Minnesota Files Suit Against CashCall (Western Sky Financial)

Complaint – Minnesota v CashCall

From an article about the suit:

Minnesota regulators are, for the first time, challenging a practice in which an Internet lender is allegedly hiding behind tribal sovereign immunity to skirt state laws.

A lawsuit filed Thursday against California-based CashCall Inc. takes aim at the rent-a-tribe phenomenon, which Attorney General Lori Swanson described in an interview as “an emerging problem” that has come under fire elsewhere.

The complaint, filed jointly by Swanson and state Commerce Commissioner Mike Rothman, accuses CashCall and subsidiaries WS Funding and WS Financial of engaging in an “elaborate ruse” to deceive borrowers and regulators and fleece them with illegally high rates on Internet loans.

A lawyer for the company would only say the lawsuit contains inaccuracies.

Previous coverage about CashCall and Western Sky Financial here.

Yakama Nation Celebrate Sockeye Return to Cle Elum Lake for the First Time in 100 Years

Yakama Nation biologists released thousands of sockeye salmon into a Central Washington lake over the past four summers to restore fish runs that were decimated with the damming of area rivers and streams. Each fall, the just-released fish swam up the Cle Elum River to spawn and die. Their babies, meanwhile, spent a year in the lake before swimming to the ocean to grow into adulthood. Now, four years after the first release in 2009, those adult fish are returning to their birthplace to spawn, and tribal members are celebrating what they hope is the resurrection of a revered species to its native habitat. “You are part of a sacred ceremony to celebrate the return of an important ingredient to our body, our hearts, our life,” Yakama elder Russell Jim told the crowd gathered on the shore of Cle Elum Lake.

Some great pictures from the celebration here.

Thanks to JO for the article.

Hopi Sue Navajo over Access to Sacred Sites

Saying the Navajo Nation is ignoring its obligations, the Hopi Tribe wants a federal judge to order that its members  be allowed onto Navajo lands for religious purposes.

The lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court here claims the Navajos agreed in 2006 to permit Hopi religious practitioners to engage in certain practices in designated areas of the Navajo Nation. That includes the “sacred gathering of golden eagles.”

Attorney Timothy Macdonald said those sites even are set out on a map.

But Macdonald, in the lawsuit made available Tuesday, said the Navajo Nation is preventing Hopi tribal members from going on to some of those sites because they are on specific “allotments.” Those are parcels of land held by the federal government for individual Navajos.

It even got to the point where a member of the Hopi Tribe was arrested last year, he said.

A bid to have the dispute resolved by a special Joint Commission went nowhere, Macdonald said, when the panel concluded it lacks jurisdiction over individual allotments.

So Macdonald now wants U.S. District Court Judge Paul Rosenblatt to block the Navajo Nation from taking any action to keep Hopi religious practitioners from the specified areas. And if Rosenblatt won’t do that, Macdonald wants him to rule that the Joint Commission can make a decision.

Harrison Tsosie, the Navajo Nation attorney general, said Tuesday he is still studying the case but said the allotments are “off limits” to Hopi religious practitioners. He also said those areas were not part of the 2006 agreement and that the sites in question are not on the map.

Hopi Tribe v. Navajo Nation – Complaint 07-05-13 copy.

Link to the news article here.

 

Yukon Court Orders Territory to Consult First Nation

The Yukon Supreme Court has overturned a Yukon government decision to allow a mining exploration project on the White River First Nation lands.

Last year, Yukon’s environmental assessment board recommended that a Tarsis Resources project not be allowed to proceed because it would have negative effects.

The director of mineral resources with the Yukon Department of Energy, Mines and Resources rejected that recommendation.

The White River First Nation then turned to the courts.

On Friday Justice Ron Veale ruled the Yukon government had made “fundamental mistakes” in its approach to consultation, by disregarding the board’s recommendation.

He ordered the director of mineral resources to meet with the First Nation for “deep consultation.”

Article here.

SD Tribes Discuss the Idea of Creating Tribal-Run Foster Care Systems

Following mounting anger over charges that the state has routinely and illegally placed Native American children with non-native foster parents, South Dakota tribes gathered Monday in Rapid City to discuss how they could form their own tribal-run foster care systems. . . .

Since a conference held by the tribes in Rapid City in May, attended by Kevin Washburn, the U.S. Interior Department’s assistant secretary for Indian Affairs, the Lakota have focused increasingly on steps to wrestle away federal funding from South Dakota and create native-run foster care systems.

Article here.

Article on Tribal Constitutions and Constitutional Reform

This article focuses heavily on the current constitutional reform movement going on at the White Earth Nation in Minnesota, but also makes some interesting points about tribal constitutions in general.

A few quotes from the article:

Most Americans don’t realize that tribes have their own constitutions, which set down rules for everything from tribal government to citizenship. But many were built on models written by the U.S. Department of the Interior nearly 80 years ago.

Times have changed, tribal leaders say. Today many Indian nations are expanding their economies, experimenting with gaming and hoping to include their own cultural touchstones and collective priorities in the document that governs them.

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“We are governed by the Indian Reorganization Act, written by the federal government in 1934,” said Vizenor, chairwoman at White Earth, the state’s largest tribe. “[Our constitution] doesn’t have an independent judicial system. It doesn’t have separation powers. And there are about 27 references about asking permission from the Secretary of Interior in order to do something.”

A new constitution, Vizenor said, could be the key to attracting new businesses, running clean elections, creating an impartial judiciary — and creating a place where more people want to live, work and invest.

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About 250 of the 333 tribal constitutions in the United States were based completely or partly on the Indian Reorganization Act, according to David Wilkins, professor of American Indian studies at the University of Minnesota. The U.S. Constitution doesn’t apply to Indian Country because tribes are sovereign nations that existed before the constitution was drafted, he said.

Tribal constitutions determine how tribes govern themselves internally and how they relate to other government entities such as counties and states. Having stronger checks and balances in place can help prevent the favoritism and corruption that has prevented some tribes from prospering, supporters say.

Research has shown that tribes with the most capable governments are more successful economically than others, said Steve Cornell, co-director of the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development and a professor at the University of Arizona.

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White Earth got started on the process in 1997, after several tribal leaders — including former chair Darrel (Chip) Wadena — were convicted of election fraud and bid-rigging related to the tribe’s casino. When Vizenor was elected tribal chair in 2004, she made constitution reform a priority.

White Earth’s proposed constitution contains the first term limits for tribal leaders and an independent court system. Judges must be graduates of a law school accredited by the American Bar Association, but must also have “knowledge of Anishinaabe [Ojibwe] culture, traditions and history.”

It creates a legislative council, but one advised by a “council of elders.” It contains safeguards guaranteed in the U.S. Constitution, such as freedom of religion, speech and press. But it also protects “freedom of artistic irony,” a form of satire used in literature that “may not please some citizens.”

Vizenor hopes good governance will attract and keep younger tribal members, who often leave reservations because, in the absence of clear rules, jobs can hinge on political connections.

In the past, Minnesota tribes interested in reforming their governments often lacked the expertise and finances, said Jaime Pinkham, a vice president at the Bush Foundation. That’s why the foundation stepped in.

Even with funding, however, challenges remain. How do you stir up excitement over a constitution in a place grappling with poverty? How do you get buy-in from folks who stand to lose political privilege? How do you deal with the contentious tribal citizenship issue?

“Change is frightening to people,” said Anton Treuer, executive director of the American Indian Resource Center at Bemidji State University. “But times are changing, and we need to change with them.”

Full article here.

New Law Could Help Increase Native Hawaiian Roll Effort

A new state law allowing proof of ancestry to be taken from several sources is expected to make it easier to expand the roll of Native Hawaiians – a move that could help them form their own government.

The law that went into effect Monday aims to increase the number of people on the roll by reducing paperwork and redundancy on various lists of Native Hawaiians such as those at Kamehameha Schools and for homestead land leases, Hawaii News Now reported Thursday.

Article here.

Gas Line Spills 25,000 Gallons on Montana Tribal Land

A Phillips 66 pipeline with a record of prior accidents spilled an estimated 25,000 gallons of gasoline in a remote area outside a small town on Montana’s Crow Indian Reservation, but no public health problems were anticipated, federal officials said Friday.

A representative of the Houston-based oil refinery and chemical company said the amount of leaked gas likely was less than initially reported, although no alternate figure was offered. The initial estimate came from a report submitted by the company to the government’s National Response Center.

Federal and tribal officials and the company worked Friday to determine what caused the break in the 8-inch underground line. It occurred about 15 miles southwest of Lodge Grass, a town of about 430 people near the Wyoming border. The same line has seen at least three spills over the past two decades.

Story here.

OK Seeks New Tobacco Tax Deals with Tribes

Oklahoma officials are pushing to raise taxes on tribal tobacco sales to a level that could reduce or wipe out the competitive price advantage tribal smoke shops have enjoyed for decades.

Gov. Mary Fallin’s office, however, said the main goal in its negotiations on new tribal tobacco compacts is to make tobacco taxes more consistent in the state.

Article here.

Marge Anderson, Long Time Leader of Mille Lacs Band, Has Died

Condolences to her friends and family.

Marge Anderson, the longtime leader of the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe who led the tribe during its successful efforts to reclaim its tribal hunting and fishing rights and steered casino profits to social programs instead of individuals, has died. She was 81.

Anderson, the first woman to lead an American Indian tribe in Minnesota, died of natural causes Saturday on the band’s reservation in Onamia, according to the tribal government. Officials said she was an authority on the history, traditions and culture of the Ojibwe and was fluent in the language.

She also led the tribe into the modern era of American Indian gaming while she was the band’s chief executive from 1991 to 2000, and again from 2008 to 2012. She used the profits from the band’s Hinckley and Mille Lacs casinos to fund social programs, schools and clinics for the band’s members instead of handing out payments to individual members.

According to the band, more than 2,300 of its 4,300 members live on the reservation, which is about 75 miles north of Minneapolis.

“Marge Anderson was a great tribal leader for the band and a trailblazer for all of Indian Country,” Melanie Benjamin, the tribe’s current chief executive, said in a statement. “This is an extraordinary loss for the band.”

“Marge led the band through our treaty-rights case and into the modern era of Indian gaming,” added Curt Kalk, the band’s secretary-treasurer. “She made history for the band and we will feel her impact for generations.”

Anderson became a lightning rod for criticism by non-Indians when the tribe sued to reassert its fishing and hunting rights on Mille Lacs Lake and in other parts of east-central Minnesota that were granted under an 1837 treaty.

“This case is about more than hunting deer and catching fish,” she said shortly before the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of the tribe in 1999. “It is about preserving and passing along the traditional ways that make us who we are — Ojibwe people.”

And she led a celebration outside tribal headquarters when the high court declared that the 1837 treaty was still valid.

“Today the United States has kept a promise,” Anderson said. “A promise that our rights are not just words on paper. A promise that agreements are made to be honored, not broken.”

Anderson is survived by her husband, Merlin Anderson, two children, six grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. A wake is planned for Tuesday evening, followed by a funeral Wednesday morning at the District I Community Center in Onamia.

Here.