The Boston Globe

Judge approves trust for tribal lands

-

A federal judge in US District Court in Boston has ruled against a group of Taunton residents who sued the federal government in an effort to prevent the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe from building a casino in the city. The judge’s decision granted summary judgment to the US Department of the Interior, which had placed 321 acres of land in Mashpee and Taunton into trust. The tribe, which has about 2,600 enrolled citizens, was an intervenor-defendant in the suit. Although establishm­ent of the reservatio­n returned only a small fraction of the tribe’s ancestral territory, Tribal Chair Brian Weeden said in a statement Monday that “this reservatio­n is crucial to our ability to exercise our sovereign right to self-governance, to preserve our language and culture, and to provide for our people.” The anti-casino plaintiffs argued in the suit filed in February 2022 that the Biden administra­tion’s decision affirming the tribe’s reservatio­n was arbitrary, capricious, and unlawful because the tribe isn’t eligible for a reservatio­n since it wasn’t an officially recognized tribe in 1934, the year the federal Indian Reorganiza­tion Act became law. The Mashpee Wampanoags were not federally recognized until 2007. They also said that Taunton was not part of the Cape Cod-based tribe’s historical domain. The judge’s decision, however, said that the “historical record indicates that the Mashpee have had a robust connection to the designated lands for over four centuries,” and have called the area of southeaste­rn Massachuse­tts home for thousands of years long before their first contact with Europeans, including the Pilgrims in 1620. (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States