Federal Court Refuses to Suppress Statements Made to FBI under Advice of Tribal Court Lay Advocate

Here are the materials in United States v. Chase Alone (D. S.D.):

Chase Alone Magistrate R&R

Chase Alone Objection

DCT Order on Chase Alone R&R

Apparently under the Red Bird case, a tribal lay advocate is not “counsel” under the Fifth and Sixth Amendments, so any statements made to the FBI after a tribal criminal defendant is represented by a lay advocate are not required to be suppressed.

Update in Flandreau/South Dakota IGRA Good Faith Negotiations Case

Here are the new materials in Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe v. South Dakota (D. S.D.):

South Dakota Motion for Summary J

Flandreau Motion for Judgment on Pleadings

DCT Order Denying Summary Judgment.

Previous posts on this case are here (governor’s obligation to testify) and here (tribal financial docs).

 

 

Sprint Communications v. Native American Telecom & Crow Creek Sioux Tribal Court

Here is that opinion:

Sprint v Native American Telecom — Denial of PI.

An excerpt:

Defendant, Native American Telecom (NAT), moves for a preliminary injunction to enjoin plaintiff, Sprint Communications Company, from withholding interstate switched access charges that NAT has already billed or will bill to Sprint in the future. Sprint resists the motion. The motion is denied.

Alltel v. Dejordy: Subpoena of Gonzales Law Firm Records

As reported on Indianz….

Here are some of the relevant materials in this issue:

ALLTEL – GONZALES FIRM BRIEF FILED IN COURT (4-13-11).7

ALLTELV.DEJORDY-OSTSOPPOSITONTOCONTEMT(4-13-11)

ALLTEL V. DEJORDY – ORDER ON ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE

Challenge to “Gift Deed” Fails

Here is the opinion in Bernard v. Interior (D. S.D.): Bernard v DOI

Federal Court Affirms Interior Decision to Take Yankton Travel Plaza Parcel into Trust

Here is the order in County of Charles Mix v. DOI (D. S.D.):

DCT Order Denying Granting Summary J against Charles Mix County

Here are the briefs.

Federal Court Remands Yankton Sioux Trust Acquisition to DOI to Allow Review of 23 Documents

Here are the materials in South Dakota v. DOI (D. S.D.):

DCT Order Remanding to Interior

Interior Motion to Dismiss

South Dakota Motion for Summary J

It should be noted that in this case South Dakota is challenging a trust acquisition called the Wagner Heights Addition. The land is to be used for tribal housing, and in fact the tribal housing is already there.

Federal Court Abrogates Tribal Immunity in Denying Motion to Quash Subpoena in a Third Party Contract Breach Claim

Here is the order denying the motion to quash in Alltel v. DeJordy (D.S.D.): DCT Order on Motion to Quash.

Occasionally, court opinions prove the power of the professor’s pen (and this is definitely intended not to be a criticism of the professor or the court, both of whom for which we have the greatest respect):

Joshua Kanassatega, an Assistant Professor of Law and Director of the Indian Law Program at Gonzaga University School of Law, concludes James and Catskill Development, are “misguided” because:

1. They fail to utilize the existing balancing tests used to excuse high ranking government officials from giving deposition testimony;

2. They fail to properly apply Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(c)(3)(A) and to consider the policies underlying  the rule;

3. They wrongly analogized the sovereignty and immunity of the United States to Indian tribal sovereignty and tribal immunity; and

4. As a federal policy matter, the federal court’s application of the “discovery immunity exception” undermines Indian tribal sovereignty.

Joshua Jay Kanassattega, The Discovery Immunity Exception in Indian Country — Promoting American Indian Sovereignty By Fostering the Rule of Law, 31 Whittier L. Rev. 199 (2009) (summarized).

Professor Kanassattega’s analysis looks to the United States Supreme Court for some general guidance on this issue.

In the 1986 case Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Reservation v. Wold Engineering, the Court articulated a concept of limitations on the federal common law immunity that the Indian Tribes possessed. While recognizing that common law immunity was a “necessary corollary to Indian sovereignty and self-governance,” the Court, in passing, noted that because Indian Tribes possessed only quasi-sovereignty, such immunity is not congruent with the immunity possessed by the United States or the several states. More ominously, the Court added, “this aspect of tribal sovereignty, like all others, is subject to  plenary federal control and definition.”

Kanassattega, supra at 240-41 (citing Three Affiliated Tribes, 476 U.S. 877, 890-91, 106 S. Ct. 2305, 90 L. Ed. 2d 881 (1986) (citing Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez, 436 U.S. 49, 58, 98 S. Ct. 1670, 56 L. Ed. 2d 106 (1978) and United States v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 309 U.S. 506, 513, 60 S. Ct. 653, 84 L. Ed. 894 (1940)).

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Federal Court Dismisses South Dakota’s Challenge to BIA Trust Acquisition on behalf of Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate

Here is that opinion: South Dakota v Salazar.

And the cross-motions:

USA Motion to Dismiss — Sisseton case

SD Motion for Summary J — Sisseton case

It is apparent from South Dakota’s continuing challenges to Section 5 that they are hoping for a vehicle that could eventually justify Supreme Court review of the constitutionality of Section 5.

Federal Court Refuses to Require S.Dakota Governor to Testify re: Good Faith Negotiations under IGRA

Here are the recent materials in Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe v. South Dakota (D. S.D.):

DCT Order Granting Motion for Protective Order

SD Motion for Protective Order

Santee Opposition

SD Reply

Of course, the court notes that all of this might change depending on the outcome of California’s cert petition in Rincon.