Here.
An excerpt:
Over the last few weeks, this stretch of highway has emerged as the unlikely flash point in escalating disputes between the Seneca Nation of Indians and the State of New York — disputes over sovereignty, and money, that have led the tribe to seek the intervention of President Obama and have twice prompted Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo to send high-level delegations to western New York in an effort to make peace. The tribe, saying that its leadership was pressured 57 years ago into accepting a one-time payment of $75,000 to allow the Thruway to cross its Cattaraugus reservation, is now dunning the state for more than $80 million — $1 for every vehicle that has crossed the reservation on the Gov. Thomas E. Dewey Thruway since 2007. The state, in turn, is seeking hundreds of millions of dollars it says the tribe owes as a share of its cigarette sales and gambling proceeds.