After 76 Years, Tribal Citizenship on National Indian Congress' Agenda

founders_photo.jpg

The 76 year-old National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) has never proclaimed its support of Tribal citizenship rights.  But that could change this week.

NCAI will convene its annual meeting on Monday and consider a Tribal citizenship protection Resolution, at the urging of a broad coalition of former NCAI Presidents, Native Nations, inter-Tribal organizations, and Indigenous leaders, educators, and advocates.

Past NCAI President Ron Allen proposes Resolution #PDX-20-001, which would affirm that “since time immemorial, each Tribal Nation retains the right to determine its own membership and each Indigenous individual enjoys the right to belong as a citizen of his or her Tribal Nation, according to its traditions and customs . . .” 

“Our tribal citizens—the People—are the foundation of our sovereign nations,” said Allen, the current Chairman of the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe.  “We must protect against outside attacks on tribal citizenship, whether from the U.S. Congress, federal courts or anti-Indigenous groups.”

Tribal citizenship has increasingly come under attack by the federal government and anti-tribal groups. 

In the Baby Veronica case, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito derided Tribal belonging in the first line of his majority decision that undercut the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA), with this statement: “This case is about a little girl  . . . who is classified as an Indian because she is 1.2% (3/256) Cherokee.”  

Earlier this year the Goldwater Institute cited Tribal blood-quantum citizenship criteria to assail ICWA as an unconstitutional race-based law before the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in Brackeen v. Bernhardt

The Trump Administration likewise mischaracterized Tribal governmental health care beneficiaries as a racial class for Medicaid purposes, and also attempted to unilaterally stop issuing the federal Indian blood degree certifications that many Tribal governments utilize for citizenship purposes. 

The NCAI Resolution “will help prepare NCAI for frontline defense of tribal citizenship and nationhood,” Allen continued.  Former NCAI Presidents Brian Cladoosby, Susan Masten, and Mel Tonasket also support the Resolution, which as of this morning awaits referral by NCAI’s Executive Board to a committee of jurisdiction.

During yesterday’s NCAI Executive Board Meeting by Zoom, Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians President and Suquamish Chairman Leonard Forsman shared these words with the Board:

Screen Shot 2020-11-07 at 11.59.55 AM.png

And Indian identity and citizenship are essential to Native nationhood. According to Dr. Joe Kalt of the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development: “Nothing is more central to any nation’s sovereignty than the power to determine who shall hold rights of citizenship and belonging,”   

Observing that Tribal leaders frequently contact the Harvard Project for advice regarding Tribal citizenship challenges, Dr. Kalt sees the Resolution as an opportunity “to bring much-needed focus to these critical matters” and to “strengthen the self-governing powers of all Indigenous nations.”

The Jamestown and Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribes, Yakama Nation, and Spokane Tribe of Washington State, the Organized Village of Saxman in Alaska, Robinson Rancheria of California, Hualapai Tribe of Arizona, and Citizen Band of Potawatomi Nation in Oklahoma are urging NCAI to adopt the Resolution.

Those western Native Nations are joined by the Great Plains Chairmen’s Association and eastern and southern Alliance of Colonial Era Tribes. 

The Association of American Indian Affairs (AAIA), National Urban Indian Family Coalition, National Native American Bar Association, National Native American Law Student Association, and Association of American Indian Physicians have also endorsed the Resolution, understanding the great extent to which Tribal citizenship undergirds Indigenous life, health, safety, culture, and law.

Believing it is “imperative that Tribal leadership have open dialogue about protecting Tribal citizenship, nationhood and identity,” Shannon O’Loughlin, a Choctaw citizen and AAIA’s Executive Director, remarked: “It is time that our Nations be the example of what it looks like to the world to protect human rights and cultural sovereignty.”

Galanda Broadman Once Again Named "Best Firm" in Native American & Gaming Law by U.S. News

Best_Law_Firms_Standard_Badge_2021.jpg

Galanda Broadman, PLLC, has been named a “Best Law Firm” by U.S. News - Best Lawyers in the arena of Native American Law and Gaming Law, for the ninth year in a row. 

According to U.S. News - Best Lawyers, the firm's national ranking was determined through the firm's overall evaluation, which was derived from a combination of Galanda Broadman’s “clients' impressive feedback” and “the high regard that lawyers in other firms in the same practice area have for [the] firm.” 

Galanda Broadman is dedicated to advancing Indigenous legal rights and business interests and defending Indigenous human rights.

The firm, with eight lawyers and offices in Seattle and Yakima, Washington and Bend, Oregon, represents Tribal governments, businesses, and citizens in critical litigation, business and regulatory matters—especially in matters of Treaty rights, sovereignty, taxation, civil rights, and belonging.

Seattle Councilwoman Debora Juarez Urges "Colonial Blade" Of Disenrollment Be Discarded

09212019_DebateDist5_145405-780x520.jpg

On this Indigenous Peoples Day, Seattle City Councilwoman Debora Juarez struck a solemn tone, reflecting that the "federal government non-recognition process and tribal government disenrollment process are two sides of the colonial blade that is still being wielded today."

She continued:

It cuts deep. It divides community. Its pain is immeasurable.... This colonial tool divides tribes, families, and communities. I don't know what we'll do. If we're going to continue, I don't know how we're going to heal ourselves from this....

Federal non-recognition process and tribal disenrollment are designed to erase our people, to deny them their birthright, to make them invisible, and to continue the violent history that we've endured since 1492.

These policies and practices have no purpose in the 21st Century....I hope our leaders are listening today and [will] reject this tool, this weapon, this colonial act, and will throw it in the historical bin of oppression...

Listen to her sobering yet inspiring words on the Seattle Channel at minute-second 18:30. #StopDisenrollment

Why Do Western Wash. Cops Keep Killing Indigenous People? Galanda, Dreveskracht Explain

image-2-e1593730069183.png

Gabe Galanda and Ryan Dreveskracht are featured in a compelling new investigative podcast: “The Killing of Stonechild Chiefstick: The Investigation,” which exposes Kitsap County and City of Poulsbo law enforcement’s cover-up of the killing of Mr. Chiefstick on July 3, 2019.

In an encounter that lasted only ten seconds, Mr. Chiefstick, a Chippewa Cree member and father of five, who hailed from the Suquamish Reservation, was shot dead by Poulsbo Police Officer Craig Keller in a crowded Poulsbo waterfront park on the night of July 3, 2019.

Mr. Chiefstick is the latest in a growing number of Indigenous people who have lost their lives at the hands of Western Washington police. Over the past decade, John T. Williams, Milo Harvey, Cecil Lacy, Jr., Renee Davis, and Daniel Covarrubias also died in this region due to local police violence. Indigenous mental illness or mental health crisis was a factor in most if not all of these tragedies.

Criminal charges were not filed against any of the officers involved in those fatalities. None of those situations resulted in a civil jury trial, with cases brought by the decedents’ families either getting dismissed or settling out of court. Only two resulted in inquests, where the officers were exonerated.

In episodes 3, 5, and 6, Galanda and Dreveskracht expose various aspects of the “playbook” that the extended Western Washington law enforcement family uses to conceal the truth associated with officer-involved deaths. In the final episode, they explain why those local deaths continue unabated:

Galanda: “It’s important to recognize here that officers make mistakes.  Our police officers are by and large undertrained and unqualified to perform for the job that they are tasked to perform by local government.  Mistakes happen.  But just societies admit mistakes and learn from mistakes.  They do not cover up mistakes and hide from the consequences of mistakes….[W]hat we are seeing throughout our society and throughout Western Washington is that our system of government is designed to not atone for the mistakes made by law enforcement but to hide those mistakes, and hiding those mistakes only leads to the next person being killed by the police.” 

Dreveskracht: “[W]ithout having the truth out, without having the facts available to the public, with the sort of broad defenses available like qualified immunity, like the felonious conduct statute…these cases don’t even get to a jury. There’s no testimony to figure out what exactly happened and there’s no fact finder to evaluate that testimony. It’s just going to keep happening.”

Galanda and Dreveskracht also discuss what justice might look like for Mr. Chiefstick’s family, including his five surviving children:

Galanda: “Justice in this case would be some remedy that does not allow these officers, like so many officers in Western Washington or America, to escape the repercussions of the decisions they made on July 3, 2019. And hopefully that justice for Stonechild Chiefstick’s family will result in the next life being saved or spared from law enforcement rather than being lost at the hands of law enforcement.”

Dreveskracht: “I think that would involve, in this case, training for the officers, critical incident training.  It would involve an approach to law enforcement from a level of supervision to a level of policymaking that takes these situations and takes a de-escalation approach as opposed to rushing in and being scared and making a bad decision….”

Emmy award-winning Producer/Editor Dom Caprese produced the powerful podcast series. Please listen.

Gabe Galanda and Ryan Drevesckracht are partners at Galanda Broadman, PLLC. They sue local and state governments, officials, and officers for the wrongful death of Indigenous and non-Indigenous persons. Gabe belongs to the Round Valley Indian Confederation, descending from the Nomlaki and Concow Peoples.

Gabe Galanda Named Among America's Best Lawyers for 15th Straight Year

Best-Lawyer-America-LOGO-e1491091395185.gif

Gabe Galanda has been selected by his peers for inclusion in the 2021 edition of The Best Lawyers in America® in the areas of Gaming Law and Native American Law, for the 15th straight year.  

Gabe was also named "Lawyer of the Year" for his work in Gaming Law in Seattle. Only a single lawyer in a specific practice area and location is honored with a "Lawyer of the Year" designation.

He has now been selected to The Best Lawyers in America® every year since 2007.

Gabe’s practice focuses on complex, multi-party litigation and crisis management, representing Indigenous nations, businesses, and individuals.

He is skilled at defending Indigenous nations from legal attacks by local, state and federal government, and representing plaintiffs and defendants in catastrophic injury lawsuits.

Gabe also handles civil rights controversies for Indigenous people, particularly those involving tribal citizenship rights.  He also represents plaintiffs in federal civil rights litigation against police officers and jailers for the wrongful death of Indigenous individuals in state custody.

The Best Lawyers in America® is regarded as the definitive guide to legal excellence in the United States. Gabe’s selection was based on a peer-review survey, which all told comprises more than 4.9 million confidential evaluations by top attorneys throughout the country.

Gabriel S. Galanda is the managing lawyer of Galanda Broadman, PLLC, in Seattle. Gabe is a descendant of the Nomlaki and Concow Tribes, belonging to the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Northern California.

Four Galanda Broadman Indigenous Rights Lawyers Honored By Super Lawyers

Superlawyers2-900x350-c-default-600x233.jpg

Indigenous rights lawyers Gabe Galanda (Round Valley), Anthony Broadman, Ryan Dreveskracht, and Amber Penn-Roco (Chehalis) were each honored by Super Lawyers magazine for 2020.

Gabe and Anthony were named “Super Lawyers” and Ryan and Amber “Rising Stars,” all in the field of Native American Law.

Galanda Broadman, PLLC, was also recently named a “Best Law Firm” by U.S. News - Best Lawyers in the arena of Native American Law and Gaming Law, for the eighth year in a row. 

With seven lawyers and offices in Seattle and Yakima, Washington and Bend, Oregon, the firm is dedicated to advancing and protecting Indigenous rights.