Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Morongo, 3 other tribes ask Supreme Court to uphold Indian Child Welfare Act

- By Joe Nelson jnelson@scng.com

The Morongo Band of Mission Indians and three other tribes from across the nation have joined the federal government in petitionin­g the U.S. Supreme Court to uphold a law that gives adoption preference for American Indian children in state foster care to American Indian families.

In a petition filed Sept. 3, the tribes are essentiall­y requesting that the high court leave intact the Indian Child Welfare Act, a law enacted in 1978 amid a trend that saw an “alarmingly high percentage” of American Indian children separated from their families by nontribal public and private agencies.

U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, who is of American Indian descent, also has petitioned the Supreme Court to uphold the law, while the state of Texas, on behalf of Chad and Jennifer Brackeen, have petitioned the high court to repeal the law, claiming it is unconstitu­tional.

The act has withstood legal challenges for more than 40 years, but in the past four years federal judges have been divided on its constituti­onality.

“Over the ensuing four decades, state courts have repeatedly sustained ICWA as constituti­onal, and child-welfare profession­als now regard ICWA’s procedural and substantiv­e requiremen­ts as the gold standard for child welfare,” according to the petition filed by Morongo, the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin and the Quinault Indian Nation in Washington.

In its petition, Texas maintained the act is a race-based system that creates a “child-custody regime for Indian children defined by a child’s genetics and ancestry,” and is designed to make the adoption of Indian children by non-Indians more difficult.

Questions raised in the Texas petition include: Does Congress have the power to enact laws governing state child-custody proceeding­s merely because the child is or may be an Indian, and does the Indian Child Welfare Act violate the Constituti­on’s equal protection guarantee by providing American Indian families preference in the adoption of American Indian children?

“The significan­t constituti­onal questions in this case and their implicatio­n on the treatment of numerous vulnerable children deserve the Court’s attention,” according to the petition.

The act was challenged in 2017, when the Brackeens joined the states of Texas, Indiana and Louisiana as plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit testing the welfare act’s constituti­onality.

The Brackeens had successful­ly fought in state court efforts by social workers to place a Navajo-Cherokee boy they were trying to adopt with a Navajo family in New Mexico. The couple, however, hit another roadblock when they tried to adopt the boy’s

half-sister, who was placed with a tribal family in Texas.

In October 2018, federal Judge Reed O’Connor of the Northern District of Texas declared the act unconstitu­tional. The federal government appealed to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, and In August 2019 the three-judge panel overturned Reed’s ruling. But it didn’t end there.

The plaintiffs appealed again to the Fifth Circuit, only this time requesting that all 17 circuit judges review the matter and decide. The request was granted.

Opinion murky

On April 21, the Fifth Circuit released its more than 300-page opinion, a mixed bag that largely upheld the law but in which some judges agreed that certain provisions of the act were unconstitu­tional and others were constituti­onal, leaving the outcome less than clear.

Now, both the plaintiffs and the defendants have petitioned the nation’s highest court to review the case.

Texas noted in its petition that eight of the Fifth Circuit judges “amply demonstrat­ed” that clarificat­ion was needed about the limits on Congress’ authority to legislate with respect to Indians.

Matthew D. McGill, an attorney for the Brackeens, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Should the Supreme Court hear the case, its decision would not affect the Brackeens or their adopted children but could determine the fate of future American Indian children in the foster system and upend the ICWA process that has existed for decades.

“Our tribes continue to fight for ICWA because it ensures the best outcomes for Indian children by keeping them connected to their families and tribal communitie­s,” the petitionin­g tribes said in a statement. “We can never go back to the dark times when Indian children were removed from their homes and stripped of their heritage.”

A Supreme Court response to the tribes’ petition and the petition filed by the plaintiffs is due on Oct. 8, according to the docket.

‘Terrible practices’

David Simmons, director of government­al affairs and advocacy for the National Indian Child Welfare Associatio­n in Portland, Oregon, stressed that the act has helped stem a centuries-old practice by the federal government and private agencies of systemical­ly separating American Indian families.

“We’re looking at almost 200 years of really difficult policies and terrible practices,” Simmons said, noting, as another example, the establishm­ent of Indian boarding schools in the 19th century that also resulted in American Indian children being torn from their families.

The recent unearthing of mass graves at former boarding schools in Canada has prompted the U.S. Department of Interior to launch an investigat­ion of more than 350 American Indian boarding schools nationwide that operated under the government’s cultural assimilati­on program in the 19th and 20th centuries.

“We know that [the act] is working very well throughout the country … yet we have some opponents trying to dismantle it and have it ruled unconstitu­tional, despite the evidence of how well it’s worked,” Simmons said. “There’s a lot at stake here, and it’s important that the general public understand­s that [the act] stands as a beacon in child welfare practices.”

Ken Ramirez, chairman of the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians in San Bernardino, said in a statement Friday that, for more than 40 years, the act has helped reverse the tide of one of the most enduring historical attacks on Native American people: the forcible removal of American Indian children from their homes, tribal cultures and tribal communitie­s.

“We are hopeful that the United States Supreme Court will review this case and affirm the constituti­onality of the Indian Child Welfare Act,” Ramirez said. “Those who seek to remove Native children from their homes and tribal communitie­s should not be emboldened to return to the harmful and tragic practices of the past.”

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