Bouschor Wins State Court Trial [Aaron Payment “Press Release” Removed]

The jury in the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe v. Bouschor Trial found for the defendants.  We’ve covered other parts of this trial here and here and here.

Here is a press release we received (MF: the least helpful press release we’ve ever received). So unhelpful, we received a demand letter to take it down. MF@ 7:12 PM.

Retraction: Earlier this evening I received an email from an attorney for several of the defendants named at one time or another demanding a retraction in accordance with Mich. Comp. Laws 600.2911(2)(b), which we gladly and apologetically do. We often receive unsolicited material for posting on Turtle Talk, and post some material. In this case, we received a document from Aaron Payment, the former chairman of the Sault Tribe, in addition to other unsolicited emails from other individuals asserting that the Sault Tribe had lost a jury verdict in the underlying matter of Sault Tribe v. Bouschor. As the local news had not yet published anything on the matter, we chose to publish the news, with an attachment to the Payment document, which we noted was “not very helpful.” We did so not to publish facts about the case, but to note the reaction — a highly opinionated and politicized reaction — from the former chair of the Sault Tribe that had initiated the lawsuit years ago. [references to Paul Shagen removed]

In terms of the retraction, we are instructed to note three facts. First, “There has been no federal crime, nor any charges of any crime.” Second, “Native Americans were not … excluded [from the jury on the basis of race], and one of the jurors selected to serve at the outset of the trial was in fact Native American.” And third, “the jury found that none of the defendants … wrongfully took anything from the Tribe.”

We note the timelines here as well. I received the email at approximately 7:15 PM. I took down the offending document immediately, and began composing this detailed retraction, published in full at 8:52 PM, which should be construed as a “reasonable” time within the statute.

I note lastly that we at Turtle Talk certainly had no intent to defame anyone. I’m not sure how the racial composition of the jury serves to defame the defendants. I’m not sure how the former chairman’s opinion that a “federal crime” occurred defamed them, either. I myself have “taken” money from the Sault Tribe — in 1992 or so when I worked there for a brief period as a summer intern. All three men are gainfully employed in Indian country, as far as I know, and have stellar reputations in the field. The allegations made by the Sault Tribe have been public for much longer than the existence of Turtle Talk. Frankly, it is not Payment’s recent “press release” that could possibly be injurious to these men — it is the allegation of large sums of money changing hands between a tribal leader and his (largely political) employees, as many tribal lawyers are, after losing a hotly-contested election. This is obviously a highly emotional and political case, and we at Turtle Talk have no dog in this fight.

Yet another update: It would appear that the Communication Decency Act affords Turtle Talk immunity from defamation liability (47 USC 230) since we did not author the offending statements.

Suquamish Indian Tribe v. Upper Skagit Indian Tribe

This case was denied cert at the Supreme Court this morning.  The order list is here.

MSU NALSA Art Fair, Call for Artists

The Native American Law Student Association (NALSA) at Michigan State University College of Law will be hosting a 1st Annual Art Fair on Friday, January 21, 2011. The purpose of the Art Fair is to showcase the art of area American Indian Artists as well as kick off a silent auction that will raise money for NALSA students to attend the Federal Bar Association’s Annual Indian Law Conference held near Santa Fe, New Mexico.

The Art Fair will go from 9am until 4pm and be held in the Castle Boardroom of the Law School Building. We will publicize the event across the campus as well as throughout Lansing and nearby communities.

NALSA is not asking for money from the artists, but we are instead asking that the artist donate something they’ve made that we can use for a silent auction that will begin on the January 21st and run approximately a week.

If you are interested in being a part of the fair (or for more information) please email nalsalaw@msu.edu by November, 15, 2010.

Madison County v. Oneida Indian Nation

Wow, we’ve been doing a lot of Supreme Court posts lately.   Unfortunately, here’s another one.  The Supreme Court granted cert in Madison County v. Oneida Indian Nation this morning.  A link to the materials is here [OIN v Madison County CA2 Opinion].

Update — Justice Sotomayor seems to have recused herself from this matter (see the SCT order here).

Rob Porter & Stephen Pevar Quoted in NY Post

The NY Post has an unfortunate and not representative headline for the body of the article.  Which I suppose is hardly a surprise, given the publication:

Indian reservations a land of the freebie
By JENNIFER FERMINO
Last Updated: 10:11 AM, September 27, 2010

Bargain-priced butts, cheap gas and gambling casinos get all the attention, but life on an Indian reservation includes other lifestyle elements that are as foreign as the Wild West to most New Yorkers.

Step onto an Indian reservation and you’re leaving the United States and entering a sovereign nation that includes free health care, a tribal justice system with its own courts, jails and police — and even separate license plates and passports.

The state’s knockdown, drag-out fight with Indians over untaxed cigarettes has thrust the debate over their sovereignty — based on decades-old treaties between the federal government and the tribes — back into the headlines.

The reservations operate as nations within a nation, with tribes dealing directly with the feds on a government-to-government relationship.

Indians who live and work on one of the country’s 300-plus federally recognized reservations are exempt from paying state income taxes, but usually they are required to pay all federal taxes.

However, if a citizen of one of the 564 federally recognized tribes works off of the reservation, they are required to pay state taxes, no matter where they live.

Those who live on any reservation don’t have to pay state property taxes, but they might have to fork over some kind of tribal fees.

And state sales taxes are not levied on Indians who make purchases on a reservation — hence the low price of cigarettes and gas that attract non-Indians to the reservations.

Continue reading

Supreme Court Fails to Grant Cert in Indian Law Cases

The Supreme Court failed to grant cert in any of the Indian law cases at the long conference yesterday. Our list of the cases is here.  The Court has already granted cert in United States v. Tohono O’odham, and it is possible they might still CVSG a case.

National Post 5 Part Series on Ontario Tobacco

The National Post is doing a 5 part series on tobacco in southwest Ontario and Quebec (h/t Pechanga).  Part of the story involves the Six Nations, but in part 2 of the series, the focus turns to non-Indian tobacco growers.

Three months ago, a southwestern Ontario farmer reportedly sold 90,000 lbs. of raw-leaf tobacco, about a tenth of the crop produced on the area’s largest farms, to a shadowy buyer. The eye-popping, secret payment he pocketed in return was $1-million — in cash — close to five times the price he would have commanded on the legal market.

The customer, according to another grower familiar with the transaction, was the owner of a contraband cigarette factory, operating well outside the strictly regulated raw-tobacco marketing system. Although more akin to deals struck in the drug world and not always so large, such sales appear to be occurring with surprising frequency in Ontario’s tobacco belt. Reports have long suggested that the dozens of aboriginal-run cigarette plants in Canada and the United States are mostly supplied by raw tobacco smuggled from the southern states, or stolen from Canadian farms.

Sources in agriculture and the underground tobacco industry, however, say many Ontario farmers have been pulling in handsome sums selling — illegally — to the contraband industry.

And the description of Wednesday’s article:

All about Canada’s smuggling capital: Akwesasne Mohawk reserve, straddling the border with the U.S and perfect for trade in contraband. Yet Akwesasne’s smuggling origins lie with legal, big-tobacco companies, and smuggling’s resurgence in the last several years came despite urgent warnings from Mohawk leaders to the federal government.

Story About Harvesting Wild Rice on Michigan Public Radio

Podcast here , slide show here

Summary:

For thousands of years, Native American tribes in the Great Lakes region have been harvesting wild rice. They call it manoomin.

But over the past few centuries, this tradition has been dying out. The rice beds have been shrinking, and the cultural knowledge has been disappearing. Many tribes were forced to relocate away from the wild rice beds. Starting in the 1870s, some children were taken from their families, into boarding schools. They were given English names and cut off from their culture and from the knowledge of how to harvest rice.

In Michigan, some people are trying to bring the tradition back.

Getches Stepping Down as Dean

From the University of Colorado-Boulder Law School press release (h/t Faculty Lounge):

CU-Boulder Law School Dean Announces Intention to Resign in 2011

September 1, 2010

David Getches, dean of the Law School at the University of Colorado at Boulder, has announced that he intends to resign as dean effective June 2011.

Getches, who will stay at CU-Boulder as a law professor, said he is “eager to return to teaching and research.” Now in his eighth year as dean of CU-Boulder’s law school, Getches announced his resignation to the faculty on Aug. 20.

“I have reached this decision with confidence that the Law School is on a solid footing,” Getches said. “With the support of alumni, faculty, staff, students and donors, we have many achievements that distinguish Colorado Law among the nation’s best law schools.”

Interim Provost Russell Moore will appoint a search committee by the end of September.

“Dean Getches forever left his mark by guiding the Law School into a new era and into the state-of-the-art Wolf Law Building,” Moore said. “I am very pleased we will be able to retain his vast expertise in water, natural resources and Indian law as a continuing member of our faculty.”

Under Getches’ leadership, the academic offerings at the law school have been greatly expanded. New programs include an endowed Experiential Learning Program, three Master of Laws degrees, three legal clinics, three certificates and eight dual-degrees.

An active fundraiser, Getches has helped raise $28.5 million in donations, increasing the law school’s endowment 80 percent since 2003. The increase in fundraising allowed Getches to fulfill one of his primary initiatives, to significantly increase the number and amounts of law student scholarships to attract the most promising students, regardless of financial capacity.

Getches, who has been on the faculty since 1979, is the Raphael J. Moses Professor of Natural Resources Law. He teaches and writes on water law, public land law, environmental law and American Indian law.

Getches is a nationally renowned expert in natural resources and Indian law issues. A prolific writer, he has published several books on water law and has written many articles and book chapters on water, natural resources and Indian rights issues that have appeared in diverse scholarly and popular publications.

In 1970, he became the founding executive director for the Boulder-based Native American Rights Fund, a national, nonprofit Indian-interest law firm. From 1983 to 1987, he was executive director of the Colorado Department of Natural Resources under Gov. Richard D. Lamm. The department is responsible for the operation of 10 divisions of state government that deal with parks, wildlife, land, water and minerals. In 1996, he served as special consultant to the secretary of the U.S. Department of the Interior.

Getches earned his undergraduate degree from Occidental College in California and his law degree from the University of Southern California School of Law.

Contact

Malinda Miller-Huey, 303-492-3115

Michigan Indian Day Information and Registration Forms

Ashley Harding, former Program Coordinator at the ILPC, has done an amazing amount of work for this year’s Michigan Indian Day program.  We know the whole day will be great, but are sure some will be very interested in the second keynote speaker.

During the administration of Governor William G. Milliken, the Legislature designated the fourth Friday of September as Michigan Indian Day (Act 30 of 1974, Section 435.161). To honor this day in the State of Michigan, the Michigan Indian Day Planning Committee through the Ingham County Health Department’s Native American Outreach Program is proud to announce the 9th Annual Michigan Indian Day Event, entitled Strengthening Health, Strengthening Families: Empowering Indigenous Communities.

The event will be taking place Friday, September 24 at the Hannah Community Center in East Lansing, Michigan. The conference this year will be discussing health inequity and health disparities among the American Indian/First Nations populations of Michigan.

Our keynote speakers will be:

Stacy A. Bohlen, Executive Director, National Indian Health Board (NIHB), Washington, D.C.

Daniel Levy, Director of Law & Policy at the Michigan Department of Civil Rights. He will be discussing recent changes made to the Michigan Indian Tuition Waiver and the American Indian/First Nations populations this is affecting.

Workshop discussions include:
– Urban Native youth programming and its importance,
– Tobacco use among American Indians
– Tackling health inequity and why,
– Indian child welfare updates,
– Tribes and environmental justice issues,
– and MORE…

Costs
The cost of registration is $30 for the General Public and $15 for Students and Elders. Registration costs include materials, refreshments and lunch. No cash will be accepted.

Scholarships
Scholarships are available for students and elders (55 & up). Due to the limited number of scholarships, the committee will be taking these applications on a first come first serve basis.

Registration
Participants have the opportunity to register online or print off the registration form and mail it. Registration forms mailed must include payment. For those who register online, payment must be received within two weeks of registration. Please note the registration deadline is Friday, September 17.

Webpage
http://hd.ingham.org/other-services/native-american-outreach-program/michigan-indian-day-/mid-registration-2010.aspx

Questions
If there are any questions, please contact Ashley Harding at 517.272.4127 or by email at aharding@ingham.org

We hope to see you in attendance.

Registration Form
Registration Form-Elder Scholarship

Registration Form-Student Scholarship