Sandy Lake Band of Chippewa Fails in Second Federal Court Effort to Win Federal Recognition

Here are some of the materials in Sandy Lake Band of Chippewa Indians v. United States (D. Minn.):

DCT Order Dismissing Sandy Lake II

Sandy Lake Motion for Partial Summary J

USA Motion to Dismiss

Materials on their prior effort are here.

McCrary v. Ivanof Bay Village: Cert Petition Challening Alaska Native Immunity

Here is the petition:

McCrary Cert Petition

Question presented:

 Whether the Alaska Supreme Court correctly held that Congress intended the Federally Recognized Indian Tribe List Act to delegate the Secretary of the Interior authority to create more than 200 “federally recognized tribes” in Alaska by publishing a list of Native Entities in the Federal Register.

Lower court materials; briefs here and opinion here.

Eastern Pequot Tribal Nation v. Salazar Complaint

Here is the complaint:

Eastern Pequot Complaint

H.T.

Federal Court Grants Wasson/Bills Motion for Preliminary Injunction in Winnemucca Leadership Dispute

Here is that order:

DCT Order Granting Preliminary Injunction

Prior posts are here and here and here.

DOI Reaffirms Federal Recognition Status of the Tejon Indian Tribe

From the press release:

The Tejon Indian Tribe first requested confirmation of its status in 2006. Due to an administrative error, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) failed for several years to place the Tejon Indian Tribe on the list of federally recognized tribes that the BIA is required to publish annually. That list, entitled “Indian Entities Recognized and Eligible to Receive Services from the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs,” was last published in the Federal Register on October 1, 2010 at 75 FR 60810, and the list was supplemented on October 27, 2010 at 75 FR 66124.
In his letter to the Tejon Indian Tribe, the Assistant Secretary stated that “[u]pon review of the facts and history of this matter, including prior Assistant Secretaries’ decisions, I herby reaffirm the federal relationship between the United States and the Tejon Indian Tribe, thus concluding the long and unfortunate omission of the Tejon Indian Tribe from the list of federally recognized tribes.”

Members of United Houma Nation Seek Federal Recognition with Online Petition

From Houma Today article:

Members of the tribe have created a digital petition on the White House’s website, “We the People,” which promises to provide an official response from the Obama administration if the issue can gather enough signatures in a month.

“The goal is to get federally recognized,” said Adam Credelle, who started the petition. Credelle is a United Houma Nation member from Patterson who currently attends law school at Southern University.

The United Houma Nation’s petition must get 25,000 signatures before Dec. 1. As of Friday evening, the petition had garnered 1,972 signatures since Tuesday, when it was launched.

Here is a link directly to the petition to get a presidential response: Federally recognize the United Houma Nation.

Napa and Sonoma County Motion to Dismiss Mishewal Wappo Federal Recognition Suit Denied

Here are the materials in Mishewal Wappo Tribe of Alexander Valley v. Salazar (N.D. Cal.):

DCT Order Denying Intervenors Motion to Dismiss

Intervenor Counties Motion to Dismiss

Federal Defendants Reponse

Mishewal Wappo Opposition

Intervenor Counties Reply

The Political Economy of the Carcieri Fix

Last week’s hearing on the ongoing question of whether Congress will “fix” the Supreme Court’s Carcieri decision was a different take than earlier hearings, but still completely ignores the elephant in the room.

The first hearings were naked pleas to reverse the Supreme Court’s decision on the grounds that the decision was just plain incorrect. The increased complexity of administration of fee to trust acquisitions for tribes possibly affected by Carcieri and Interior was the backdrop there. Now it is jobs and economic development, truly important factors.

But what was missing, and what likely guarantees there will never be a Carcieri fix, was the big gaming tribes. It is the big gaming tribes that divide Indian country on this question, and even though there are only a dozen, maybe two, in question … and they have an effective veto on a Carcieri fix.

Forget Rhode Island’s concern about having their ridiculously expensive Supreme Court victory stripped away, or some Senators’ concerns about “reservation shopping.” Senators views can be changed, especially when political expediency requires it. But the powerful Indian gaming tribes’ interests are economic. So the hearings are incomplete at best, and maybe a sham at worst, because the real interests can stay quiet on the record.

Intertribal gaming revenue sharing anyone? But even that might not be enough.

Federal Court Denies Muwekma Ohlone Tribe’s Objections to DOI’s Decision Not to Acknowledge Tribe

Here is the opinion in Muwekma Ohlone Tribe v. Salazar (D. D.C.):

DCT Order Granting USA Motion for Summary J

And the materials:

Muwekma Motion for Summary J

Interior Cross-Motion for Summary J

Federal Court Defers Decision in Nisenan Maidu Tribe v. Salazar

The plaintiffs, who are seeking federal recognition under Hardwick v. United States, will seek individual relief under that case instead.

Here are the materials:

Plaintiff Motion to Proceed in Hardwick

DCT Order Deferring Case