15 Years Ago Today, Minnesota v. Mille Lacs was Decided

With all of the depressing Indian Law cases that we read, it is always nice to remember the victories.

This is taken from the Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission’s Facebook page:

Honoring Treaty Day 2014

A unique Ojibwe holiday, GLIFWC bands established Treaty Day following the US Supreme Court ruling in the Minnesota v. Mille Lacs case. That decision, issued 15 years ago today, found that reserved rights in the Minnesota 1837 ceded territory continued to exist—a ruling that supported earlier court decrees on other ceded lands and waters.

To the treaty-era Ojibwe headmen, tribal harvesters (across the centuries), legal experts, caretakers of treaty resources, and today’s men and women that lead tribes into the 21st Century: Chi Miigwech! COR

 

United States Cert Opposition Brief in Quantum Entertainment v. DOI

Here:

USA Cert Opp

Petition is here.

Supreme Court Denies Wolfchild/Zephier Cert Petitions

Here is today’s order list.

The petitions are here.

Sixth Circuit Denies Sault Tribe Motion to Reconsider Stay

Here:

CA6 Order Denying Reconsideration

Prior posts on the stay are here and here. Panel materials here.

Supreme Court Grants RLUIPA Petition

The Supreme Court granted Holt v. Hobbs, a (handwritten) prisoner petition with the following issues:

(1) Whether the Arkansas Department of Corrections’ no beard growing policy violates the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA) or the First Amendment; and (2) whether a ½ inch beard would satisfy the security goals sought by the policy.

SCOTUSblog page here.

Order here.

Sault Ste. Marie Tribes Moves Sixth Circuit to Reconsider Stay Order

Here is the motion:

Sault Tribe Motion to Reconsider Stay Order

The stay order materials are here.

 

Sixth Circuit Stay Order in Michigan v. Sault Tribe

Here:

CA6 Stay Order

Michigan Stay Motion

Cert Opposition Briefs in Katie John Appeal

Here are the opposition briefs in Alaska v. Jewell:

Federal Cert Opp Brief

Katie John Cert Opp [A second brief with the appendix: AFN Alaska v Jewell BIO app]

Cert petition here.

Two Amicus Briefs Supporting Wolfchild Cert Petition

Here:

Gregory Sisk Amicus

Historic Shingle Springs Miwok Amicus

Cert petitions here.

Fletcher, Fort, and Reo on “Tribal Disruption” Theory in the Michigan Law Review First Impressions

Matthew L.M. Fletcher, Kathryn E. Fort, and Dr. Nicholas J. Reo have published “Tribal Disruption and Indian Claims” in Michigan Law Review’s First Impressions. PDF. Here is a taste:

Legal claims are inherently disruptive. Plaintiffs’ suits invariably seek to unsettle the status quo. On occasion, the remedies to legal claims can be so disruptive-that is, impossible to enforce or implement in a fair and equitable manner-that courts simply will not issue them. In the area of federal Indian law, American Indian tribal claims not only disrupt the status quo but may even disrupt so-called settled expectations of those affected by the claims.[1] The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has dismissed a round of Indian land claims at the pleading stage, including Onondaga Nation v. New York,[2] because it considered the claims so disruptive.

We agree that Indian legal claims are inherently disruptive and may implicate the centuries-old settled expectations of state and local governments and non-Indians. It is empirically and categorically false, however, that the remedies tribal interests seek are impossible to enforce or implement in a fair or equitable manner. Every year in cases against state governments and their political subdivisions, Indian tribes settle long-standing claims that at their outset, often appear intractable, if not downright impossible, to remedy. The recent settlements of claims by the Oneida Indian Nation of New York,[3] the Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe,[4] and five Michigan Anishinaabe tribes[5] demonstrate the falsehood of the idea that Indian claims are too disruptive to be remedied. These negotiated settlements powerfully illustrate that the disruption produced by Indian claims has an important function: forcing federal, state, and tribal governments to creatively seek solutions to difficult governance issues in Indian country.

Part I of this Essay describes recent common law, which dismisses Indian claims on the grounds that they are too disruptive. Part II briefly surveys the history of the relationship between Indians and the United States. Part III describes recent settlements between tribal and local governments. Part IV presents our theory of tribal disruption based on notions of ecological disturbance, studied in ecology and related fields. We argue that ecological disturbance in linked social-­ecological systems offers a useful analog to the disruptive nature of Indian claims. These claims can be compared to disturbances in rivers, forests, or other ecosystems. Floods, forest fires, and windstorms break down existing structures, allowing space for reorganization, diversification, and new growth. Tribal claims similarly clear out a legal space for creative and improved governance institutions.