Indian Trust: Cobell v. Kempthorne Home Privacy Policy
Site Map Contact Sunday, November 12 2006
 
Email Signup
Enter your email address below to receive Indian Trust updates by email.

Appearances
 Thursday January 25, 2001
 Review of Indian Trusts Criticized
by William Claiborne
Washington Post Staff Writer
The Washington Post
 
Native Americans who are suing the federal government over mismanagement of
as much as $10 billion in Indian trust accounts contended yesterday that a
last-minute order by Bruce Babbitt, the outgoing interior secretary, to
conduct a statistical sampling of the trusts to determine how much Indians
are owed was a ruse to avoid full recompense.

In one of his final acts before leaving office, Babbitt said that trust
account records are in such disarray that a statistical sampling is the most
cost-effective way to calculate how much the government owes account
holders. A special trustee charged with overseeing the trusts has estimated
the sampling could cost as much as $70 million.

However, Eloise Cobell, the lead plaintiff in a class action lawsuit aimed
at forcing the government to clean up the mismanaged trusts, said the
Interior and Justice departments intend to use Babbitt’s order to
“bootstrap” their appeal of a 1999 federal court decision that ordered a
full accounting of the trusts.

“This is another desperate effort to distract the courts and Congress from
their utter inability to complete a full and accurate accounting, as
required by law,” Cobell said. “I certainly hope the Bush administration can
get control of the Justice Department, obey the law and the federal judge’s
orders and start to restore some integrity to this disgrace.”
Dennis Gingold, an attorney for the Indians, said the Interior Department
has notified the U.S. Court of Appeals that the statistical sampling was
ordered to put the department in compliance with the federal court’s order
“when, in fact, it is in violation of the court’s order.”

U.S. District Judge Royce C. Lamberth had ordered the Interior and Treasury
departments to overhaul the trust fund and find out how much account holders
were owed. He said a century of mismanagement and shoddy record-keeping has
left 300,000 Indians with no idea of how much they are owed in royalties
from oil drilling, grazing and logging on Indian-owned lands.
Each year, about $500 million in royalties is channeled into the trust
accounts. They are passed down through generations, and many impoverished
Indians rely on them to pay for food and everyday needs.
While plaintiffs in the lawsuit contend that a minimum of $10 billion is
owed, Interior officials have said the total is probably less, but at least
in the hundreds of millions.

Lamberth said the accounts had been so badly mismanaged that the system
represented “fiscal and governmental irresponsibility in its purest form.”
At one point in the lawsuit, he held Babbitt and Treasury Secretary Robert
E. Rubin in contempt of court for failing to produce records as ordered by
the judge.

Gingold said the proposed sampling would be a waste of money because account
records are so unreliable that a sampling could not produce accurate
information. Instead, Gingold proposed the creation of an “economic model”
of the account system, using hundreds of variables that would include
original data such as oil well production and grazing records instead of
only records from sample accounts.

Gingold said such an accounting could be done for about $2 million instead
of $70 million because the data is readily available.
Last year, the Interior Department held 80 public hearings around the
country to hear testimony about the sampling plan, which was designed to
study the records of about 350 accounts and make projections for
compensation from those records.

A majority of account holders who commented said the government should
research each account separately to determine just compensation. Kevin
Gover, former assistant secretary for Indian affairs, estimated such an
undertaking would require doubling the Bureau of Indian Affairs’s annual $2
billion budget for an undetermined number of years.

During a six-week trial in 1999, government officials conceded that the
records are in a shambles and that they are unable to provide an accounting.
Congress approved $27.6 million in emergency funds to help fix the problems
and urged the government to settle the lawsuit by using statistical sampling
to determine fair compensation.

© 2001 The Washington Post
 
for more information: click here
 « prev article next article » 
 
« January » « 2001 »
date article link
01/25/01 Review of Indian Trusts Criticized [ view ]
01/25/01 Indians rip Babbitt’s late effort [ view ]
01/24/01 Gov’t Mismanaged Indian Accounts [ view ]
01/17/01 More Indian trust documents missing [ view ]
 « December | February » « 2000 | 2002 » 
Home | Privacy Policy | Site Map
 
Copyright ©2006 Blackfeet Reservation Development Fund, Inc. All rights reserved.
 
Developed by www.gslsolutions.com.