Federal Court Remands to State Court Workers Comp. Claims against Tribal Insurer

Here are the materials in Mendoza v. First Santa Fe Insurance Services Inc. (D.N.M.):

1 Notice of Removal

1-2 Amended Complaint

6 Motion to Dismiss

8 Response

10 Motion to Remand

12 Reply in Support of Motion to Dismiss

14 Response to Motion to Remand

17 Reply in Support of Motion to Remand

42 DCT Order

Related case here.

FCC Waivers on Lifeline Subsidies Extended to Nov. 30

Here:

FCC Order

Daily Social Distancing Show: “Sioux Tribes Fight U.S. Government Over COVID Control Measures”

Here:

Federal Court Allows Criminal Case Arising on Red Lake Reservation to Proceed

Here are the materials in United States v. Fisher (D. Minn.):

1 Indictment

22 Motion to Dismiss

25 Motion to Suppress

31 Fisher Memorandum

36 Government Response

37 Magistrate Report

38 Objection

40 DCT Order

California COA Affirms Immunity of Miami Tribe Business

Here are the materials in In re Internet Lending Cases, AKA Rosas v. AMG Services, Inc.:

Opinion

Appellant Brief

Reply

AMG Response Brief

Yet Another Suit Arising from 2014 Wakpamni Lake Community Corp. Bond Issuance

Here is the complaint in Bonwick Capital Partners LLC v. U.S. Bank National Association (D.S.D.):

1 Complaint

Update — the parties apparently reached settlement:

32 Stipulation

33 DCT Order

Federal Court Remands Insurance Dispute Involving Eastern Band Cherokee Gaming Entity to State Court

Here are the materials in Gemini Insurance Company v. Harrah’s NC Casino Company LLC (E.D. N.C.):

Elizabeth Reese on McGirt: “Welcome to the Maze: Race, Justice, and Jurisdiction in McGirt v. Oklahoma”

In the University of Chicago Law Review Online, here. An excerpt from this outstanding essay:

The morning of July 9th, American Indian tribal citizens and non-Indian residents of eastern Oklahoma woke up and experienced a similar shock. The United States Supreme Court, in an opinion authored by Justice Neil Gorsuch, announced that the Muscogee (Creek) Nation’s reservation boundaries had never been disestablished.

The Supreme Court’s 5–4 decision in McGirt v. Oklahoma implies, though does not explicitly hold, that eastern Oklahoma is, was, and always had been within the undiminished boundaries of the Muscogee (Creek), Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Seminole Nation’s reservations. The ruling was shocking and confusing for both groups of American citizens because they were experiencing a bit of what “justice” is like for the other group for the very first time.

That Thursday morning gave American Indian people a glimpse of what it must be like not to be “the Indians.” On that day, American Indians weren’t reduced to a metaphorical Red Sea, always parting to make way for White Americans’ interests. Instead, they were able to win despite those interests and without the indignities that have become the norm in the Supreme Court’s Indian law opinions.

That same morning gave the non-Indians of eastern Oklahoma a glimpse of part of the Indian experience: waking up to helpless confusion about what the United States government has just done to your lands and rights, followed by the even greater problem of trying to understand the confusing jurisdictional rules that have been the status quo in Indian Country for a long time.

At times like this I think that Lady Justice must have a sense of humor.

The Conversation: “Indigenous Mexicans turn inward to survive COVID-19, barricading villages and growing their own food”

Here.

Washington State Bar Indian Law Section — 32nd Annual Indian Law CLE: Going Virtual

Here: