Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Experts: Decades of tribal law fractured

Supreme Court ruling expands state authority on Native American land

- Felicia Fonseca and Lindsay Whitehurst

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. – A U.S. Supreme Court ruling expanding state authority to prosecute some crimes on Native American land is fracturing decades of law built around the hard-fought principle that tribes have the right to govern themselves on their own territory, legal experts said.

The Wednesday ruling is a marked departure from federal Indian law and veers from the push to increase the tribes’ ability to prosecute all crimes on reservatio­ns – regardless of who is involved. It also cast tribes as part of states, rather than the sovereign nations they are, infuriatin­g many across Indian Country.

“The majority (opinion) is not firmly rooted in the law that I have dedicated my life to studying and the history as I know it to be true,” said Elizabeth Hidalgo Reese, an assistant law professor at Stanford University who is enrolled at Nambé Pueblo in New Mexico. “And that’s just really concerning,”

Federal authoritie­s largely maintained exclusive jurisdicti­on to investigat­e serious, violent crime on reservatio­ns across much of the U.S. when the suspect or victim is Native American. The 5-4 decision from the high court in a case out of Oklahoma means states will share in that authority when the suspect is not Native American and the victim is.

Criminal justice on tribal lands is a tangled web, and the ruling likely will present new thorny questions about jurisdicti­on, possible triple jeopardy and how to tackle complicate­d crimes in remote areas where resources are stretched thin. States had power to prosecute crimes involving only non-Natives on reservatio­ns before this week’s ruling.

“It will have an impact in Indian Country, so only the future will tell us if it’s good or not,” said Robert Miller, a law professor at Arizona State University and citizen of the Eastern Shawnee Tribe. “Is it better to have more criminal prosecutio­ns, more government­s enforcing crimes or less?”

Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote a scathing dissent joined by the court’s three liberal members, saying “one can only hope the political branches and future courts will do their duty to honor this nation’s promises even as we have failed today to do on our own.”

Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. of the Cherokee Nation said the court “failed in its duty to honor this nation’s promises, defied Congress’s statutes and accepted the ‘lawless disregard of the Cherokee’s sovereignt­y.’ ”

It’s unknown how the decision ultimately will play out for tribes, but there is precedent. Congress establishe­d a law in 1953 that’s known as PL-280, partly to relieve the federal government of funding public safety on some reservatio­ns. The law resulted in state authority over crime in several states, including Alaska and California where about three-fifths of the 574 federally recognized tribes are based.

As in the decision in Oklahoma v.

Castro-Huerta, tribes did not consent. Neither Congress then nor the Supreme Court now funded the expansion of state authority on tribal land.

“That’s far from the first time,” said Lauren van Schilfgaar­de, a member of Cochiti Pueblo in New Mexico who directs the Tribal Legal Developmen­t Clinic at the UCLA. “Federal Indian law is just littered with cases in which tribes were denied the opportunit­y to speak on their own behalf.”

Federal authoritie­s have long been criticized for declining to prosecute cases in Indian Country – roughly a third, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. Authoritie­s in PL-280 states also have been criticized for a lack of response to crime in Indian Country, where law enforcemen­t officers often must travel long distances to investigat­e reported crimes.

Tribes asserted that the federal government – with which they have a political relationsh­ip – is the appropriat­e sovereign entity to handle criminal matters. Congress maintains control over Native American and Alaska Native affairs, which are overseen by the Department of Interior.

States have no such obligation to tribes.

Kevin Washburn, dean of the University of Iowa’s law school, said it will be interestin­g to see how the priority question shakes out.

“That is, will feds take primacy or will state prosecutor­s take primacy in cases?” said Washburn, who is Chickasaw and a former assistant Interior secretary for Indian Affairs. “And how do they decide who will be first or who will move at all?”

Although the Supreme Court ruling is an expansion of power for states, it doesn’t come with a similar increase for tribes. A 1978 ruling stripped tribes of any criminal jurisdicti­on over non-Natives on their reservatio­ns. The reauthoriz­ation of the Violence Against Women Act in 2013 restored some of that authority in limited domestic violence cases and further expanded it earlier this year.

Most tribes can sentence convicted offenders to only a year in jail, regardless of the crime. A 2010 federal law increased tribes’ sentencing authority to three years for a crime. Few tribes have met the federal requiremen­ts to use that authority, including having public defenders and law-trained judges.

Oklahoma has its own unique history on tribal affairs, including a 2020 U.S. Supreme Court decision known as McGirt v. Oklahoma that said a large chunk of the eastern part of the state remains a Native American reservatio­n. That ruling, written by Gorsuch, left the state unable to prosecute Native Americans accused of crimes on tribal lands that include most of Tulsa, the state’s second-largest city with a population of about 413,000.

The Supreme Court refused to reconsider McGirt. Oklahoma filed a flurry of petitions related to the case, leading to the most recent decision on state power over crime on reservatio­ns that extends broadly across the U.S. Justice Brett Kavanaugh, writing for the majority, said the state’s interest lies in protecting all victims of crime.

Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum, a Republican, applauded the ruling and pledged to work with the state and the tribal nations “who are our partners in building a safe city.”

 ?? MICHAEL WOODS/AP FILE ?? Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. says the court “failed in its duty to honor this nation’s promises, defied Congress’s statutes and accepted the ‘lawless disregard of the Cherokee’s sovereignt­y.’ ”
MICHAEL WOODS/AP FILE Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. says the court “failed in its duty to honor this nation’s promises, defied Congress’s statutes and accepted the ‘lawless disregard of the Cherokee’s sovereignt­y.’ ”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States