Ninth Circuit Affirms Tribal Court Conviction

The case is Eagle v. Yerington Paiute Tribe, and involves an interesting question: whether tribal prosecutors have to prove Indian status beyond a reasonable doubt. The answer appears to be no.

Opinion.

[Appellant opening brief unavailable.]

Yerington Paiute Brief

Eagle Reply Brief

Jeffredo v. Macarro Cert Petition re: Pechanga Disenrollments

Here: Jeffredo Cert Petition

Incidentally, a few days after the petitioners filed, the Ninth Circuit panel adopted an amended opinion (here).

Lower court materials are here.

Questions presented:

1. Is the Writ of Habeas Corpus under the Indian Civil Rights Act limited solely to tribal criminal proceedings instead of also including tribal civil proceedings which result in the disenrollment of life-long tribal citizens?

2. Does the combination of “disenrollment,” which is the stripping away of Appellants’ life-long tribal citizenship and the current and potential restrictions placed on Appellants, constitute a severe restraint on their liberty so as to satisfy the “detention” requirement of Section 1303 of the Indian Civil Rights Act?

3. Does the disenrollment of life-long tribal members, by itself, constitute a severe restraint of liberty so as to satisfy the “detention” requirement of the Indian Civil Rights Act?

4. Did the Appellants exhaust their tribal remedies by going through every Pechanga Tribal appeal proceeding available to contest their disenrollment?

I don’t see how this is certworthy. There’s no split in authority alleged by the petitioners (they didn’t even try to assert a split with the Second Circuit which decided a somewhat similar case (Poodry) years ago). I imagine the Supreme Court one day will reconsider the National Farmers Union tribal court exhaustion doctrine but this doesn’t seem to be a very good vehicle for that because it’s not a tribal court jurisdiction case at the heart of the doctrine. Plus, it’s an internal tribal matter with no national importance whatsoever (other than the side-show of Indian gaming wealth).

Finally, despite the dissent from District Court Judge Wilkens, I don’t think the Roberts Court is inclined to expand habeas rights in any way, let alone to benefit Indian people in this way. As Justice Holmes told Justice Brandeis, the Supreme Court is not there to do justice.

UPDATED (5/10/10): Romero v. Goodrich — Another Case re: Tribal Court Authority to Order Consecutive Sentences

Here are the materials so far in Romero v. Goodrich (D. N.M.), case out of the Pueblo of Nambé:

SWITCA Affidavit and Opinion

Nambé Pueblo Motion to Dismiss

Romero Opposition

Nambé Reply

Romero v Goodrich Magistrate Report

Apparently, this case was dismissed when the Pueblo of Nambé commuted the sentence of Ronald Romero: Motion to Reconsider — Commuted Sentences

Morrison v. Spang — Tribal Court Exhaustion in ICRA Habeas Proceeding

Here are the materials from the District court in Montana:

Morrison Magistrate Report

Morrison DCT Order

Federal Court Dismisses ICRA Habeas Case for Failure to Exhaust Tribal Remedies

Here is the opinion in this unremarkable case (Acosta-Vigil DCT Order).

What is remarkable, though I could be wrong, is why the tribal judge is literally defending the petition. Shouldn’t the tribal prosecutor be doing this?

Here is the response: Delorme-Gaines Response