Judge Dodge Protected by Judicial Immunity in Federal Nooksack Case, For Now

Download(PDF): Doc. 63 – Order Granting Defendant Dodge’s Motion to Dismiss

Link: Posted Documents and Materials, previous Nooksack posts

UPDATE (1217 EDT):

Briefs filed before order to dismiss:

Brief filed today:

Onion: “Department Of Interior Asks For Resignation Of Obama-Era Elk”

Here.

Zinke Calls to Reopen IRA, Looking for “Off Ramp” and to (apparently?) Terminate the Trust Relationship by Privatizing Tribes

Here:

We need a discussion on that. As I look at the 1934 Indian Reorganization Act, I think it’s time for a dialogue. “What are we going to be 100 years from now? Is there an off-ramp? If tribes would have a choice of leaving Indian trust lands and becoming a corporation, tribes would take it and quite frankly at BIA (the Bureau of Indian Affairs), I’m not sure in many ways we’re value- added.

Webinar: Working in Tribal Communities to Protect Victims and Communities from Firearms in DV Cases

May 22, 2017 – 11:00am PT, 12:00pm MT, 1:00pm CT, 2:00pm ET

Tribal communities face a variety of unique obstacles to removing firearms from individuals who are prohibited from having them due to civil protection orders (CPOs) or criminal convictions for domestic violence.  Yet the CPO and criminal processes provide many opportunities for professionals to learn about and respond effectively to abusers’ access to firearms using existing laws.  The NCJFCJ and our partners have gathered examples of strategies from around the country to help Tribal and other communities take full advantage of these intervention opportunities so that they can better protect victims and others from firearms violence. 
NCJFCJ, in partnership with the Office on Violence Against Women, is leading a Firearms Pilot Site Initiative (FPSI) that will provide training and technical assistance on these strategies and practices.  The project is a collaboration with the National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center (NIWRC) and other national TA providers (AEquitas, BWJP, CCI, the IACP, and Ujima), as well as expert practitioners from around the country. The FPSI will work with selected sites to assist them in developing interdisciplinary efforts to improve local implementation of firearms prohibitions in civil and criminal domestic violence contexts.
This webinar will discuss challenges and strategies pertinent to Tribal communities that are involved in efforts to effectively implement firearms restrictions in domestic violence cases.  It will also introduce professionals and communities to the FPSI, which soon will be selecting sites for in-depth technical assistance, training, and other support.  The NCJFCJ and its partners will assist selected sites in assessing their implementation efforts and challenges, identifying gaps, and developing partnerships among community stakeholders, including federal partners, to design and implement practices that will enhance victim and community safety.  

Presented by:
Carolina LaPorte, Senior Native Affairs Advisor, National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center
Nancy Hart, JD, Senior Program Attorney, National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges
Darren Mitchell, JD, National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges Consultant

 

Link to register for webinar: here

Closed Captioning will be provided. The webinar will be 60 minutes long and will be recorded and made available to individuals who cannot participate in the live webinar. If you have further questions regarding this event, please contact Alicia Lord at alord@ncjfcj.org.

MI Supreme Court Administrative Hearing on ICWA Pro Hac Rule

Announcement here.

All of the comments submitted on this rule were in support of it–I’m pretty sure I thanked everyone personally, but thank you again to everyone who did.

Grand Traverse Band Seeks GAL RFP

The Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians Tribal Court is soliciting contractual-service proposals for Guardian Ad Litem (GAL) to work in the Family Healing to Wellness Court (FHTWC). The contractual services will start upon completion of contract negotiations and end on 9/30/19. This contractual position is paid from Grant Number #4030 (Grant) from the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.

2017 04 20 RFP_GAL_Final

Nooksack State Court Proceedings Stayed Pending Federal Litigation

Here are the materials in Rabang v. Gilliland (Wash. Super. — Whatcom County):

3-9-17 Defendant Chief Judge Raymond G Dodge’s Motion to Dismiss

3-24-17 Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Pursuant to CR12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6) OCR

3-31-17 Reponse to Defendant Raymond Dodge’s Motion to Dismiss

4-3-17 Response to Defendants Gilliland Ashby and Garcia’s Motion to Dismiss

4-4-17 Defendants’ Reply in Support of Motion to Dismiss

4-5-17 Defendant Chief Judge Raymond G Dodge’s Reply in Support of Motion to Dismiss

4-7-17 Verbatim Report of Proceedings April 7, 2017

4-21-17 Court’s Order on Defendants’ Respective Motions to Dismiss Heard April 7, 2017

Fletcher: “New Divisions in Indian Country over Energy Justice”

Here:

New Divisions In Indian Country Over Energy Justice

By Matthew Fletcher, Michigan State University College of LawMay 2, 2017, 11:35 AM EDT

Matthew L.M. Fletcher

The new administration’s undoing of the Obama administration’s clean environment rules, especially hydraulic fracking regulations and the Clean Power Plan, portend great division in Indian country as the few dozen energy tribes, whether they like it or not, stand apart from the remaining tribes.

Energy tribes, such as the Southern Ute Indian Tribe, had sued the government to undo the Obama Administration’s fracking regulations on the clever and unifying claim that the government pushed through the regulations without consultation with Indian tribes required under various federal statutes and the general trust relationship. Virtually every Indian tribe can support that claim. In fact, a key legal argument against the Dakota Access pipeline, for example, involved a lack of consultation, a claim backed by the Obama administration’s January 2017 tribal consultation report.

Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke quickly acted after the president’s momentous rollback of environmental protections. A new initiative creates a Royalty Policy Committee consisting of federal, state, industry, public interest and tribal representatives to advise the secretary on the fair market value of mineral and energy resources. That tribal representatives are included in this committee may salve some tribal leaders who worried the new administration would not continue the federal government’s consultation practices.

But most Indian tribes are not energy tribes, and most Indian people are not supportive of natural resources extraction. Energy tribes such as Navajo and Hopi are intensely split over resources extraction, with influential organizations such as Diné CARE (Citizens Against Ruining our Environment) organizing and litigating against reservation resource extraction. Other tribal communities have been all but ruined by intense resource extraction, exemplified by the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation on the Fort Berthold Reservation (MHA nation). Just a decade ago, as prices soured, fracking exploded on the reservation. So did drug and violent crimeshuman trafficking and horrific impacts on sacred lands. The New York Times strongly suggested that the tribal council was wracked with corruption once inundated with cash.

And, of course, Indian tribes in the Great Plains, the Great Lakes and the Pacific Northwest are leading the charge against pipeline constructionfish habitat destruction and other threats to water and the environment. Indian people and their allies have formed nonprofit groups like Honor the Earth to challenge any threats to reservation environments.

With so many tribes, groups and Indian people aligned in favor of environmental justice, the national organizations that normally lead the charge of a unified Indian country against attacks on tribal sovereignty, especially the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) and the Native American Rights Fund (NARF), are hamstrung because they cannot side against any one Indian tribe against another. In the event Congress and the Administration champion a significant alteration in the federal trust relationship that would benefit energy tribes’ ability to extract resources, as has been contemplated in recent years, NCAI and NARF would likely have to sit out the debate if non-energy tribes objected to the proposals. Imagine if the MHA nation or another energy tribe intervened in the in the Dakota Access pipeline litigation on the side of the federal government or the pipeline construction company, for example. Both organizations might have to step aside on the political and legal fronts.

Energy tribes have a compelling argument about their untapped resources. Navajo, Hopi, Crow, Southern Ute and many others have been the victims of decades, if not centuries, of exploitation by the United States and private enterprise. For more than a century, the U.S. Department of the Interior stripped Indian reservations of coal, timber and other resources with little or benefit to Indian tribes or Indian people. Supreme Court cases like Tee-Hit-Ton Indians v. United States, United States v. Sioux Nation, and United States v. Navajo Nation arose from either the straight out confiscation of Indian resources or the exploitation of those resources for pennies on the dollar of their fair market value. It is only natural that energy tribes desire to profit from their own resources rather than others after being exploited for so long.

But the bitter internal struggled permeating some energy tribes now could easily expand to national intertribal conflicts. The Native Village of Kivalina’s failed federal court suit seeking damages from major fossil fuel extraction businesses portends those greater conflicts. Kivalina is one of many Indian communities in Alaska and elsewhere severely impacted by climate change — it is literally falling into the sea as ocean levels rise and winter storms become more dangerous. Other tribes are seeing fewer fish and game habitats due to climate change impacts. If energy tribes become ever greater players in resource extraction, it is merely a matter of time before environmentally oriented tribes begin to challenge them in court and in politics.

If so, then we might see a terrible battle over competing claims to tribal sovereignty — tribal energy against tribal environments. The opening shots in that battle are already being fired in Congress. In February, Rep. Markwayne Mullin, a Cherokee Nation member representing Oklahoma District 2, berated Standing Rock Sioux Tribe council member Chad Harrison over the tribe’s opposition to the Dakota Access pipeline. In March, Raul Grijalva, representing Arizona District 3, asserted that the Trump administration’s energy policies stoke the energy industry’s “fundamental lust” for tribal and public resources and lands. It may be just a matter of time before congressional rhetoric turns more to action, and tribal communities line up against each other.

Matthew L.M. Fletcher is a professor of law at Michigan State University College of Law. Fletcher is the primary editor and author of the leading law blog on American Indian law and policy, Turtle Talk.

The opinions expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the firm, its clients, or Portfolio Media Inc., or any of its or their respective affiliates. This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal advice.

Alaska ICWA Case on QEW and Guardianship

Here.

Ultimately the question turned on whether a long term guardianship is a foster care placement or a termination of parental rights (which have differing standards of proof). The court found it was a foster care placement, and required the testimony of a qualified expert witness.

National Indian Law Library Bulletin (4/28/2017)

Here:

The National Indian Law Library added new content to the Indian Law Bulletins on 4/28/17.

U.S. Federal Courts Bulletin
http://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/federal/2017.html
New Mexico v. Department of Interior (Indian Gaming Regulatory Act – Tribal-State Compacts)
Fletcher v. United States (Fiduciary Duty)
Lesperance v. Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians (Tribal Sovereign Immunity)

Tribal Courts Bulletin
http://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/tribal/2017.html
Licciardello v. Mashantucket Pequot Gaming Enterprise (Civil Law; Torts; Negligence)

News Bulletin
http://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/news/currentnews.html
In the Sacred Places section, we feature articles about a Trump executive order to direct the Department of Interior to review and recommend changes to National Monument designations.

Law Review & Bar Journal Bulletin
http://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/lawreviews/2017.html
The following articles were added:
Recognition of tribal court orders and judgments.
Overriding tribal sovereignty by applying the National Labor Relations Act to Indian tribes in Soaring Eagle Casino and Resort v. National Labor Relations Board.
A fouled hand: Ysleta del sur Pueblo’s struggle to game in Texas.
Paths in the wilderness?: The politics and practices of Hopi religious freedom in Hopitutskwa.
Hope for the Hopi in a post-Hobby Lobby world: The Supreme Court’s recent interpretation of RFRA and strengthening Native Americans’ religious-based land rights claims.
A new narrative: Native Hawaiian law.

U.S. Legislation Bulletin
http://www.narf.org/nill/bulletins/legislation/115_uslegislation.html
S.975: A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to permanently extend the Indian coal production tax credit.
S.943:  Johnson O’Malley Supplemental Indian Education Program Modernization Act
S.J.Res.11: A joint resolution providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the final rule of the Bureau of Land Management relating to “Waste Prevention, Production Subject to Royalties, and Resource Conservation”.
H.R.2083: Endangered Salmon and Fisheries Predation Prevention Act. See SEC. 5. TREATY RIGHTS OF FEDERALLY RECOGNIZED INDIAN TRIBES.