Federal Judge Refuses to Sanction Attorney for Repeatedly Disparaging Tribal Court

Here are the relevant materials in Becker v. Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation (D. Utah):

134 becker motion for sanctions

146 tribal parties motion for sanctions

154 dct order denying becker motion for sanctions

155 dct order denying tribal parties motion for sanctions

Other Becker related posts here. Posts in Ute Indian Tribe v. Lawrence here.

Split Ninth Circuit Affirms Life Sentence for Salt River Gang Member Convicted When He Was a Juvenile

Here is the opinion in United States v. Briones.

SG Recommends Grant in Washington State Dept. of Licensing v. Cougar Den Inc.

Here:

SG Brief

Update (5-30-18):

supplemental brief for respondent in response to brief of us solicitor general

Here are the materials in Washington State Dept. of Licensing v. Cougar Den Inc.

Ezra Rosser on Medicaid Waivers and Political Preferences for Indians

Ezra Rosser has published “Medicaid Waivers and Political Preferences for Indians” in the Harvard Law Review Blog.

Kirsten Carlson on the Rise of Lobbying by Tribal Interests from 1978 to 2012

Kirsten Matoy Carlson has posted “Lobbying Against the Odds,” forthcoming in the Harvard Journal on Legislation. Here is the abstract:

Conventional narratives maintain that groups that lack political power litigate because they cannot attain their goals politically. Yet lobbying by American Indians has increased over 600 percent since the late 1970s. And they are not alone. Other politically marginalized groups have also intensified their lobbying efforts over the past five decades. This raises an important question that scholars have yet to adequately answer: Why do some groups use legislative strategies to achieve their goals? This Article challenges the prevailing wisdom and demonstrates that groups sometimes lobby even when the odds are stacked against them. It considers the existing sociolegal framework for understanding why groups litigate, and suggests modifications based on insights from interest group studies, to provide a more complete explanation of when and why groups engage in various advocacy strategies. This modified sociolegal approach produces significant insights into how legal and political actors influence and are influenced by the institutions they turn to, but also enables us to see similar—and divergent—patterns across contexts. The Article presents original quantitative data to document the dramatic rise in American Indian lobbying from 1978 to 2012. Then it uses the modified sociolegal approach to explain how the relationships among courts, the political process, and groups facilitated American Indian legislative advocacy. It concludes by discussing the implications of the approach for studies of legal mobilization, interest groups, and federal Indian law.

Recommended!

Washington COA Decides Puyallup Tribe Of Indians v. Wash. State Shorelines Hearings Bd.

Here:

Opinion

Norton Sound Health Corp. Sues IHS

Here is the complaint in North Sound Health Corp. v. Azar (D.D.C.):

5-14-2018 NSHC v Azar Complaint (Final as filed)

New Volume of American Indian Law Journal (Vol. 6, Issue 2)

Here:

Volume 6, Issue 2 (2018)

Articles

Justice McKeig is one of this year’s Hamline College commencement speakers

Here.

Washington State Bar Indian Law Section CLE

Here (Flyer – 30th Indian Law Section CLE):

Flyer - 30th Indian Law Section CLE__Page_1