Here:
Federal Government Reply Brief in Salazar v. Patchak
Here:
Here:
Here:
Here:
Here are the materials in Tohono O’Odham Nation v. City of Glendale:
Lower court materials are here.
Howard Highland has posted his article, “A Regulatory Quick-Fix for Carcieri V. Salazar: How the Department of Interior Can Invoke an Alternative Source of Existing Statutory Authority to Overcome an Adverse Judgment Under the Chevron Doctrine,” on SSRN. The Administrative Law Review published the article in its 2011 volume.
Here is the abstract:
Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar has requested that Congress enact a “legislative fix” for the Supreme Court opinion in Carcieri v. Salazar. In Carcieri, the Court interpreted the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 (IRA) to effectuate a perverse distinction between Indian tribes under federal jurisdiction in June 1934 and Indian tribes whose relationship with the federal government was not established until after June 1934. Applying step one of the doctrine articulated in Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., the majority opinion of Justice Thomas declared that “the term ‘now under Federal jurisdiction’ in [the IRA] unambiguously refers to those tribes that were under the federal jurisdiction of the United States when the IRA was enacted in 1934.” As a result, a cloud now hangs over any land-into-trust transactions that the Secretary has made for Indian tribes which were not federally recognized until after 1934, and which are now unable to prove that their “post-1934 recognition [was granted] on grounds that implied a 1934 relationship between the tribe and Federal Government that could be described as jurisdictional.”
Whereas other proposals for a Carcieri fix presume the need for new legislation or regulations to fix Carcieri, this Recent Development argues that existing statutes and regulations already authorize the Secretary to overcome the effects of Carcieri. Even though the IRA no longer authorizes the Secretary to take land into trust for Indian tribes not under federal jurisdiction in June 1934, the Secretary’s fee-into-trust regulations under 25 C.F.R. Part 151 rest on several other pillars of statutory authority. 25 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 9 are the strongest alternative sources of statutory authority under which the Secretary may claim delegated authority for fee-into-trust acquisitions on behalf of Indian tribes not under federal jurisdiction in June 1934. Under the Chevron doctrine, 25 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 9 constitute an explicit delegation of authority to the Secretary to promulgate “legislative regulations [which] are given controlling weight unless they are arbitrary, capricious, or manifestly contrary to the statute.” Such legislative regulations are thus entitled to the maximum amount of Chevron deference.
25 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 9 also form the statutory basis for 25 C.F.R. § 83.12(a), which entitles acknowledged tribes to “the privileges and immunities available to other federally recognized historic tribes,” and renders them “eligible for the services and benefits from the Federal government that are available to other federally recognized tribes.” Hence, federal acknowledgment under 25 C.F.R. Part 83 ought to include the benefits available to tribes under 25 C.F.R. Part 151. This Recent Development urges that the ruling in Carcieri does not prohibit the Secretary from asserting that he has always held statutory authority under 25 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 9 to transfer land into trust for Indian tribes acknowledged under 25 C.F.R. Part 83. Although not every tribe federally recognized after 1934 was given status under 25 C.F.R. Part 83, the regulatory quick fix proposed in this paper would minimize the devastating consequences of Carcieri while a legislative fix stalls in Congress.
This is the news report noting that the Ninth Circuit will hear oral argument in this case in April (via Pechanga).
And the rest of the briefs are now in:
Here.
And here’s the letter:
An excerpt:
Governor Rick Snyder and Attorney General Bill Schuette put their opposition of the proposed Lansing casino in writing Monday. Their letter was addressed to the chairman of the Sault Saint Marie tribe of Chippewa Indians.
For the casino to even become a reality in the first place it needs to be approved by the federal government. The tribe has to ask the U.S. Department of Interior to take the land into trust and make it tribal land, then it would be eligible for gaming.
One issue facing the proposal to build a casino in Lansing is the fact that there are already 3 off-reservation casinos in the state.
The final decision would come from the federal government, but one expert says the opposition from state leaders could make this all a bit more difficult.
“The governor role I think can potentially be huge in that politics is everything when it comes to off reservation gaming,” said Matthew Fletcher, director of the Indigenous Law and Policy Center at MSU.
The letter made public from the governor and attorney general to the Sault St. Marie Chippewa Indian tribe has Fletcher a bit surprised.
“That’s pretty tough…tough talk,” said Fletcher.
In the letter it flatly says they oppose the opening of the casino.
“If this was a different world and the Governor supported this, it would put pressure on the Department of Interior to act quicker. It would make the other tribes back down,” said Fletcher.
Fletcher says the Department of Interior will listen closely to what the governor has to say and his opposition could cause a great delay in moving forward.
“This is a chunk of land that is right in the heart of the state’s capital and certainly the state is going to have say in what happens when that land completely leaves the state’s jurisdiction,” said Fletcher.
OPENING STATEMENT:
The Honorable Don Young
Chairman
WITNESSES AND TESTIMONY:
Panel I
Donald “Del” Laverdure
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs
U.S. Department of the Interior
Washington, DC
Panel II
The Honorable Robert Porter
President
Seneca Nation of Indians
Salamanca, NY
The Honorable W. Ron Allen
Tribal Chairman, CEO
Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe
Sequim, WA
The Honorable Walter Dasheno
Governor
Santa Clara Pueblo
Espanola, NM
Robert T. Coulter
Executive Director
Indian Law Resource Center
Helena, MT
Andy more or less catches my drift (via Pechanga). A few quotes:
In his piece, Fletcher goes on to outline three potentially significant legal obstacles: the Bureau of Indian Affairs’ “trust acquisition hurdles”; language in the Land Claims Settlement Act provision that says the Interior Department “shall be held in trust” (the word “shall” may not mean “has to”); and a provision in the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act that would require the Sault Tribe to submit its application to the Interior Department after “a prior written agreement between the Tribe and the State’s other federally recognized Indian Tribes that provides for each of the other Tribes to share in the revenue of the off reservation gaming facility.”
That last quote is actually from the 1993 gaming compacts.
And fourth:
A fourth hurdle, Fletcher wrote, is that the Sault Tribe “has to exercise governmental authority over the land, according to the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. Sault Tribe has no history in this area, let alone a governmental presence.”
I haven’t really expounded on a possible fifth hurdle, which is really related to the mandatory trust acquisition language. I can assure you Congress would never have intended that the Sault Tribe would be able to use this provision to buy land for off-reservation gaming purposes (especially, way off-reservation gaming purposes. See the legislative history here (Judgment Funds Hearing), which is virtually silent as to gaming. [Although to be fair, Rep. Kildee says his grandfather from the Traverse City area remembers when Indians had more “mobility” than they do now.] Ultimately, legislative history doesn’t trump the plain language. Usually.
Sault Tribe has to worry that a court construing the Secretary’s authority under the so-called mandatory trust acquisition language is unlimited, and perhaps unconstitutional as applied to this circumstance. The judgment funds settle treaty claims related to the 1836 treaty signatories. The 1836 treaty ceded territories do not include Lansing. And frankly, the Sault Tribe and Bay Mills have only a tenuous claim to lower peninsula territory, given that they are located in the Upper Peninsula, and importantly, there are already three federally recognized Lower Peninsula tribes who are 1836 treaty signatories. I mentioned in yesterday’s post that Lansing is small potatoes compared to other metropolitan areas, like Chicago and Cleveland, that don’t have Indian casinos now. Nothing stops Sault Tribe from going there with their casino proposals, and that fact alone will make a court wary of allowing Sault Tribe, Lansing, and Interior (if Interior goes along with it) to set aside trust lands in Lansing.
I recall this comment from the Eighth Circuit in a different context (involving the Secretary’s authority under Section 5 of the Indian Reorganization Act) but it makes the point here as well:
By its literal terms, the statute permits the Secretary to purchase a factory, an office building, a residential subdivision, or a golf course intrust for an Indian tribe, thereby removing these properties from state and local tax rolls. Indeed, it would permit the Secretary to purchase the Empire State Building in trust for a tribal chieftain as a wedding present. There are no perceptible “boundaries,” no “intelligible principles,” within the four corners of the statutory language that constrain this delegated authority-except that the acquisition must be “for Indians.” It delegates unrestricted power to acquire land from private citizens for the private use and benefit of Indian tribes or individual Indians.
It’s on page 882 here (SD v DOI). I can easily see a court rejecting the plain language reading the Tribe will want them to make on these grounds. It would be a terrible precedent for all of Indian country. But tribes take risky actions in desperate times, I suppose.
You must be logged in to post a comment.