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TRADING POST
Editorial
Justice for American Indians
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company
The federal government has a long history of cheating American Indians, and
not all of this dirty dealing is in the distant past. On Monday, the Supreme
Court hears arguments in a suit by the Navajo, who lost millions of dollars'
worth of coal royalties because the government helped a coal company
underpay for their coal. A lower court ruled for the Navajo Nation. The
Supreme Court should affirm that well-reasoned decision.
The Navajo's huge reservation spreads across parts of Arizona, New Mexico
and Utah. The United States holds the lands in trust and manages their large
coal deposits. Peabody Coal had a lease to mine on that land. The terms
provided that in 1984, the interior secretary could make a reasonable
adjustment in the royalty rates paid to the tribe.
That year the department increased the royalty rate to 20 percent of gross
proceeds. After Peabody protested, the Reagan administration's interior
secretary met with a Peabody lobbyist, without informing the Navajo. The
secretary then signed a memo blocking the increase and called for the Navajo
to negotiate with Peabody. The tribe, already under severe economic
pressure, ended up agreeing to a rate of just 12.5 percent. The Navajo
eventually sued, arguing that the government violated its duty to look out
for their interests, and that it cost them as much as $600 million in
royalties.
They lost in the Supreme Court on one set of legal theories, but are now
relying on other laws. The Washington-based United States Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit ruled for the Navajo. In a unanimous ruling, the
three-judge panel concluded that several federal laws impose the sort of
fiduciary duty the Indians assert.
The appeals court also made clear that the government did not live up to
this duty. The ruling found that the Interior Department met "secretly with
parties having interests adverse to" the Navajo, adopted those parties'
"desired course of action in lieu of action favorable to" the Navajo, and
misled the Navajo about its actions.
The government's behavior was "indefensible," according to four former
interior secretaries, who submitted a friend-of-the-court brief to the
Supreme Court. The Obama administration, which has inherited the Bush
administration's position in the case, should not continue to stand up for
these misdeeds.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/23/opinion/23mon2.html?emc=eta1
NYTimes.com 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company
Published: February 22, 2009