NCAI Resolution re: Cobell (proposed)

ECWS-10-008 cobell v salazar

An excerpt:

NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that NCAI does hereby demand that the Congress of the United States conduct hearings to ensure that Indian country has time to consider the likely consequences, transparency, and fairness of the proposed legislation; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the Department of Interior and the Cobell Plaintiffs conduct regional consultation with Indian Country to explain the proposed settlement and answer questions from affected Indian people.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that this resolution shall be the policy of NCAI until it is withdrawn or modified by subsequent resolution.

Cobell Settlement Deadline Extended to End of February

From the BLT:

The federal government and lawyers for the plaintiffs have agreed to extend the deadline to finalize a $1.41 billion settlement in long-running Indian trust litigation past Dec. 31..

The new deadline is Feb. 28.

Kilpatrick Stockton partner Keith Harper, a lawyer for lead plaintiff Elouise Cobell, and a spokeswoman for the Department of Justice issued identical statements via e-mail: “In order for the agreement to remain valid after its existing December 31, 2009 Legislative Enactment Deadline, the parties have agreed to extend that deadline through February 28, 2010.”

Harper said he and D.C. solo practitioner Dennis Gingold,who also represents Cobell, signed the agreement late Tuesday. The extension does not require court approval, and no other changes were made to the settlement terms, Harper said.

The settlement agreement required Congress to pass legislation by Dec. 31 authorizing payment to the plaintiffs, but lawmakers didn’t do so before leaving town for the Christmas holiday. Continue reading

Cobell Plaintiffs File Cert Petition

From BLT (miigwetch to A.K.) (cert petition, with appendices, is here):

The lawyers in the long-running Indian trust litigation in Washington find themselves in an odd position: filing a petition for certiorari just two weeks after the sides announced a $1.41 billion settlement to end the case.

This week, lawyers for lead plaintiff Elouise Cobell filed their petition with the U.S. Supreme Court to challenge a ruling in July in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. The settlement is not final and so the lawyers are keeping open their options.

The appeals court ruling erased a $455.6 million award—restitution for the government’s breach of trust in managing billions of dollars flowing from natural resources tied to Indian lands. The court also dismissed a finding that an historical accounting of individual Indian trust accounts is impossible. A three-judge panel said the government has no obligation to conduct a complete historical accounting—just “the best accounting possible” with whatever money Congress decides to appropriate.

“As a result of that holding, the government is responsible only for whatever accounting it chooses to pay for, and Indian beneficiaries will never know what happened to billions of dollars of their assets that the United States purportedly held in trust for them subject to the most exacting fiduciary standards,” Cobell’s lawyers, including D.C. solo practitioner Dennis Gingold and a Kilpatrick Stockton team, said in their petition for certiorari. “The court of appeals’ holding turns traditional, controlling trust law on its head, and is akin to giving the fox sole discretion to determine the security features of the henhouse.”

Cobell’s lawyers, who include Kilpatrick Stockton partner Keith Harper, said in a footnote on the first page of their petition that the plaintiffs and the government executed a settlement Dec. 7 that is contingent on legislation that authorizes payment and, in addition, final approval from the presiding trial court judge.

Continue reading

Yesterday’s Diane Rehm Show on Cobell Archived

Here:

Diane Rehm (NPR) on Cobell

It’s over now….sorry.

Guests

David Hayes, deputy secretary, Department of the Interior.

Rep. Tom Cole, Republican Representative for Oklahoma’s 4th District; a tribal-enrolled member of the Chickasaw Nation; co-chair of the House Native American Caucus.

Dennis Gingold, lead counsel for the plaintiffs in Cobell v. Salazar.

Elouise Cobell, lead plaintiff in class-action lawsuit Cobell v. Salazar; member of Montana’s Blackfeet Tribe.

Cobell Settlement Agreement

Here — 12-07-2009Settlement_Agreement

Cobell Settlement

From DOI.gov:

Update: Assistant AG Perrelli’s Remarks — ASG – Cobell 12.8.09

D.C. Circuit Requires Interior to Make Accounting & Vacates Trial Court Order

The D.C. Circuit vacated and remanded back to Judge Robertson the Cobell litigation (opinion here). A key excerpt:

We now hold that the district court correctly held that the
1994 Act and Cobell VI required a full accounting, but erred in
holding that an accounting cannot be conducted because, in the
district court’s view, Congress will never appropriate the funds
necessary to conduct such an accounting. The statute gives the
plaintiff class a right to an accounting. Sitting in equity, the
district court has the authority to approve a plan that efficiently
uses limited government resources to achieve that goal. It is
within the power of the district court to order an accounting
without requiring Interior to perform analyses the costs of which
exceed the benefits payable to individual American Indians. It
would indeed be “nuts” to spend billions to recover millions.
Cobell XX, 532 F. Supp. 2d at 86. A court sitting in equity may
avoid reaching that absurdity.

We now hold that the district court correctly held that the 1994 Act and Cobell VI required a full accounting, but erred in holding that an accounting cannot be conducted because, in the district court’s view, Congress will never appropriate the funds necessary to conduct such an accounting. The statute gives the plaintiff class a right to an accounting. Sitting in equity, the district court has the authority to approve a plan that efficiently uses limited government resources to achieve that goal. It is within the power of the district court to order an accounting without requiring Interior to perform analyses the costs of which exceed the benefits payable to individual American Indians. It would indeed be “nuts” to spend billions to recover millions. Cobell XX, 532 F. Supp. 2d at 86. A court sitting in equity may avoid reaching that absurdity.

More:

When we vacated the district court’s injunction for abuse of discretion, we noted in particular that the injunction “caused the cost . . . to rise by more than an order of magnitude, from $335 million over five years to more than $10 billion.” Id. at 1077. We then specifically approved the use of statistical sampling on the rationale that for some transactions, “the average cost of accounting, per transaction, would exceed the average value of the transactions.” Id. at 1078. We now take that reasoning a step further, and instruct the district court to use its equitable power to enforce the best accounting that Interior can provide, with the resources it receives, or expects to receive, from Congress. Therefore we vacate the district court’s orders and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BLT on Cobell Oral Argument

From the BLT:

The U.S. Court of Appeals has issued nine opinions in the longstanding dispute between a group of American Indians and the Interior Department, and with yet another oral argument session today in the 13-year-old case you can expect at least one more opinion.

“Has it only been 13 years?” Chief Judge David Sentelle said today in court, where more than 100 people interested in the case gathered in the ceremonial courtroom to hear argument. “Some of us didn’t have gray hair when this started,” said D.C. solo practitioner Dennis Gingold, lead counsel for the plaintiffs. “Some of us had hair,” Judge Douglas Ginsburg responded.

The plaintiffs, including Elouise Cobell, a member of the Blackfeet tribe in Montana, allege the government owes billions of dollars for mismanaging a trust fund for the collection and dispersal of royalties from oil and gas companies, among others, that leased Indian land.

U.S. District Judge James Robertson last summer ordered the government to pay $455.6 million to the plaintiffs stemming from mismanagement of the Individual Indian Money trust. Both sides appealed the ruling. Robertson called a full, historical account “impossible” considering the cost of such a pursuit.

Prominent Lawyer Who Worked on Cobell Walks On

From How Appealing:

“Kilpatrick Stockton’s Mark Levy Dead”: This post appears at “The BLT: The Blog of Legal Times.”

And the ABA Journal’s “Law News Now” blog has a post titled “Kilpatrick Stockton Lawyer Dead from Gunshot Wound.”

Attorney Mark I. Levy served on the Advisory Committee on the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure….

* * *

Levy worked on one of the recent cert petitions.