Here.
Daily Princetonian: “Nuclear Princeton: Indigenous scholarship and representation in an institution ‘not designed’ for Native students”
Here.
Here.
Here is the EPA letter to the governor:
Here are the materials in Yazzie v. Hobbs (D. Ariz.):
Here are the briefs so far in the Ninth Circuit:
Prior post here.
Here is today’s order list.
The Supreme Court denied cert in:
The Court held over Rogers County Board of Tax Roll Corrections v. Video Gaming Technologies, Inc. and In re Youngbear, and asked for a response (CFR) in United States v. Cooley.
Last week, the Court granted several cases, including an Arizona voting rights case we noted here.
Here.
Today, Governor Tim Walz announced the appointments of Julie Allyn, Maximillia Utley, and Terri Yellowhammer as District Court Judges in Minnesota’s Fourth Judicial District. All three seats will be chambered in Minneapolis.
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Ms. Yellowhammer’s appointment will fill a vacancy that occurred upon the retirement of Judge Fred Karasov.
“I am proud to appoint Ms. Yellowhammer. She is a tireless public servant, having spent her career fighting systemic inequities,” said Governor Walz. “Her experience as a tribal judge and her steadfast focus on increasing collaboration between underrepresented communities and the criminal justice system will give her a unique perspective in her new role.”
“Ms. Yellowhammer has the experience and heart that will serve the bench well,” said Lieutenant Governor Flanagan. “Her work as a tribal court judge and as an advocate for Native children and families brings a much needed perspective to the 4th judicial circuit. I’m thrilled by her appointment.”
Congratulations!!
Here (PDF):

The California Tribal Families Coalition ICWA Appellate Webinar Series organizers are applying for 4 MCLE credits through the State Bar of California. Please see the information below or the flyer to register.
Hosted by CTFC and The Whitener Group.
October 20, 2020, 12-2pm PT
Kate Fort, Indian Law Clinic Director, Michigan State University College of Law
This webinar will describe national trends in Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) appellate decisions as well as provide an update on Federal lawsuits challenging the Act. Presenters will discuss best practices for California appellate practitioners with ICWA cases in their caseload. October registration here.
December 3, 2020, 12-2pm PT
Kate Fort, Indian Law Clinic Director, Michigan State University College of Law
This webinar will provide an update on recent California ICWA caselaw and discuss emerging trends and issues in California Case law over the past 5 years. Presenters will discuss how these trends affect tribes and families in California and how appellate attorneys and policymakers can best respond. December Registration here.
To post an open Indian law or leadership job to Turtle Talk, send the following information to indigenous@law.msu.edu:
Environmental Law Institute
Research and Publications Intern (Spring 2021 January – May), Washington, DC, but it will be a fully remote position, so interns do not need to be in DC. Interns conduct in-depth secondary and primary research, attend and report on outside events, analyze, edit, and synthesize scholarly material, assist with preparation for environmental training courses, and provide limited administrative support. ELI integrates interns into the day-to-day operations of the Institute, and interns are encouraged to attend ELI-sponsored workshops, seminars, roundtable, and other events. In addition, interns will develop and complete an independent research project under the guidance of ELI staff. Closing date: November 15, 2020 11:59pm. Application link here.
Maier Pfeffer Kim Geary & Cohen, LLP
(paid) Summer 2021 legal clerkship, Oakland, CA. MPKGC is a boutique Indian law firm. We are seeking a current law student with a demonstrated interest in tribal issues to assist with a wide range of matters, such as tribal governance, gaming, economic development, housing, ICWA, and more. The position will be based in Oakland or remote, to be determined closer to start date. Applications are due Friday, November 13. Please see attached posting for details. For more information or inquiries, please contact Bethany Sullivan at bsullivan@jmandmplaw.com.
US EPA Region 8 Office of Regional Counsel
Summer intern and spring and fall externship, in Denver, CO. We are looking for rising 2L students who are able to commit to a full-time (40 hours a week) summer or spring externship. We are requesting that applications be submitted by October 15 for a spring externship, and by November 15 for summer internships. We are unable to offer any remuneration; however, we endeavor to accommodate requests for academic credit consistent with your law school’s externship policy. At this time, we are uncertain whether the office will continue to work remotely into the spring and summer. Our office is currently remote and worked remotely this past summer.
The Quinault Indian Nation
RFQ, Taholah, Washington. Seeking a Chief Judge for the Quinault Tribal Court. Please contact Kelly Billie at Kelly.billie@quinault.org or (360) 276-8215, ext. 1400 to obtain a copy of the detailed RFQ document for proposal qualifications and requirements. Proposals must be submitted by October 9, 2020. Anticipated start date will be early January, 2021. Proposals and/or questions about the RFQ should be submitted to lbruner@quinault.org.
Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma
Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, Durant, OK. Responsible for prosecuting criminal, juvenile, quasi-civil, wildlife, traffic and deprived actions on behalf of the Choctaw Nation as assigned by the Lead Tribal Prosecutor. For more information please see the job description. Application closes October 31, 2020.
Little River Band of Ottawa Indians
Prosecutor, Department of Prosecutor’s Office, Manistee MI. This position serves as the chief law enforcement officer responsible for the prosecution of violations of the Tribe’s Constitution, criminal laws, conservation laws, ordinances, regulations, and resolutions in Tribal Court. The incumbent acts independently, exercising his/her own prosecutorial discretion. Please see the job announcement for more information. Application closes October 13, 2020.
The Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi Tribal Government Center
Paralegal, Fulton, MI. Develops and maintains archive files for all legal projects and tasks undertaken by the Legal Department; Develops procedures for file management and tracking of open project files for work assigned to the Legal Department; and more. For more information please see the job description. Posting Ends 10/14/2020 8:30 AM ET. Apply at the NHBP Careers page https://www.nhbpi.org/careers-at-nhbp/.
Southern Ute Indian Tribe
Tribal Water Attorney, Ignacio, CO. Under the supervision of the Legal Department Director, attorney will serve as a member of the Tribe’s Legal Department, with principal responsibility for representing the Tribe on water matters. Where time allows, the attorney will represent the Tribe in other matters that require the Legal Department’s attention, including code review and drafting, litigation, contract review, and employment matters. Apply online at https://careers.southernute.com/pfund. Closes October 13, 2020, 5:00pm MST.
RFP – Social Services Attorney. The Southern Ute Indian Tribe is requesting contract proposals from attorneys or law firms to represent Social Services in child/elder/at-risk adult protection cases. Approx. ½ time. For full RFP email jrivera@southernute-nsn.gov or call 970-563-2141. Proposals due October 26h at 5 p.m.
ACLU-Montana
Communications Director, Missoula, MT. The Communications Director has a unique opportunity to set and guide the strategy for communications, elevate the mission and the brand of the ACLU of Montana, grow our supporter base, expand the public’s understanding of civil rights and civil liberties, and advocate for positive change in the civil rights and liberties landscape in Montana. Our current top priorities are Indigenous justice, criminal legal reform and ending the criminalization of poverty, LGBTQ equality, and voting rights. We will begin reviewing applications October 5, 2020. Applications after that date are encouraged and will be accepted on a rolling basis until the position is filled. For more information please visit the website and see the job description.
ACLU National Office
Senior Advisor, Affiliate Equity Programs in the Affiliate Support and Nationwide Initiatives Department, National office, New York, NY. The Affiliate Support and Nationwide Initiatives Department (ASNI) builds state capacity and strengthens the connections between the ACLU and its network of 54 state affiliates and their 1,500 staff members across the country. Their work constitutes an unparalleled bulwark defending and advancing our civil liberties and civil rights. For more information please visit the link.
New Mexico Legal Aid
Native Communities Medical-Legal Partnership Attorney. New Mexico Legal Aid has received a multi-state grant from AmeriCorps to host one-year AmeriCorps members to facilitate the medical-legal partnership (MLP) program serving American Indians and Alaskan Natives throughout the US. 14 members will be recruited throughout the US as follows: six attorneys in Alaska (Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau, Kenai, Nome, Sitka), four attorneys in Oklahoma (Oklahoma City), and one attorney in each Arizona (Phoenix), Nebraska (Omaha), New Mexico (Albuquerque) and Utah (Montezuma Creek). The attorney selected will be located primarily at the clinic site but also the at host site’s local office. AmeriCorps Member will ideally begin November 15th, 2020 or as soon as possible thereafter and continue for one year. For more information and to apply visit www.newmexicolegalaid.org.
Rosette LLP
Attorney, Oklahoma City, OK. Preference will be given to attorneys who are licensed in multiple jurisdictions, as well as those who have an established commitment to protecting the interests of federally-recognized Indian Tribes and matters involving Native American heritage, as well as a keen interest and experience in Federal Indian law including in the areas of litigation (in tribal, state and federal courts), transactional law, gaming law, internal tribal governance matters, lobbying, water law and/environmental law. Position will close in two weeks. Please see the announcement for more information.
The Capitol Hill Policy Group LLC
Director of Indigenous Advocacy, Washington, D.C.The Firm is currently recruiting for a Director of Indigenous Advocacy based in our Washington, D.C. office. The Director of Indigenous Advocacy will have experience working on Capitol Hill and will interact primarily with the firm’s Managing Principals led by Robert Odawi Porter, Esq., a former President of the Seneca Nation of Indians. Communication with other Firm personnel, clients, and people outside of the Firm will be required to accomplish the duties of the position. Closing Date: November 15, 2020. Please see the job description for more information.
See posts from September 25, 2020.
Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett, a judge on the Seventh Circuit, has a bit of a thin record on Indian law matters, but no less than many other nominees. I address three areas, her judicial record, her clerkship for Justice Scalia, and her scholarly record.
I. Judicial Record
Judge Barrett was a member of a panel affirming by unpublished opinion an appeal brought by a Native prisoner in Wisconsin state prison, Schlemm v Carr. Unpublished opinions are unsigned and usually written by a court clerk. From the order, we learn what the religious issue involved:
David Schlemm, a Native American inmate, sued the Wisconsin Department of Corrections and prison officials for interfering with his religious practices. The district court entered summary judgment for the defendants, but we remanded his case for trial. See Schlemm v. Wall, 784 F.3d 362 (7th Cir. 2015). After a bench trial, the district court entered an injunction requiring the Department to honor several of Schlemm’s requests. On appeal again, Schlemm primarily asserts that the injunction is insufficient; specifically, it does not permit him to obtain fresh game meat to make “Indian Tacos” for the traditional Ghost Feast. Because the record shows that this limitation does not impose a substantial burden on Schlemm’s religious exercise and is the least restrictive means of furthering the prison’s security interest, we affirm the judgment.
Judge Barrett’s only writing as a judge mentioning Indians is from her dissent in a Second Amendment case, Kanter v. Barr, 919_F.3d_437. In her dissent, Judge Barrett argued that the federal prohibition on felons possessing guns was unconstitutional as applied to non-dangerous felons. Her dissent drew deeply from originalist theory and sources similar to Justice Scalia’s majority opinion in D.C. v. Heller. One of the arguments raised by Judge Barrett was that the leaders of the founding generation summarily disarmed persons considered dangerous, including Indians and slaves:
Slaves and Native Americans, on the other hand, were thought to pose more immediate threats to public safety and stability and were disarmed as a matter of course. See MALCOLM, supra, at 140–41; WINKLER, supra, at 115–16 (noting “forcible disarmament” out of “fear that these groups would use guns to revolt” or otherwise threaten the “public safety”); DECONDE, supra, at 21–22 (noting “anxiety that slaves would rebel”). And this practice of keeping guns out of the hands of “distrusted” groups continued after the Revolution. For example, many states even constitutionalized the disarmament of slaves and Native Americans. See Volokh, 11 TEX. REV. L. & POL. at 208–09.7
It is tempting to read too much into this passage. No doubt Judge Barrett is not using this historical evidence to support the summary disarming of Indians and descendants of slaves in the 21st century. But the dependence on founding-era evidence to interpret the Constitution could be troubling — after all, if the founders’ interpretation of the Constitution is controlling on the Supreme Court, then summary disarmament of Indians and descendants of slaves authorized by Congress or a state legislature that declares people of color as “dangerous” could be held to be constitutional. I’ve written about the pitfalls of over-reliance on originalist thought and evidence in a new paper just published in the Michigan Journal of Race & Law here.
Judge Barrett also participated in an appeal regarding the dueling claims of romance novelists who wrote books about a wealthy white woman who falls in love with an Indian man, Rucker v Fasano. Here is a description of that case:
No love is lost between romance novelists Kelly Rucker and Donna Fasano, who each wrote a tale of a wealthy teenage girl who falls in love with a boy of Native American heritage and becomes pregnant, before they are cruelly parted. To the reader’s relief, however, in each book the lovers are reunited years later, and they rekindle their fiery romance while their child explores his indigenous heritage with his father’s guidance. The characters’ happy endings, however, did not extend to the authors, who each claim to have conceived the story first. Rucker sued Fasano and her publishers for copyright infringement. In this appeal challenging the district court’s entry of summary judgment for the defendants, Rucker contends that disputes of material fact exist regarding Fasano’s access to Rucker’s story and the similarities between the two works. We affirm the judgment.
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The Promise of a Virgin is about a heroine named Sheridan who has a teenage romance with Kasey, her family’s pool boy, who is part of the Navajo Nation. Reclaim My Heart is about a heroine named Tyne who has a teenage romance with Lucas, a boy who is part of the Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape Tribal Nation. The protagonists in each story have a secret tryst and the heroine becomes pregnant. The teenage lovers then part under tragic circumstances only to reunite years later as adults—ten years in Rucker’s book and sixteen years in Fasano’s. In both books the hero finally meets his son, and teaches him about his indigenous heritage. The novels both end with the hero and heroine falling in love again and getting married.
There is no Indian law in this case.
II. Clerkship
Judge Barrett clerked for Justice Scalia in the 1998 Term. The Supreme Court decided four Indian law cases that year. In each case, Justice Scalia voted against tribal interests.
Arizona Dept. of Revenue v. Blaze Constr. (1999)
El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. Neztsosie (1999)
Minnesota v. Mille Lacs (1999)
Amoco Production v. Southern Ute (1999)
It is treacherous to assign views on Indian law to Judge Barrett simply because she clerked for Justice Scalia, but it is very possible that she worked extensively on at least one of these cases. Justice Scalia did not write a separate opinion in any of these cases.
III. Scholarly Record
Judge Barrett came to the Seventh Circuit as a law prof at Notre Dame. In her article surveying the canons of construction, Judge Barrett described the history of the canon of construction of Indian treaties and the rise of the canon of construction of Indian affairs statutes:
Philip Frickey describes the Indian canon – the maxim that statutes dealing with the Indians must be construed in their favor – as the legacy of John Marshall.193 It is, therefore, like avoidance and Charming Betsy, another uniquely American invention. In Patterson v. Jenks, Chief Justice Marshall, interpreting a treaty between the state of Georgia and the Creek Indians, noted that in a contest between those two parties, ambiguity should be resolved in a manner “favourable to the pretension of the less powerful and less intelligent or skilful [sic] party to the compact.”194 That was the first mention of the canon, but the case that really launched it was Worcester v. Georgia, which interpreted a treaty between the Cherokee Indians and the United States.195 Marshall’s opinion favors the Indians in construing the treaty,196 but it is the starker language from Justice M’Lean’s concurrence that has been quoted by later cases: “The language used in treaties with the Indians should never be construed to their prejudice. . . . How the words of the treaty were understood by this unlettered people, rather than their critical meaning, should form the rule of construction.”197
After Worcester, the Indian canon lay dormant in federal case reports until the Supreme Court invoked it again thirty-four years later in In re Kansas Indians, where the Court applied the canon to a treaty exempting certain Miami Indian lands from taxation.198 I found only two other nineteenth century cases invoking the canon.199 Given the paucity of nineteenth century cases applying the canon, twentieth century courts perhaps overstated the case when they described the canon as “well-settled law”200 and a “rule of construction [that] has been recognized, without exception, for more than a hundred years.”201The Indian canon is unique among the substantive canons discussed in this Part because it began in the treaty context as essentially a rule of contract interpretation. Insofar as it instructs courts to construe treaties in favor of the less sophisticated party to them, the rule resembles the approach that courts take in the construction of adhesion contracts.202 What is interesting about the Indian canon for present purposes is that it jumped without discussion from the interpretation of treaties to the interpretation of statutes. Treaty making with the Indians ceased in 1871 in response to demands from the House of Representatives for a role in the making of federal Indian policy.203 Thereafter, relations between the United States and Indian tribes were governed by statute. When courts began interpreting these statutes in the early 1900s, they assumed, without reflection, that the canon should continue to apply. For example, without considering the potential impact of the structural differences between statutes and treaties, the Circuit Court of Nevada asserted that the canon should apply to statutes dealing with Indians simply because statutes had replaced treaties as the mechanism by which Indian policy was made.204 The Supreme Court’s first application of the canon to a statute did not even acknowledge the shift from treaty to statute.205
That is not to say that federal courts have been wrong to apply the Indian canon to statutes.206 The point for present purposes is not the validity of the canon, but the utility of the historical evidence for revealing the attitudes of early federal courts toward substantive canon-making. And the peculiar circumstances surrounding the emergence of this canon – particularly its grounding in treaty interpretation, where a court enforces an agreement reached by multiple parties rather than functioning solely as Congress’s faithful agent – make its history of limited utility notwithstanding its presence on the list of old canons that modern courts continue to apply.
If anything is to be drawn from this passage, and that’s a big “if”, Judge Barrett’s awareness of the canons is a good thing. Judge Barrett’s skepticism of the history of the canon of construction as applied to federal statutes is concerning. In a later passage, she seemed to worry that federal courts would rewrite federal statutes to benefit Indians and tribes in a way that might trouble textualists:
More troubling for the textualist are the cases in which federal courts invoked substantive canons to justify a departure from a statute’s most natural reading. Courts identified an outer limit to the judicial power by disavowing the ability to adopt an interpretation that contravened the plain text. But they claimed substantial leeway to work within meanings that the statute could bear. Recall that in Charming Betsy, Marshall argued that “an act of Congress ought never to be construed to violate the law of nations if any other possible construction remains.”223 In describing the avoidance canon, Justice Story opined that to avoid an unconstitutional interpretation of a statute, a court should adopt a construction “which although not favored by the exact letter, may yet well stand with the general scope of the statute, and give it a constitutional character.”224 Courts applying the presumption against retroactivity explained that they would “struggle hard” against a retroactive interpretation,225 refusing to adopt it “unless it contained express words to that purpose.”226 Courts applying the government-exemption rule read an exception into otherwise unqualified text absent a clear statement to the contrary.227 Courts also read treaties with the Indians in favor of the Indians, rather than as Congress may have understood or intended, but the contractual origins of the Indian canon make it a less enlightening gauge of how federal courts understood the scope of their power to interpret statutes.228
Footnote 228 cites to the previous passage generally — Judge Barrett found no cases to support the proposition that troubled her. It is somewhat concerning that she appears to assume that the courts are too deferential without doing the research to support that proposition. However, in footnote 206, Barrett does note Phil Frickey’s argument that the Indian canons are rooted in the Constitutional relationship between tribes and the federal government:
Frickey has made powerful arguments as to why the “difference in form should not … substantially alter judicial methodology,” Frickey, supra note 193, at 421-22, including the argument that the canon can be understood as an outgrowth of the “sovereign-to-sovereign, structural relationship” between Indian nations and the United States. Id. So understood, the canon might be rationalized with reference to the Constitution rather than to a contract analogy. See infra Part IV.C.
Indian law advocates would love to see a Judge Barrett incorporate these views into a judicial opinion.
Judge Barrett here briefly wrote about the aftermath of the Worcester v. Georgia decision, where President Andrew Jackson engaged in a political war with the Supreme Court and the Governor of Georgia:
Jackson’s confrontation with the Court stemmed from the Court’s holding unconstitutional a Georgia statute that, among other things, permitted whites to live among Indians only if they got a license to do so and swore an oath of loyalty to the State of Georgia.41 Samuel Worcester was convicted for his refusal to do either; the Supreme Court, holding the statute unconstitutional, overturned his conviction and ordered Georgia to release the prisoner.42 Georgia refused.43 With a federal judgment at stake, one might have expected Jackson to force Georgia’s compliance, but he did not. Instead, tradition has it that Jackson proclaimed, “John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it.”44 Jackson’s failure to intervene, combined with rhetoric decrying the Supreme Court and defending Georgia, left Jackson vulnerable to the charge that he had violated the Constitution by failing to enforce the Court’s decree.45 Jackson was saved from a direct collision with the Court by the fact that he appeared to lack the authority to act. Timing and a procedural quirk had prevented the Supreme Court from dispatching the federal marshal to execute the judgment, and a federal statute authorized the President to intervene only if the marshal failed.46 Thus, notwithstanding Jackson’s fairly open approval of Georgia’s defiance and his expressed willingness to defy the Court himself, he came only to the brink of refusing to enforce a federal judgment. His conduct nonetheless stands as an important, if symbolic, denial of an unqualified executive obligation to execute Supreme Court judgments.
Judge Barrett noted in a footnote a piece of historical gossip that I found fascinating, that perhaps the first instance a protest formed at the Supreme Court building in response to the 1968 Puyallup decision:
An early, and perhaps even the earliest, protest at the Court in response to a Supreme Court opinion occurred on May 29, 1968, when angry demonstrators from the Poor People’s Campaign, representing the interests of Indians, stormed the Supreme Court in response to a ruling upholding the State of Washington’s right to specify when fishing could take place in the state. See Earl Caldwell, High Court Building Stormed in Demonstration by the Poor, N.Y. Times, May 30, 1968, at 1. The first “March for Life,” the still-continuing annual protest against Roe v. Wade, was held on January 22, 1974, the first anniversary of the decision. See Louis J. Palmer, Jr., March for Life, in Encyclopedia of Abortion in the United States 208, 208 (2002).
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