Craven et al. Appeal to Cobell Settlement Does Not Require Appeal Bond

Here is that order:

Cobell DCT Order re Appeal Bond

The Cobell plaintiffs asked for millions:

 Pending before the Court are the following motions: (1) Plaintiffs’ Unopposed Motion for Appeal Bond Pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 7 [Docket No. 3856], which seeks “that this Court require [Kimberly] Craven to post a bond or other security in the amount of $8,306,439.93 to ensure prompt payment of plaintiffs’-appellees’ costs on affirmance of this Court’s final judgment order,” Pls.’ First Mot. for Appeal Bond 1; (2) Plaintiffs’ Second Unopposed Motion for Appeal Bond Pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 7 [Docket No. 3859], which makes a similar request that an $8,306,439.93 bond be imposed against the Harvest Institute Freedmen Federation, LLC, Leatrice Tanner–Brown, and William Warrior; (3) Plaintiffs’ Unopposed Motion for Expedited Consideration of Plaintiff[s’] Second Unopposed Motion for Appeal Bond Pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 7 [Docket No. 3860]; and (4) Plaintiffs’ Third Unopposed Motion for Appeal Bond Pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 7 [Docket No. 3869], which further requests that an $8,306,439.93 bond be imposed against Ortencia Ford and Donnelly Villegas. For the reasons set forth below, the Court will deny all four motions.

BLT reports on the judge’s reaction to the plaintiffs’ request:

No opponent of the settlement, Cobell’s lawyers said, “is entitled to a free pass at delaying justice” for the hundreds of thousands of Native Americans who make up the class. The suit, filed in 1996, sought an accounting of the government’s handling of individual Indian trust accounts flowing from the use of land for timber, natural gas and minerals.

“The delay caused by Craven’s appeal means that more elderly and more infirm class members will pass on without obtaining justice that they deserve,” Cobell’s lawyers said in the court filing (.pdf). “The human cost of Craven’s appeal can never be quantified, and as this Court has found, many of the class members depend on their trust funds for the most basic staples of life.”

Craven’s attorney, Theodore Frank of the Center for Class Action Fairness, said in response (.pdf) that the appeal is not frivolous and that Cobell’s lawyers are exaggerating their costs. Frank alleged Cobell’s request for an appeal bond was brought in bad faith and urged Hogan to sanction the plaintiffs’ lawyers.

***

For instance, Hogan criticized the plaintiffs’ lawyers for contending that there are established practices in the D.C. Circuit for appeal bonds. Cobell’s lawyers, in one instance, pointed to a case in which a federal trial judge declined to order a bond.

Hogan said “it goes without saying” that a published decision denying an appeal bond “cannot credibly be cited as establishing a ‘practice.’” The judge said he was “surprised” Cobell’s lawyers cited to cases that don’t help their cause much.

“It is unclear to the Court whether the unsupported arguments and representations in the plaintiffs’ briefs were intentional, the result of carelessness and haste, or otherwise can be reasonably explained,” Hogan said.

Sanctions, the judge said, are not warranted. But he said he ordered Cobell’s lawyers to file a declaration that addresses the concerns he raised.

The remaining appeal docs are here.

Federal Court Dismisses Vann v. Salazar; Cherokee Nation v. Nash Remains

Here is the WaPo coverage, and the materials:

DCT Order Dismissing Vann Complaint

Federal Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss

Smith Motion to Dismiss

Vann Motion to Amend Complaint

Vann Motion to Consolidate

Federal Court Denies Muwekma Ohlone Tribe’s Objections to DOI’s Decision Not to Acknowledge Tribe

Here is the opinion in Muwekma Ohlone Tribe v. Salazar (D. D.C.):

DCT Order Granting USA Motion for Summary J

And the materials:

Muwekma Motion for Summary J

Interior Cross-Motion for Summary J

Update in Wyandotte Nation v. Salazar

The government has moved to change venue and the State of Kansas has moved to intervene:

Salazar Motion to Transfer Venue

Kansas Motion to Intervene

Federal Court Grants Attorney Fees to Alliance to Save the Mattaponi in Environmental Suit

Here are the materials in Alliance to Save the Mattaponi v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (D. D.C.):

Magistrate Recommendationr re Atty Fees

US Objection

DCT Order on Atty Fees

Update in Vann v. Salazar — With Materials on Cherokee Principal Chief Election

Here are additional materials:

Vann Reply

Vann Supplemental Brief

Joint Motion for Order

Federal Government and Cherokee Nation Responses to Cherokee Freedmen Motion to Enjoin Principal Chief Election

Here are the updated materials in Vann v. Salazar (D. D.C.):

USA Response to Vann Motion

Cherokee Nation Response to Vann Motion

The Vann motion is here.

Cherokee Freedmen Motion for Injunction in Federal Court Seeking Vote in Principal Chief Election

Here are these materials, filed in Vann v. Salazar (D. D.C.):

Freedmen Plaintiffs Motion for Preliminary Injunction (Vann)

Memo in Support of Freedmen Plaintiffs Motion for Preliminary Injunction

PI Motion Exhibits

And the text of an accompanying press release: Continue reading

Wyandotte Nation v. Salazar: Off-Reservation Gaming Application Complaint

Here (as reported in Indianz):

Wyandottte Nation v. Salazar Complaint

Preliminary Materials in Clark County, Wash. Challenge to Cowlitz Trust Acquisition

Here:

Cowlitz Motion to Intervene

Federal Defendants Answer.

Here is the complaint.

News article here.