Body Cam Footage from Altercation between Creek Lighthorse and Olkmulgee County Jailer

From NonDoc:

Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals Says Castro-Huerta Means that Congress Didn’t Preempt State Criminal Jurisdiction in Indian Country [No, that’s not the law but nothing matters anymore.]

Here are the materials in Deo v. Parish:

Brief in Support of Mandamus Petition

State Response Brief

Opinions

Proposed State of Oklahoma, Act of June 16, 1906, Proposed forest reserve in southeastern Indian Territory

Modoc Drops Reservation Boundaries Suit

Here is the motion in the now-consolidated case of Eastern Shawnee Tribe v. Drummond (N.D. Okla.):

Prior post here.

Complaints by Eastern Shawnee and Seneca-Cayuga are here.

Modoc Nation Brings Reservation Boundaries Suit

Here is the complaint in Modoc Nation v. Drummond (N.D. Okla.):

Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals Briefs in Stitt v. City of Tulsa

Here:

Tenth Circuit Denies Certificate of Appealability to Prisoner Attempting to Invoke McGirt Jurisdictional Defense

Here are the materials in Williams v. Harpe:

Application for Certificate of Appealability

CA10 Order

Tenth Circuit Affirms Post-McGirt Federal Conviction Where Jury Might Could Have Acquitted Defendant Under Oklahoma Self-Defense Law

Here is the opinion in United States v. Budder.

Briefs:

City of Tulsa v Hooper Stay Application Materials

Here:

Lower court materials here.

Nicholas Stamates on White Collar Crime in the City of Tulsa after McGirt and Castro-Huerta

Nicholas Stamates has posted “The Aftermath of McGirt and Castro-Huerta: Problems and Possible Solutions relating to White Collar Crime in the City of Tulsa,” recently published in the Texas Tech Law Review, on SSRN.

Here is the abstract:

The Supreme Court ruling in McGirt v. Oklahoma drastically changed the legal jurisdiction of most of the state of Oklahoma under federal law. In 2017 the 10th Circuit held in Murphy v. Royal that the Oklahoma Enabling Act of 1906 never disestablished the reservations of the Five Civilized Tribes and the Supreme Court would concur with that opinion in McGirt v. Oklahoma which means that the Major Crimes Act and other federal and tribal laws relating to Indians now apply in Eastern Oklahoma, including the City of Tulsa, and not Oklahoma law in applicable cases. In doing so, the Supreme Court inadvertently created a white-collar crime jurisdictional nightmare but one that has many solutions that enshrine tribal sovereignty and corporate responsibility among Tulsa based businesses. These solutions include state and tribal compacts, congressional legislation and proactive measures by Tulsa corporations such as “McGirt forms” that list Indian status of involved parties under federal law in case of a crime, choice of law provisions in contracts for civil suits in Tribal Courts so that corporations know what to expect and can shape the outcome of a case and working with local law schools so that new hires are prepared for the post McGirt and Castro-Huerta landscape.

Oklahoma Federal Court Orders Immediate Release of Native Convict from State Custody

Here are the materials in Graham v. White (N.D. Okla.)