To the gang,

Here is some interesting stuff for you guys.

Ray Evans Harrell

UpClose tonight, September 20:

Elouise Cobell


Sometimes looks can be deceiving. You'd never suspect that a 5-foot-4 banker
who never
finished college would win one of those MacArthur 'genius" awards and take
on the federal
government through sheer grit and determination. But as Nightline Producer
Jay Lamonica
first discovered a few years back, looks are indeed deceiving:

Elouise Cobell is mild-mannered and polite. Cobell has spent most of her
life on the Blackfeet
reservation in northwest Montana. She's a mother, a rancher and she helped
start the first
tribal-owned bank on a reservation. She's also suing the federal government
for billions of dollars...
and so far she's winning. She was one of nine children who lived in a small
house without electricity,
plumbing or telephone. She grew up listening to stories about her ancestor,
Mountain Chief, the last
hereditary leader of the Blackfeet, and how the Blackfeet ruled the northern
plains and followed
the huge herds of buffalo. Then the white man came, the buffalo were
exterminated and the Blackfeet
were herded onto the reservation.

One of the stories she heard was what happened on Ghost Ridge during the
winter of 1883-4.
The US government promised to supply winter rations to the Blackfeet, who
had been disarmed
and confined to the reservation. Instead, the food was sold on the black
market and more than
500 Blackfeet starved to death. They are buried in a mass grave on Ghost
Ridge. Cobell heard
other stories when she was younger.

The land that had been given to individual Indians, including her parents,
was to be held in trust
for them by the US government who would rent it out to mining, oil, timber
and grazing interests
and then pass along the money to the landowners. No one was sure how much
they were
supposed to get and in many cases, even where their land was located.
Payments have been
intermittent and seemingly random.

The government provided with little or no information about their holdings
or the money held in
trust for them. Cobell is the lead plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit
against the federal government
filed six years ago. The judge in the case, Royce Lamberth, has said he "has
never seen more
egregious conduct" by the federal government which has "engaged in a
shocking pattern of
deception of the court."

Two Cabinet members were held in contempt of court in 1999 for not producing
the trust
documents as ordered by the judge. A fine of more than $600,000 was paid and
the government
has admitted that many of the documents have been destroyed or are lost.
Secretary of Interior
Gale Norton is now on trial for contempt in the case. The judge also ruled
the government had
not lived up to its trust obligation. Another trial will be held to
determine how much the plaintiffs
should receive. Cobell estimates up to $137 billion is unaccounted for since
1887.
This week a federal judge held Interior Secretary Gale Norton in contempt
for failing to comply
with his orders to fix problems with the US Indian trust fund. So tonight,
Sam Donaldson talks
with Elouise Cobell. Don't be fooled by her genteel manner. She's fiercely
determined to force the
government to, as she puts it, "do the right thing." If you think you've
heard all about the plight of
Native Americans, you haven't met Elouise Cobell.

Richard Harris
Senior Producer
Nightline UpClose




PLEASE READ AND PASS ON, EVERYONE NEEDS TO KNOW .... THE STRUGGLE CONTINUES


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