Alaska SCT Affirms Award in Boiler Explosion Caused by AVCP Regional Housing Authority Negligence

Here are the materials in Association of Village Council Presidents Regional Housing Authority v. Mael:

AVCP Opening Brief

Mael Opening Brief

Appellee Brief

Alaska Brief

AVCP Reply

Mael Reply

New Empirical Study by Harvard/Federal Reserve Researchers Shows that the Restoration of Reservation Status Has No Negative Impact on Local Economies, etc.

Michael Velchek and Jeffery Y. Zhang have posted “Restoring Indian Reservation Status: An Empirical Analysis” on SSRN. The paper is forthcoming in the Yale Journal on Regulation. Here is the abstract:

In McGirt v. Oklahoma, the Supreme Court held that the eastern half of Oklahoma was Indian country. This bombshell decision was contrary to the settled expectations and government practices of 111 years. It also was representative of an increasing trend of federal courts recognizing Indian sovereignty over large and economically significant areas of the country, even where Indians have not asserted these claims in many years and where Indians form a small minority of the inhabitants.

Although McGirt and similar cases fundamentally turn on questions of statutory and treaty interpretation, they are often couched in consequence-based arguments about the good or bad economic effects of altering existing jurisdictional relationships. One side raises a “parade of horribles.” The other contends “the sky is not falling.” Yet, to date, there is hardly any empirical literature to ground these debates. Litigants have instead been forced to rely upon impressionistic reasoning and economic intuitions.

We evaluate these competing empirical claims by exploiting natural experiments: judicial rulings altering the status quo of Indian reservation status. Applying well- established econometric techniques, we first examine the Tenth Circuit’s Murphy v. Royal decision in 2017 and the Supreme Court’s McGirt v. Oklahoma decision in 2020, which both held that the eastern half of Oklahoma was in fact Indian country. To do so, we leverage monthly employment data at the county level, annual output data at the county level, and daily financial data for public companies incorporated in Oklahoma. Contrary to the “falling sky” hypothesis that recognition of Indian jurisdiction would negatively impact the local economy, we observe no statistically significant effect of the Tenth Circuit or Supreme Court opinions on economic output in the affected counties.

We supplement these findings by analyzing five further case studies. These include three Supreme Court decisions: Nebraska v. Parker (concerning the Village of Pender, Nebraska); City of Sherill v. Oneida Indian Nation (City of Sherill, New York); South Dakota v. Yankton Sioux Tribe (Mix County, South Dakota). We also analyze settlements between Tribes and State governments in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan, in 2010 and Tacoma, Washington, in 1989. On balance, we report no statistically significant evidence that recognition of Tribal jurisdiction reduces economic performance in the affected counties, and we provide several hypotheses to contextualize these finding. These results have important consequences for ongoing litigation, including the Supreme Court’s upcoming merits case Oklahoma v. Castro-Huerta, No. 21-429 (U.S.), in which the litigants have raised competing empirical arguments about the effects of the McGirt decision.

Highly recommended.

Alaska Federal Court Pushes ANC Takings Claim against US to Trial

Here are the materials in Cully Corp. v. United States (Fed. Cl.):

One wishes this case were about walruses. . . .

United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues — Announcement

The United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues is around the corner, April 26-May 6. Sign up today to join the Implementation Project for a series of online side events to preview the Forum’s agenda and consider applications for tribes in the U.S. https://un-declaration.narf.org/upcoming-webinars-on-the-united-nations/?fbclid=IwAR1oJfN_8n4NNhfBr1J1PseaJcupl34Bk-t7l4AdDdU2rNeD5PvWe2X2III

Snoqualmie v. Washington Cert Petition

Here:

Questions presented:

  1. Whether the federal courts have the constitutional authority to unilaterally abrogate all rights guaranteed to an Indian tribe under a treaty with the United States absent congressional action.
  2. Whether the Ninth Circuit erred by applying issue preclusion to hold that Snoqualmie was not a party to the Treaty even though the Executive Branch expressly recognizes Snoqualmie as a Treaty party.

Lower court materials here.

Amicus briefs in support of the petition:

Bottom Side Briefs in Oklahoma v. Castro-Huerta

Here:

United States Amicus Brief

Five Tribes Amicus Brief

NCAI Amicus Brief

Former US Attys Amicus Brief

Peace Commission Treaty Tribes Amicus Brief

NIWRC Amicus Brief

Scholars Amicus Brief

Topside briefs here.

Choctaw Citizens Sue for Tax Relief under McGirt

Here is the complaint in Meashintubby v. Paulk (E.D. Okla.):

Federal Court Dismisses Effort to Relitigate Tribal Court Child Custody Order, Awards Attorney Fees to Tribal Defendants

Here are the materials in Van Nguyen v. Foley (D. Minn.):

4 Amended Complaint

17 GAL Motion to Dismiss

24 Tribe Motion to Dismiss

32 Response to 17

33 Response to 24

39 GAL Reply

40 Tribe Reply

42 DCT Order Dismissing Complaint

46 Tribe Motion for Attorney Fees

52 Response to 46

70 DCT Order on Attorney Fees

The universal symbol for attorney fees awards.

Arizona SCT Briefs in South Point Energy Center v. Arizona Department of Revenue

Here:

Prior post here.

High Country News

Harvard Law Review on Climate Change and the Third Indian Canon

Here is “Indigenous Interpretations: Invoking the Third Indian Canon to Combat Climate Change,” chapter 2 of Developments in the Law: Climate Change. Chapter 2 begins on page 1568 (page 47 of the pdf).