “wrongs” occur within Tribal boundaries. This article argues that the territoriality of the bad men clauses should be read broadly to encompass violence committed outside of Tribal boundaries to address the disproportionate police violence against Native Americans that occurs there.

Treaty Waters At Risk: Happening Now

President Whitney Gravelle, Bay Mills Indian Community delivering her keynote address “The Battle of the Black Snake: Line 5 and Tribal Treaty Rights” at the Treaty Waters At Risk: Tribal Sovereignty and the Line 5 Challenge in the Great Lakes conference. Held at the MSU College of Law’s Castle Board Room, East Lansing, MI. Several panelists today offering a wealth of information. There’s still time left to join us for the afternoon panels!

Ninth Circuit Materials in Maloney v. Office of Navajo and Hopi Relocation

Briefs:

Oral argument video here.

New Scholarship on Implicit Divestiture

Issac Santos and Elizabeth Ann Kronk Warner have posted “Turning Sugar to Alcohol:  An Originalist Critique of Implicit Divestiture” on SSRN.

Here is the abstract:

This Article challenges one of federal Indian law’s most consequential doctrines through the lens of originalism, the constitutional methodology now dominant on the U.S. Supreme Court. The doctrine of “implicit divestiture,” first articulated in Oliphant v. Suquamish Indian Tribe (1978), holds that tribal governments have been divested of certain sovereign powers deemed “inconsistent with their status” as domestic dependent nations-even absent any congressional statute or treaty provision explicitly abrogating such authority. Through comprehensive examination of the doctrine’s development from Oliphant through United States v. Cooley (2021), this Article demonstrates that implicit divestiture represents precisely what originalism rejects: judge-made policy disguised as law, where contemporary judicial preferences about fairness have supplanted interpretation of fixed legal sources understood by the founding generation. Tribal sovereignty existed at the Constitution’s enactment, making this area uniquely suited to originalist analysis. Yet no constitutional provision, founding-era treaty, or principle of eighteenth-century international law authorized courts to unilaterally diminish tribal sovereignty without congressional action. Even the Marshall Trilogy-decided within decades of the founding-identified only two limited exceptions to retained tribal sovereignty, both grounded in the doctrine of discovery and European law of nations as contemporaneously understood. Following the analytical path marked by Justices Gorsuch and Thomas’s recent dissent questioning the plenary power doctrine’s constitutional foundations, this Article argues that implicit divestiture similarly lacks any basis in the Constitution’s original meaning and should be abandoned in favor of originalist principles that preserve tribal sovereignty except where explicitly abrogated by Congress or limited by founding-era legal sources. This intervention arrives at a crucial moment when the Court’s originalist majority is actively reconsidering longstanding judge-made doctrines across constitutional law, making reconsideration of implicit divestiture both timely and methodologically imperative for a Court committed to fidelity to the Constitution’s original public meaning.