National Indian Law Library Bulletin (12/12/2018)

Here:

The National Indian Law Library added new content to the Indian Law Bulletins on 12/12/18.

Law Review & Bar Journal Bulletin (contact us if you need help finding a copy of an article)
https://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/lawreviews/2018.html

  • Don’t take me out to that ballpark: State action, government speech, and Chief Wahoo after Matal.
  • “Mining” on Indian land: It’s not what you think.
  • Native American tribal appellate courts: Underestimated and overlooked.
  • Was Allergan’s patent-housing agreement in exchange for sovereign immunity a “sham to subvert the existing intellectual property system”?

Federal Courts Bulletin
https://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/federal/2018.html
Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Biegalski (Doctrine of Claim Preclusion; State Taxation; Utilities)
Guardado v. Nevada (Prisoner Rights)

State Courts Bulletin
https://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/state/2018.html
Everi Payments, INC. v. Washington State Department of Revenue (Business and Occupational (B&O) Tax Refund – Agency Law)

News Bulletin
https://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/news/currentnews.html
In the Environment & Energy section, we feature an article about how the United Nations will scale up consideration of the experiences of indigenous peoples with climate change and efforts to respond to it.

Regulatory Bulletin
http://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/regulatory/2018.html
We feature a notice of the Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, regarding land acquisition for the Dry Creek Rancheria Band of Pomo Indians, California.

Cayuga Indian Nation Prevails in Tax Immunity Dispute with Seneca County

Here are the materials in the long-running Cayuga Indian Nation v. Seneca County (W.D. N.Y.):

58 Cayuga Motion for Summary Judgment

60-5 Seneca County MSJ

62 Cayuga Reply

67 Seneca County Reply

76 DCT Order

Prior posts here.

Ninth Circuit Decides California Valley Miwok Tribe v. Zinke

Here is the unpublished opinion.

Briefs here.

Oral argument video here.

Lower court materials here.

Washington COA Rejects Tribal Vendor’s Tax Assessment Challenge

Here are the materials in Everi Payments Inc. v. Washington State Dept Of Revenue:

507919 Appellant’s Brief

507919 Respondent’s Brief

507919 Reply Brief

D2 50791-9-II Published Opinion

Lower court materials here.

Tenth Circuit Briefs in Caddo Nation of Oklahoma v. Wichita and Affiliated Tribes II

Here:

Appellant Brief

Response Brief

Reply

Case tag here.

Eleventh Circuit Rejects Seminole Tax Claims on Claim Preclusion Grounds

Here is the unpublished opinion:

Opinion

Here is an excerpt:

The question in this appeal is whether the doctrine of claim preclusion bars the Seminole Tribe of Florida (the “Tribe”) from again challenging the imposition of a Florida state tax on utility services, which the Tribe uses to conduct on reservation activities that are regulated by federal law. Concluding that the requirements of claim preclusion have been met and that no exception to the doctrine applies, we affirm the district court’s dismissal with prejudice of the Tribe’s complaint.

Briefs here.

Federal Court Confirms Conviction of Several for Witness Retaliation in Hunkpati Investments Fraud

Here are the materials in United States v. Columbe (D.S.D.):

2 Redacted Indictment

234 DCT Order

Ninth Circuit Briefs in Rabang v. Kelly II

Here:

6. Opening Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants

11. Appellee Chief Judge Ray Dodge’s Answering Brief

13. Answering Brief of Kelly Defendants-Appellants

21. Reply

Case tag here.

Jessica Shoemaker on Reclaiming Modern Indigenous Land Tenures

Jessica Shoemaker has posted “Transforming Property: Reclaiming Modern Indigenous Land Tenures,” forthcoming in the California Law Review.

Here is the abstract:

This Article challenges existing narratives about the future of American Indian land tenure. The current highly-federalized system for reservation property is deeply problematic. In particular, the trust status of many reservation lands is expensive, bureaucratic, controlling, and linked to persistent poverty in many reservation communities. Yet, for complex reasons, trust property has proven largely immune from fundamental reform. Today, there seem to be two primary options floated for the future: a “do the best with what we have” approach that largely accepts core problems with trust, perhaps with some minor efficiency-oriented tinkering, for the sake of the benefits and security it does provide, or a return to old, already-failed reform strategies focused on simply “liberating” American Indian people with a forced transition to state-based fee-simple property. Both strategies respond, sometimes implicitly, to deep impulses about how property should work, especially in a market economy, but both also neglect sufficient respect for the true potential of more autonomous indigenous property regimes.

This Article engages property theory and related work on property system change to make the case for more radical institutional land reform as a realistic alternative choice, even in the complex and multi-layered environment of existing reservations. Property systems are full of dynamic, pluralistic potential, and property powerfully shapes the contours of both human communities and physical landscapes. This Article unearths this existing potential and charts a series of alternative steps, driven primarily by respect for tribal governments’ own actions and choices, to reclaim new, modern versions of indigenous land tenures within reservation spaces.

Oral Argument Transcript in Case on Whether the Dual Sovereignty Exception to the Double Jeopardy Clause Should Continue

Worth a read. The federal government’s attorney’s representations about tribal criminal jurisdiction and tribal prerogatives are . . . interesting.

Here is the transcript in Gamble v. United States.

The docket page is here.

The NWIRC and NCAI brief is here: NIWRC Amicus Brief