Interior
Department lawyers issue legal opinion on compliance with the Carcieri decision
By Will
Collette
Joe Larisa is ready....to rack up some billable hours |
Expect
Charlestown’s “Town Solicitor for Indian Affairs” Joe
Larisa to include a lot more time
on his monthly bills for work on “the Carcieri Fix” especially if the
Charlestown Citizens Alliance reacts the way I expect they will.
On March 12, lawyers in the Solicitor’s Office of the Department of Interior
released a long-anticipated opinion on how the Interior Department will handle requests from the 500+ Indian
tribes that were stripped of sovereignty rights by the 2009 decision by the US Supreme Court that originated in Charlestown’s fight with the Narragansett Indian
Tribe over its planned low-income senior citizens housing development off Route One.
Click here to read the entire opinion
memo.
In a
widely criticized decision, the majority of Supreme Court justices held that
Congress was not clear enough in its language of the 1934 Indian Reorganization
Act that they intended all Indian tribes to be covered by the Act and
accordingly ruled that the 500+ tribes that received federal recognition after
1934 were not covered. Among the 500 are the Narragansetts.
Since
the Carcieri decision, Indian civil rights activists have been trying to get
Congress to enact a “Carcieri Fix” – a bill that states that the Indian Reorganization
Act of 1934 does indeed apply to all Tribes, regardless of when they were
recognized. However, the Carcieri Fix has failed to even pass one house of Congress and is woefully if not permanently stalled.
Bill S. 676 failed to pass in the last Congress and died. A replacement bill has not been introduced. However, the effects of the Supreme Court decision remain as presented in this graphic |
The
Charlestown Citizens Alliance is fine with the status quo, even if it means
screwing 500+ tribes to preserve Charlestown dominion over the Narragansetts. Since
this is an election year, and the CCA Party traditionally campaigns on fear –
usually trumped up and sometimes simply made up – you can be sure the CCA will
be blowing the bugle to assemble the town militia over this latest activity.
According to Indian Country Today, one reason the newly released Interior Solicitor opinion is overdue is
that the Interior Department has been pretty much following the prescribed
measures anyway.
Among
the prescriptions in the Solicitor opinion are to (a) treat each Tribe individually; (b)
conduct a historical analysis to determine what the federal government’s
relationship has been with that tribe; and (c) if the history shows any sort
historic jurisdictional relationship between the feds and that tribe and that
the relationship was intact in 1934, then that Tribe should be treated as “recognized”
under the 1934 law.
This
probably has no effect on the Narragansetts since the Supreme Court used their
circumstances as the basis of their decision, not to mention the Tribe was
subjected to unjust “detribalization” (declared to no longer exist) well before
1934.
However,
one analysis claims that
the Solicitor’s “opinion, for instance, implies that the
Narragansett Tribe, at issue in Carcieri,
likely would have been able to make the required showing had the Court
allowed.” That comment ignores
the fact that the Court didn’t allow
the Tribe to make that showing.
But
this policy could provide some relief to many of the 500 other tribes that
became collateral damage in Charlestown’s war against the Narragansetts.
However, there are at least three major federal lawsuits challenging various
Interior Department attempts to place tribal lands in trust and any one of them
could simply void the Interior Department’s legal opinion. A federal judge
trumps an agency lawyer every single time.
Remember
that when the CCA Party sounds the emergency klaxon and tells all concerned
citizens to man the barricades surrounding the Narragansett lands.
Meanwhile
we’ve got Injun Joe Larisa on the job, charging the town $2,050 a month to
watch to see if the Narragansetts are making any alarming moves, real or
imagined. According to the two most recent invoices Larisa submitted to the
town and that the town released to me under the Access to Public Records Act,
Larisa spent five hours working on the town’s Narragansett issues in January
and February.
In
January, he was paid $2,050 for three and a half hours working on ways to block the state of Rhode Island from transferring the old Camp Davis
property to the Tribe. That comes to $586 an
hour. Click here for his January invoice.
In
February, he was paid $2,050 to work on the behind-the-scenes fight over Camp
Davis for an hour and for another half an hour of work monitoring the “Carcieri
Fix.” That comes to $1,367 an hour. Click here for his February invoice.