Thursday, December 12, 2013

After Stripping Pechanga Veterans of Their Citizenship, Pechanga Looks to Hire Veterans

The Pechanga Band Of Luiseno Indians Stripped many military veterans from the tribe of their citizenship, some posthumously in their purge of two large families.  They stole their heritage and benefits from them and NOW, they look to gain some goodwill by interviewing veterans.

Read about their treatment of veterans:


Pechanga Mistreats Biker Vets, Welcome Mongols
Pechanga Scrubs Veterans’ Page from Website
Pechanga Veteran OUSTED POSTHUMOUSLY from TRIBE '


Dozens of unemployed military veterans were given one-on-one interviews Wednesday during a unique job fair/open house hosted by the Pechanga Resort & Casino, one of the county’s largest employers.
More than 110 invitations were sent out to veterans or reservists — part of the casino’s push to fill 150 jobs — and more than 40 responded, according to Pechanga public relations manager Ciara Green.
Some of the veterans, a group selected from a pool of online applications, drove in from Orange and San Bernardino counties with resumes in hand to talk about open positions.

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

TREASON & SEDITION BEING CHARGED AT CHUKCHANSI by AYALA FACTION.

Letter going out at the Picayune Rancheria of Chukchansi Indians by the Nancy Ayala Faction that charges TREASON and SEDITION against the Tribe.  The PUNISHMENT and PENALTIES are being enforced before the hearings.

As you can read, ALL RIGHTS as a Tribal member have been suspended.  I guess that means that anything that is said now, by those "under review" can not be held against them.


CLICK ON PICTURES TO ENLARGE:

 


THIS DEMANDS ACTION by ALL OF US.  Get your letters ready.

Disenrollment Demands Serious Attention from ALL SOVEREIGN NATIONS, Including the Federal Government

Attorney Ryan Seelau has an essay in Indian Country Today on the issue of the harmful action of disenrollment foisted upon thousands of Native Americans by their own tribe.


Before I go any further, let me be very clear about something. The Nooksack Indian Tribe
—like all Native Nations—are sovereign and, collectively, the Nooksack Indian Tribe possesses the inherent right of self-determination. The right to self determination includes, among other things, the right of a Native Nation to citizenship. And the right to define citizenship includes both a right to
include individuals as citizens of the nation as well as to exclude individuals from being citizens of the nation. 

This right is qualified, or at least should be, by due process protections. Unfortunately, many Native Nations spend their time focusing on citizenship selection criteria while ignoring the need for procedural protections.   OP: In our case, the Pechanga tribe herded us into groups and only allowed ONE person to speak to our "lot" on appeal. We could not bring writing implements, have an attorney present, nor present any evidence against those who accused us with no evidence.


While many Native Nations are now doing pro-terminationist’s dirty work by revoking their own peoples’ citizenship – often through disenrollment procedures based on membership rolls and other artificial requirements originally created by the federal government – and, by extension, causing a cultural identity crisis, there are Native Nations that recognize the serious consequences of disenrollment and are looking for different options. For example, the Graton Rancheria government recently revised their constitution to put in place significant protections for its people. Although disenrollment is still legally possible under Graton Rancheria law, it can only occur in cases of fraud or mistake, and even then the proceedings must take place within a three-year statute of limitations. To further protect its citizenry, any changes to citizenship laws can only occur when with the approval of two-thirds the adult population. Examples like this one, though, are scarce across Indian Country, and need to be more prevalent.   OP:  Congratulations to Graton Rancheria for finding a proper way to treat their citizenship.   We've written extensively on Chukchanski, Pala, Pechanga, Redding on how they have not followed their own tribal laws and how sovereign nations, including our own government, should treat these tribes that harm their people.   No water rights, not attending functions at those casinos of disenrolling tribes.

READ the rest of the story at the link above.

 

 

Monday, December 9, 2013

Tracey Avila Dies; Receives FINAL JUSTICE for her Mistreatment of Rancheria Families

Tribal Chairwoman Tracey Avila of Robinson Rancheria died on Wednesday night from complications while on dialysis. She also suffered a stroke. She was 52. I hope she had the decency to repent.

Avila was accused of stealing more than $60,000 from the Elem Pomo Tribe. She used to be the tribe's fiscal officer.

Elem's own investigation led to the conclusion that Avila had allegedly taken the funds through three principal methods – increasing her hourly pay rate without authorization, giving herself unapproved pay advances and signing several of her family members up for health care coverage but not having the required premiums deducted from her paycheck, Attorney Dutschke's letter stated. Her trial was repeatedly delayed amid concerns about her declining health. She suffered from diabetes and kidney failure and recently had a stroke, her attorney said.

 Avila had police with ASSAULT WEAPONS, evict members: It was a cold, rainy day on the Robinson Rancheria today, when two Tribal Police Officers came to the door of Monica Anderson's house on Quail Top Drive with assault rifles in their hands. Monica was being evicted because her husband belongs to the Duncan clan, a clan who Tribal leader Tracey Avila has spent the past year trying to eradicate from the Rancheria for no other reason than the patriarch, Clayton, speaks out against the wrongdoing he has witnessed there since Avila took control of the administration of the Robinson Band of Pomo people. Read more on Robinson Rancheria:

Robinson Rancheria Disenrollments
Robinson Rancheria Terrorism
Tracey Avila
Lake County News
accused embezzler Tracey Avila led evictions


Nooksack Tribe Disenrollment: SCREW DUE PROCESS, We Don't Need No Stinking Due Process

Tribal disenrollment leads to many ugly issues:  Complete lack of transparency from tribal government.  No regular scheduled meetings and now it looks like the 306 members of the Nooksack Tribe will get some of their punishment a bit early.  Although NOT disenrolled, those who are under review WILL NOT receive the same benefits as other enrolled members

Reports from our friends of the NOOKSACK 306:

On December 3, the Kelly Faction passed a Nooksack Tribal Council Resolution for “2013 Christmas Support in the amount of $250.00 to be made available to each currently enrolled Nooksack Tribal members, not subject to pending disenrollment proceedings.” 

They did so via a “poll,” in secret, and without any notice to Tribal Councilpersons St. Germain and Roberts. That was the same day Bob Kelly refused to call the monthly public Regular Meeting of the Nooksack People. 

This latest scheme is unlawful, under both tribal and federal law, and utterly shameful. And it will not be taken lying down. That is because WE BELONG

Read MORE on disenrollments:


Disenrollment

Tribal disenrollments

Tribal Cleansing

Tribal Terrorism

Riverside County Gets First Native American Judge: Sunshine Sykes. Can She Protect the Rights of Native Americans Harmed by Corrupt Tribal Governments?

Congratulations to Judge Sykes.  Hopefully, she can be an advocate for Native Americans that have been harmed by their tribes.  There are hundreds in Riverside County that have been harmed by the Pechanga Band of Luiseno Indians.
Attorney Sunshine S. Sykes became Riverside County Superior Court’s first Native American judge when she appointed to the bench by Gov. Jerry Brown Thursday, Dec. 5.
Brown also announced Thursday the appointment of Khymberli S.Y. Apaloo as San Bernardino County Superior Court judge. She had been serving as a commissioner. Apaloo, 43, is from Rancho Cucamonga.
Sykes, 39, of Riverside, has been a  a deputy county counsel at the Riverside County Office of County Counsel since 2005.
The graduate of Stanford University Law School, where she also earned her undergraduate Bachelor of Arts degree, is a member of the Navajo Nation.
She was a contract attorney at the Juvenile Defense Panel from 2003 to 2005.  Sykes was a staff attorney and Equal Justice Works fellow at the California Indian Legal Services from 2001 to 2003, according to a release from the governor’s press office.
Sykes, a Democrat, fills the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge Randall White.

Chukchansi "Leadership" EMBARRASSES themselves with TWO Separate Elections

The elections from both sides were rigged.  Two factions fighting over control.  It's time for customers to boycott this casino and wait for North Fork Rancheria to open.  Time to PULL the tribe's recognition.

The latest in a Chukchansi leadership standoff resulted in two elections on Saturday, with both groups claiming to be the rightful tribal council of the Picayune Rancheria of Chukchansi Indians in Coarsegold, which has been deeply divided since the winter of 2011.
One of Saturday's elections was deemed the "unification election" -- an attempt to join two factions: leaders of the Reggie Lewis and Morris Reid groups.
The other was led by Nancy Ayala's faction, which has maintained control of the rancheria offices in Coarsegold, along with day-to-day operations at Chukchansi Gold Resort & Casino.
Richard Verri, legal counsel for the tribe, said Lewis got the most votes in the "unification election." He will be joined on the tribal council by Chance Alberta from the Lewis group and Dixie Jackson and Reid from the Reid group.
Verri said the elction drew a "very strong showing by the tribal members," but he didn't have the vote count.
In the "unification election," ballots were sent to just over 800 adult voting members of tribe, which has about 900 members, said Verri, who has been representing the Lewis group. Ballots were also sent to the Ayala group, he said.
"This election is about keeping the membership intact," Verri said. "It's about saying, 'we have 900 members, we are all equal, there's not classes of membership.' There's not first- or second-class citizens. Once you are a citizen, you are a citizen."
Verri said only some members, who came to the tribal offices and who weren't sanctioned, were allowed to vote in the Ayala election.
David Leibowitz, spokesman for Ayala's council, said Saturday that he didn't know how many ballots were cast in their election. As of late Saturday night, he did not have election results.
"The tribe continues to move forward," Leibowitz said of the Ayala election. "The Ayala quorum continues to make the payments ... tribes are sovereign nations and they have land from which that sovereignty resides. You can't just set up a headquarters in a strip mall (in Fresno, where Lewis' group is now based) and say you run the tribe."
The rift between the Lewis and Reid groups was mended at a general council meeting in September. Members voted to lift the sanctions against Reid supporters -- which date to the occupation of the tribal offices in February, 2012, and another leadership standoff.
The new, unified group is still hoping for intervention from the Bureau of Indian Affairs to help sort out the leadership feud.




Read more here: http://www.mercedsunstar.com/2013/12/07/3380741/divided-chukchansi-tribe-holds.html#storylink=cpy

Friday, December 6, 2013

Fresno Grizzlies Accept CHUKCHANSI BLOOD MONEY for Naming Rights

Shame on the Fresno Grizzlies.  They had a chance to stand up for the 70 percent of Chukchansi people that have been harmed by their own tribe by refusing to take money from a corrupt tribe.   Yeah, right.  Standing up for human and civil rights is for Mandela, not for white businessmen in Central California.

The Fresno Bee:
Grizzlies President Chris Cummings and Nancy Ayala, council chairwoman of the Picayune Rancheria of Chukchansi Indians, held a ceremonial check signifying the tribe's full payment of this year's naming-rights fee at the downtown stadium.
The check was symbolic -- the tribe covered the $1 million bill with two separate payments about a month ago.
Ayala said the tribe considers it "an honor" to do business with the Grizzlies and the community.
Cummings said the team is "looking forward to keeping this relationship going as long as baseball exists."
The back story, though, isn't quite as cheery.
The tribe, which operates the Chukchansi Gold Resort & Casino near Coarsegold, is in the middle of a bitter internal fight for political control. The tribe usually pays its stadium naming rights fee with a single check in September.
Way to stand tall Grizzlies and Chris Cummings.
READ MORE ABOUT CHUKCHANSI:
Picayune Rancheria of Chukchansi Indians
Picayune Rancheria
Chukchansi thuggery
Nancy Ayala
Chukchansi disenrollment
Chukchansi Council Dispute
Morris Reid




Tribe Denied Power Over Nonmember's Land - Tribal Overreach of Power Slapped Down

As our readers know, on my reservation, the Pechanga Reservation in Temecula, the tribe is working hard to eliminate our water rights.   Maybe it's time we built a five story compound on our land?


 The Shoshone-Bannock Tribes of Idaho cannot regulate home construction by a nonmember on land he owns within the Fort Hall Reservation, the 9th Circuit ruled Thursday.

     David Evans inherited land near Pocatello, one of several plots of "non-Indian fee land" within the 800-square-mile reservation, and hired Sage Builders to construct a home there in 2012. Though Evans obtained a building permit from Power County, he did not seek authorization from the 5,822-member Shoshone-Bannock Tribes.

     After Evans ignored the tribe's request that he submit a building permit, along with permit fees, to them, tribal authorities issued a stop-work order and threatened to fine him $500 a day if he continued to dodge the tribe's regulations.

     Evans, Sage and a subcontractor sought a federal ruling that the tribes had no jurisdiction over non-Indian fee land, but U.S. District Judge B. Lynn Winmill in Pocatello said that they had to first take the issue to the tribal court. Winmill denied Evan's move for an injunction and dismissed the case.

     A three-judge federal appeals panel in Portland unanimously reversed on Thursday.

     "The tribes plainly lack the power to regulate Evans' conduct," Judge Milan Smith wrote for the court.

     To gain such power and assert tribal-court jurisdiction in the case, the tribes would have had to show that Evans' home-building threatened their "political integrity, economic security, or health or welfare," according to the ruling.

     The tribes failed to show any such threats, the panel found, noting that Evans' would not be the first home to be built by a nonmember within the reservation.

     "To begin with, the area contains many residential properties owned and inhabited by nonmembers," Smith wrote. "Additionally, the city of Pocatello operates the Pocatello Municipal Airport on non-Indian fee land a short distance from Evans' parcel."

     Smith added that, "because the tribes plainly lack the authority to regulate Evans' construction of a single-family house on non-Indian fee land, the District Court erred in concluding that exhaustion is required."

     Attorney Mark EchoHawk argued for the tribes that the plaintiffs were attempting to wriggle away from tribal-court jurisdiction at the expense of the "tribal court system and decades of federal legislative, executive, and judicial policy supporting tribal courts."

     "Rather than exhaust tribal remedies as required, plaintiffs prematurely sued the tribes in federal court, seeking an order declaring that the tribes cannot ever assert jurisdiction of any kind over the plaintiffs, regardless of what they may do on the reservation," EchoHawk wrote in an appellate brief.
     He further argued that the question of whether the tribe can regulate Evans cannot be answered "until the tribal court has had a full opportunity to develop the record and consider the question in the first instance."
     Finding, however, that the "exhaustion requirement is not absolute," the appellate court allowed Evans to forgo tribal court and predicted the "overwhelming likelihood of success on the merits" of his case.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Grand Ronde Tribe Responds to Mass Disenrollment Story

The tribe responds to news media exposing their plans for disenrollment.

The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde is conducting an enrollment audit. The audit fulfills one of the tasks assigned in the Tribal Strategic Plan for 2010, which was adopted in August of 2009. That plan was formulated after nearly two years of development that began with a Strategic Futures conference in 2007 involving Tribal leaders and members. The plan directed Enrollment to audit all enrollment files and applications, track reasons for denials, and audit blood quantum records with the goal of strengthening the Grand Ronde Family Tree.

Recently some statements have cropped up on social media sites regarding the Tribe’s Enrollment audit. One of them even featured the Tribe’s emblem and could have led people to believe it was an official statement from the Tribe. It was not. In addition, the statements contain extremely misleading and false information. For example, the statement that up to 20% of the Tribe is being disenrolled is simply not true. Audit proceedings are ongoing and in fact, over the last several months a number of Tribal members and their families have provided the necessary information to clear up inconsistencies in their files and resolve issues related to their enrollment.

Tribal Council cannot make any specific comments on the Enrollment Audit until audit proceedings have been completed. The Tribal Council does not see enrollment files until an Enrollment Committee recommendation is presented.

There is an established process under the Enrollment Ordinance for addressing loss of membership that includes working with Enrollment Staff, then hearings before the Enrollment Committee, a hearing before Tribal Council., and ultimately an appeal to Tribal Court and the Tribal Court of Appeals.

Over the years our Tribal membership, through Constitutional amendments, has consistently pushed for tightening our membership requirements. As elected officials the Tribal Council took an oath of office to uphold the Tribal Constitution and the laws of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde. In that same pledge, the Council swore that they would perform all duties required of them by the Constitution and the laws of the Tribe. The Council knows this process is not any easy one for the Tribal community but the Council is committed to getting through it with diligence and compassion.


Thank you,

--
Siobhan Taylor
Public Affairs Director
Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde

Monday, December 2, 2013

US Supreme Court To Hear Case With Implications on Tribal Sovereign Immunity

Misuse of tribal immunity, in some cases where tribes use it as a club to beat the weak and helpless, could send a shockwave through Indian Country.

A small, shuttered casino in a tiny northern Michigan town is at the center of a case coming before the U.S. Supreme Court today that could redefine when American Indian tribes can be sued and under what conditions. A far-reaching decision — if the court makes one — could impact all sorts of commercial activities taken by tribes: from casino gambling to payday lending, and give state governments more leeway to sue American Indian groups.

As it stands now, the federal government can file suit against a tribe, but states are largely barred from doing so unless a tribe either has agreed to waive its sovereign immunity or had it abrogated by Congress. But the Michigan attorney general’s office is arguing that immunity shouldn’t stop its suit to block the Bay Mills tribe from opening a casino outside of tribal lands, since the federal government has so far declined to act. Otherwise, the state claims, the law seems to set up a contradiction in which Indian casinos are governed by federal and state authorities on tribal lands, but are outside their reach off-reservation. “The sky will not fall if blanket tribal immunity goes away,” state lawyers said last week in the case against the tribe, which in 2010 tried to open a casino in Vanderbilt, a small town about 50 miles south of the Mackinac Bridge.

Tribes see it far differently, however, with worries that a Supreme Court decision could open them up to a flurry of lawsuits discouraging off-reservation activities, including tribal law enforcement and cross-governmental agreements.

The implications are so great that the National Congress of American Indians — the oldest of tribal rights groups, representing hundreds of tribes — asked the U.S. Interior Department to settle the case before the court hears it. 

 But the federal government has largely stayed out of it, other than declaring the Vanderbilt property — more than 100 miles from the tribe’s Upper Peninsula reservation — to not be “Indian lands” for casino purposes. In a court brief, the federal government said there should be other means of settling the argument but counseled against any change to sovereign immunity, a policy that furthers tribal “self determination and economic development.”

 Without the federal government stepping in, tribes are anxious the court will accept Michigan’s argument — more than a dozen other states are in support of the state’s position — and reinterpret the immunity doctrine. “The state is really asking for a deep intrusion into tribal unity. ... You could be sued for anything,” said John Dossett, the NCAI’s general counsel. “The federal government has really kind of punted on this thing when they shouldn’t have.” Even the NCAI considers Bay Mills’ move to be a “test case” of the law.

Using interest from a settlement with the U.S., the tribe bought the Vanderbilt land more than 100 miles from its reservation in Brimley, in the Upper Peninsula. The tribe — which has long pursued casino sites in the Lower Peninsula, including in Port Huron — argued that the land should be available for tribal gambling since it was purchased through the proceeds of a land settlement. Under the settlement, interest was to be used “for improvements on tribal land or the consolidation and enhancement of tribal landholdings through purchase or exchange.” Any land bought was to be “held as Indian lands are held.”

But the U.S. and Michigan deemed the new property to not be “Indian lands” for the purpose of gambling, a fact that has revealed an apparent contradiction in the law: The relevant law controls gambling on reservations, not off them. While no one questions the federal government’s authority to bring suit, the state’s authority — the tribe argues — is nonexistent under tribal immunity. To that, the state says its nonsensical to think Congress intended to limit gambling on tribal land but not off-reservation.

State Solicitor General John Bursch, who will argue the case, knows others suggest the issue could be settled through arbitration or alternative means, but that tribal immunity would trump any deal reached those ways, too. “Sovereign immunity by the tribe would bar our ability to enforce any ruling,” he said. “We’d be right back where we started.”  

Bursch said it wasn’t the state’s intention to move into the question of tribal immunity, but that the tribe, in defending itself, raised the issue. Now, it appears to be about the only one remaining. The court could be asked to draw a delicate balance between self-determination in Indian country and the rights of states to regulate their own territories. Absent an overt congressional directive, the state said in its most recent brief, there is no reason for the court to avoid considering the boundaries of immunity — if only to settle contradictory findings in courts across the U.S. Bay Mills, meanwhile, brings a strong team with it today led by Neal Katyal, a former acting U.S. solicitor general with a long history before the high court.

Cancelled Tribal Meeting at Grand Ronde, Along with CENSORED Tribal Newspaper. First Amendment is just a number, not a Right.

The Grand Ronde tribe of Oregon is censoring newsletters, finding that publishing disenrollment information is "inappropriate". Here is a video of what the tribe is doing as told by members. PLEASE share so that this news spreads.