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sky of mind
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080130/ap_on_go_ot/indian_money


Judge hits gov't on Indian money delay

By MARY CLARE JALONICK, Associated Press Writer
Wed Jan 30, 6:39 PM ET



WASHINGTON - A federal judge on Wednesday ruled that the Interior Department has "unreasonably delayed" its accounting for billions of dollars owed to Indian landholders.

The federal agency "has not, and cannot, remedy the breach" of its responsibilities to account for the Indian money, U.S. District Judge James Robertson said in a 165-page decision in a long-running federal lawsuit alleging mismanagement of Indian trust funds.

"Indeed, it is now clear that completion of the required accounting is an impossible task," Robertson said.

The suit, first filed in 1996 by Blackfeet Indian Elouise Cobell, claims the government has mismanaged more than $100 billion in oil, gas, timber and other royalties held in trust from Indian lands dating back to 1887.

Cobell said in a statement that "this is a great day in Indian Country."

"We've argued for over 10 years that the government is unable to fulfill its duty to render an adequate historical accounting, much less redress the historical wrongs heaped upon the individual Indian trust beneficiaries," Cobell said.

An Interior Department spokeswoman said officials were reviewing Robertson's decision and had no immediate comment.

Robertson said he will schedule a hearing in the next month to discuss a way to solve the problem. He added that his conclusion that Interior is unable to perform an adequate accounting does not mean that the task is hopeless.

"It does mean that a remedy must be found for the department's unrepaired, and irreparable, breach of its fiduciary duty over the last century. And it does mean that the time has come to bring this suit to a close," Robertson said.

The judge said that although department officials had attempted and continued to attempt to "cure the breach of their fiduciary duty" they have not succeeded in doing so and "have unreasonably delayed the completion of the required accounting."

Robertson also blamed Congress for the lack of money appropriated for the cause, citing the "tension between the expense of an adequate accounting and congressional unwillingness to fund such an enterprise."

Interior Department officials argued during the October trial that their job was difficult with limited money from Congress. The judge agreed, saying the department deserves credit for trying to strike a balance between "exactitude and cost."

He said he did not agree with the Indian plaintiffs' assertion that an adequate accounting is not possible because of missing records. The record is inconclusive on that point, he said.

The lawsuit deals with individual Indians' lands. Several tribes have sued separately, claiming mismanagement of their lands.

The government proposed paying $7 billion partly to settle the Cobell lawsuit in March 2007, but that was rejected by the plaintiffs, who estimate the government's liability could exceed $100 billion. The Interior Department estimates that it has spent $127 million on its accounting in the past five years.

Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, said Wednesday that he hopes the judge's decision is a catalyst for a settlement.

"Ultimately the question is going to be for the administration and the Justice Department, are they willing to settle for all of these years of mismanagement," he said.

Robertson took over the case after Judge Royce Lamberth was removed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, which said he had lost his objectivity.

The government had asked that Lamberth be replaced after the judge lambasted the Interior Department, writing in a decision that it "is a dinosaur — the morally and culturally oblivious hand-me-down of a disgracefully racist and imperialist government that should have been buried a century ago."

In his decision, Robertson detailed the extensive background of the case, saying that it would "stretch the limits of understatement" to say the case's history has been exhaustively chronicled in district court. He noted there are 3,504 entries on the case's docket and 10 circuit judges have been engaged in the case. His opinion will have the shorthand of "Cobell XX," he noted.

Throughout his conclusion, Robertson quoted Charles Dickens' "Bleak House," which chronicles a never-ending legal suit. Using passages from that novel, he notes that the "suit has, in course of time, become so complicated" that "no two lawyers can talk about it for five minutes without coming to a total disagreement as to all the premises."

"'Innumerable children have been born into the cause,' and, as plaintiffs have reminded us on occasion, 'innumerable old (plaintiffs) have died out of it,'" Robertson said.


Jubal
I worked on this case for over three years. And it became obvious to me. We'll win the case, eventually. And we'll win the appeals, eventually.

We will never, ever get the money.

That's why I stopped working on the case.
sky of mind
Lots of lawsuits work that way, as you know.
It's relatively easy to file suit, and to win a settlement.
It's quite another to actually get dime one.


None the less, in this case I hope things work out better.
seuss
QUOTE(Jubal @ Tuesday, 5 February 2008, 7:11 am) *
I worked on this case for over three years. And it became obvious to me. We'll win the case, eventually. And we'll win the appeals, eventually.

We will never, ever get the money.

That's why I stopped working on the case.


Reminds me of the time I was interning for a western Pa. forest preservation group, with the head of Penn State Law School as our lawyer (Back when Tom Ridge was Governor, and Mumia abu Jamal was just becoming widespread news).
The USFS had introduced the country's largest ever timber sale on the Nation's only nat. forest that turned a profit (thanks to a wealth of black cherry trees). We took them to court on a lack of research into their EIS and got an injunction, but they just turned it into multiple sales, and a year and a half later, they were back at it again...

hey, at least we stopped the chainsaws for the National Rainbow Gathering...

edit to add...

to fit this in with the thread, we enlisted the help of the Seneca who had recently done banner drops off the dam that flooded their rez in PA and pushed them across the border to NY. It wasn't a hard sell... they appreciated our supply runs across the burning tire barracades they placed against the incursions of the BIA and FBI.
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