indianz.com Dynamic Homes
Advertise on Indianz.Com
Home Whats New on Indianz.Com? News Forums
  About
Home > News > Headlines
Print   Subscribe
Supreme Court delays action on Indian gaming case
Thursday, June 5, 2008
Filed Under: Law | National

A case that tests a critical provision of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act remains on the docket as the U.S. Supreme Court wraps up its current term.

The court was due to consider a petition filed by the Kickapoo Tribe during a closed-door conference last week. Instead of taking action, however, the justices asked the state of Texas to file a brief in the case.

Back in April, the state waived its right to respond to the tribe's petition. The state did the same in an earlier Indian gaming case over the closure of the Alabama-Coushatta Tribe's casino.

But now that the court wants Texas to file the brief, the state will finally go on record. The response is due by June 18 -- a day before the final conference of the current term.

The move means the case might not be resolved until the court returns to work in October of this year. The delay affects not just the Kickapoos but also an Alabama tribe whose gaming rights are being contested in a pending lawsuit.

In both cases, the Interior Department invoked a provision of IGRA that is used when states like Texas and Alabama refuse to negotiate with tribes. Interior is authorized to issue what are known as secretarial procedures so the tribes can offer the same types of Class III games that are legal in their respective states.

The procedures would have helped the Kickapoo Tribe but Texas argued that they were illegal. In a ruling last August, the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals agreed and said Interior was wrong to cut the state out of the process.

"The Secretarial Procedures violate the unambiguous language of IGRA and congressional intent by bypassing the neutral judicial process that centrally protects the state's role in authorizing tribal Class III gaming," the court wrote in a 2-1 split.

The Department of Justice has said the 5th Circuit "erred" by invalidating the procedures. But the Bush administration -- led by George W. Bush, the former governor of Texas -- refused to appeal the case to the Supreme Court and is urging the court not to accept it.

The Kickapoos, backed by eight other tribes, want the Supreme Court to take the case. Not only did the 5th Circuit get it wrong, they argue the decision conflicts with another circuit.

The state of Alabama is closely watching the case as it pursues its own challenge to the secretarial procedures.. The state has refused to negotiate with the Poarch Band of Creek Indians.

Relevant Documents:
Docket Sheet No. 07-1109 | 5th Circuit Ruling (August 17, 2007) | Briefs and More

Related Stories:
Texas tribe presses Supreme Court on IGRA issue (4/22)
Alabama sues to block Poarch Creek Class III gaming (4/9)
Class III gaming efforts in doubt after court decision (9/24)
Appeals court blocks Class III gaming for Texas tribe (8/21)
Texas cheers ruling against Kickapoo gaming (8/21)
Sen. Cornyn asks DOI to delay Kickapoo gaming (6/29)
Interior enters Class III debate in three states (11/15)



Copyright © Indianz.Com
More headlines...
Feature Story:
Menominee Nation off-reservation casino rejected (1/8)
Feature Story:
Ken Salazar picked to lead Interior Department (1/8)
Indianz.Com Casino Stalker (1/8)
Federal Recognition Database 2.0 (1/8)
In The Hoop Column (1/8)
Indian Gaming News (1/8)
The Federal Register (1/8)
NCAI PDF: Draft agenda for tribal leaders meeting (1/8)
Some Cherokee councilors cancel inauguration trip (1/8)
High school band to stay 'Chiefs' for inaugural (1/8)
Jodi Rave: Series on Indian lawmakers in Montana (1/8)
Senate panel holds Daschle confirmation hearing (1/8)
Rep. Cole gains seat on Appropriations panel (1/8)
Colville man selected as BIA superintendent (1/8)
Puyallup Tribe affected by flooding in Washington (1/8)
EPA issues boil water order for Omaha Reservation (1/8)
NPR: Alaska Native corporations seek friends (1/8)
Lawmakers angry over Oneida Nation trust transfer (1/8)
Quechan man's death still being investigated (1/8)
Editorial: Sam Bradford a Cherokee class act (1/8)
Pala Band seeks to reclaim ancestral homeland (1/8)
Recorder: Morongo Band argues attorney conflict (1/8)
Treatment program focuses on Arapaho culture (1/8)
Former Cheyenne-Arapaho official sentenced (1/8)
U.S. Attorney to seek state office in Colorado (1/8)
Seneca Nation hopeful for casino under Obama (1/8)
Red Lake Nation breaks ground on casino expansion (1/8)
Auburn Community to resume casino expansion (1/8)
Shingle Springs casino sees 19K visitors a day (1/8)
Mohegan Tribe reaches deal over casino smoking (1/8)
more headlines...
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
AllNative.Com Clothing

Home | Abramoff | Arts & Entertainment | Business | Canada | Cobell | Education | Environment | Forum | Health | Humor | Indian Gaming | Jobs | Law | National | News | Opinion | Politics | Recognition | Red Lake | Sports | Trust

Suggest a Site

Indianz.Com Terms of Service | Indianz.Com Privacy Policy
About Indianz.Com | Contribute to Indianz.Com | Advertise on Indianz.Com | Write to Indianz.Com

Indianz.Com is a product of Noble Savage Media, LLC and Ho-Chunk, Inc.