MichGO v. Kempthorne Cert Petition

Here is is: michgo-cert-pet-10-23-08

The questions presented are two-fold. First, the petitioners raise the nondelegation doctrine argument that caused Judge Rogers Brown in the D.C. Circuit to dissent below. And second, the petitioners make the same argument about recently recognized tribes that the Supreme Court will decide in Carcieri v. Kempthorne.

See our earlier posts here and here and here and here and a link to an Indian Country Today article about MichGO.

The interesting question here will be whether the government will file a response at all, given that there’s no circuit split (by MichGO’s admission), that the SCT already denied cert on the first issue in the Carcieri litigation, and that the second issue will be decided by Carcieri.

Carcieri Oral Argument Fight Not Over Yet

From Indianz:

Officials in Rhode Island are still fighting over who will argue Carcieri v. Kempthorne on November 3.

Laurence Tribe a leading U.S. Supreme Court practitioner, said Theodore B. Olson, a former Bush administration attorney, should represent the state. He said only “childish and selfish” reasons would prevent Olson from arguing the case. “The obvious solution is for Ted Olson to argue the case. He’s much more experienced … But if they find that unpalatable, they should flip a coin and grow up,” Tribe told The Providence Journal.

Joseph Larisa Jr., the assistant solicitor for Indian Affairs for the town of Charlestown, still believes he should present the case but he is willing to do a coin toss. Gov. Donald Carcieri (R) Attorney General Patrick Lynch only want Olson to argue. At issue is whether the Narragansett Tribe can acquire land under the Indian Reorganization Act even though the tribe wasn’t recognized at the time of the act’s passage in 1934. If the tribe can acquire new lands, the state claims jurisdiction over them.

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Indianz Commentary on the Supreme Court’s 2008 Term

From Indianz:

With three Indian law cases already on the docket, this year’s U.S. Supreme Court term could get see the addition of some high-profile religious rights disputes.

The cases are being watched closely in Indian Country, whose efforts to limit negative rulings by the court have largely succeeded in recent years. Since the disastrous 2000-2001 term, when tribal interests lost nearly every decision, the justices have heard fewer and fewer Indian law cases.

This year looks a lot different, with the court set to resolve disputes over land-into-trust, the federal trust responsibility and Native Hawaiian rights. In all three instances, the lower courts ruled in favor of Native interests, leading to fears that the victories will be overturned.

The docket already has the Native American Rights Fund, whose attorneys help run the Tribal Supreme Court Project, suggesting that the current term “may prove to be another difficult period for Indian Country.”

The addition of two religious rights cases could make it even harder but since the lower courts ruled against Native interests both times, the justices may not be interested in hearing them. So far this term, they have already rejected three petitions from tribes who were on the losing end of a case.

The first case involves Winslow Friday, a member of the Northern Arapaho Tribe of Wyoming, who is being prosecuting for taking a bald eagle — a protected species — without a federal permit. He took the eagle for use in the sacred Sun Dance ceremony and argues that the permitting process violates his rights under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.

“In the more than 20 years of the permit program’s existence, no individual tribal member has ever applied for or received a fatal-take permit,” his attorney wrote in a petition to the Supreme Court. “At the time of the hearing, only three permits had been issued, to two different tribes in the southwest represented by legal counsel, as opposed to individual Indians.”

A federal judge sided with Friday in October 2006 and dismissed the charges. But the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals reinstated the indictment in May of this year, rejecting the RFRA claims in a unanimous decision. Friday’s petition was filed October 1. The government’s response is due November 7.

In the second case, the Navajo Nation, the Hopi Tribe and other tribes in Arizona are suing to stop the U.S. Forest Service from allowing a ski resort in the sacred San Francisco Peaks to use reclaimed sewage to make snow.

The tribes say the presence of the wastewater will harm their religious beliefs. A three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals initially sided with the tribes. But after a rehearing, an en banc panel reversed course and rejected the tribal RFRA claims by an 8-3 vote in August.

The tribes have not yet filed a petition with the Supreme Court. Earlier this month, the 9th Circuit agreed to stay the case while the appeal is being pursued.

Tribes used to look to the Supreme Court to protect their interests but the tide has changed in recent decades. Many attribute the reversal of fortune on the William Rehnquist, whose term as chief justice began in 1986 and ended in 2005, following his death.

“At a recent conference at the University of North Dakota School of Law, professor Alex Skibine remarked that since 1988, the Supreme Court has decided 33 of 44 Indian law cases against tribal interests,” Matthew Fletcher, the director of the Indigenous Law and Policy Center at Michigan State University, wrote in an Indian Country Today opinion piece last year.

President Bush’s two nominees to the Supreme Court — John G. Roberts, who now serves as chief justice, and Samuel Alito — have shifted the court into more conservative grounds. The winner of the next presidential election — either Sen. Barack Obama or Sen. John McCain — may get a chance to shape the court even further.

Carcieri Impasse: Decided by Coin Toss?

From the Legal Times (H/t Indianz):

It’s the classic dilemma that faces parties who suddenly find themselves before the Supreme Court. Who should argue: the lawyer who has been with the case from the beginning, or a seasoned Supreme Court advocate who knows which buttons to push to win the hearts and votes of five justices?

The Supreme Court created just such a dilemma Monday in its handling of motions filed in Carcieri v. Kempthorne, set for argument on Nov. 3. As a result, says one of the lawyers involved, “we are at a massive impasse” over who will argue.

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No Divided Argument in Carcieri v. Kempthorne

The Supreme Court released its other orders from last Monday’s long conference.

The motion of petitioners Donald L. Carcieri, Governor of Rhode Island, and the State of Rhode Island for divided argument is denied. The motion of petitioner Town of Charlestown for divided argument is denied. The motion of Narragansett Indian Tribe for leave to participate in oral argument as amicus curiae and for divided argument is denied.

So I assume the State will let Ted Olson on behalf of the governor argue the case against Ed Kneedler on the government’s side.

Here are the cert denials:

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St. Croix Band v. Kempthorne Materials

Here are many of the pleadings in the St. Croix Band v. Kempthorne case reported earlier today (opinion).

st-croix-amended-complaint

us-motion-to-dismiss-st-croix-complaint

st-croix-opposition-to-govt-motion-to-dismiss

govt-reply-brief

st-croix-supplemental-memorandum

govt-response-to-supplemental-memorandum

dct-order-denying-preliminary-injunction

Federal Courts Holds Artman Guidance NOT Reviewable

In St. Croix Band of Chippewa Indians v. Kempthorne, the District Court for the District of Columbia dismissed St. Croix’s challenge to the Secretary’s authority to refuse to take off-reservation land into trust. The court found that the Artman Guidance letter is not final agency approval.

dct-order-of-dismissal-st-croix

Supreme Court Declines to Lift Gun Lake Stay

From TV:

ALLEGAN COUNTY, Mich. (NEWSCHANNEL 3) – The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court has dealt a blow to the West Michigan tribe trying to build a casino near Wayland.

Justice John Roberts has denied the tribe’s request to vacate a stay issued by a Washington DC circuit court. That court said that the tribe would have to wait until after the Supreme Court hears the latest challenge from the anti-gambling group MichGO.

Many speculate that Roberts’ decision is an indication that the court will hear that challenge, but that may not happen until sometime in 2009. So, for now, the Gun Lake Tribe has to wait and cannot start construction on the casino in Allegan County.

“Many speculate?” Since there has not even been a cert petition filed yet, I don’t see any reason to speculate on anything yet.

Carcieri v. Kempthorne: Amicus Briefs Supporting the Respondent

They’re here, courtesy of the Supreme Court Project:

In support of Respondents:

Amicus Brief of Narragansett Indian Tribe

Amicus Brief of Law Professors

Amicus Brief of NCAI

Amicus Brief of Historians

Amicus Brief of Standing Rock Sioux, et al.

Narragansett Tribe’s Amicus Brief in Carcieri v. Kempthorne

Here is the Narragansett brief in Carcieri. As we get them, we’ll post them.

Narragansett Amicus Brief