Bree Black Horse Featured In Indian Gaming Magazine
Bree Black Horse is an Associate in the Seattle office as an Associate. Bree’s practice focuses on federal court and tribal court litigation involving tribal governments, enterprises and businesses....
View ArticleTribes: Banish Drug Dealers, Sparingly, But Don’t Disenroll
This summer a number of tribes, including the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe of South Dakota, Spirit Lake Tribe of North Dakota, and Blackfeet Tribe of Montana, have resuscitated the penal tradition of...
View ArticleGabe Galanda’s Anti-Disenrollment Advocacy Featured by “Best Lawyers”
It was not long ago when legal journals would not pay any attention to tribal disenrollment controversy. Today mainstream legal journals like Law360 and Courthouse News Service write on the subject....
View ArticleBree Black Horse Helps Lead Her Alma Mater, S.U. Law School
Bree Black Horse is chipping in to help her alma mater, the Seattle University School of Law, and its Center for Indian Law & Policy. Bree has been appointed to the Center’s advisory Council, and...
View ArticleTribal Marijuana: Don’t Believe the Hype
Gabe Galanda recently kicked off the “Tribal Participation In the Cannabis Industry“-conference in Portland, Oregon. Gabe delivered a monologue that attempted to bring some rationality to the Indian...
View ArticleEPA Offers Revised Clean Water Act TAS Rules
By Ryan Dreveskracht The current regulation of water pollution in Indian country is complex, to say the least. Governed largely by the Clean Water Act (“CWA”)—a comprehensive statute designed to...
View ArticleFederal Law Enforcement Void Invites Human Trafficking in Indian Country
By Joe Sexton Indian Country is not immune to the crime of human trafficking. In fact, given the history of federal law enforcement negligence and the federal government’s willful oppression of...
View ArticleOnly Lawyers Can Spark the Federal Indian “Human Rights Era”
By Jared Miller Since President Barack Obama announced the United States’ endorsement of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (Declaration) in 2010, some legal scholars...
View ArticleFederal Court Grants Tribe’s Injunction Against Fracking Rule
By Amber Penn-Roco On March 26, 2015, the Bureau of Land Management issued a final rule concerning hydraulic fracturing on federal and Indian lands, which was in turn challenged by the States of...
View ArticleNatives Turn Local “Deadliest Enemies” Into Change Agents
Towns, cities and counties, as tribal communities’ closest neighbors, have historically played a major role in the “deadliest enemies“-dynamic of tribal-state relations. At the municipal level Indians...
View ArticleTribes Could Lose Big If Nebraska Prevails in “Diminishment” Case
By Jared Miller When the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear Nebraska v. Parker earlier this month, it created the real possibility of a new kind of land-grab in Indian country. Nebraska is a reservation...
View ArticleMarijuana Tribes: Beware of the DEA’s Trojan Horse
In 2013, I published “Federal Task Force: Indian Country’s Trojan Horse,” explaining: Beware of the federal task force. . . . [T]he federal task force is a Trojan Horse when it enters Indian country....
View ArticleRecognize. Disenrolled Indians Acknowledged As Their Own Tribes
By Bree Black Horse It could happen. In fact, the Federal Government is currently considering whether a band of disenrolled California Pomo Indians should be recognized as their own tribe. Other...
View ArticleWill SCOTUS Double Down Against Tribal Courts In Dollar General?
By Jared Miller Last week, U.S. Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch remarked on the success of a pilot program allowing select tribes to prosecute non-Indians for domestic violence under the reauthorized...
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