Here are the initial materials in the litigation between Muscogee Creek and Poarch Creek alleging the latter Tribe’s construction of a casino on sacred grounds:
casino
Brief Guest Post from Craig Dorsay on the Proposed Casino in Bremerton, WA
[In re the article posted here.] I am tribal attorney for Samish, which is mentioned prominently in the article. The family, which is Samish, has approached the Samish Tribal Council a number of times, asking the Samish Tribe to undertake the project. Recently the family approached the Samish Tribal Council again, now under the auspices of a California casino developer, raising the proposal again. The Samish Tribe has repeatedly declined the family’s request to pursue this project in Bremerton. Bremerton is not within or near the traditional territory of the Samish Tribe, and the land in question has never been under the governmental jurisdiction of the Samish Tribe. The nearest tribe is the Suquamish Tribe, which likely has the strongest claim to this area. The Samish Tribe has informed the Suquamish Tribe that it is not part of this project and has no interest in being associated with it in any shape or form.
This is a difficult issue for Samish because as a tribe re-recognized under the Federal Acknowledgment Regulations, Samish has encountered great difficulty in opening its own gaming operation in its territory. Samish was opposed in re-recognition by neighboring tribes – Swinomish, Lummi, Upper Skagit and Tulalip, and those tribes continue to oppose any proposed land into trust and gaming operation by Samish. The neighboring tribe, Swinomish, through their Chairman, Brian Cladoosby, has raised the Carcieri decision against Samish, including for gaming. While an alternative opportunity to pursue gaming farther away might be appealing, the Samish Tribe has always done the right thing and declined any offer to intrude on the territory or interests of another tribe. Craig Dorsay
Tribal family’s quest to build casino in Bremerton faces hurdles, foes | Local News | The Seattle Times
Here’s an interesting article about a family’s attempt to develop a casino on an allotment they own off-reservation in Bremerton, Washington. The allotment was originally issued to a Quinault tribal member but her descendants, who currently own it, are Samish.
Freep: 8 New Casinos For Michigan Proposed
Here.
As early as Tuesday morning, the Committee for More Michigan Jobs could get approval from the State Board of Canvassers to launch a campaign to persuade Michigan voters to let the group build those two casinos and six more. If the developers convince voters to amend the Michigan Constitution, it could usher in the largest expansion of gambling since Detroit won three casinos in 1996.
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Backers include former Granholm administration budget director Mitch Irwin, an East Lansing Democrat, and former House Speaker Rick Johnson, a Cadillac-area Republican. The Detroit partnership has lined up names such as Four Tops singer Duke Fakir, boxing promoter Emanuel Steward and Detroit funeral director O’Neil Swanson as major investors.Despite the big names and big money, however, the outcome is far from certain. The proposal faces opposition from Indian tribes that operate outstate casinos and existing Detroit casino operators not keen on new competition.
“We are confident the voters of Michigan will reject this unprecedented expansion of gaming,” said James Nye, spokesman for Protect MI Vote, a coalition that includes MGM Grand Detroit and Greektown Casino-Hotel in Detroit; the Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe, owner of Soaring Eagle Casino & Resort in Mt. Pleasant, and the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of Potawatomi, owner of FireKeepers Casino near Battle Creek.
Proposed Casino Would Be South Carolina’s First
An excerpt from The Island Packet:
The gambling resort would be within Hilton Head Lakes, a residential development on U.S. 278 — 18 miles from Hilton Head Island and three miles from Exit 8 on I-95. The United Keetoowa Band of the Cherokee Indians in Tahlequah, Okla., would own it.
Jasper County and city of Hardeeville councils passed resolutions endorsing the project Thursday and asked the state and federal government for support. The local leaders hailed it as a boon to Lowcountry tourism that could help cure chronic unemployment.
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Under the federal Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, before a tribe can request that “off-reservation” land be taken into trust by the U.S. government for gaming purposes, the bureau must determine that doing so is in the tribe’s best interest and not detrimental to the surrounding community. The state’s governor must also agree.
“The governor has no intention of signing any memorandum of understanding that would enable casino gambling,” said Rob Godfrey, a spokesman for the first-term Republican.
Michigan Indian Gaming Materials: Compacts
The 1993 stipulation and consent judgment in Tribes v. Engler is here.
The GTB compact is here — the compacts of GTB, Saginaw Chippewa, LVD, Sault Tribe, BMIC, Hannahville, and KBIC are the same.
The LTBB compact is here — the compacts of LTBB, LRB, Pokagon, and Huron Nottawaseppi are all the same. LTBB’s Mackinaw City amendment is here.
All the compact materials are available here.