Pioneer Press column August 17, 2005
by Marcia Armstrong, Siskiyou County Supervisor
(HERE
for proposed Karuk Constitution)
New Karuk Constitution:
It has come to my attention that the Karuk tribe
is in the process of revising their constitution.
http://karuk.us/constitution According to
their website, the proposed changes are intended
to greatly expand Tribal jurisdiction. Tribal
members are invited to provide input at a series
of meetings in September.
From my reading of the document, the proposed
changes in jurisdiction could widely overlap and
conflict with County, City, State and federal
authority. Taken to the extreme, it would be
Constitutionally questionable to have regulations
imposed upon non-tribal people through a tribal
government body in which they had no elected
representation.
Changes: The document proposes to enlarge
the territory and ancestral lands of the Karuk to
include all of Siskiyou County and a portion of
Humboldt County, California from Aikens Creek to
the Klamath River, to the County line. There are
specific claims on all submerged lands, and the
beds, banks and waters of all the waterways within
the territory, as well as the Tribe’s usual and
customary hunting, fishing and gathering sites.
The document proposes to enlarge jurisdiction of
the Karuk tribe to include all lands, waters,
natural resources, cultural resources, air space,
minerals, fish, forests, wildlife, and other
resources within the territory. The Tribe proposes
to claim jurisdiction over all activities within
or without the Tribe’s territory that “have a
serious, direct or negative effect on the
political integrity, economic security, resources
or health and welfare of the Tribe and its
members.” In the document, the Karuk tribe
declares its intent to manage, develop, protect
and regulate the use of Tribal land, wildlife,
fish, plants, air, water, minerals, and all other
natural and cultural resources within Tribal
jurisdiction.
The proposed constitution states that it is the
Tribe’s intent to enact laws and codes governing
conduct of individuals and prescribe disciplinary
action for offenses against the Tribe; to maintain
order; to protect the safety and welfare of all
persons within Tribal jurisdiction; and to provide
for the enforcement of the laws and codes of the
Tribe.
Indian Country: California is a PL 280
State. Generally, that means that a tribe has
civil regulatory jurisdiction over trust lands and
tribal members within Indian Country (reservation
lands.) The State has criminal jurisdiction.
Whether a tribe may regulate non-tribal land use
on private non-trust lands within a reservation is
a grayish legal area and I am not an attorney.
However, Montana v. U.S. , 450 U.S. 544 (1981,)
implied a tribal right to regulate conduct in
Indian Country that threatens “the political
integrity, the economic security, or the health or
welfare of the tribe.“ Tribes do not have
regulatory jurisdiction outside of Indian
Country.
No treaty with Indians in the California Klamath
region was ever ratified. Unlike the Yurok and the
Hoopa, the Karuk tribe was never granted a
reservation by the United States, nor does it have
federally recognized fishing rights as a tribe. If
the Karuk have “Indian Country” at all, it would
seem to be limited to lands held in trust for
housing.
To my knowledge, aboriginal or ancestral land
claims in California were extinguished long ago.
The tribes never ceded land to the US, as in other
states. In Barker v. Harvey, 181 U.S. 481 (1900),
the Supreme Court indicated that any Indian right
of occupancy in California should be considered as
a "right or title derived from the...Mexican
government." It was established that the Indians'
right of occupancy was deemed abandoned after the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo with Mexico for
failure to present them to the land claims
commission under the California Land Settlement
Act of 1851. (This was reaffirmed in United States
v Title Ins. & Trust Co., 265 U.S. 472, 486,
1924.)
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