Alaska Federation of Natives Files Cert Stage Amicus Brief in Polar Bear Case

Here is the brief filed in Alaska v. Jewell:

afn-amicus-brief

Here are the cert petitions:

alaska-cert-petition

alaska-oil-gas-assn-cert-petition

Fletcher — The Consequences Of Divide-And-Conquer: Carcieri Redux (Law360.com)

Here:

The Consequences Of Divide-And-Conquer: Carcieri Redux

In Carcieri v. Salazar, the U.S. Supreme Court held that the Narragansett Tribe was not “under federal jurisdiction” in 1934, and therefore the U.S. Department of the Interior could not acquire land in trust for the tribe. The DOI’s decision to acquire trust land for the Cowlitz Tribe is one of several controversial post-Carcieri trust acquisitions. Now comes a petition for a writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court from the challengers, Citizens Against Reservation Shopping v. Jewell.

Whether an Indian tribe was “under federal jurisdiction” in 1934 is rooted in complex tribal-federal histories. Congress passed the Indian Reorganization Act in 1934, and authorized the Interior Secretary to acquire land in trust. The statute states that the DOI can acquire land for “recognized Indian Tribe[s] now under Federal jurisdiction.” The federal government interpreted that language to mean tribes recognized at the time of a decision to acquire land for seven decades. In Carcieri, the Supreme Court held that “now” unambiguously meant at the time of the passage of the sct, rejecting the government’s interpretation. The federal government did not know in 1934 what tribes were “recognized” or “under federal jurisdiction,” or even what those terms meant. Carcieri has added additional — and highly complex — layers of analysis to federal trust acquisitions.

The DOI agreed to acquire land in trust for the Cowlitz Tribe for gaming purposes in 2011. Through the regular federal acknowledgment process, 25 CFR Part 83, the DOI acknowledgedthe tribe in 2002. The acknowledgment process requires petitioning tribes to demonstrate they existed as a distinct tribal community since 1900 or earlier. The Cowlitz tribe entered into failed treaty negotiations with the United States in 1855, but according to the DOI and the D.C. Circuit, the federal government continued a government-to-government relationship with Cowlitz from then into the 20th century. It seems plausible that the government “recognized” the tribe, whatever that may mean (to channel Felix Cohen, who wrote exactly that phrase in 1934 to describe this statute). The court concluded in Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community v. Jewell that the statute is ambiguous, and the DOI’s interpretation is entitled to Chevron deference.

That the case involved a challenge by another Indian tribe, Grand Ronde, to the Cowlitz matter begs the question about the interests at play in a challenge to a trust acquisition. Grand Ronde’s share of the gaming market in northern Oregon stands to suffer some if the Cowlitz Tribe commences gaming operations closer to Portland. Siding with local units of government, a local anti-Indian community group, and other non-Indian gaming interests, Grand Ronde led the effort to use Carcieri to defeat Cowlitz and the Interior Department. Interests opposing Indian gaming could not have drawn up a divide and conquer strategy any better. More broadly, the lobbying effort to persuade Congress to “fix” the Carcieri decision with an amendment to the 1934 Act is similarly stymied by intertribal conflicts, with some established tribal gaming interests quietly lobbying against a fix. Now that the case is headed to the Supreme Court, the Grand Ronde tribe has dropped out, as have the local government entities, but their anti-Cowlitz partners are taking up the slack in their stead.

It is only a matter of time before Carcieri-based challenges to fee-to-trust acquisitions by the DOI reach the Supreme Court given the financial stakes involved. There are other cases in the pipeline involving tribes such as the Oneida Indian Nation of New York and the Ione Band of Miwok Indians. More cert petitions may soon be forthcoming.

Barring acquiescence by the United States or another unusual development, it is unlikely the court will grant review in the Cowlitz matter. Normally, the court does not grant review in matters of limited importance unless there is a clear circuit split on federal law. Other than a federal district court decision involving the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe (currently on appeal in the First Circuit), the Interior Department’s trust acquisitions challenged under the Carcieri decision have been affirmed. In short, the D.C. Circuit’s decision squares with the outcomes in prior cases in the Second and Ninth Circuits. Even if the outcomes had been different, the applicable law is not currently in doubt. As noted above, each tribe’s history is different, rendering every fee-to-trust decision extremely fact-specific (or factbound, in the court’s parlance). As I noted in my paper, Factbound and Splitless, any cert petition labeled “factbound and splitless” has virtually no chance of being reviewed by the Supreme Court.

That said, my research also shows that the Supreme Court is more likely to grant certiorari in Indian law matters, which involve unique federal interests, and (unfortunately for tribal interests) in cases where tribal interests and their federal partner have prevailed below. The court might conclude on its first look that the Interior Department or the federal circuit courts are simply wrong on the law, and docket the case for review.

In any event, the Carcieri decision spawned a great deal of litigation in an area — tribal gaming — that has important financial stakes, as well as the possibility of inter-tribal conflict. While the Cowlitz matter might not be the vehicle to answer the ultimate question of the meaning of Carcieri and the Department of the Interior’s response, there will be similar cases in the future, perhaps leading to inter-tribal sparring at the Supreme Court.

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.

Citizens Against Reservation Shopping v. Jewell Cert Stage Materials

Cert Petition:

Citizens Against Reservation Shopping v. Jewell

Questions presented:

1. Whether, to have been a “recognized Indian tribe now under Federal jurisdiction” in 1934, a tribe must have been “recognized” at that time.
2. Whether, to have been “under Federal jurisdiction” in 1934, a tribe must have been located in Indian country – that is, on land over which the United States exercised jurisdiction to the exclusion of State jurisdiction.
Lower court materials here.
UPDATE:

Nisenan Tribe of the Nevada City Rancheria v. Jewell Cert Petition

Here:

Cert Petition

Questions presented:

1. Whether the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals’ nunc pro tunc ruling depriving Petitioners of substantive procedural rights was in error?
2. Whether the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals’ ruling on the statute of limitations was in error?

SCOTUS Denies Cert in Wolfchild

Here is today’s order list.

Cert stage briefs here.

Mackinac Tribe v. Jewell Cert Petition

Here:

Cert Petition

Questions presented:

Whether the Court of Appeals deviated from this Court’s decision in Carcieri v Salazar, 555 U.S. 379 (2009) which held that the Secretary of Interior’s Federal Acknowledgment Process (FAP) established in 25 C.F.R. Part 83 is not determinative as to whether Indian Tribe is “recognized” for the purposes of the Indian Reorganization Act (25 U.S.C. § 479)?

Whether the Secretary of Interior can avoid performing her mandatory non-discretionary duty under the Indian Reorganization Act (25 U.S.C. § 476) to call elections to ratify tribal constitutional documents within a reasonable time by requiring a tribe to exhaust administrative remedies estimated to require 30 years to complete?

Lower court materials here.

Wolfchild v. Redwood County Cert Stage Briefs

Here:

Wolfchild Cert Petition

Lower Sioux Cert Opp

Lower court briefs here.

Cert Petition Filed by Foster Parents in the Alexandria P. Case

Petition here.

Previous coverage and case documents here.

After the California Court of Appeals upheld Alexandria’s placement with her family in Utah, the foster parents appealed to the California Supreme Court. The California Supreme Court decided against review. Though there is no written opinion from that decision, the foster parents can petition the Supreme Court for cert at this point.

The questions presented are:
(1) Whether ICWA applies where the child has not been removed from an Indian family or community.

(2) Whether ICWA’s adoptive placement preferences, 25 U.S.C. § 1915(a), require removal from a foster placement made under 1915(b), for the purpose of triggering the Adoptive placement preferences contained in 1915(a).

(3) Whether the state courts erred in holding that “good cause” to depart from ICWA’s placement preferences must be proved by “clear and convincing evidence”–contrary to the text and structure of the statute and the decision of at least one other state court of last resort–or otherwise erred in their interpretation of “good cause.”

The likelihood of the Court granting this petition is relatively slim. However, the attorney representing the foster parents is the same attorney who represented the birth mother in Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl. Indian Country should expect no less of an onslaught of media from this case than what happened in that one. The foster parents in this case have used the exact same media strategy. This article in the October ABA Journal Magazine leaves no doubt. None of this should be a surprise to those following the cases filed in the past year, but Indian Country is going to have to find the support for the type of media strategy Choctaw Nation will need to counter the attacks that will come.

There is an alternative summary of the facts that is rooted in the lower court decisions (and reflects the reality that all of the parties except this couple agreed that this little girl’s current placement with her relatives is in her best interests) here.

SCOTUS Denies Cert in Several Indian Law Matters

The Court denied cert in:

No news on Tunica-Biloxi Gaming Authority v. Zaunbrecher (15-769), which might be held pending the outcome in Lewis v. Clarke.

 

Kitras v. Town of Aquinnah Cert Petition

Here:

Kitras Cert Petition

Questions presented:

1. Whether an assumed tribal custom can survive the extinguishment of aboriginal rights by Congress and undermine conveyances of land that were transferred in fee simple absolute?
2. Whether the legal presumption of an “easement by necessity” is protected against contradiction by the parol evidence rule, and whether the relaxation of the rule amounts to a taking of property under the Due Process Clause?
3. Whether the judicial elimination of a well-established common law right to private property, absolutely necessary for the enjoyment of property, constitutes a judicial taking under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments?
Lower court materials here.