Is a tribal
court’s ex parte banishment
legal? or
“patently unconstitutional”?
US District Court rules “the action of
summary
eviction …
with absolutely no due process ranks right up there with summary
execution”
by
Clara NiiSka
Can a tribal court order the
banishment of a
non-Indian:
forcible removal from her place of employment at a state-chartered
non-profit
organization on fee patent land, forcible removal from her home on
white-owned
fee patent land? Can a tribal court
banish a non-Indian from state highways? Is
the county sheriff obligated to enforce such a tribal
court
banishment order, particularly when he has personal knowledge that at
least one
of the reasons given by the tribal court for banishment is false? And—given ‘tribal sovereignty’—is there
anything that a person banished without even a pretense of any fair
hearing by
the tribal court, can do about it?
On July 24, 1998, the Standing
Rock tribal
court issued an ex
parte order, based on one person’s complaint and decided without a
hearing,
banishing Margaret Penn from the Standing Rock reservation. According to court records, Penn is 1/8
Turtle Mountain Chippewa, not enrolled and not enrollable, legally “a
non-Indian and nonmember of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe.”
Maggie Penn, who has a law
degree, worked as
a tribal
prosecutor on the Standing Rock reservation. As
Press/ON reported in a February 19, 1999
article by Julie
Shortridge, Penn brought charges against tribal court chief judge Mike
Swallow
for unethical conduct in May 1996. Three
months later, Penn was fired by Swallow. In
September 1997 Penn sued in tribal court for wrongful
termination
from her job. The same month, Swallow
was voted out of his judicial office; when his term expired in January
1998 he
was hired by the tribal council as in-house attorney, with a
substantial
increase in his salary. The ethics
charges against Swallow were apparently never fully heard by the tribal
court,
and Penn’s wrongful termination lawsuit was still pending when she was
banished.
Penn had worked as a part-time
grantwriter
and bookkeeper at
Tender Hearts women’s shelter since 1995. Her
grantwriting skills brought in more than $600,000 to
fund the
facility. Penn also conducted seminars
around the nation on Indian law and domestic violence.
Tender Hearts Against Family Violence, Inc.,
was a non-profit organization incorporated under state law and located
on
fee-patent land, the “old Warrior Motel” converted into a battered
women’s
shelter in Ft. Yates, South Dakota. It
received more than $40 thousand in federal money for fiscal year 1998. During the first half of 1998 Penn remained
on Standing Rock reservation, working at Tender Hearts.
“The Tender Hearts program was
embroiled in
some controversy
of its own,” according to US Senior District Judge Patrick Conmy in his
March 6th,
2002 Opinion. On July 24, 1998, Faith
Taken Alive requested that her uncle, tribal court judge Isaac Dog
Eagle,
banish Penn from Standing Rock reservation. Shortridge
reported that the banishment request was
“motivated by Taken
Alive [and others] conspiring to seize control of Tender Hearts, Inc.,
in
conjunction with illegal activities of three Tender Hearts Board
members …”
Dog Eagle issued the banishment
order ex
parte,
without a hearing, and without an opportunity for Penn to respond to
Taken
Alive’s allegations. The order provided
a hearing would be held within thirty days, “but no such hearing was
ever
scheduled or held,” wrote Judge Conmy in his recent Opinion.
The banishment order was served
on Maggie
Penn at work, at
the Tender Hearts shelter in Ft. Yates, South Dakota, by BIA police
officer
Captain John Vettleson, assisted by Sioux County, North Dakota, Sheriff
Frank
Landeis. The Ft. Yates police
department apparently was not consulted.
According to deposition
testimony by Sheriff
Landeis, BIA
police officer Vettleson called and “just asked me if I could come up
to the PD
for a little bit.” In situations where
an arrest was anticipated, mutual backup between the Sheriff’s office
and the
BIA police was common, testified Landeis. Judge
Conmy found that “such cooperation is not unusual
and is really a
necessity when one considers the vast amount of territory to be
covered, the
overlapping jurisdictions and the very rural nature of the area.”
“One of the grounds stated for
Penn’s
banishment is the fact
that she brought a complaint against the Tribe for her wrongful
termination as
tribal prosecutor,” writes Shortridge. “Apparently,
Penn was banished for exercising her legal
rights in tribal
court.
“Faith Taken Alive’s request for
banishment
also asserts
that Penn had a gun …” Sheriff Landeis
testified that “a little after noon,” on July 24, 1998, he stood
outside the
tribal police department, by the back doors, talking to the BIA
superintendent
at Standing Rock, Larry Bodin, and BIA police officer John Vettleson,
“and then
John handed me the order. And as I read
through it, I at that time seen the part in there about the pistol. I advised them at that time that she didn’t
have it, that it was given to me two or three months prior to that and
that
I’ve had it ever since.” Maggie Penn,
concerned that the pistol would be stolen from her home in Selfridge,
where
there had been a number of burglaries, had given it to the Sheriff for
safekeeping. Landeis testified that he
and Vettleson “went over to the judge’s office and told him that I’ve
had the
gun for two or three months already.”
Despite the obviously false
allegations in
Taken Alive’s
complaint, tribal court judge Dog Eagle reportedly told Vettleson to
“go ahead
and serve” his ex parte order banishing Maggie Penn.
According to deposition
testimony, both
Landeis and
Vettleson knew that Maggie Penn is non-Indian—and thus that she is not
under
the jurisdiction of the tribal court. Backing
each other up, the BIA police officer and the
County sheriff got
into their respective squad cars, and “both drove down with our
vehicles to
Tender Hearts.” The BIA police officer
served Penn with tribal court judge Dog Eagle’s ex parte order
of
banishment.
“Maggie had read over the order
and … she
wanted to fax it
to her attorney or get ahold of him. She
couldn’t get the fax to go through. She
couldn’t get [her attorney] on the phone, and she then
asked … what
would happen if she didn’t obey the order, and John [Vettleson] advised
her
that she could be arrested,” according to the sheriff’s testimony.
Maggie Penn, reportedly assuring
the police
that she would
“not cause any trouble,” left the shelter driving her own car. The police escorted her to the Sheriff’s
Office, where Landeis ‘dropped his car off at the sheriff’s office,’
and got
into Vettleson’s BIA squad car. Riding
together, the two law enforcement officers escorted Penn for
approximately 17
miles on state highways to Selfridge, North Dakota, where Penn rented a
house—on fee-patent land—from white rancher James Blotske.
They left Penn to pack up the few belongings
she would be able to fit into her car, went to the nearby Cenex station
to get
gas, then returned to Penn’s residence and “helped her carry boxes out
to her
vehicle.”
“I believe Maggie had asked what
would
happen if she would
come back to her residence,” Landeis testified, “and at that time John
[Vettleson] said that he’d be obligated to arrest her, or his officers
would.”
The law enforcement officers
gave Penn about
45 minutes to
sort through her house full of possessions, pack, and load her car. They helped her catch her cat.
Then, Sheriff Landeis and BIA police officer
Vettleson, riding together in Vettleson’s BIA patrol car, escorted
Maggie Penn
northbound on state Highway 6, about 25 miles to the Standing Rock
Reservation
boundary line. “It must have been about
3:00,” testified Landeis.
Less than two hours after Maggie
Penn was
notified of tribal
court judge Isaac Dog Eagle’s ex parte order, she had been
escorted
“over the line,” banished, exiled, forced to leave her job, her
community, her
home, and most of her personal property behind her.
The law enforcement officers made a U-turn and
returned to
the
reservation.
Maggie Penn told this writer
that she
preferred not to speak
to the press at this time. Another
person who was banished at about the same time as Penn says that such ex
parte exile is indeed “cruel and unusual punishment, a wrenching
removal
from home and community, a kind of ‘social death penalty’.” The details of the banishment are seared
into memory, and summarily stripped of community and social identity,
cast out,
a refugee ‘community’ of one alone, “it takes years to rebuild one’s
self, to
recover confidence, to find the self-confidence to put down roots
again.”
Penn sued. Drawing
on her considerable expertise in Indian law, she sued Isaac Dog Eagle
officially and personally, the Standing Rock tribe, and a number
officials. Constrained by limited
federal jurisdiction in the face of tribal sovereignty—despite the
federal
funding of the Standing Rock tribal court, tribal council, and BIA
operations
on Standing Rock reservation (according to federal single audits, the
Standing
Rock tribal council received over $17 million in federal dollars in
fiscal year
1998)—Penn based much of her suit on the habeas corpus remedy afforded
by the
Indian Civil Rights Act. Penn also
requested that the federal court find that it had jurisdiction to hear
“any
cause of action arising out of the issuance and execution of the
banishment
order.”
The Standing Rock tribal council
responded
by vacating the
banishment order on September 14, 1998, and then arguing that Penn’s
federal
lawsuit was moot because the banishment order no longer existed.
In an order dated January 27,
1999, US
District Court Judge
Patrick Conmy wrote that Penn’s “petition for the Writ of Habeas Corpus
is now
dismissed as having been mooted by the cancellation of the offending
order, and
the court finds that the balance of the requested relief is beyond the
limited
jurisdiction of this court under the pleading filed.”
Despite the dismissal, Conmy was sharply
critical of the
actions
of the tribal judge, et al., pointedly writing in Margaret
A. Penn
v. Isaac Dog Eagle, et al., “… I find the conduct towards Ms.
Penn
outrageous.”
While the federal court’s
dismissal of the
habeas corpus
action was on appeal, Penn settled her federal lawsuit against the
tribe and
her long-pending lawsuit in tribal court for $125,000.
Then, on July 21, 2000, she sued the United
States and several other defendants under the Federal Tort Claims Act,
USC
1983, and various state law torts. The
US and Sioux County moved for summary dismissal “based primarily on
theories of
absolute and qualified immunity.” In
other words, they argued that even if what they had done to Maggie Penn
was
illegal, she couldn’t do anything about it.
On March 6, 2002—almost four
years after
Maggie Penn was
banished—the US District Court for the District of South Dakota ruled
on the
motions for summary dismissal. As Patrick Conmy, now Senior District
Judge,
wrote in his opinion in Margaret A. Penn v. United States
of America,
et al., Case No. A1-00-93, “the essence” of Penn’s complaint “is
that the
banishment order should not have been carried out because it clearly
violated
the law.”
Conmy explained his ruling:
“Immunity should
extend to good
faith actions taken within the jurisdiction of the officer. As a general rule, an officer carrying out a
court order is clothed with immunity regardless of the idiocy of the
order, but
there has to be a limit to this policy. If
the Tribal Court had ordered summary execution of Ms.
Penn, surely
Caption Vettleson and the Sheriff would not have carried out the order,
although with the constitutional sanctity of the home of a citizen the
action
of summary eviction from the home and the County with absolutely no due
process
ranks right up there with summary execution.
“I do not find the [banishment]
Order to be
‘facially
valid.’ Ms. Penn is not a tribal member
or even an ‘Indian’ for purposes of Tribal Court jurisdiction. The facts recited by the parties indicate
that the [tribal] Court had issued other ‘banishment orders’ in the
past. A continuation of a clearly
unconstitutional
course of conduct does not create legitimacy. The
Order would be unconstitutional even if directed
toward a tribal
member. It is inconceivable to me that
any law enforcement officer, trained in the constitutional requirements
of
arrest and search and seizure, could believe than an ex parte
order
forcing someone from their home and County of residence for a minimum
period of
30 days could be valid.
“It may be argued, and probably
will be so
argued on appeal
of this Order, that the denial of immunity will emasculate the
effectiveness of
law enforcement in that some determination of legitimacy of a court
order will
be required of the officers. I reject
that argument in the belief that some determination of legitimacy is
the clear
duty of a law enforcement officer. ‘Just
following orders’ should not be an excuse when the order is patently
unconstitutional.”
Press/ON contacted Maggie
Penn’s
attorney, Randy
Thompson of St. Paul law firm Stapleton, Nolan, MacGregor &
Thompson. Thompson explained that the next
step is, most
likely, appeal by the defendants to the 8th Circuit Court,
and quite
possibly to the U.S. Supreme Court. If
Judge Conmy’s ruling that Ms. Penn has any legal remedy is
affirmed on
appeal, only then—after years of litigation and reportedly working two
jobs to
pay her legal fees—will Maggie Penn’s case go to trial.
Stressing that most of his legal
practice
has nothing to do
with Indian law, Thompson consented to an interview.
“From my perspective, this case
is a …
critical first step
in dealing with two issues,” Thompson said.
The first is “the routine denial
of
fundamental
constitutional rights by tribal governments and courts,” and the second
issue
is “holding the BIA and County Sheriff responsible for enforcing an
order that
violated constitutional protections and was issued by a court with no
jurisdiction over Maggie Penn. …
“She was terrified that there
was no one
there to protect
her rights. The tribe issued the
[banishment] order ex parte. The
feds and the sheriff enforced it. Who
was there to protect her rights?
“The government needs to be
concerned” that
continuing such
lack of accountability, “will essentially bring in a lawless system
with no due
process, no right to be heard.”
Thompson explained that the
responsibility
for the Standing Rock
tribal court and tribal council’s actions ultimately lay with the US
Government.
Larry Bodin, Standing Rock BIA
superintendent, had testified
in deposition that the tribal court, operated by the tribe under a
Public Law
93-638 contract, was “basically, once … the contract is let, now it’s
in the
tribe’s court. In this case, the tribal
court.” According to Bodin, the BIA’s
supervision goes little farther than requiring that federal funds be
audited:
“There’s a once-a-year requirement of an annual audit.
If the audit turns out good, we don’t mess
with the tribe.”
When asked whether or not his
federal agency
had “any
responsibility in administering this 638 contract to assure that the
tribal
court was operating in accordance with the Constitution of the United
States,”
the BIA superintendent explained, “Actually, in the case of Standing
Rock Sioux
Tribal Court, there was a judicial review done, the results of which
I’m not
privy to. As a matter of fact, as of
today [August 2, 2001], I’m still looking for the results of the review
that
was taken by D.C.” about four years previously. When
asked, “Have you ever received complaints from individuals
that the tribal court is not operating properly,” Bodin responded,
“Yes.” Upon receiving such complaints,
Bodin said,
“I check with the tribal prosecutor or the court administrator or the
chief
judge to see if there’s any validity to the allegations.”
Attorney Randy Thompson told Press/ON,
“they keep
funding the tribal council, keep funding the BIA.”
Is there any concern that they will be held
liable?
Thompson said, “They knew that they had no
jurisdiction over Maggie Penn,” yet the BIA police banished her on an ex
parte tribal court order regardless.
Righting wrongs, obtaining legal
redress,
depends on many factors—and
one of them is finding a lawyer willing to take the case.
“I think that my practice is unique,”
Thompson said, “because virtually everyone with Indian law expertise is
either
a federal or state attorney, or works for tribal government, and
indeed, the
largest law firms in the state have now established Indian law
departments
because of the casino money.” He
thought for a moment. “It would
certainly be more lucrative for me to use my Indian law expertise to
work for
tribal government.” But, he continued,
“there are so many genuine abuses of Constitutional rights and civil
rights
occurring—and they are hurting both Indian people and non-Indian
people.”
Thompson said that he has been
approached
“by both
non-members and [tribal] members who are looking for anyone they can
find, to
help them. The tribal establishment is
insulated by sovereign immunity, judicial immunity,” as well as by “the
policy
of …tribal self-government with no bill of rights, no petition for
redress, no
access to the federal courts, and qualified immunity that protects
police.” And, he added, “the ‘other
side’ has financial resources generally not available to my clients.”
“I still believe that the idea
of justice is
a powerful
thing,” Thompson said. “I don’t always
prevail, but I sometimes prevail against the odds.
“I also believe that the tide of
history is
on the side of
the people that I represent. I mean,
ultimately, that constitutional protections will be extended to Indian
people
on the reservations. … I do not know when, but it will happen.” Either the tribal courts will act to ensure
“independent courts, separation of powers, due process and other
constitutional
protections on their own, or it will get imposed from the outside. I am disappointed in the many talented
lawyers who are tribal members, who are cognizant of this problem and
who
continue to support the same old ‘tribal’ way of doing business, rather
than
leading a reform movement—because if it is not reformed from within, it
is
going to be imposed from the outside.
“When tribes hide behind ‘rights
of
self-government,’ when
they deny membership to qualified individuals … when tribal courts
don’t
provide impartial justice, when the benefits of membership are doled
out
according to political or personal considerations: then this is a
system that
is rotten to the core, and will ultimately fail.”
Thompson added, “The federal
government has
allowed the BIA
to become an agency that acts in the best interests of tribal
government. I would argue that their trust
responsibility is to individual Indian people, not to the tribal
government.”
On a more philosophical level,
he said that
despite the
“historical racism” and other bitter legacies of history, “at some
point you
have to move forward together as a society. Regardless
of what’s happened in the past, the most
important question
is: where do we go from here?
“There are fundamental aspects
of democracy
that are
universal across cultures,” Thompson said, including that “sovereignty
resides
in the people, not the government, and that the legitimacy of the
government is
derived from the consent of the governed.”
From Thompson’s perspective, the
problems
presently
confronting Indian people are massive, and the remedies are slim. “I could take ten pro bono cases a
day, if I could afford them,” he said. “There
is a huge unmet need for legal services in all
aspects of this
society.”
“If you throw up the defenses of
tribal
sovereignty, tribal
immunity, etc.,” the legal situation on Indian reservations is “much
more difficult”
than that facing most US citizens. “Just
consider the legal action necessary for exhaustion
of remedies in
tribal courts: you have just doubled your legal costs—to get a decision
from a
panel which is likely not to be impartial and whose outcome is
predicated” on
tribal politics.
For example, Thompson explained,
consider
the dynamics in
“Mr. Melby’s case. [See “Grand
Portage Band Purchases Marina to Settle
Lawsuit: Band pays $1.6M to avoid litigating diminishment issue,”
Press/ON,
September 7, 2001.] The suit was brought by Dean Deschampe, who
was the
tribal land administrator. His cousin
Norman Deschampe was the tribal chairman, who chose Anita Fineday as
the tribal
court judge. By the time the case went
to the tribal court of appeals, both Dean and Norman were on the tribal
council. So, the original plaintiff
when the suit started was involved in the process of picking the judges
to
decide the case. It’s sad, it’s just
sad.”
Press/ON asked Randy
Thompson about
Maggie Penn’s
case. “I believe that what was done to
Maggie Penn is indefensible.”
Nevertheless, he said, the “qualified
immunity defense”
raised on behalf of the police officers is not trivial, and “we have to
defeat
this defense in order to get to trial.” Despite
the favorable decision by Judge Conmy, “the next
step is likely
to be an appeal by the defendants to the 8th Circuit.
… I have to say that it is an interesting
case” because of the interplay of conflicts it creates between “liberal
and
conservative judicial philosophies. The
liberals are much more likely to be supportive of the unfettered rights
of
tribal government, for example, sovereignty, sovereign immunity. But, they often feel that the conservatives
have gone too far with the qualified
immunity that protects police officers. The
conservatives love qualified immunity of police
officers, but are
much more willing to reign in tribal government when it violates
constitutional
and civil rights.”
County sheriff has appealed, and
the federal
defendants have
indicated that they will appeal as of April 1.
<>Cameron Hayden, Assistant US Attorney for
the federal
defendants, told Press/ON that his official comment is: “The
judge’s
decision is not final. It is not a
final resolution to the action,” and it cannot be cited as precedent. “We will be making an appeal in the 8th
Circuit Court of Appeals.”> |