Cobell Settlement May Be Scuttled by Lower Attorney Fee Amendment

From Law.com:

Congressional approval of one of the largest class action settlements in U.S. history is getting hung up on the issue of legal fees for plaintiffs lawyers.

The $3.4 billion Indian trusts settlement agreed to in December could be scuttled if Congress doesn’t approve the terms of the agreement by May 28, according to The Associated Press.

The tentative settlement would close the books on a class action filed in 1996 on behalf of 300,000 American Indians. The plaintiffs in the suit claimed that as trustee for 145 million acres of land under theDawes Act of 1887, the U.S. Department of the Interior mismanaged trust accounts and allowed the federal government to give the best land to white settlers. The settlement calls for plaintiffs to be paid $1.4 billion — about $1,500 per class member- — and for a $2 billion fund to be set up to buy American Indian land.

The potential snag now, as reported by sibling publication The Blog of Legal Times, is a move by Sen. John Barrasso of Wyoming to cap attorney fees in the case at $50 million. That has one of the plaintiffs lawyers who spent years litigating the matter crying foul.

Dennis Gingold — a solo practitioner in Washington, D.C., who serves as lead counsel to the plaintiffs — told the AP that he will terminate the settlement and resume litigation unless Congress approves the agreement without altering any of its terms. Gingold told The BLT that Barrasso’s sentiments fly in the face of a previous fee cap of $100 million agreed to in December, which would give Gingold and his co-counsel at Kilpatrick Stockton fees totaling between $50 million and $100 million.

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Linda Greenhouse on the Importance (Or Lack Thereof) of the Supreme Court

Important reading, I think, for those who expect a “visionary” Supreme Court appointment…

From the NYTs:

In Obama’s view, the court is institutionally ill suited to solve the country’s problems. It’s hard to imagine that he wants to invest capital and energy into trying to turn the court into something he believes it was never intended to be.

Used as an epithet, “activist judge” is almost always applied to a judge who has just issued a decision that the speaker doesn’t like. Conservatives affix the label to the Supreme Court of the 1960’s and 1970’s, as well as to anything they object to about the current court. The ink on Justice John Paul Stevens’s letter of resignation last month was barely dry before conservative political candidates and bloggers lined up to bid good riddance to “the liberal activist now leaving the court.”

Exactly what the conservatives’ beef was with Justice Stevens wasn’t clear. Presumably, it was something other than the Stevens majority opinion inKelo v. City of New London, the 2005 decision that left democratically elected local governments free to condemn private property for the purpose of economic development.

Progressives, of course, have been having a field day denouncing the Roberts court’s decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, which opened the door to unlimited political spending by corporations and overturned recent precedents in order to reach that result. The ruling was “an astounding example of judicial activism,” according to Representative Jerrold Nadler, a New York Democrat who in his capacity as chairman of the subcommittee on the Constitution promptly convened a hearing on the decision’s implications.

Into this linguistic and jurisprudential thicket has stepped the former constitutional law professor Barack Obama, in a conversation with the pool reporters traveling with him on Air Force One last week. Asked whether he would use the pending Supreme Court nomination to push back against “conservative judicial activism,” the president responded with a 200-word soliloquy so densely packed as to lend itself to a variety of interpretations — and misinterpretations.

Characterizing an earlier era’s attacks on the Supreme Court, Mr. Obama said: “It used to be that the notion of an activist judge was somebody who ignored the will of Congress, ignored democratic processes, and tried to impose judicial solutions on problems instead of letting the process work itself through politically. And in the ’60s and ’70s the feeling was, is, that liberals were guilty of that kind of approach.

“What you’re now seeing, I think, is a conservative jurisprudence that oftentimes makes the same error,” he continued, and added, “The concept of judicial restraint cuts both ways.”

Was the president in fact, as some have suggested with either glee or dismay, imposing a kind of moral equivalency on the court then and the court now — a kind of “we had our activists and now they have theirs, and both made mistakes, so let’s move on”? Has he fallen into such apostasy as to cast aspersions on the very judicial accomplishments that liberals treasure?

While it’s possible to interpret his words that way, I read them differently. In fact, I think he meant the opposite of equivalency, and I think he said so, albeit cryptically, when he offered this description of what he called conservative jurisprudence: “What you’re seeing is arguments about original intent and other legal theories that end up giving judges an awful lot of power; in fact, sometimes more power than duly elected representatives.” He went on to say that, by contrast, “the core understanding of judicial restraint is that, generally speaking, we should presume that the democratic processes and laws that are produced by the House and the Senate and state legislatures, etc., that the administrative process that goes with it, is afforded some deference as long as core constitutional values are observed.”

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ICT Coverage of Eagle Rock Protest

From ICT:

As the spirits whispered through the towering pines on 40 mile per hour winds atop sacred Eagle Rock, American Indian warrior Levi Tadgerson said, “you can feel our relatives and the spirits with us.”

He stood on the cliff’s edge looking out upon northern Michigan’s Yellow Dog Plains for another approaching storm – literally and figuratively – as Tadgerson’s fellow warriors are trying to stop an international mining giant from destroying the site where Ojibwa ceremonies have taken place as long as elders can remember.

In late April, Kennecott Eagle Minerals began site preparation work for its sulfide mine called the Eagle Project. The entrance to the nickel and copper mine will be built at sacred Eagle Rock.

“We are defending the water, we are defending our treaty rights and our right to practice our culture,” said Tadgerson, who describes himself as “an Anishinaabe man who loves and respects the environment.

“We’re defending our right to live a healthy life and have our kids live a healthy life.”

The Keweenaw Bay Indian Community and numerous environment groups are worried because sulfuric acid is a byproduct of sulfide mining plus several companies have announced plans for dozens of similar mines.

Kennecott says environmental protection is a major concern, but opponents say the way the company has operated other mines doesn’t show it.

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GTB Member — Dwaun Anderson — Commits to Play Basketball for MSU in Two Years

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From the T.C. Record Eagle:

It was the moment Dwaun Anderson has been waiting for.

Michigan State coach Tom Izzo called and the Suttons Bay standout answered.

Anderson traveled to Michigan State on Wednesday and was offered a basketball scholarship to join the Class of 2011.

“This is it,” Anderson said. “We got there, got a tour and watched a couple of videos in the conference room.”

When Izzo offered Anderson a scholarship, he didn’t hesitate. He talked to his family for about 10 minutes and then verbally committed.

“I had no doubts at all,” Anderson said. “This is it. I watched a lot of college basketball when I was younger, but I always thought they were the one I liked the most.”

Anderson had previous offers from Central Michigan, Oakland and Utah, but was being patient waiting to see if he could get an offer out of East Lansing.

“I was comfortable waiting because I still had another year,” he said.

Only a junior, Anderson has been named a Class C All-Stater twice.

This season, the 6-foot-3 Anderson led Suttons Bay to a 25-2 record and a run to the Class C state title game at Michigan State’s Breslin Center. He averaged 20 points, six rebounds, four assists and two blocks a game.

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UM Law Quad Profiles on Three Indian Law Alums

Here: Michigan Law Quad Article on Indian Law Prof Alums

The three are Allie Maldonado, Beth Kronk, and me.

State Civil Rights Panel to Discuss Mascot Issue

From the Holland Sentinel:

State Civil Rights Panel to again take up issue of Native American mascots
By CHRISTINE HOMAN
Posted May 03, 2010 @ 05:30 AM
Lansing, MI —

By CHRISTINE HOMAN
Capital News Service

The Civil Rights Commission will soon be examining its stance on Native American mascots.

At its May 24 meeting, the commission is scheduled to discuss the issue and decide whether to take action.

In 2002, it passed a resolution condemning the use of Native American mascots, but at the upcoming meeting, the commission will consider whether to issue a declaratory ruling that indicates how it would deal with the question in the future.

“As we grow more sensitive and understanding, there are certain practices we’ll have to examine,” said Harold Core, director of public relations for the Department of Civil Rights.

Opponents of using Native American mascots and nicknames for schools and colleges say they’re offensive and in some cases racist.

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Obama and Granholm at UM Commencement

From SBM:

President Obama and Michigan Governer Granholm

Governor Granholm’s status as a short-lister for appointment to the U.S. Supreme Court gained extra attention this weekend when she appeared with President Obama at his University of Michigan commencement address.  The suspense was heightened on Monday as Legal Times reported that the short list has narrowed, and that the White House has hinted that the decision is coming this week.

Federal Judiciary Showing Little Progress in Hiring Minority Clerks

From the National Law Journal:

Under pressure from Congress, the federal judiciary is ramping up efforts to hire more minority law clerks at the district and appeals court levels, while acknowledging that “there is significant room for improvement” in the diversity of clerks.

The Judicial Conference of the United States offered that assessment as part of a response to questions from a House budget subcommittee last year about the dearth of minority law clerks. The judiciary’s policymaking body also compiled statistics on the percentage of minority law clerks during the past seven years — statistics that have not been widely publicized before now.

In 2008, the most recent year available, 13.9 percent of district court law clerks were non-Caucasian, which breaks down as 6.2 percent Asian-American, 4.1 percent African-American, 3.3 percent Hispanic, 0.2 percent Pacific Islander and 0.1 percent Native American. The numbers were similar at the appeals court level. The percentage of minorities has changed little since 2003, according to the statistics.

Rep. Jose Serrano, D-N.Y., said at a recent hearing of the House Appropriations subcommittee on financial services and general government that the lack of minority clerks at all levels of the judiciary — including the Supreme Court — is a continuing concern, adding that “something has to change.”

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Sara Lee Scholarship for Women Attending Tribal Colleges in MI and WI

From the press release:

/PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The Sara Lee Foundation is proud to continue the Sara Lee Foundation Tribal College Scholarship Program for Women through a partnership with the American Indian College Fund (the Fund).  This scholarship program will continue to provide financial assistance to American Indian women attending tribal colleges located in Michigan and Wisconsin. Selected recipients must also be primary residents of one of the following states: California, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, or Wisconsin.

Since 2001, the Sara Lee Foundation has consistently supported the Fund, benefiting countless Native women and aiding them in their journey towards a more hopeful, prosperous future.

“We are excited to continue our support of American Indian women and their pursuit of a higher education,” said Judy E. Schaefer, Director of the Sara Lee Foundation. “We are proud of the scholarship program that we have developed with the American Indian College Fund and the positive effects it continues to have on the students, their families, and their futures.”

Commentary on Rincon Band Case and Seminole Tribe Compact

From Dave Palermo at Gaming Compliance via Pechanga:

A recent landmark appeal court ruling in California which found that Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger had strong-armed tribes over revenue sharing agreements is unlikely to be enough to reverse a growing tide of anti-sovereignty sentiment.

For two decades American Indians have complained that states have been extorting unreasonable if not illegal revenue sharing agreements from tribal governments in exchange for the right to operate casinos.

Tribal leaders claim revenue sharing called for in the agreements, referred to as “compacts” under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988, violate the intent if not the letter of the act, which prohibits taxation of tribal governments.

Indigenous Americans got a measure of satisfaction in an April 20 decision by a three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco which ruled California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger negotiated in bad faith by demanding an illegal taxin tribal-state compact negotiations with the Rincon Band of Luiseño Indians, a small but prosperous tribe near San Diego.

“We applaud this decision because it confirms one of the basic foundations of the relationship between American Indian tribes and states, that Indian tribes are sovereign governments, which, like other governments, cannot be taxed,” Rincon Chairman Bo Mazzetti said.

The ruling also was a respite from what tribes believe is a backlash against Indian gambling and a growing public perception of tribes not as sovereign governments and culturally rich first Americans, but wealthy purveyors of casinos.

Legal experts believe the 2-1 ruling, should it be upheld on appeal to a full panel of 9th Circuit judges and the US Supreme Court, will not influence compacts in the other 27 states with tribal casinos. They contend it will only impact California compactswith some 61 tribes.

But tribal leaders found comfort in the harsh language of the court’s ruling, not to mention newspaper headlines which claimed Schwarzenegger “broke the law” and “strong-armed” tribes into paying onerous revenue sharing payments in exchange for the right to increase their volume of slot machines.

“We are mindful that many states, and especially California, are currently writhing in the financial maw created by the clash of certain mandatory state expenditures at a time when state revenues have plummeted from historic levels,” wrote 9th Circuit Judge Milan Smith Jr.

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