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March 30, 2012

Mashantucket Court Ruling Reaffirms Non-taxable Status of Reservations

In an important legal win for Indian country, a federal judge has reaffirmed that states and their subdivisions cannot tax property on Indian land regardless of who owns it.

The Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation won its long running lawsuit against the Town of Ledyard on March 27 when Senior U.S. District Judge Warren W. Eginton granted the Nation’s motion for summary judgment in a case it had filed against the town in 2006. The Nation sought a declaration that the Town of Ledyard did not have the authority to tax slot machines leased by the tribe from a gaming company and used at Foxwoods Resort Casino. The Nation argued that imposition of the tax by the town was preempted by the federal Indian Trader Statutes, the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA), and based on a balancing of the interests of the federal government, the Nation, the town and the state.

The judge agreed. “Indian tribes are distinct sovereign entities that are ‘distinct, independent political communities retaining their original natural rights,’” Eginton said in his ruling, quoting Worcester v. Georgia, one of the Marshall Trilogy cases from 1823 to 1832 that set the foundation for Indian law. The trilogy paradoxically asserts the sovereignty of Indian nation while denying them land rights other than occupancy. “States do not have authority to regulate Indian tribes where a state law is preempted by federal law or infringes upon the ‘right of reservation Indians to make their own laws and be ruled by then,’” Eginton said, quoting other case law.

The Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation council said in a statement that it is pleased the federal district court in Connecticut agreed with the Tribe’s position that the Town of Ledyard lacks the authority under federal law to impose property taxes on leased slot machines on the Reservation. “The court’s decision definitively upholds the federal and tribal interests in tribal self-determination and self-government, and determines that these significant interests outweighed any interest the Town or State has to impose a tax on Reservation,” the council said. “This decision relates only to the Town’s attempt to impose taxes on property within the Tribe’s reservation and does not change the fact that the Tribe is the largest property taxpayer within the Town of Ledyard. Nothing in the decision will affect the Tribe’s continued payment of taxes on property located outside the Reservation.”

Neither Ledyard Mayor John Rodolico nor the town’s attorney, Don Bauer of the Washington-based firm of Perkins Coie, could not be reached for comment.

Eginton notes in his ruling that Nation has invested more than $1.42 billion into its gaming operations, which include Foxwoods Resort Casino and MGM Grand at Foxwoods. He cites the Nation’s reimbursement to the state of $56.8 million for law enforcement services since Foxwoods opened in 1992, and its contribution of 25 percent of its slot revenues in fulfillment of the tribal-state gaming compact—an amount now reaching almost $3.3 billion. Additionally, the tribe has contributed around $85 million in donations to local organizations and $10 million to the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington.

In his Eginton said that the taxing the non-Native owned slot machines was preempted by both the Indian Trader Statutes and the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act and that it was also preempted based on a balancing of the various parties’ interest. “The State and the Town’s interest in taxing the leased equipment fails to justify the economic burden on the Tribe that compromises substantial federal and Tribal interests in tribal self-determination and self-government pursuant to comprehensive federal regulation,” he wrote.

Gabriel Galanda, an enrolled member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes and partner in the Seattle-based firm Galanda Broadman, said the district court ruling is a victory for Indian county. “Through IGRA, Congress clearly preempted the Indian gaming tax field. States cannot tax Indian gaming. Period. That federal preemption now extends, at common law, to Class II or III gaming devices,” Galanda said. Galanda said it has always been presumed that under IGRA’s categorical bar to state taxation, states and local government cannot tax slot machines or video lottery terminals in tribal casinos, even if title to those devices remains with non-Indian manufacturers under lease or participation arrangements with tribes. The new ruling affirms that presumption, but also sends a clear message to states and their subdivisions, he said. “The ruling should also serve to push back against state and local tax collectors who are increasingly looking to sink their tax claws into the labors and proceeds of tribal economic development and diversification efforts, especially as they attack the likes of the tribes’ non-Indian business partners.”

The Town of Ledyard would be “foolish” to appeal the decision to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, Galanda said, “but I would not put it past any elected state tax collector to file an appeal in hope of becoming a folk hero — in modern crusade against Indians, in the name of so-called states’ or taxpaying citizens’ rights. This is definitely a rare tax win for the good guys.”

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March 20, 2012

Florida Teen’s Death Raises a Variety of Concerns

Seminole County in Florida is in the national spotlight as news came from the Grand Jury, announcing it will investigate the death of an unarmed black teen that has caught the attention of justice groups nationwide.

Trayvon Martin, 17, who was fatally shot on February 26 by George Zimmerman, 28, a neighborhood watch volunteer is now under investigation by the Justice Department according to an article in the New York Times.

Allegedly Martin was walking in the rain with his hood up and on his way to his father’s girlfriend’s house when Zimmerman spotted him. Zimmerman mentioned a rash of recent burglaries in the neighborhood in his police report and thought it was odd to see the young man walking alone at night. Martin was returning from the story where he bought skittles and a tea.

Trayvon Martin Killer 270x337 Florida Teen’s Death Raises a Variety of Concerns

George Zimmerman is seen in a police mug shot provided by the Orange County, Florida, Jail, via The Miami Herald, from a 2005 arrest. Zimmerman is the neighborhood watch captain who shot unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin, 17, in a gated community in Sanford, Florida in February 2012. (AP Photo/Orange County Jail via Miami Herald)

Zimmerman followed, and later gave chase on foot after being told by a 911 dispatcher, to back off and wait for the police. Soon after a shot was fired from the 9 mm that Zimmerman was legally carrying according the The Times. The dispatcher was still on the line when the shot was heard in the distance. Soon after the shot was fired the 911 dispatch office received a series of calls from neighbors. Following an outcry to hear the multiple 911 calls from Zimmerman and neighbors, the police department released the tapes.

Zimmerman claimed it was in self-defense and has not been charged raising concerns with one of Florida’s laws.

In 2005 Florida passed the “stand your ground” law that allows people to use deadly force away from their homes if they have reasonable fear that an assailant could seriously harm them or another according to an article at CNN. The law has been an issue since, and is again in question within this latest shooting, as the CNN article states Florida had become a “shoot first” state.

This morning ABC News released an exclusive story with Martin’s girlfriend who was allegedly on the phone with him, via Bluetooth headset, up to the moment he was shot.

She recalled Martin saying he was being followed, before thinking he lost Zimmerman. She allegedly heard a short altercation before the line went dead and there was no answer when she tried to call back.

“We’re going to turn this over to the Justice Department because the family does not trust the Sanford Police Department to have anything to do with the investigation,” said Martin’s family Attorney Benjamin Crump to ABC News.

An online petition at change.org, helped push for the federal investigation in the case – the petition currently has 598,641 signatures.

The Times also reported that Zimmerman is studying criminal justice.

ABC News stated that Zimmerman was not part of any of the 22,000 registered watch groups nationwide and that he violated major parts of the Neighborhood Watch Manuel, “It should be emphasized to members that they do not possess police powers. And they shall not carry weapons or pursue vehicles.”

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March 19, 2012

Oglalas Ask Courts to Cap Whiteclay Beer Sales

Following up on a recently filed federal lawsuit against beer stores, breweries and other businesses involved in the Whiteclay, Nebraska alcohol trade, the Oglala Sioux Tribe has gone a step further and is requesting injunctive relief from the courts. The tribe wants the court to limit total volume of beer sales in Whiteclay—which lies on its southern border—to the amount that can be consumed in accordance with Nebraska and Oglala Sioux Tribe laws. The original lawsuit demanded a still-unspecified sum—widely reported as $500 million—for damages done to the tribe by generations of alcohol sales.

How much can be sold legally in Whiteclay? Very little, according to tribal attorney Thomas White, of White and Jorgenson, in Omaha. Last year, Whiteclay’s four take-out beer stores purveyed the equivalent of 4.3 million 12-ounce servings. However, there is no place in the town, such as a licensed bar or café, in which the public may drink alcohol legally. Therefore, White said, it must be either consumed in public in violation of Nebraska law or bootlegged onto the adjoining dry reservation in violation of Oglala Sioux Tribe law.

The tribe’s latest legal filing was inspired by public remarks by Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning, who said during a radio program about the original lawsuit that shutting down beer stores in Whiteclay would mean Pine Ridge residents would simply travel to other Nebraska towns to buy alcohol. That sentiment was echoed in a recent newspaper story by a resident of the town and in interviews filmed for the award-winning 2008 documentary Battle for Whiteclay.

With Nebraska’s top legal advisor indicating the state would not enforce its own liquor laws, the tribe was left with “no adequate remedies at law” to stem the ongoing flood of alcohol across its borders, says its most recent complaint.

The reservation was first declared dry, with alcohol use and sale prohibited, when it was formed in the mid-1800s. Bootleggers set up shop across the border in Whiteclay, Nebraska, almost immediately and began to peddle booze onto Pine Ridge, which to this day suffers crippling rates of alcoholism and alcohol-related public-health issues, overwhelming the tribe’s health-care, social-services, education and justice systems. One in four children are born with fetal-alcohol effects. All told, alcoholism impacts 85 percent of reservation families, and nearly all crime on Pine Ridge is alcohol-related, says the tribe—which has no jurisdiction over Whiteclay.

A tribal member who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retribution claimed the recent legal actions would help. “In a few minutes, you can stroll down to Whiteclay from Pine Ridge Village, the biggest population center on the reservation,” he said. “Sometimes people go several times a day. So if you stop the liquor trade in Whiteclay, you severely limit access to alcohol on Pine Ridge.”

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March 11, 2012

Support Growing for Spottedcrow’s Parole Hearing

In many states, $31 in marijuana sales may land an individual in drug court, mandatory counseling or with a misdemeanor fine. However, this was not the case for Patricia Spottedcrow, 26, a member of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes. Instead, Spottedcrow, a mother of four, was sentenced to 10 years at the Dr. Eddie Warrior Correctional Center in Taft, Oklahoma for what amounted to in the court records as a “dime bag.” Her conviction date was October 21, 2010.

Spottedcrow, of Kingfisher, Oklahoma had no prior convictions. Because her children were in close proximity, Spottedcrow was convicted on possession of a controlled substance in the presence of a minor as well as distribution of a controlled substance, for which she is still serving until March 30, 2016 according to the Oklahoma Department of Corrections website. Spottedcrow’s mother, Delita Starr, was also convicted but whose sentence was suspended in order to care for Spottedcrow’s children.

According to an article from the Tulsa World, Spottedcrow has made use of her time, waiting for the day when she will be released. This includes finishing her GED, taking parenting classes, and participating in Alcoholics Anonymous/Narcotics Anonymous and faith-based programs.

Since Spottedcrow’s conviction, she has had a groundswell of support through the Internet and social media sites such as Causes through Facebook. One particular page, “Parole for Spottedcrow!” features the names and addresses of Oklahoma’s Pardon and Parole Board members in order for supporters to write letters.

Indian Country Today Media Network contacted the Eddie Warrior Correctional Center for an interview request, but one could not be arranged by press time.

An early parole hearing for Spottedcrow has been granted by the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board for when it convenes on April 17-20. Spottedcrow’s hearing will not be scheduled until April 6.

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Gila River Teen Sentenced to 30 Years in Prison for Second Degree Murder and Robbery

On February 28, U.S. District Judge Roslyn O. Silver sentenced Gila River teenager Johnny Lopez, 17, of Laveen, Arizona to a combined 30 years of imprisonment.

The teenager pled guilty, in two separate cases, to Robbery and Use of a Firearm During a Crime of Violence, and Second Degree Murder according to a Department of Justice press release.

Lopez stated in his plea agreement for the robbery case, on February 20, 2010, that he held a man at gunpoint while he and his accomplices stole the man’s vehicle on the Gila River Indian Reservation. An accomplice instructed the victim of the robbery to walk into the desert or Lopez would shoot him. The victim complied. The judge sentenced Lopez to 70 months imprisonment on the robbery charge. She also sentenced him to 120 months imprisonment on the use of a firearm during a crime of violence charge, which is to be served consecutively to the second degree murder sentence. Lopez was also sentenced to a term of five years of supervised release, to follow his release from prison, and was ordered to pay $2,200 in restitution.

In regards to the murder case,  Lopez stated in his plea agreement on July 22, 2010 that he carried a rifle into a neighboring home of his mother’s house on the reservation where he proceeded to have a conversation with two occupants before opening fire and shooting the two men, a father and son, several times. Both victims died due to injuries. Lopez then stated he told a friend later that night to bury the rifle. Silver sentenced Lopez to concurrent terms of 240 months imprisonment and five years of supervised release on the two murder counts and ordered him to pay $20,359.88 in restitution according to the release.

The Gila River Police Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation handled the investigation.

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March 10, 2012

Honduran Man Arrested on Gila River Indian Nation

On February 25, local authorities in Casa Grande, Arizona arrested Hernan Ramirez-Orteja and later turned him over to federal officials on a federal warrant that was stemming from a two-count indictment handed down on June 29, 2011.

The indictments were one count of Aggravated Sexual Abuse by use of force or threats and one count of Aggravated Sexual Abuse of a person under the age of 12.

He will remain in custody pending his trial scheduled for April 24, 2012 with District Judge Cindy K. Jorgenson presiding. Punishment for each charge is from 30 years to life in prison.

Ramirez-Orteja was arrested on the Gila River Indian Nation. The Tohono O’odham Police Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Tucson conducted the investigation preceding the indictment.

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March 9, 2012

State Versus Tribe Tobacco Issues Resurface

Repeated efforts by the Muscogee (Creek) Nation to conduct tobacco sales without state intervention appear to have floundered in a federal appeals court which dismissed sovereignty-related arguments and appeals to federal law.

The court found February 28 that off-reservation Indian transactions and tobacco sales to non-Indians are subject to state laws that govern all state residents and that enforcement of those laws does not violate federal legislation or tribal self-government.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court’s dismissal of the Nation’s complaint against Oklahoma tax authorities because, it said, the Nation failed to state a plausible claim against individual state officials.

The conflict in Muscogee (Creek) Nation v. Scott Pruitt, Attorney General of Oklahoma and state tax officials began in 2009 when Oklahoma Highway Patrol officers stopped Nation-owned trucks traveling outside of tribal lands and allowed state tax officials to seize tobacco products deemed “contraband.”  It resulted in extensive litigation.

In 2009 the Nation approached the U.S. District Court in Tulsa, Oklahoma for an injunction to prevent the state from seizing tobacco products. The court subsequently denied the injunction and refused to charge state tax officials with helping to violate federal law in connection with the seizures. In 2010, the District Court dismissed an amended complaint concerning the tobacco confiscation and was upheld by the 10th Circuit in 2011. In 2012, the 10th Circuit affirmed the District Court in dismissing the Nation’s claims concerning Oklahoma tax statutes.

In its last appeal, the Nation contended that state tax laws are preempted by federal Indian Trader statutes, which outline accepted practices and safeguards for trading with tribes, and by violations of the Nation’s right to self-government.

Generally, states cannot tax reservation lands and reservation Indians, the court said, but Indians outside their own Indian country lands are subject to nondiscriminatory state laws applicable to all state citizens.

The Supreme Court has held that the state has no authority to tax tribal tobacco retailer’s sales to Indians, but it does have the authority to tax Indian sales to non-Indians without preempting the Indian Trader statutes and other federal law. The high court has not found that “application of state law outside Indian country infringes on tribal sovereignty,” according to the latest petition.

The state tax laws the Nation called into question were the Excise Tax Statute, the Escrow Statute and the Complementary Act. A three-judge panel of the 10th Circuit found the laws did not improperly regulate the Nation’s sale of tobacco products to its own members or place “impermissible burdens” on the sale of tobacco to non-tribal members.

The Nation challenged Oklahoma tax statutes that imposed an excise tax on all non-tribal members who purchase tobacco products from retailers located on tribal land that provide tax-free sales to Nation members.

Under the Excise Tax Statute, tribes (“compacting tribes”) can enter into compacts with the state to collect sales taxes on cigarettes and other tobacco products sold in Indian country while those that do not (“noncompacting” tribes, including the Nation) are exempted from the tax when sales to tribal members occur on tribal land. Licensed wholesalers are issued tax-free stamps to affix to the cigarettes, with stricter rules applying to other tobacco products.

Under a Master Settlement Agreement (MSA), a liability-related compact with the nation’s four major tobacco companies, tobacco product manufacturers make payments to the state and, to offset competitive advantages by non-participating manufacturers, the Escrow Statute requires the latter to pay into the escrow fund except for sales of cigarettes bearing tax-free stamps.

The Complementary Act requires all tobacco product manufacturers selling cigarettes in Oklahoma to certify they are either participating in the MSA or are making payments to the escrow fund. The Act makes it unlawful to affix tax-stamps if the manufacturers are not certified participants.

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March 6, 2012

BIE School Being Sued for Discrimination Against Pregnant Teen

After being kicked out of school and publicly humiliated for being pregnant, 15-year-old Shantelle Hicks now has the American Civil Liberties Union and ACLU New Mexico on her side.

The groups filed a lawsuit against the school today alleging that school administrators violated Shantelle’s constitutional right to equal protection under the law, Title IX’s prohibitions against sex and pregnancy discrimination and violations of her right to privacy.

After disclosing to school officials that she was pregnant in October 2011, Shantelle was told she could no longer attend Wingate Elementary School, a Bureau of Indian Education-operated boarding school for Native American students in Ft. Wingate, New Mexico.

According to the complaint, officials told the eighth-grader she could no longer stay in the school’s dormitories because her pregnancy would set a bad example for the other students.

After Shantelle’s mother, Vicky Hicks, contacted ACLU of New Mexico and the group sent a letter to the school on October 17 asking that Shantelle be allowed to come back, the school agreed. Shantelle had missed four days of instruction.

About 10 days later—on or about October 27 according to the filed complaint—an all school assembly was called. During the assembly, Shantelle’s pregnancy was announced by the school’s director, Christine Edsitty-Beach, and a school counselor, Sadie Martinez. Shantelle’s pregnancy was not common knowledge and she was not showing at the time.

“It was so embarrassing to have all the other kids staring at me as I walked into the gymnasium,” said Hicks in an ACLU statement. “I didn’t want the whole school to know I was pregnant because it’s not their business, and it wasn’t right for my teachers to single me out.”

The ACLU of New Mexico believes the school officials embarrassed Shantelle in retaliation for refusing to leave Wingate.

“It is outrageous that educators would subject a young woman in their care to such cruelty,” said ACLU of New Mexico cooperating attorney Barry Klopfer, in the statement.

“Too often, pregnant students face significant barriers or outright discrimination in school,” said Galen Sherwin, staff attorney with the ACLU Women’s Rights Project, in the statement. “Instead, schools should give pregnant and parenting students the support they need to help them succeed, for both themselves and for their children.”

In a blog on The Washington Post website, Valerie Strauss calls the actions of Wingate teachers no more than bullying. “Outing a teenager as pregnant is nothing more than bullying, but when an adult does it, it sends a message that such behavior is acceptable,” she says in the blog. “Whatever one thinks about the pregnancy of an eighth-grader, there’s no way to condone a school leader humiliating her in front of her peers.”

The lawsuit is seeking compensatory and punitive damages, but no amount is specified in the complaint. The lawsuit also asks that defendants Edsitty-Beach and Martinez be required to attend gender and pregnancy discrimination training and that the school offer training to employees.

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Keystone Blockade on Pine Ridge Reservation Leads to Arrests

Five American Indians were arrested March 5, after a six-hour blockade on the Pine Ridge Reservation that stopped two large trucks carrying parts of the Keystone XL Pipeline tried to cross through the reservation.

Following her release from jail, Debra White Plume said, “Alex (Debra’s husband), myself, Sam Long Black Cat, Andrew Iron Shell and Don Iron Shell were arrested and charged with disorderly conduct. We formed a blockade to stop tarsands oil mine equipment from passing our land.”

White Plume said there was about 50 to 75 people that took part in the blockade in the Eagle Nest District of Wanbli, on the northern side of the Pine Ridge Reservation.

Indian Country Today Media Network will continue to report on this story throughout the day.

Watch a video from blockade here:

Click here to view the embedded video.

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March 5, 2012

Mental Health Experts Disagree in Navajo Man’s Appeals Case

A Navajo man who pleaded guilty to one count of abusive sexual contact unsuccessfully contested a post-release order that required him to enter a residential program even though two psychologists disagreed about his potential to re-offend.

Ronald Tom served a 16-month sentence imposed by a District Court in New Mexico which ordered one year of supervised release. Probation officials also requested that Tom spend additional time in a halfway house for further treatment after release because he would be living near his 8-year-old granddaughter.

Tom acknowledged at least four instances of inappropriately touching a 14-year-old step-granddaughter he and her grandmother had raised since the girl was 3 years old, court records showed. The grandmother and the girl moved out of Tom’s house after the sexual abuse allegations were made.

Post-release conditions for Tom, who appealed the halfway house requirement to the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, included a provision that he “not have contact with children under the age of 18 without prior written permission of the probation officer.”

Some of Tom’s relatives argued that the residential requirement was unnecessary because they had successfully kept Tom away from his granddaughter when he was on supervised release and they could continue doing so.

A mental health counselor, Dr. Bobby Sykes, disagreed with them and noted that Tom “had a recurring, and chronic, alcohol abuse problem” with periods of drinking interspersed with sobriety.

Although tests showed there was a low risk that Tom would re-offend, Sykes determined that Tom was “at a high risk of re-offending because [he] was an introverted man from an introverted culture with limited ability in the English language, with whom Dr. Sykes had admittedly established no rapport and because [Tom] was very reluctant to talk about his first sexual experiences,” the court said.

Dr. Eric Westfried, a licensed clinical psychologist, “strongly disagreed” with Sykes’ findings and concluded Tom would not re-offfend if he was not required to enter a halfway house.

Faced with the conflicting opinions, the District Court upheld the residential requirement, noting that Tom’s close proximity to his granddaughter could violate the order forbidding contact with any children under age 18.

In addition, “the court sees someone who has demonstrated the capacity and willingness to sexually assault a girl who, while not a blood relative, was almost like a member of his family” and then claimed no memory of the assaults “because of his level of intoxication.”

The federal appeals court February 29 upheld the post-release requirements imposed by the District Court because, among other factors, Tom could be provided with needed treatment.

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