Michigan Federal Court Dismisses Lay Advocate’s Civil Rights Suit against Sault Tribal Judge and Private Attorney, Orders $1500 Sanction Award

Here are the materials in Bellfy v. Edwards (W.D. Mich.):

1 Complaint

9 Fabry Motion to Dismiss

11 Edwards Motion to Dismiss

14 Bellfy Subpoena

15 Bellfy Motion to Strike

16 Fabry Motion to Quash

23 Edwards Response to 15

24 Fabry Response to 15

25 Bellfy Motion for Judgment on Pleadings

26 Fabry Response to 25

27 Edwards Response to 25

29 Edwards Motion for Sanctions

30 DCT Order Quashing Subpoena

31 Bellfy Motion for Summary J

32 Edwards Response to 31

33 Fabry Response to 31

34 Magistrate Report

35 Bellfy Objection

36 Edwards Response

38 DCT Order

No Judicial Immunity For Pre-Signed Removal Orders

Not an ICWA case, or even involving an Indian child, but this decision illustrates some disturbing removal practices in Wayne County. The U.S. Eastern District court found that because the judge left pre-signed removal orders for juvenile officials, she is not entitled to judicial immunity. This practice created an administrative procedure, not a judicial one:

It is not Hartsfield’s actions in signing the form of order that plaintiffs complain about.
Rather, it is Hartfield’s actions in putting in place a policy which allowed a pre-signed removal form to be filled in and docketed by non-judicial personnel, without judicial review, for a petition submitted to the family court after normal business hours. These actions, if true, are administrative. Hartsfield essentially signed pieces of paper that had no vitality until a third party–in this case a probation officer–filled in certain information on the paper. At the time the form of order was signed by Hartsfield, there were no parties before the court nor were there any active child custody proceedings. Her actions therefore could not have been “judicial acts.”

This is the federal case filed by the parents in the “Mike’s Hard Lemonade” removal case where the father accidentally gave his child alcoholic lemonade at a baseball game, leading to the child’s removal from the home, and the father having to leave the home so the child could return. The case will go forward against the judge, but not against the individual DHS workers in their individual capacities.

 

Important Michigan Tribal Court Decision re: Civil Rights, Judicial Immunity, and the Awarding of Attorney Fees

Here is the decision in Joseph Martin v. Little River Band of Ottawa Indians from the Little River Band Tribal Court (Judge Bill Brott, sitting pro tem): Martin v. LRB.

Tribal Judicial Immunity in Federal Criminal Cases

In U.S. v. Wahtony, the District of Idaho held that a federal criminal defendant’s subpoena of a tribal judge’s background must be quashed on sovereign immunity grounds.

shoshone-bannock-motion-to-quash

wahtomy-response-brief

shoshone-bannock-reply-brief

us-v-wahtomy-dct-order