Tohono O’Odham Nation AG Job Posting

Tohono O’odham NationOffice of Attorney General
The Office of Attorney General is now hiring an Assistant Attorney General I. Applicants must have at least one year of progressively responsible legal experience. The Office of Attorney General represents the interests of the Tohono O’odham Nation in tribal, state, and federal venues. Attorneys in the office enjoy a diverse practice overlaid with challenging jurisdictional issues. 
The Nation offers generous benefits including paid holidays, sick and annual leave, medical, dental, and vision insurance, retirement, and life insurance. Applicants must pass a background check. Send resume, legal writing sample, and three references to Acting Attorney General Laura Berglan via email at laura.berglan@tonation-nsn.gov.

Updated Ninth Circuit Briefs in United States v. Alvirez

Here:

Alvirez Supplemental Brief

US Supplemental Brief

The Ninth Circuit panel decided this one way back in 2013, but withdrew the opinion to await the en banc decision in United States v. Zepeda.

Ninth Circuit Sitting En Banc Announced “Indian Status” Test under Major Crimes Act

Here is the opinion in United States v. Zepeda.

From the syllabus:

The en banc court affirmed a defendant’s convictions and sentence under the Indian Major Crimes Act, which authorizes federal jurisdiction over certain crimes committed by Indians in Indian country.

The en banc court held in order to prove Indian status under the IMCA, the government must prove that the defendant (1) has some quantum of Indian blood and (2) is a member of, or is affiliated with, a federally recognized tribe. The court held further that under the IMCA, a defendant must have been an Indian at the time of the charged conduct, and
that, under the second prong, a tribe’s federally recognized status is a question of law to be determined by the trial judge. Overruling United States v. Maggi, 598 F.3d 1073 (9th Cir.
2010), the en banc court held that the federal recognition requirement does not extend to the first prong of the Indian status test. The court held that the evidence at trial was sufficient to support the finding that the defendant was an Indian within the meaning of the IMCA at the time of his crimes.

The en banc court held that the defendant’s sentence was not unreasonable because it was mandated by 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), which required the district court to impose consecutive mandatory minimum sentences on the defendant’s convictions for use of a firearm during a crime of violence.

The en banc court agreed with the three-judge panel’s reasons for rejecting the defendant’s other arguments, and it adopted those reasons as its own.

Concurring in the judgment, Judge Kozinski, joined by Judge Ikuta, wrote that under the majority’s holding, the IMCA is a criminal statute whose application, in violation of equal protection, turns on whether a defendant is of a particular race. Judge Kozinski wrote that he would instead affirm the conviction either by applying the IMCA to all members of federally recognized tribes irrespective of their race, or by holding, consistent with Maggi, that the jury had sufficient evidence to infer that the defendant’s ancestry was from a federally recognized tribe.

Concurring in the judgment, Judge Ikuta, joined by Judge Kozinski, wrote that the court should not continue to define an Indian by the “degree of Indian blood” because this definition disrespects tribal sovereignty and perpetuates the “sorry history” of this method of establishing race-based distinctions.

En banc materials here, here, and here. Panel materials and other materials here, here, and here.

Ninth Circuit Briefs in State of Arizona v. Tohono O’odham Nation

Here:

Arizona Brief

Salt River & Gila River Brief

TON Answer Brief

Arizona Reply Brief

Salt River & Gila River Reply Brief

Lower court materials here.

 

BIA Decision Approving Glendale Area Trust Land Acquisition for Gaming Purposes for Tohono O’Odham Nation

Here:

2014-07-03 Washburn Letter to Norris re Trust Decision

This is on remand from the Ninth Circuit’s mandate.

National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers Amicus Brief Filed in United States v. Zepeda

Here:

Criminal Defense Attorney Amicus

Prior posts here (order granting en banc review), and links to briefs here.

 

Additional Briefing in United States v. Zepeda — US Renews En Banc Plea

Here:

US Supplemental Brief

Zepeda Supplemental Brief

Prior post with links to all materials here.

Tohono O’odham Nation Attorney Posting

Here:

Tohono O’odham Asst AG

Tohono O’odham Nation Attorney Job Posting

Here.

Ninth Circuit, on Reconsideration, Orders Interior Review of Gila Bend Act in Tohono O’odham Gaming Lands Appeal

Here are the materials in City of Glendale v. United States:

Superceding panel opinion

Arizona & Glendale En Banc Petition

Gila River En Banc Petition

Federal Response

TON Response

The court’s syllabus:

The panel withdrew its prior opinion and published a superseding opinion affirming in part, and reversing and remanding in part, the district court’s summary judgment in favor of federal defendants in an action by the City of Glendale seeking to set aside the United States Department of Interior’s decision to accept in trust, for the benefit of the Tohono O’odham Nation, a 54-acre parcel of land known as Parcel 2 on which the Nation hoped to build a resort and casino.

The panel held the Gila Bend Indian Reservation Lands Replacement Act, read as a whole, was unambiguous and that § 6(c) of the Act created a cap only on land held in trust for
the Nation, not on total land acquisition by the tribe under the Act. The panel held that § 6(d) of Act was ambiguous as to whether Parcel 2, located on a county island fully surrounded by city land, was within the City of Glendale’s corporate limits. The panel held further that the Secretary of the Interior was mistaken in concluding that the term has a plain meaning, and remanded for the agency to consider the question afresh in light of the ambiguity the panel saw. Finally, the panel held that passage of the Act was within congressional power under the Indian Commerce Clause and was not trumped by the Tenth Amendment

News coverage here.

Previous panel materials here.