From ICT: Brendan Johnson Appointed Head of DOJ Committee

With an extensive quote from Prof. Fletcher:

Johnson to head Native DoJ committee
By Rob Capriccioso

Story Published: Nov 23, 2009

Story Updated: Nov 23, 2009

WASHINGTON – With a non-Native picked to lead the U.S. Department of Justice’s Native American Issues Subcommittee, some are taking the opportunity to highlight the importance of Indian inclusion within the national legal scene.

It was announced the week of Nov. 16 that Brendan Johnson, the U.S. attorney for South Dakota, was chosen by the Obama administration to head the committee, which is made up of federal prosecutors who serve in jurisdictions with large numbers of Indians.

The newcomer to the national scene was confirmed to his top lawyer position in October. He is the son of Democratic Sen. Tim Johnson of South Dakota, a longtime advocate of Native American issues on the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs.

Those who know the younger Johnson expect him to continue on his father’s path while leading the committee, which is intended to advise Attorney General Eric Holder on public safety and legal issues in Indian country.

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Talk on Cherokee Syllabary at MSU

Tuesday, November 24th at 11am.  116H Erickson Hall, MSU

Here are the details:

Prof. Cushman on Cherokee Syllabary

Michigan Indian Legal Services Newsletter

Here is a copy of the Fall 2009 MILS newsletter:

MILS_Newsletter_Fall_2009

“Facing the Future: The Indian Child Welfare Act at 30” is OUT NOW!

Michigan State University Press has published our edited collection, “Facing the Future: The Indian Child Welfare Act at 30.” The press website is here. The book is also available at amazon.

 

Tribal Nations Conference Today at White House

From the White House press release:
WASHINGTON – On Thursday, November 5th, 2009, President Obama will host the White House Tribal Nations Conference. As part of President Obama’s sustained outreach to the American people, this conference will provide leaders from the 564 federally recognized tribes the opportunity to interact directly with the President and representatives from the highest levels of his Administration.  Each federally recognized tribe will be invited to send one representative to the conference.

President Obama said, “I look forward to hearing directly from the leaders in Indian Country about what my Administration can do to not only meet their needs, but help improve their lives and the lives of their peoples. This conference will serve as part of the ongoing and important consultation process that I value, and further strengthen the Nation-to-Nation relationship. “

NPR’s Morning Edition:

“November 5, 2009 from WPR
President Obama meets with hundreds of Native American leaders when he hosts the White House Tribal Nations Conference Thursday. The event is for federally-recognized tribes. With that recognition, tribes are eligible for economic assistance, land, housing grants and other government benefits. The Brothertown Indians of Wisconsin had their application for formal recognition rejected, but they are appealing.”

From Indianz.com:

Other administration officials expected to attend are: Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke, Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, Energy Secretary Steven Chu, Education Secretary Arne Duncan, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, Deputy Attorney General David Ogden, HUD Deputy Secretary Ronald Sims, DHS Deputy Secretary Jane Lute, Associate Attorney General Tom Perrelli, and Indian Health Service Director Dr. Yvette Robideaux The tentative schedule follows:

9:00–9:30 – Welcome and Opening Remarks
9:30–10:40 – Interactive Discussion with President Obama
10:45-12:15 – Interactive Discussion with Administration Officials
12:15–1:45 – Lunch
1:45-3:00 – Interactive Discussion with Administration Officials
3:15-4:45 – Interactive Discussion with Administration Officials
4:45-5:20 – Closing Remarks

NALSA Panel Event: Tribal Judges

MSU NALSA is hosting a panel of tribal judges on Wednesday, November 11 at 4:30 pm in the Castle Board Room.  Hon. Michael Petsokey, Hon. Holly Thompson and Hon. Matthew Fletcher will be talking.

Food and drink will be served.

NALSA Tribal Judges Event

NALSA logotest

President Joe Shirley Put On Administrative Leave

From The Kayenta Today blog:

Navajo President Joe Shirley Jr. put on administrative leave to allow further investigations into OnSat, BCDS

October 26th, 2009

Administrative leave will allow appropriate law enforcement authorities access to further information within the Office of the President/Vice President

WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. — By a vote of 48-22, the Navajo Nation Council put President Joe Shirley Jr. on administrative leave with pay during the pendency of investigations and possible prosecution of ethical, civil and criminal charges by the Navajo Nation through a special prosecutor. The Council’s actions today, Oct. 26, are the result of three investigations that allege wrongdoing by the president and key members of his staff within the Executive Branch of the Navajo Nation.
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Prof. Fletcher (among others) in tomorrow’s OK City Journal Record

With a picture, no less:

Could this mean the end of Indian law?

by Marie Price
The Journal Record September 14, 2009

OKLAHOMA CITY – Attorneys who represent Indian tribes say Native American rights can be a tough sell before the federal courts.

Michigan State University law professor Matthew Fletcher at the Federal Bar Association meeting Friday. (Kendall Brown)

Michigan State University law professor Matthew Fletcher at the Federal Bar Association meeting Friday. (Kendall Brown)

Michigan State University law professor Matthew Fletcher told the Federal Bar Association meeting Friday in Oklahoma City that since the advent of the Rehnquist U.S. Supreme Court in 1986, tribes’ overall success rate before the high court has declined from about 60 percent to 25 percent. He said that gives them a worse win-loss ratio than convicted criminals.
Fletcher is a member of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians.
Tulsa attorney Walter Echo Hawk said the courts are ripe for reform in how they approach Native American religion, sovereignty, self-determination and other issues.
“The law is a double-edged sword,” said Echo Hawk.
He said legal history has shown that the law can reflect the highest in human nature or be used to achieve unjust ends or as an instrument of terror.
Expressing some optimism, Echo Hawk said the Supreme Court is rowing against the tide in its decisions against tribes, with the executive and legislative branches of government leaning more in favor of the rights of Native Americans.
Indian law attorney Michael McBride said the outcome of tribal-related cases has tended to swing back and forth over the years, although decisions in favor of the states have increased. Oftentimes, McBride said, tribes are a casualty of that pendulum swing.
“Indian tribes have a love/hate relationship with the United States government,” he said.
McBride, with Crowe & Dunlevy, said the government has a trust relationship with the tribes, but tribes can suffer due to abuse of that relationship. McBride is also a justice on the Supreme Court of the Pawnee Nation.
Echo Hawk said practitioners have observed a retreat in recent years from the legal principles established during the rise of modern Indian nations from 1970-1985. He said tribes lost about 80 percent of their cases under Rehnquist, a trend that appears to have continued under Chief Justice John Roberts.
Echo Hawk called the situation a crisis, saying that some wonder whether death of Indian law may be at hand.
Among Supreme Court decisions that should be reversed, Echo Hawk mentioned Johnson v. McIntosh, an 1823 opinion that he said pegs its result on the doctrine of discovery and conquest. He said the result of that decision was to strip Indians of legal title to their lands, turning them into mere occupants.
He said another decision “actually closed the courthouse doors to the Cherokee Nation,” with the justices’ failure to act on behalf of the tribe in that 1831 case allowing Georgia to deprive Cherokees of their rights and lands. Echo Hawk said that in Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock (1903), the court held that the plenary power of Congress authorized it to break treaties with tribes with impunity.
“None of these cases have ever been reversed,” Echo Hawk said.
He said such decisions arose from the concept of colonialism, with some of them referring to Indians as inferior savages, but are still cited in modern cases.
In addition to overturning those decisions, Echo Hawk said that Indian law should be elevated to meet the minimum standards of the 2007 United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
Echo Hawk is an associate justice on the Pawnee Nation Supreme Court and has worked with the Native American Rights Fund for more than 35 years. He is of counsel with Crowe & Dunlevy.

Lee Opinion from the Michigan Supreme Court

The Michigan Supreme Court upheld the lower court terminating the parental rights of Cheryl Lee, stating that there had been sufficient active efforts.  However, the Court did explicitly state that the AFSA does not supersede or relieve the State from providing active efforts.

Unfortunately, the Court also held that:

In this case, however, the fundamental disagreement is not about the nature
of the required services, but about the timing of those services. Indeed, respondent acknowledges that the DHS and the tribe provided active efforts in the past, but argues that 25 USC 1912(d) requires current active efforts, which the DHS failed to provide because it did not offer services in connection with the termination of her parental rights to JL. We decline to read the word “current” into 25 USC 1912(d). This statutory language does not impose a strict temporal component for the “active efforts” requirement.

and:

Similarly, we decline to hold that active efforts must always have been provided in relation to the child who is the subject of the current termination proceeding. Again, the question is whether the efforts made and the services provided in connection with the parent’s other children are relevant to the parent’s current situation and abilities so that they permit a current assessment of parental fitness as it pertains to the child who is the subject of the current proceeding. The evidence must satisfy the court “beyond a reasonable doubt” that the parent’s continued custody of that child “is likely to result in serious emotional or physical damage to the child,” as required by 25 USC 1912(f).

Lee Opinion

Our previous coverage is here and here.

TurtleTalk on Twitter

Yep, you can now follow us on Twitter, if you like.  At this point we’re using it for when new blog posts go up, but it’s possible we’ll use it for other announcements as well.  And to complete the circle, at the bottom of the blog, you can see our most three most recent tweets.

We’re @ILPCTurtleTalk.