Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and Attorney General Eric Holder today announced a settlement of the long-running and highly contentious Cobell class-action lawsuit regarding the U.S. government's trust management and accounting of over three hundred thousand individual American Indian trust accounts. Also speaking at the press conference today were Deputy Secretary of the Interior David Hayes and Associate Attorney General Tom Perrelli.
Under the negotiated agreement, litigation will end regarding the Department of the Interior’s performance of an historical accounting for trust accounts maintained by the United States on behalf of more than 300,000 individual Indians. A fund totaling $1.4 billion will be distributed to class members to compensate them for their historical accounting claims, and to resolve potential claims that prior U.S. officials mismanaged the administration of trust assets.
In addition, in order to address the continued proliferation of thousands of new trust accounts caused by the "fractionation" of land interests through succeeding generations, the settlement establishes a $2 billion fund for the voluntary buy-back and consolidation of fractionated land interests. The land consolidation program will provide individual Indians with an opportunity to obtain cash payments for divided land interests and free up the land for the benefit of tribal communities.
By reducing the number of individual trust accounts that the U.S must maintain, the program will greatly reduce on-going administrative expenses and future accounting-related disputes. In order to provide owners with an additional incentive to sell their fractionated interests, the settlement authorizes the Interior Department to set aside up to 5 percent of the value of the interests into a college and vocational school scholarship fund for American Indian students.
“This is an historic, positive development for Indian country and a major step on the road to reconciliation following years of acrimonious litigation between trust beneficiaries and the United States,” Secretary Salazar said. “Resolving this issue has been a top priority of President Obama, and this administration has worked in good faith to reach a settlement that is both honorable and responsible. This historic step will allow Interior to move forward and address the educational, law enforcement, and economic development challenges we face in Indian Country.”
“Over the past thirteen years, the parties have tried to settle this case many, many times, each time unsuccessfully," said Attorney General Eric Holder. "But today we turn the page. This settlement is fair to the plaintiffs, responsible for the United States, and provides a path forward for the future.”
The settlement has been negotiated with the involvement of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. It will not become final until it is formally endorsed by the court. Also, Congress must enact legislation to authorize implementation of the settlement. Because it is a settlement of a litigation matter, the Judgment Fund maintained by the U.S. Departments of Justice and Treasury will fund the settlement.
“While we have made significant progress in improving and strengthening the management of Indian trust assets, our work is not over,” said Salazar, who also announced he is establishing a national commission to evaluate ongoing trust reform efforts and make recommendations for the future management of individual trust account assets in light of a congressional sunset provision for the Office of Special Trustee, which was established by Congress in 1994 to reform financial management of the trust system.
The class action case, which involves several hundred thousand plaintiffs, was filed by Elouise Cobell in 1996 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia and has included hundreds of motions, dozens of rulings and appeals, and several trials over the past 13 years. The settlement funds will be administered by the trust department of a bank approved by the district court and distributed to individual Indians by a claims administrator in accordance with court orders and the settlement agreement.
Interior currently manages about 56 million acres of Indian trust land, administering more than 100,000 leases and about $3.5 billion in trust funds. For fiscal year 2009, funds from leases, use permits, land sales and income from financial assets, totaling about $298 million were collected for more than 384,000 open Individual Indian Money accounts and $566 million was collected for about 2,700 tribal accounts for more than 250 tribes. Since 1996, the U.S. Government has collected over $10.4 billion from individual and tribal trust assets and disbursed more than $9.5 billion to individual account holders and tribal governments.
The land consolidation fund addresses a legacy of the General Allotment Act of 1887 (the “Dawes Act”), which divided tribal lands into parcels between 40 and 160 acres in size, allotted them to individual Indians and sold off all remaining unallotted Indian lands. As the original holders died, their intestate heirs received an equal, undivided interest in the lands as tenants in common. In successive generations, smaller undivided interests descended to the next generation.
Today, it is common to have hundreds—even thousands—of Indian owners for one parcel of land. Such highly fractionated ownership makes it extremely difficult to use the land productively or to provide beneficial use for any individual. Absent serious corrective action, an estimated 4 million acres of land will continue to be held in such small ownership interests that very few individual owners will ever derive any meaningful financial benefit from that ownership.
Additional Information is available at the following sites: www.cobellsettlement.com.
The Department of the Interior website: www.doi.gov. The Office of the Special Trustee website: www.ost.doi.gov
The consolidated land sell off of unallotted land is in part due to many Native Americans without "decree of blood quantum" being denied registration. Though they have in many instances a higher blood quantum of Native blood then those registered; they are exiled out of fear of those registered losing more of their pie. As in Casino profit sharing. The Tribes could register those who have well substantiated genealogy and oral family histories, this would increase the numbers,the voices to save the land!! A "conditional agreement" could be attached to disallow sharing in Casino profits to such new enrollees but the Tribes would benefit grateley and the enrollees would be satiated in their Spirit. Which is the drive that brings them to the Tribe to their heritage anyway, not the "Casino profits" that are blinding the Tribes, the People have been blinded! The Spirit, the Earth, The People are one in God the Great Spirit of all. Don't sell out!! Blood quantum devaluates every generation anyway unless Native to Native American marriages are the only marriages and this is not happening.
ReplyDeleteThe Dawes plan was a "plea bargain" and it is being offered again disguised as a beneficial consolidated land sell off of unallocated land. Hold on to your fractions of land!And fight the sale of unallocated, up the numbers of registered Tribal members! The Dawes plan 200 years projected for desimation of Native Owned land! You will be disinfranchised of your land and instead be a share holder in a Casino! What a poor exchage. Save the people save the land don't sell out to greed the Gov never plays from the vest its underhanded from up the sleeve and down and dirty, Plea bargains in all cases come back to bite you!Fraud, bribery and fakery mastermined plan to decimate the holdings of Native Americans! Study, Read and don't give up land! Unite with your brothers and sisters who are in exile many are not "laughable wanna be's" but decendants of those who would not cave! They are drawn to their roots not money.The age has arrived that they can live as their ancestors wish they could have, without fear of discovery and they wish to celebrate their survival with their People, united as Tribal members. It is a matter of the heart that requires recognition from the people who's welcome it is entreating for acceptance. Strength in numbers.
What a windfall for the natives!
ReplyDeleteWe are very thankful to the guidance and the assistance of the Great Spirit for settling this long, long unresolved financial conflict. Yes, we are spiritual people and we are connected to our Mother Earth. May we continue to walk in our Native traditional harmony and enjoy the Western-way wealth. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteWait until you see who gets the money and who doesn't.
ReplyDelete