October
26, 2001
Press/ON
publisher Bill Lawrence, acting as his own attorney, filed Friday as
intervenor
in the two casino audit lawsuits being heard in Ramsey County District
Court: Mille
Lacs Band of Ojibwe Indians, Plaintiff, v. State of Minnesota
and
Charlie Weaver as the Commissioner of the Minnesota Department of
Public Safety,
and Prairie Island Indian Community v. Minnesota Department
of Public
Safety.
Lawrence
stated that
he also intends to file as intervenor in the third casino audit
lawsuit, Shakopee
Mdewakanton Sioux (Dakota) Community, Grand Portage Band of Chippewa
Indians,
and Lower Sioux Indian Community v. Mike Hatch, Minnesota
Attorney
General, David F. Fisher, Commissioner of the Minnesota Department of
Administration, and Charles R. Weaver, Jr., Commissioner of the
Minnesota
Department of Public Safety, which the tribal attorneys filed in
Federal
District Court in Minneapolis.
“Why
are you doing
this intervention?” this writer asked.
Lawrence said, “I obviously would have preferred that the Star
Tribune intervened—despite their hundreds of millions dollars of
buyout
debt remaining, they still have much deeper pockets than I do. But, they told me a week ago that they did
not intend to intervene. I do not have
any doubt that the Attorney General’s Office will do an outstanding job
in
representing the state’s interests in these cases, but there are other
interests that need to be represented—not only those of the media, but
also
those of Indian people. As you know, we
as Indian people do not have access to this information from our own
tribal
governments, even though right now we—as tribal co-owners of the Red
Lake
casino operations—are being spent blind by tribal council officials
heedlessly
sinking us ever-deeper into debt while refusing to disclose basic
financial
information.”
“In
addition,
knowing that these lawsuits can go on for a considerable length of
time,”
Lawrence continued, “I have some concern that the present Attorney
General may
seek other opportunities, and that his successor may not take the same
interest
in upholding public access to these documents.”
In
response to
longstanding concerns by readers of this newspaper, Press/ON
requested
copies of the casino audits under the Minnesota Data Practices Act. About 44 of these audits are held by the
Minnesota Department of Public Safety (DPS) pursuant to the
State-Tribal
gambling compacts. The Data Practices
Act is a “sunshine law” which provides that almost all government
records in
the state of Minnesota are public information.
Months of legal wrangling
followed Press/ON’s request:
DPS refused to provide the audits, the state Department of
Administration ruled
that they were public information and that DPS was legally required to
release
them, then DPS Commissioner Charlie Weaver filed a formal application
to
reclassify the casino audits as nonpublic until the matter could be
considered
by the legislature. The Department of
Administration approved Weaver’s request to reclassify the audits as
nonpublic
information, then, as required by state law, the matter went to the
Attorney
General for review. On September 14,
the Attorney General’s office ruled that the reclassification request
was
“disapproved as to form and legality,” and that the audits are public
information. Shortly thereafter, the
five Indian tribes named as plaintiffs filed lawsuits in three separate
legal
actions, two in state court and one in federal court, seeking to
prevent
release of the casino audit information.
The
tribal attorneys
have already obtained temporary restraining orders enjoining the state
from
releasing the casino audits pending hearings to determine where the
injunctions
should become permanent, and the tribal attorneys have informed the
courts that
they intend to file Summary Judgment motions—meaning that the release
of the
casino audits will be barred without any further consideration (or
redress
other than through the Legislature).
The cases filed in the Ramsey County are scheduled to be heard in late November, and the federal case is scheduled for mid-December.