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Subject: Cabinet Members Held in Contempt
Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 12:37:48 EST
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Cabinet Members Held in Contempt

.c The Associated Press

By PHILIP BRASHER

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A federal judge held two Clinton administration Cabinet
secretaries in contempt today over the government's delay in producing records
of Indian trust funds.

U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth issued the contempt order, saying Treasury
Secretary Robert Rubin and Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt failed to produce
documents related to a class-action lawsuit over the alleged mishandling of
300,000 Indian accounts worth an estimated $500 million.

The secretaries and Assistant Interior Secretary Kevin Gover were ordered to
pay legal fees and other expenses that resulted from their delay in complying
with Lamberth's November 1996 order to produce documents.

``I have never seen more egregious misconduct by the federal government,''
Lamberth said in his order.

The judge's ruling followed a contempt hearing last month.

Interior's Bureau of Indian Affairs was ordered two years ago to turn over
statements, checks and other documents on accounts held by five American
Indians who are the lead plaintiffs in the suit against the Interior and
Treasury departments.

So far, only a small number of the documents have been produced.

``The court is deeply disappointed that any litigant would fail to obey orders
for production of documents, and then conceal and cover up that disobedience
with outright false statements that the court then relied upon,'' the judge
wrote. ``But when that litigant is the federal government, the misconduct is
even more troubling.''

The Treasury Department had no immediate reaction to the ruling.

The Interior Department issued a statement saying that correcting decades-long
problems with management of the Indian trust funds remained one of Babbitt's
``highest priorities.''

The lawsuit is related to a long and embarrassing attempt to clean up $2.5
billion in Indian trust funds.

The funds include the 300,000 accounts held by individual Indians and another
2,000 tribal accounts worth $2 billion. The money includes lease revenue,
royalties and court settlements.

Some of the accounts are worth only a few dollars. The largest one, valued at
$400 million, is a court's award to the Sioux nation for its loss of the Black
Hills.

The presidential appointee in charge of reconciling the accounts and improving
the bookkeeping resigned last month.

Special Trustee Paul Homan accused Babbitt of stripping him of the authority
he needed to do his job, and Homan's supporters accused Babbitt of making him
a scapegoat for the department's problems.

Records that have been turned over have included embarrassing revelations.

The Bureau of Indian Affairs was unable to document $2 billion of transactions
in the tribal accounts over a 20-year period. It is not known how much of that
is actually missing, but it has been estimated the government could be liable
for up to $575 million in the tribal accounts alone.


AP-NY-02-22-99 1236EST

Copyright 1998 The Associated Press.  The information  contained in the AP
news report may not be published,  broadcast, rewritten or otherwise
distributed without  prior written authority of The Associated Press. 


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