Response Brief in Lomeli v. Kelly

Here:

Lomeli v Kelly COA Contempt Response Brief of Appellees

Nooksack Tribal Court Materials on Disenrollees Motion for Contempt

Here are the new materials in St. Germaine v. Kelly (Nooksack Tribal Court):

St Germain v. Kelly Motion for Order to Show Cause Re Contempt

St Germain v. Kelly Declaration of Leah Zapata

St. Germain v. Kelly Declaration of Agripina Smith

St. Germain v. Kelly Response to Plaintiffs Motion of Ord to Show Cause Re Contempt

Previous materials in this case are here and here.

 

Updated Materials in Nooksack Disenrollment Appeal — Roberts v. Kelly

Here:

Roberts v Kelly – First Amended Complaint w Appendices

Roberts v Kelly Order Accepting First Amended Complaint

Roberts v. Kelly Declaration of Gabriel S. Galanda in Support of Motion for Contempt

Roberts v. Kelly Motion for Contempt Against Kelly Defendants

Roberts v. Kelly Motion for Reconsideration of Sua Sponte September 6, 2013 Order

Roberts v. Kelly Order Denying Motion for Contempt

Bellingham Herald: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/2013/09/19/3212992/both-nooksack-tribal-factions.html

Read more here: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/2013/09/19/3212992/both-nooksack-tribal-factions.html#storylink=cpy

Al Jazeera America!: http://america.aljazeera.com/watch/shows/live-news/2013/9/tribal-families-battleefforttorejectthem.html

New Scholarship on Tribal Court Contempt Power over Nonmembers

The North Carolina Law Review has published “The Jurisdictional ‘Haze’: An Examination of Tribal Court Contempt Powers Over Non-Indians.”

Here is the abstract:

Recently, in the case of In re Russell, the Cherokee Tribal Court confronted the thorny issue of criminal contempt­. The court ruled that because all courts’ criminal contempt powers are inherent, they fall outside the scope of Oliphant. This Recent Development argues, however, that while imprecise facets of Oliphant and contempt law would make it appropriate for the Cherokee Tribal Court to claim power over summary criminal contempt prosecutions of non-Indians in some circumstances, the court’s blanket decree that criminal contempt is always within a tribal court’s jurisdiction runs counter to current law.

Part I presents the facts of the Cherokee Tribal Court’s order in In re Russell as the backdrop for a discussion of the interplay between contempt law and tribal court jurisdiction. Part II provides a brief overview of tribal criminal court jurisdiction under the Supreme Court’s ruling in Oliphant. Part III surveys the history of contempt law, explaining the sometimes subtle differences between the types of contempt proceedings and how they are jurisdictionally determinative in tribal courts. Part IV applies the principles of Oliphant and contempt law to In re Russell, explaining why the Cherokee Tribal Court stepped beyond its jurisdictional limitations in the case. Part IV concludes by setting forth ways in which tribal courts can, consistent with Oliphant, enforce their authority through their contempt powers.

We will post a PDF of the article once we get it. If, that is.

We do have the order that inspired this article, and it is here.