Hamilton Journal News

In reversal, Oklahoma can now prosecute more tribal crimes

- By Michael Macagnone CQ-Roll Call

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court expanded Oklahoma’s authority to prosecute crimes against Native Americans in much of the state Wednesday, potentiall­y reducing the need for Congress to spend millions of dollars more in the state for the Justice Department and federal courts.

The 5-4 decision in Oklahoma v. Castro-Huerta means the state, along with the federal government and tribes, can prosecute crimes committed by non-Native Americans against Native Americans.

That will limit the effect of a 2020 opinion in McGirt v. Oklahoma, which found that Congress never dissolved the Muscogee Nation’s reservatio­n that stretches over much of the state, including the city of Tulsa.

The McGirt decision appeared in multiple places in the Biden administra­tion’s fiscal 2023 budget requests, attached to more than $100 million in additional spending, since it meant the federal government and tribes needed to handle all the criminal cases on that reservatio­n area.

At a House Appropriat­ions Committee markup Tuesday, Rep. Matt Cartwright, D-Pa., cited the McGirt ruling as part of the reason for a nearly 6% increase in funding for the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion next fiscal year. Cartwright said the agency has “expanded responsibi­lities” on reservatio­ns as a result.

The committee’s funding bill included $64 million for federal prosecutor­s specifical­ly to deal with the consequenc­es of the McGirt decision. And the bill included $22 million for the FBI to handle the additional McGirt workload.

The committee advanced that fiscal 2023 Commerce-Justice-Science spending bill Tuesday night.

Separately, the federal judiciary had requested an additional 32 federal public defenders for fiscal 2023, $4.9 million for defender services and an additional $1 million for court security to handle cases in Oklahoma.

In the majority opinion Wednesday, Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh wrote that there is an assumption that states can prosecute crimes by nontribal members against tribal members, and it would take an act of Congress to expressly take away that authority.

The case stems from a man, Victor Manuel Castro-Huerta, who was convicted of neglecting his 5-year-old stepdaught­er. Castro-Huerta is not Native American, but his stepdaught­er is a member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and an Oklahoma court vacated his conviction on that basis, citing McGirt.

Kavanaugh wrote that the case illustrate­d a “now-familiar pattern” in the wake of the McGirt decision, where “after having their state conviction­s reversed, some non-Indian criminals have received lighter sentences in plea deals negotiated with the Federal Government.”

Kavanaugh also cited a DO J report that it had opened prosecutio­ns in less than a third of the criminal referrals it received in the Eastern District of Oklahoma.

Even still, cases in the Eastern District of Oklahoma more than tripled, according to a statistica­l report from the Administra­tive Office of the U.S. Courts. Prosecutor­s filed more than 1,000 cases there in 2021, in a district with a single federal judge.

Justice Neil M. Gorsuch wrote in a dissent, joined by the court’s three liberal justices, that Oklahoma would need an act of Congress to expand its authority to prosecute these cases.

The Constituti­on, Gorsuch wrote, envisioned a structure where the federal government had final authority over relationsh­ips with Native American tribes. In Oklahoma, that meant an agreement with the Cherokee Nation that the federal government had sole jurisdicti­on over crimes committed by or against tribal members, he wrote.

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