Alex Skibine on Indian Law and the New Equal Protection

Alexander Tallchief Skinine has posted “Using the New Equal Protection to Challenge Federal Control Over Tribal Lands” on SSRN.

Here is the abstract:

There are today over 55 million acres of land owned by Indian tribes or their members that the Federal government claims are held in trust by the United States for the benefit of these tribes or members. Throughout history, purporting to act as a trustee for the Indians, Congress has enacted laws severely restricting the ability of Indians to make management decisions with respect to these lands. Many of these laws, for instance impose federal approval requirements before these tribally-owned lands can be leased, sold, or otherwise encumbered. This Article calls into question the power of the federal government to impose such restrictions and argues that these laws constitute a denial of equal protection under the Due Process Clause Fifth Amendment. Since 1974, laws made specifically applicable to Indians because of their status as Indians have been held not to involve racial classifications but political ones because these laws do not affect all “Indians” but only those Indians that are also members of Indian tribes. While this holding has been welcomed by tribes when fighting to uphold laws benefitting Indians, it has also impaired their ability to make effective equal protection arguments against laws detrimental to them. The prevailing view is that in order to mount a successful equal protection challenge, Indians would have to show that such laws are not rationally tied to Congress’ unique trust obligations towards Indians. Others take the position that regular rational basis review would be applicable to such equal protection challenges. This Article disagrees with both positions and argues that the new Supreme Court Equal Protection jurisprudence as reflected in cases such as United States v. Windsor (2013) can be successfully used by Indian tribes to attack those laws imposing, only on them, federal approval requirements before such lands can be leased or otherwise encumbered. Under such new jurisprudence a law can be set aside under equal protection either if it was based on unconstitutional animus towards a vulnerable minority or if it did not pass a somewhat more intensive level of review than rational basis. What some scholars have called “rational basis with bite.”

Highly recommended!

Opening Federal Circuit Brief in Shinnecock Nation v. United States

Here:

Shinnecock Opening Brief

Lower court materials here.

Federal Court Dismisses Billion Dollar Shinnecock Land Claims Suit

Here are the materials in Shinnecock Indian Nation v. United States (Fed. Cl.):

7 US Motion to Dismiss

10 Shinnecock Response

13 US Reply

Shinnecock Indian Nation v. United States, No. 12-836, Slip Op. (Fed. Cl. Aug. 29, 2013)

Complaint here.

Fifth Amendment Order in Criminal Case Arising on Fort Apache Reservation

Here are materials in United States v. Dehose (D. Ariz.):

DCT Order on Motion to Suppress

Dehose Motion to Suppress

 

Federal Circuit Affirms Dismissal of Fifth Amendment Claim re: Colorado River Indian Tribes’ Reservation Lease

Here is the opinion in McGuire v. United States.

Briefs:

McGuire Opening Brief

Federal Appellee Brief

McGuire Reply

An excerpt:

Jerry McGuire leased a plot of farmland in Arizona from the Colorado River Indian Tribes (“CRIT”) with the approval of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (“BIA”). He filed this Fifth Amendment regulatory takings claim after the BIA removed a bridge that he used to access portions of the leased property. McGuire does not claim that removal of the bridge was itself a taking, but rather that the BIA’s  alleged refusal to authorize replacement of the bridge was a taking of his property rights. After trial the Court of Federal Claims (the “Claims Court”) denied McGuire’s regulatory takings claim. McGuire appeals. Because we hold that McGuire’s regulatory takings claim never ripened and that, even if McGuire’s claim had ripened, he had no cognizable property interest, we affirm.

Lower court materials here.

Shinnecock Indian Nation Sues United States for $1.1Billion over Land Dispossession

Here is the complaint:

Shinnecock Complaint

D.C. Circuit Rejects Challenge to Western Shoshone Claims Distribution Act on Standing Grounds

Here are the materials in Timbisha Shoshone Tribe v. Salazar:

CADC Opinion

Timbisha Opening Brief

Interior Answering Brief

Timbisha Reply

Timbisha Supplemental Brief

Background materials are here.

Federal Claims Court Rejects Regulatory Takings Claim in On-Reservation Lease Dispute

Here is the opinion in McGuire in United States:

McGuire Opinion

A prior related opinion (denying the govt’s motion for summary J) is here.

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.

Opening Brief in Timbisha Shoshone Tribe v. Salazar Judgment Funds Claim

An interesting case to watch. Here is the brief:

Timbisha Opening Brief

Here was the original complaint and a press release explaining the claim.

And here is the district court order dismissing the claim:

DCT Order in Timbisha Shoshone v Salazar