Former Bethel Police Officer Pleads Guilty to Assault for Misconduct

Link to Alaska Dispatch News article by Lisa Demer here.

WSBA Indian Law Section Summer 2016 Newsletter

The Washington State Bar Association Indian Law Section is pleased to deliver the summer 2016 issue of the Indian Law Newsletter, now available online (PDF).

In this issue:

  • Word from the Chair, Lauren King
  • Betting Against the House: Santa Ysabel and Lessons Learned With Internet Gaming by Drew Pollom
  • Executive Committee’s Letter to the BOG Regarding the Proposed Ban on Religious Practices at WSBA Events
  • Current Developments in Tribal Taxation Issues and Initiatives by Wendy Pearson
  • Disenrollment: The American Dream Meets the Myth of Scarcity by Se-ah-dom Edmo

As a benefit of Indian Law Section membership, you can look forward to upcoming issues, which will provide updates on Section activities, practitioner resources, and an array of other relevant information. If you are interested in contributing an article for the next edition, please email the editor of the Indian Law Newsletter, Anthony Broadman.

Nooksack Tribal Clerk Now Rejecting Filings in Gladstone v. Kelly

Download PDF: Belmont (Roberts) v Kelly REJECTED Third Declaration of Michelle Joan Roberts in Support of Motion to Expand InjunctionGladstone v. Kelly REJECTED Motion for Permanent Injunction Margretty Rabang

Link to previous posts here.

NYTs Op-Ed: David Archambault on Dakota Access Opposition

Here is “Taking a Stand at Standing Rock.”

NYTs: “Occupying the Prairie: Tensions Rise as Tribes Move to Block a Pipeline”

Here.

Briefs in Standing Rock Sioux Tribe v. United States Army Corps of Engineers (D.D.C.) are here.

San Bernadino County Sheriff Enjoined from Citing On-Reservation Tribal Members for Traffic Violations

Here are the materials in Chemehuevi Indian Tribe v. McMahon (C.D. Cal.):

13-1 Tribe Motion

14 Opposition

24 Supplemental Opposition

26 Reply

32 Tribe Supplemental Brief

35 Response to 32

51 DCT Order

We posted the complaint here.

Fletcher: “The Next Justice’s Impact On The Indian Child Welfare Act” (law360.com)

The Next Justice’s Impact On The Indian Child Welfare Act

Matthew L.M. Fletcher

Justice Antonin Scalia’s death impacts Indian country in dramatic ways. Last term, the most critical tribal court jurisdiction appeal to hit the Supreme Court of the United States in decades was affirmed by a 4-4 tie in favor of tribal jurisdiction. The court declined certiorari in a pair of tribal labor relations cases where there was a gaping circuit split, possibly because the justices foresaw yet another 4-4 tie. The next justice may be the deciding vote in cases that bring the same questions, but bigger cases involving the Indian Child Welfare Act(ICWA) are in the pipeline.

ICWA is invoked in literally hundreds of child welfare cases throughout the country every year. ICWA applies whenever an Indian child is removed from home by state agencies, and further applies when an Indian parent’s rights to a child might be terminated. ICWA requires state courts with jurisdiction over Indian children to notify relevant tribes and allow them to intervene as a party, and in some matters transfer jurisdiction to tribal court. ICWA more quietly establishes robust due process protections for Indian parents and Indian children, protections that Casey Family Programs and 16 other child welfare advocacy groups call the “gold standard” in child welfare statutes. Given that many state child welfare systems are bureaucratic nightmares where families can be lost, this is an important statement.

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Registration is Now OPEN for ILPC/TICA Conference!!

Registration is here.

Registration includes continental breakfast and lunch both days, along with the reception on Thursday night at the East Lansing Marriott. We’ve also applied for 10.75 CLEs from the Minnesota State Bar Association, and will provide forms for those seeking credits in other states.

The tentative agenda is here.

If you, your firm, or organization would like to be a conference sponsor, please see the form here for more information, and our deepest thanks for making the conference possible.

Series of Articles on ICWA in the Minnesota Star Tribune

Part I here.

Part II here.

Charts on the foster care disparities in Minnesota here.

Small piece on Minnesota Indian Women’s Resource Center here.