-Caveat Lector-

 from:
 http://www.amcity.com:80/portland/stories/1999/06/28/story2.html

 The Business journal, Portland
 June 28, 1999

 Mysterious delays plague Kennewick Man lawsuit

 Gina Binole
 Business Journal Staff Writer

 On the second anniversary of what was supposed to be a speedy
 case, Kennewick Man's future remains about as murky as his
 past.

 Kennewick Man was discovered by a couple of college students
 in 1996, who found him along a bank of the Columbia River in
 Washington. He's believed to have been a fisherman who died
 9,300 years ago. A stone spearpoint stuck in his hip, and the
 repeated infections that likely came with it, could have been
 the cause. He stood about 5 feet 8 inches, tall for his time.
 He could've been anywhere between 40 and 55, an old guy back
 then.

 His discovery has stirred religious tensions, racial unrest,
 political posturing and scientific curiosity. With that in
 mind, it should shock no one that Kennewick Man has devoted
 most of his 20th century existence to court, the subject of a
 lawsuit filed in Portland.

 Believed to be one of the oldest and best preserved skeletons
 ever found in North America, Kennewick Man has whipped up a
 convoluted legal war. The combatants include five Native
 American tribes who seek to rebury the remains without study;
 the U.S. government, which repeatedly has sided with the
 Indians; eight well-respected scientists anxious to unlock
 clues to the peopling of the Americas; and a pagan,
 pre-Christian religious group which, like the tribes, is
 looking to lay claim to Kennewick Man.

 For two years, Portland has been the battle's legal
 epicenter. Two local lawyers, Alan Schneider and Paula
 Barran, sided with science, filing a lawsuit against the
 government seeking the right to study Kennewick Man's
 skeletal remains much more thoroughly.

 The suit was filed on behalf of the eight scientists who view
 Kennewick Man as a potential magnifying glass for the origin
 of modern American man. Before the government seized the
 skeleton on behalf of the tribes in 1996, initial reviews
 indicated that Kennewick Man possessed Asian and European
 features and might not be Indian at all.

 Portland was determined to be a better venue for the
 litigation. Both lawyers live here, and they felt a Spokane
 lawsuit would be viewed as a battle against the tribes.

 On June 27, 1997, U.S. Magistrate Judge John Jelderks stayed
 the case. He also called for a study of the remains to
 determine the skeleton's origin and which group might call
 him theirs, although no plaintiff was to take part in the
 research. Jelderks asked that the government first determine
 whether the skeleton was, in fact, Native American. If that
 proved to be true, the next step, he said, would be for the
 government to find out if the skeleton could be linked to a
 modern-day tribe.

 He requested that the controversy be resolved in a "timely
 and orderly manner."

 Two years, according to Schneider and Barran, is not
 particularly speedy, even in the eyes of the time-warped
 anthropologists and archaeologists they represent. Several of
 the plaintiffs, considered the best in their respective areas
 of study, are pushing 70. But they wait, because they must.

 "Welcome to the Kennewick Man war room," Schneider said as he
 walks into his no-frills office on Southwest Columbia Avenue.
 "Talk about something that consumes one's life."

 Although the pressure has eased some as they wait for the
 results of the government study, he continues to file data
 requests under the federal Freedom of Information Act and to
 outline future strategies for when the stay is lifted.

 Already, he estimates, he and Barran have put in more than a
 half-million dollars in pro bono time. The government has
 spent about double that.

 Schneider, an amateur archaeologist often tapped in cultural
 resource cases, got involved in the Kennewick Man case at the
 request of Doug Owsley, division head of physical
 anthropology for the Smithsonian Institute's Museum of
 Natural History. Owsley, who has helped identify remains in
 high profile cases such as Jeffrey Dahmer and the Branch
 Davidians, had just 19 hours to conduct a court-ordered
 inventory of Kennewick Man. He believes the skeleton warrants
 more scientific study.

 Schneider, like Owsley, maintained the bones must be studied
 by more than those people hand-picked by the government. And
 he is arguing that under the First Amendment, Owsley and the
 other plaintiffs are extended not only the right to speak,
 but the right to send and receive information. Kennewick Man
 is one of a handful of skeletons that have been described as
 possessing features that are to some degree Caucasoid. They
 raise the controversial question whether Native Americans
 were the first people in the New World.

 "I feel we need to win this case because what is at stake is
 the next generation," Owsley said in a phone call from his
 office at the Smithsonian. "It's not a personal agenda to see
 that skeleton. ... We know so little about that time period.
 This is an opportunity to gain all kinds of information.

 "If you put it into perspective, they used to have a very
 simple model as to the peopling of the Americas, and 11,500
 years ago, the earliest Americans gave rise to a culture
 called Clovis. It's now becoming apparent that this model is
 very inadequate. It's far more complicated than one major
 migration."

 Even the Asatru Folk Assembly, a group that practices a
 pre-christian Norse religion, believes Kennewick Man should
 be studied. The religious sect filed its lawsuit after
 hearing the skeleton showed Caucasoid characteristics. Like
 the Indians, Steve McNallen said the Asatru believe they have
 a duty to find out if Kennewick Man is related to the people
 of Europe. McNallen is the leader of the group, which is
 based in Nevada City, Calif., and counts about 500 members.
 The group has, however, lost its legal representation and is
 no longer an active participant in the lawsuit.

 "We will wait for the results, but I think we now feel that
 it is very likely that European peoples have ancient roots on
 this continent, and we'd like to see that investigated
 further," McNallen said.

 Owsley does not understand why the government has been so
 dogged in its opposition to scientific study by the
 plaintiffs.

 The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers seized the remains shortly
 after the initial radio carbon dating on behalf of
 Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Reservation, Confederated
 Tribes and Bands of the Yakima Nation, the Nez Perce Tribe,
 Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation and the
 Wanapum Band.

 In addition, the Corps covered up the spot on the riverbank
 where Kennewick Man was found, making future entry difficult
 if not impossible. This action was taken even after a bill
 prohibiting it from doing so passed both houses of Congress
 and was awaiting the president's signature. The Corps, saying
 the law was on its side, spent $175,000 to cover the site
 with 2,000 tons of rocks and dirt.

 In 1990, Congress granted Indians the right to reclaim their
 ancestors' remains and cultural artifacts. The Native
 American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act applied not
 only to skeletons and objects in museums but to new
 archaeological finds as well.

 Armand Minthorn, a spokesman for the Umatilla tribe, told
 Congress his people view human remains as sacred and that he
 needed no scientific study to tell him the bones belong to
 his people. His religion and the teachings of his elders tell
 him that they were the first people. They want Kennewick Man
 back into the ground where they say he belongs.

 "Some scientists say that if this individual is not studied
 further, we, as Indians, will be destroying evidence of our
 history. We already know our history," Minthorn said.

 There are those who have learned of the Kennewick Man saga
 and argued the tribes fear a new migration theory will put
 their status as a sovereign nation at risk.

 The government's position is that, if the remains are 700
 years or older, they are considered Native American, although
 they do not necessarily belong to a particular tribe, said
 Stephanie Hanna of the Department of the Interior.

 Hanna, who responded to phone calls placed to Allison Rumsey,
 the third U.S. Department of Justice lawyer to take on the
 Kennewick Man case, said the tests have been completed and
 the department is in the process of reviewing them. She said
 she had no idea when the results would be released because
 higher level officials have asked to be briefed. Asked if
 this was a common request, she replied: "Nothing about this
 case has been typical."

 Barran, the litigator who has been working with Schneider,
 wholeheartedly agreed. She likened the government's actions
 to closing libraries and limiting access to knowledge. She
 does not in any way deny that the desecration of Indian
 graves occurred. Nor does she belittle their religious
 beliefs. Like the scientists she represents, she said she
 believes the bones should be given more than a one-time
 government study and a more certain future than reburial.

 "I want to know who Kennewick Man is," she said. "I believe
 that is my right; it is the public's right."

 That, of course, will be an issue for the courts to decide,
 and perhaps, a story Kennewick Man's skeleton will tell.






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