And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

Date: Sat, 27 Feb 1999 10:27:02 -0800
From: Tom Schlosser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: MSAJ Seattle 206 386 5200
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To: Triballaw mailing list <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Article on Principal Chief Joe Byrd
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http://www.reasonmag.com:80/9903/fe.as.tale.html

[Reason magazine]

                                               REASON * March 1999

               Tale of Tears
               When the Bureau of Indian Affairs occupied the
               Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, it was an old story
               with a modern twist.

               By Amy H. Sturgis

               An embattled chief executive, elected with less than
               half the vote, who refuses to turn over legal
               documents to official investigators. Capricious
               firings of public employees on spurious charges.
               Accusations of misused funds, dubious dealings with
               the Democratic National Committee, and subverting
               state power for personal ends. Surreptitiously taped
               phone calls. Allegations of abuse of power.
               Indictments for obstruction of justice. Fears that
               the standing of the highest office in the land--and
               faith in government--have been irrevocably damaged.

               Though the above is unfolding within the borders of
               the United States, this is not a story about Bill
               Clinton. It is about recent events in the Cherokee
               Nation of Oklahoma, the quasi-sovereign entity that
               covers more than 7,000 square miles in northeastern
               Oklahoma. In 1997, at the behest of Principal Chief
               Joe Byrd, who occupies a position analogous to
               Clinton's, federal Bureau of Indian Affairs agents
               occupied the CNO's courthouse and disrupted an
               ongoing investigation into the chief's alleged
               squandering of tribal monies and trampling of the
               Cherokee constitution. Two years later, the armed
               BIA agents are gone, but the controversy continues,
               playing out in CNO courts and legislative chambers.

               Though sharing few specific details with Clinton's
               scandal, the four-monthoccupation and the events
               surrounding it illuminate what might be considered
               the deeper, structural issues of the Clinton
               impeachment by providing an object lesson in the
               necessity of the rule of law and separation of
               powers. The CNO controversy underscores that real
               damage is done to the political process when one
               branch of government refuses to recognize the
               constitutionally mandated authority of its
               counterparts.

               The occupation also casts a harsh light on the
               Bureau of Indian Affairs, a bureaucracy that has
               been called "the worst federal agency" by U.S. News
               & World Report and characterized as "a multifaceted
               nightmare" by the inspector general of the

               Department of the Interior. Indeed, since its birth
               as part of the War Department in 1824, the BIA has
               evolved from an ill-conceived and brutal weapon used
               to eradicate and subjugate native Americans to one
               of the most widely and consistently criticized units
               of the federal government.

               The Cherokees are the second largest tribe in the
               United States, and about 70,000 members live within
               the borders of the CNO. With the city of Tahlequah
               as its capital, the nation is a democracy with three
               branches of government--the Chiefdom, the Tribal
               Council, and the Judicial Appeals Tribunal--that
               perform roughly the same functions as the U.S.
               executive, legislative, and judicial branches. Like
               the U.S. federal government, the Cherokee government
               is designed to maintain a system of checks and
               balances among branches.

               Joe Byrd was elected chief in 1995, in a race
               overshadowed by the news that popular incumbent
               Wilma Mankiller had developed lymphoma and would not
               run for office. In an election in which only 12
               percent of eligible voters turned out, Byrd managed
               to get just 29 percent of the total. The genesis of
               the BIA occupation dates to 1996, when Byrd ignored
               requests by the Tribal Council to provide contracts
               and other financial records regarding public
               business. Even when the Cherokee Nation Judicial
               Appeals Tribunal ruled in late 1996 that Byrd had to
               surrender the papers for the public record, he
               refused to comply. After giving Byrd several months
               to obey the law, Tribal Prosecutor A. Diane Blalock
               asked Chief Justice Ralph Keen to issue a search
               warrant for Byrd's office on February 24, 1997.

               Cherokee marshals served the warrant the next day
               and copied the financial records in question. Mere
               hours later, a furious Byrd publicly announced that
               he had done nothing wrong. He also fired Cherokee
               Marshal Service Director Pat Ragsdale and a
               lieutenant marshal, both of whom had helped execute
               the search. The battle of executive and judicial
               wills escalated: Cherokee Justice Dwight Birdwell
               immediately reinstated the two marshals and ordered
               that anyone interfering with the orders and
               investigation of the Judicial Appeals Tribunal would
               be in contempt of court.

               Although Article X of the Cherokee constitution
               required that he turn over the documents, Byrd said
               there was "no need" for public scrutiny of the
               papers because, he promised at a press conference,
               "absolutely no money had been misused." Ignoring the

               inconvenient fact that the Cherokee courts had given
               him six months to comply with its request for
               financial documents, Byrd said, "I think Ralph Keen
               should have given me the opportunity to handle that
               situation myself...all he had to do was call me."

               As those events were playing out, Cherokee Marshal
               Service Director Pat Ragsdale was investigating
               irregularities in the documents gathered from the
               chief's office. It seemed clear to Ragsdale that
               Byrd had illegally diverted Cherokee Nation funds,
               including some from the Bureau of Indian Affairs,
               beyond the CNO without proper authorization.
               Ragsdale informed the FBI, since federal money was
               involved. After reviewing Ragsdale's information,
               the FBI launched an investigation on March 6, 1997.

               After the FBI probe began, however, Bob Powell, a
               former Oklahoma Bureau of Investigation agent who
               had been given the nebulous title "tribal inspector"
               by Byrd, called the marshals' office. According to a
               tape of that conversation later filed with the
               Cherokee courts, Powell suggested to five deputies
               that allegiance to Byrd would allow them to retain
               their jobs. Powell explained that Byrd had come into
               the possession of a wiretap tape supposedly exposing
               a conspiracy to overthrow him. Powell told the
               marshals that Byrd was planning to give the tape to
               federal investigators. Such a ploy, said Powell,
               would simultaneously win the FBI's support and
               discredit Byrd's opponents in the Cherokee Nation.

               It didn't work out that way. The tape, which
               included conversations among outspoken Cherokee
               leaders such as Marvin Summerfield, an editor of the
               Cherokee Observer newspaper, Justice Dwight
               Birdwell, and Tribal Councilwoman Barbara
               Starr-Scott, revealed criticism of the Byrd
               administration but no "conspiracy" against him. The
               FBI's questions ultimately centered not on the
               content of the tape but on the illegal nature of the
               wiretap that produced it. Far from winning over the
               FBI to Byrd's cause, the tape implicated the chief
               in yet more wrongdoing.

               Byrd also drew heat for his use of Bob Powell to
               intimidate members of the Marshal Service. Members
               of the Tribal Council questioned Powell's
               appointment by Byrd, especially since the position
               of "tribal inspector" was not mentioned in the
               constitution and had never existed before. Tribal
               Prosecutor Blalock filed contempt and obstruction of
               justice charges against Powell for interfering with

               the marshals' investigation of Byrd. Powell
               responded with the ingenious though disingenuous
               argument that he did not have to recognize Cherokee
               national law--despite the fact that he worked for
               the chief of the nation--because he was not born an
               ethnic American Indian.

               With his power apparently slipping away, Byrd
               scrambled for footing. On March 20, 1997, he stated
               that he would not follow orders from the Cherokee
               Judicial Appeals Tribunal that he considered to be
               illegal or unconstitutional. In effect, he had given
               his warning that he would pick and choose the laws
               he wished to obey. Such a posture would be
               disturbing in any elected official. But it struck a
               particularly harsh note among the Cherokees, who
               were forcibly relocated to Oklahoma after President
               Andrew Jackson refused to abide by an 1832 U.S.
               Supreme Court ruling guaranteeing the Cherokees'
               right to remain in the southeastern United States.
               An outraged Chief Justice Ralph Keen warned that
               Byrd had "set himself up as being above the law."

               Byrd responded by firing more marshals involved in
               investigating him. When the court ordered the
               marshals reinstated, Byrd placed the officials
               responsible for restoring the marshals' paychecks on
               administrative leave. In the meantime, Byrd amassed
               his own private stock of tribal marshals, sworn in
               and armed by Byrd to protect him and his interests.
               With each step, the chief moved closer to making the
               CNO his own personal police state.

               But he could not do it alone; he needed outside
               help. Indeed, a majority of Cherokee legislative and
               judicial officials opposed him, and the wheels of
               the Cherokee justice system continued to turn
               against him with every new discovery in the ongoing
               investigation into his tenure as chief. Both Chief
               Byrd and Deputy Chief Garland Eagle were scheduled
               to appear before the Judicial Appeals Tribunal to
               show why they shouldn't be held in contempt for
               ignoring multiple court orders. Had they failed to
               attend, the marshals were prepared to arrest Byrd,
               and an impeachment inquiry would have followed. That
               legal process was aborted by the BIA's intervention.

               In April, 1997, after a quick trip to Washington,
               D.C., to meet with federal officials, Byrd
               engineered the occupation of his own nation by BIA
               agents. He did this by employing an unprecedented
               interpretation of the Cherokee constitution.
               Although Article V, Section 4 of the document

               unequivocally states that "no business shall be
               conducted by the Council unless at least
               two-thirds...of members thereof regularly elected
               and qualified shall be in attendance," Byrd asserted
               that this quorum rule did not apply to "special
               meetings." On April 15, Byrd assembled the eight
               (out of a total of 15) council members who still
               supported him. Though short of a quorum--and in
               flagrant violation of a requirement that 10 days'
               notice be given prior to special sessions of the
               council--Byrd's allies voted unanimously to transfer
               the Cherokees' law enforcement responsibilities to
               the BIA.

               By nightfall, about two dozen Cherokees, including
               former Principal Chief Wilma Mankiller, had filed a
               lawsuit in the Cherokee Nation's Court over the
               dubious council vote. On April 28, when Chad Smith,
               a Cherokee constitutional attorney and political
               opponent of Byrd's, explained the chief's
               legislative machinations to a fully reconvened
               Tribal Council, Byrd's armed security guards dragged
               him from the meeting. (Ironically, that scene
               prompted The Tulsa World to editorialize that
               "federal authorities obviously will have to
               intervene if the tribe is to be saved from its
               leaders.")

               Still without a quorum, Byrd's supporters on the
               Tribal Council voted to impeach Chief Justice Keen
               and Justices Philip Viles and Dwight Birdwell. On
               June 20, with between four and 16 armed BIA agents
               assisting (sources vary), Byrd's men took control of
               the Cherokee Supreme Courthouse. The BIA claimed it
               "had to ensure the safety of the community and its
               property."

               Byrd refused to let Marshal Service Director Pat
               Ragsdale remove personal belongings for the
               justices, including the Silver Stars and Purple
               Heart Justice Birdwell had earned during the Vietnam
               War. A few days later, when Justice Philip Viles and
               Court Clerk Gina Waits went to the courthouse to
               continue their duties for the Judicial Appeals
               Tribunal investigation of Byrd, they were told that
               they would be arrested if they did not leave the
               premises at once. As bewildered Cherokees watched,
               the BIA removed files on the Byrd investigation from
               the courthouse and kept anti-Byrd tribe members from
               entering the building. The BIA had effectively
               halted a legal inquiry, enabling an embattled leader
               to ascend to the level of despot. As Muskogee Daily
               Phoenix editorial writer Derek Melot later
               commented, "The BIA...stepped beyond [a] `neutral'

               position and...actively support[ed] Byrd's
               administration."

               With their official investigation hampered by the
               BIA, the occupied Cherokees fought back in
               surreptitious ways. On June 22, under the guise of a
               hog fry, more than 700 Cherokees gathered at
               Whitaker Park in Pryor, Oklahoma, to raise money for
               the CNO marshals fired by Byrd. (Though reinstated
               by the court, they had been unpaid for several
               months.) The Cherokee Elders Council, a nonpartisan
               group of elder Cherokee activists that carries great
               advisory weight within the CNO, lodged a protest
               when it learned that Byrd's employees had damaged
               and defaced Justice Birdwell's war medals. Cherokees
               contacted members of the Oklahoma congressional
               delegation. Republican Sens. Jim Inhofe and Don
               Nickles both pledged to work against Byrd, whom
               Nickles labeled "a dictator."

               Oblivious to or uninterested in the dubious legal
               maneuvers behind its authorization, the BIA
               continued to occupy the courthouse. The unpaid
               marshals filed a federal lawsuit against the agency,
               charging it with interfering in Cherokee national
               affairs. But even as BIA agents were keeping
               Cherokees from entering their own courthouse, a
               federal district court judge dismissed the suit,
               ruling that "any disposition by this court...would
               adversely impact and interfere with the internal
               governance of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma and
               its right to exercise sovereign authority."

               In August, 1997, the displaced Judicial Appeals
               Tribunal ordered the fired marshals to reopen the
               Cherokee Courthouse so that the investigation of
               Byrd could continue. But when the marshals
               approached the building, BIA officers and Byrd's new
               marshals, now joined by members of the Oklahoma
               Highway Patrol, reacted violently, injuring six
               people. A week later, 25 Cherokees filed suits in
               federal court against members of the BIA and the
               Oklahoma Highway Patrol, charging them with
               illegally barring tribal members from the
               courthouse.

               Just when the situation seemed bleakest--and most
               likely to erupt into serious factional violence--a
               nonpartisan report on Byrd ordered by the Tribal
               Council back in 1996 appeared. Released in late
               August 1997, the Massad Report (named after its
               principal author, Anthony M. Massad), was the work
               of three non-Indian attorneys who had no ties to the
               CNO but were nonetheless conversant with native
               American political structures in Oklahoma.


               In a thorough, generally evenhanded analysis of the
               situation, the report condemned Byrd's behavior,
               focusing especially on "the shocking revelations"
               regarding obstruction of justice and lack of
               disclosure of financial records. "The principal
               chief should ensure his assistants are sensitive to
               his constitutional duty and personal commitment to
               perform his duties in strict compliance with
               applicable laws, and that they understand this
               requires change in their patterns of work," the
               report said. "The principal chief should expect and
               encourage criticism as well as support from persons
               in the other two branches [of government]." The
               report also called for reinstatement of the "fired"
               marshals, a reopening of the "closed" courthouse,
               and a return of the "impeached" justices.

               The highly visible--and highly credible--report
               shamed both Byrd's tribal allies and the BIA, which
               finally withdrew from the CNO. At last, the law and
               will of the Cherokee people was reasserted.

               But the effect of the BIA's intervention on Byrd's
               behalf has lingered long after the last armed agents
               left the area and the immediate crisis passed. As
               one Cherokee has commented, "[It] looks like we will
               not enter the 21st century with our self-governance,
               self-sufficiency and sovereignty intact....In fact,
               we...have reverted back to the turn of the century."

               Indeed, it will be some time before the CNO fully
               resolves the issues raised by recent events. Byrd
               continues to serve out his four-year term as
               principal chief, despite a late 1998 poll that put
               his approval rating in the single digits. If the BIA
               occupation he engineered failed to consolidate his
               power, it did effectively keep him from being
               impeached. With the next election for principal
               chief this May, Byrd's critics have decided to wait
               out his tenure in office rather than begin
               impeachment proceedings against him.

               Key tribal records and files, including those
               removed by the BIA, are still missing, even as new
               leads appear in the ongoing investigation of Byrd's
               alleged misuse of power. Auditors from the U.S.
               Department of Interior uncovered, in The Tulsa
               World's phrase, concerted efforts "to woo... federal
               officials using federal funds," with the goal of
               creating a personal political empire. Allegations
               against Byrd now include charges that he made
               illegal political contributions by "lending" a
               full-time, paid Cherokee tribal employee to the

               Democratic National Committee for months at a time,
               and that he diverted CNO funds to D.C.-based
               attorneys to secure favors for himself, family
               members, and supporters. At one point in late 1998,
               Byrd faced 11 active cases and four pending arrest
               warrants. In U.S. federal courts, he faces two
               criminal charges of diversion of federal funds.

               However those cases ultimately play out, the
               experience of having a national leader refuse to
               comply with legitimate requests from other branches
               of government has seriously damaged the CNO's
               political process. The occupation effectively
               postponed a constitutional convention required by a
               1995 law (the Cherokees periodically review their
               constitution). The convention, tentatively scheduled
               for 1998, did not take place due to the uproar. Even
               interest in the upcoming elections seems muted by
               the affair. As Robert A. Fairbanks, president of the
               Oklahoma-based native American College Preparatory
               Center, has observed, "The Cherokees are now
               wondering how to insure that elected officials
               henceforth conduct tribal affairs in accordance with
               the Cherokee National Constitution."

               The partisan intervention of federal agents and an
               alleged relationship between the chief and the
               Democratic Party have also reinforced fears among
               the Cherokees that the BIA, far from helping to
               impartially adjudicate tribal problems, is either
               avaricious, incompetent, or some combination of the
               two. Accusations that the BIA is a "mercenary
               agency" are regularly voiced in public forums.
               Judicial Appeals Tribunal Justice Philip Viles has
               said that the agency's intervention was based on a
               nearly complete "lack of knowledge of facts."
               According to an Octo-ber 1998 poll of the CNO
               conducted by Ohio State University researchers, the
               BIA has a 5 percent approval rating and 90 percent
               disapproval rating among tribe members.

               While the occupation no doubt intensified such
               feelings, it's worth pointing out that the BIA has
               inspired similar hostility among native
               Americans--and non-Indian critics--for most of its
               175 years. The agency has long been criticized for
               running roughshod over the very people it is
               supposed to serve. In a 1953 Yale Law Journal
               article, for instance, Felix S. Cohen, the author of
               the standard Handbook of Federal Indian Law that is
               still used today, compared the BIA to an extortion
               racket and detailed how agency officials threatened
               American Indian communities with losing their oil

               and natural gas rights, hospitals, and schools if
               they did not support the agency and its agenda. More
               recently, in Stealing From Indians (1994), David L.
               Henry, a certified public accountant and former BIA
               employee, exposed multiple cases of agency theft,
               embezzlement, and fraud against a number of American
               Indian nations by BIA agents. Tribal losses,
               according to Henry, amounted to billions of dollars.

               Such expos�s have been matched by decades of
               official calls for reform. In 1948, the Hoover
               Commission, charged with evaluating the organization
               of the federal executive branch, suggested
               dismantling the BIA in favor of a more
               decentralized, state-based system. The "Declaration
               of Indian Purpose," the product of a meeting of more
               than 450 tribal leaders at the 1961 Voice of the
               American Indian Conference, called for an end to
               government "charity" and bureaucratic paternalism
               altogether in favor of complete self-determination.
               The 1966 Presidential Task Force Report on the
               American Indian advised a fundamental overhaul of
               the BIA, as did the 1969 report known as the Josephy
               Study. The 1975 Indian Self-Determination Act, which
               granted all tribes the right to manage programs and
               services formerly administered by the BIA, even
               apparently abolished the agency's raison d'�tre.

               Somehow, though, 150 years after the removal era,
               the BIA manages to get along quite nicely. Its 1998
               budget was $1.73 billion, up from $1.6 billion the
               previous year. As suggested by the lack of a federal
               investigation or reprimand after the CNO occupation,
               the agency continues to escape any real scrutiny and
               accountability. Questions about the BIA extend far
               beyond its police power: The agency has done little
               to address the new urban and technological realities
               of native American life. For instance, while
               Cherokees in Oklahoma and beyond have embraced
               Web-based entrepreneurship and designed software
               programs capable of transcribing traditional native
               languages, the BIA still focuses on early
               20th-century concerns such as agricultural issues.

               Indeed, even as the CNO struggles to move beyond the
               crisis in governing of the past few years, the
               status quo seems to be holding at the agency that
               played such a pivotal role. In late 1997, Kevin
               Gover, an attorney specializing in federal Indian
               law and a member of the Pawnee tribe, replaced Ada
               Deer as BIA director. But judging from Gover's
               address to the 55th Annual National Congress of

               American Indians last October, such change is
               cosmetic at best. In his speech, Gover did not talk
               about policing internal corruption or standardizing
               BIA procedures. Instead, he said his goal for the
               agency was "to rediscover and reinvigorate the
               Warrior spirit in each of us."

               Beyond invoking bland platitudes, Gover criticized
               those who protested the BIA's legacy of capricious
               actions by warning that "adversaries in Congress"
               could use "the bureau's shortcomings as an excuse
               for the refusal to appropriate needed dollars."
               Gover appears to view the BIA's "shortcomings"
               merely as political threats to his agency's turf and
               budget. Such an attitude is all too consistent with
               the BIA's history and offers little reason for
               native Americans--and U.S. taxpayers--to cheer. In
               this country, we are often accused of ignoring the
               past and refusing to learn from it. Recent events in
               northeastern Oklahoma suggest that there is
               substantial truth to such a charge.

               Amy H. Sturgis is director of Vanderbilt
               University's Oral History Project and a scholar of
               Cherokee history.
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