Radical History Review Article on the Cobell Settlement

Alyosha Goldstein has posted “Finance and Foreclosure in the Colonial Present,” published in the Radical History Review. Here is the abstract:

The Claims Resolution Act (CRA) of 2010, which brought together and financed a series of historic US civil rights and Native American class-action lawsuit settlements, serves as the lens through which this essay examines debates over accountability, debt, and reconciliation and provides a means to consider how present-day efforts to foreclose the genealogies of historical injustice have been shaped in response to the contemporary crisis of global capitalism and financialization. Focusing on the salience of racialization and settler colonialism, this essay studies how and why the CRA’s juridical assemblage brings into proximity discrepant histories of dispossession and racism so as to situate these within an overarching teleology of progress and improvement in the face of contemporary economic volatility and social instability.

Arizona IPLP Conference — “Cobell Settlement Land Buy-Back Program for Tribal Nations: 2014 and Beyond.”

Here:

Register Now_January 2014

NYTs: Feds Looking for Thousands of Cobell Settlement Beneficiaries

Here.

2nd Annual Tribal Lands Conference @ the University of Arizona

Here:

Arizona Lands

Online registration for attorneys and state and federal employees is available at:

 

Online registration for Indian land owners/allottees, tribal leaders, tribal employees, students, and university faculty and staff is available at:

Gingold and Pearl: Tribute to Eloise Cobell

Dennis M. Gingold and M. Alexander Lowther (Pearl) have published “A Tribute to Eloise Cobell” in the Public Land & Resources Law Review.

The abstract:

Cobell v. Salazar, the landmark class-action case, and its settlement arise out of a painful period in American history. For more than a century, the government’s abuse of individual Indian trust beneficiaries has been documented in various government reports and has been debated in Congress, but nothing that Congress did or said stopped egregious breaches of trust committed by the executive branch. The United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit noted that “[t]he General Accounting Office, Interior Department Inspector General, and Office of Management and Budget, among others, have all condemned the mismanagement of the Individual Indian Money trust accounts over the past twenty years.” Indeed, the government exploited the Individual Indian Trust as if those funds were its own, wholly disregarding both its statutory and common law trust obligations and the needs and interests of hundreds of thousands of impoverished Indians.

No one did anything to stop that abuse until Elouise Cobell stood up and told the government, “no more.” This Article relates the actions in equity taken by Elouise Cobell to compel the United States to conduct a full historical accounting of all IIM Trust funds, to correct and restate IIM account balances, to fix broken Trust management systems, and to undertake other critical trust reform measures to ensure prudent Trust Management, and examines its remarkable achievements.

Coverage and Commentary on Interior Buy Back Program

McLatchy

NPR

Interior

Galanda

Lannan Foundation v. Gingold et al. — Fight over Cobell Settlement Attorney Fees

Here is the news coverage from BLT, which includes this link to the complaint.

Cobell Order on Distribution to Deceased Class Members

Here:

Cobell Order

IRS Phone Forum for Indian Tribal Settlement Taxes

Phone Forum for Indian Tribal Settlement Taxes

Date: June 26, 2013

Time: 2 p.m. Eastern Time

What: During this 60 minute presentation we will cover the federal income taxation of:

• Settlement payments in the Cobell case

• Settlement payments covered in Notice 2013-1

• Payments made in response to discrimination claims in the Keepseagle case

Click here to register for this phone forum (AT&T link). Please register as soon as possible because space is limited.

If you already have questions regarding the issues we plan to cover, please email to us at: tege.itg.askus@irs.gov. Please use the subject line: Indian Tribal Settlement Phone Forum. We will attempt to address your questions during the forum.

 

We look forward to the opportunity to serve you on June 26th.

Cobell Litigation Officially Over

Here.

Federal press release here.