National Indian Law Library Bulletin (9/5/2018)

Here:

The National Indian Law Library added new content to the Indian Law Bulletins on 9/5/18.

Law Review & Bar Journal Bulletin (contact us if you need help finding a copy of an article)

http://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/lawreviews/2018.html

• Battle of the band: exploring the unconstitutionality of Section 2(A) of the Lanham Act and the fate of disparaging scandalous, and immoral trademarks in a consumer-driven market.

• The new frontier of environmental preservation: The Antiquities Act.

Federal Courts Bulletin

http://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/federal/2018.html

Oneida Indian Nation v. United States Department of the Interior (Trademarks – Official Tribal Names)

Coriz v. Rodriguez, Acting Warden (Habeas Corpus; Indian Civil Rights Act)

Narragansett Indian Tribe v. Rhode Island Department of Transportation (National Historic Preservation Act)

State Courts Bulletin

http://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/state/2018.html

Gustafson v. Poitra (Lands; Jurisdiction)

News Bulletin

http://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/news/currentnews.html

In the Sacred Places section, we feature articles about limited tribal participation on a newly formed Bears Ears National Monument advisory committee, as well as featuring a story in the Environment and Energy section on abandoned and idle gas wells on Indian reservations.

Regulatory Bulletin

http://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/regulatory/2018.html

We feature a notice of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission about the publication of the Tribal Protocol Manual.

Equal Justice Works Conference & Career Fair

October 26th & October 27th in Arlington, VA

The Equal Justice Works Conference & Career Fair is the largest national public interest career fair and an opportunity for students and recent graduates to participate in both pre-scheduled interviews and networking events. Click here for more information and to register.

Student/recent graduates have the opportunity to apply for positions with over 188 employers from across the country. The deadline to apply for pre-scheduled interviews for the over 240 internship and postgraduate positions is Friday, September 14. 

Sault Tribe Sues Interior over Failure to Comply with Mandatory Trust Land Acquisition Statute

Here is the complaint in Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians v. Zinke (D.D.C.):

1 Complaint

1-1 Exhibit I

1-2 Exhibit II

1-3 Exhibit III

1-4 Exhibit IV

1-5 Exhibit V

1-6 Exhibit VI

Interior denial letter here.

Lansing trust land acquisition application docs.

Wayne County trust land acquisition application docs.

State of Michigan v. Payment materials here.

 

US Prevails in Challenge to Santa Ynez Band Trust Land Acquisition

Here are the materials in Geyser v. United States (C.D. Cal.):

27-1 Plaintiffs Motion for Summary J

28-1 US Motion for Summary J

29 Plaintiffs Reply

30 US Reply

32 DCT Order

Prior post here.

Federal Court Materials on ICRA Habeas Petition of Inmate Sentenced to 7 Years by Kewa Pueblo

Here are the materials in Coriz v. Rodriguez (D.N.M.):

1 Petition

14 Motion for Immediate Release

27 Magistrate R&R re 14

30 Respondent Objections

33 Petitioner Objections

40 DCT Order re 14

Federal Court Orders Tribal Exhaustion in Title VII Case against Tribal Entity

Here are the materials in Romero v. Wounded Knee LLC (D.S.D.):

56 Motion to Dismiss

59 Motion to Strike

62 Response to 59

63 Reply in Support of 59

67 Response to 56

68 Reply in Support of 56

77 Plaintiff’s Brief on Tribal Exhaustion

78 Defendant’s Brief on Exhaustion

79 DCT Order on Motion to Strike

80 DCT Order on Exhaustion

Federal Court Issues TRO in Grizzly Bear Delisting Case

Here are the materials in Crow Indian Tribe v. Dept. of Interior (D. Mont.):

251 Motion for TRO

252 Organizational Plaintiffs Motion for TRO

253 Brief in Support

254 DCT Order Granting TRO

Prior posts here.

Acres v. Marston Complaint [Blue Lake Rancheria]

Here:

Verified Complaint (conformed)

Federal Court Grants Full Faith and Credit to Wisconsin Oneida Family Court Judgment

Here are the materials in The Chesapeake Life Insurance Co. v. Parker (E.D. Wis.):

13 Defendant_s Motion for Summary J

22 Skenandore Response

23 Parker Response

24 Reply

28 DCT Order Denying MSJ

34 DCT Order

Breach of Trust: How Government agencies are working with Enbridge, Inc. to Jeopardize Tribal Treaty Rights

“Nothing in this agreement requires any state or federal agency to approve a permit for Enbridge.”

These were the words spoken to tribal representatives – including myself – by attorneys for the United States Department of Justice and Environmental Protection Agency during a meeting earlier this month in Traverse City, Michigan regarding Enbridge’s Line 5 Pipeline.

Earlier this year, the EPA and DOJ began working with Enbridge on a settlement agreement relating to Enbridge’s Line 5 pipeline beneath the Straits of Mackinac. You can read that agreement HERE.

I wrote about this agreement on Turtle Talk several months ago, which I encourage you to read to better understand this post. Seriously. Read it HERE. That blog entry describes how the EPA and DOJ were working – quietly – to ensure that Enbridge is able to continue to operate the Line 5 Pipeline in the waters of the Great Lakes.

Some background:

The Line 5 pipeline is nearly seven decades old, and transports Canadian oil from Superior, Wisconsin to Ontario (through) – providing no oil to the people of Michigan or the United States. It has already outlived its intended lifespan. The pipeline runs through the heart of the waters ceded by Ojibwe and Odawa tribes through the 1836 Treaty of Washington. Our tribes retained the right to fish in the ceded waters under that treaty; a fact that was confirmed in the landmark case of United States v. Michigan. Earlier this year, the Line 5 Pipeline was damaged when a ship anchor accidentally struck the pipeline. The anchor strike also damaged a nearby electrical transmission line, causing hundreds of gallons of toxic chemicals to leak into Lake Michigan and Lake Huron.

The Line 5 Pipeline poses grave risks to the people who depend upon the waters of Lake Michigan and Lake Huron, including our tribal fishermen. A majority of people in Michigan, including every federally recognized tribe within the State, wants this pipeline shut down. The pipeline’s crossing of the Straits of Mackinac provides no benefits to the people of Michigan, but forces us to bear enormous risks.

It was for those reasons that the 1836 Treaty Tribes objected to the EPA’s and DOJ’s proposed deal with Enbridge.

In numerous letters, and in-person, we explained to federal officials that Enbridge would use this agreement to circumvent environmental laws and force state and federal agencies to grant the permits necessary to keep the Line 5 Pipeline in place.

At our August 7th meeting in Traverse City, EPA and DOJ officials tried to assure tribal representatives that we had no reason to be concerned about their agreement with Enbridge. “Nothing in this agreement,” they stated, “requires any state or federal agency to approve a permit for Enbridge.”

You can imagine the surprise when representatives of the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) informed tribal officials at a meeting this week that the MDEQ may be required to issue a permit to Enbridge as a result of that agreement.

Somebody is lying.

The State of Michigan wants to authorize Enbridge to drill a tunnel beneath the Straits of Mackinac to allow the Line 5 Pipeline to continue to operate beneath the waters of the Great Lakes in perpetuity. Michigan’s tribes expect that Michigan Governor Rick Snyder will approve the construction of a tunnel sometime this year, prior to the expiration of his term in office.

But, it will take several years to bore a tunnel beneath the Straits of Mackinac. The State of Michigan appears to want Enbridge to make structural changes to the Line 5 Pipeline in the meantime to provide political cover secure the pipeline.

So, what does all of this convoluted complaining mean? This:

All of the bureaucratic actions relating to Enbridge’s pipeline over the past year are intended to make sure that Enbridge can tunnel through the lakebed and keep the oil flowing beneath the waters of the Great Lakes in perpetuity. And it is coming to a head in the next several months.

The United States Government promised the 1836 Treaty Tribes that its agreement with Enbridge would not require agencies to give Enbridge the permits it needs. The State of Michigan is saying that the agreement may require it to give Enbridge the permits it needs.

Somebody is lying. And they are doing it to help a Canadian company deliver Canadian oil to Canadian markets at the expense of our tribal treaty rights.