By Courtney Lowery, Newwest.net guest blogger, 12-08-09
The
Obama Administration today announced that it will settle in the
landmark class-action lawsuit against the Interior Department that
alleged gross mismanagement of American Indian trust accounts. In a
press conference, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Attorney General
Eric Holder said the settlement will mean $1.4 billion will be
distributed to plaintiffs.
The government has also agreed to create a $2 billion fund that will
offer new trustees (created when land is “fractioned” by being passed
down from generation to generation) cash payments for land that has been
divided up. That will, as Interior put it, “free up the land for
the benefit of tribal communities.” That brings the total settlement up
to $3.4 billion.
Cobell v. Salazar was first filed in 1996 on the grounds that
the government mismanaged the trust accounts (involving royalties for
grazing, oil and gas and timber, among others) of more than 300,000
Indians. Elouise Cobell, a Blackfeet and the lead plaintiff in the
suit, told Indian Country Today
that she is thankful the suit is finally coming to an end and that
Indian Country especially appreciates the Obama Administration moving on
the issue. Still, she said the settlement is “significantly less than
the full accounting to which the class members are entitled.”
In a release, Salazar called the settlement “historic.”
“This is an historic, positive development for Indian country and a
major step on the road to reconciliation following years of acrimonious
litigation between trust beneficiaries and the United States,” Salazar
said. “…This historic step will allow Interior to move forward and
address the educational, law enforcement, and economic development
challenges we face in Indian Country.”
Right now, the Interior Department manages 56 million acres of
Indian trust land and on that, there are more than 100,000 leases. The
agency estimates it manages $3.5 billion in trust funds.
The point of the $2 billion in buy-back money for the new “fractioned”
trustees is to, as the agency put it, “By reducing the number of
individual trust accounts that the U.S. must maintain, the program will
greatly reduce on-going administrative expenses and future
accounting-related disputes.”
The agency has promised to put 5 percent of the interests bought
through the $2 billion fund into a scholarship fund for Indians.
More here from the Interior Department and more here from Indian Country Today.
Also see HCN‘s prior coverage of the case: Indian Money – Where Is It?, Sometimes you have to fight, Congress and Indians spar over lost money, and Scoundrels and scandals in the Interior Department.

