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Native
American Press/Ojibwe
News
Attorney General rules Indian gambling audits are
public information
By Clara NiiSka - September 21, 2001
In a ruling dated Friday, September 14th, Alan Gilbert, Solicitor
General and Chief Deputy of Minnesota Attorney General Mike Hatch ruled
that State-held audits of Indian tribal gambling enterprises are public
information. The Attorney General’s Office overturned Commissioner of
Administration David Fisher’s August 29th approval of Commissioner of
Public Safety Charlie Weaver’s request to reclassify the audits as
nonpublic, disapproving both the form and the legal basis of Fisher’s
data reclassification request. The Solicitor General’s September 14th
letter to Commissioner Fisher is published in this issue of Press/ON,
beginning on page 1.
The September 14th ruling—made despite obvious pressure
by Indian gambling interests—rejects the Department of Public Safety’s
(DPS) arguments that the gambling enterprise audits should be
reclassified as nonpublic because “public access to the data would
render unworkable a program authorized by law.” In upholding DPS
Commissioner Weaver’s request to bar public access to the audits,
Administration Commissioner Fisher had argued that “if the tribal
governments refused to provide the audit data,” State enforcement of
the State-Tribal gambling compacts and compact-mandated State
monitoring of Indian casinos would be “practically impossible.”
The Attorney General’s Office rejected that argument,
writing to Fisher at the beginning of the analysis, “You apparently
believed that the Department had no legal recourse …” In the last
paragraph of his Analysis, the Attorney General’s Solicitor details
full legal recourse: “Under the compacts and the IGRA, and consistent
with the case law cited above, the Indian bands and communities must
provide the audit data upon written request of the State as a part of
their ability to engage in legal gaming in the State of Minnesota”
[emphasis added].
The Attorney General’s Office also pointedly draws
attention to the fact that the problems cited by Weaver and Fisher
would not result from the release of casino audits, but rather from
Indian gambling enterprises’ “potential refusal” to provide the audits
to the State as required by the gambling compacts. The Attorney
General’s analysis ends with the sharp observation that the State “has
legal recourse to enforce the terms of the compact if the bands or
communities fail to comply …”
The crux of the September 14th ruling by the Attorney
General’s Office is a one-sentence conclusion: “the temporary
classification of the data … as nonpublic data … is disapproved as to
form and legality pursuant to Minn. Stat. §13.06, subd. 5.”
Press/ON requested the audits of the Red Lake casinos
from DPS last February under the Minnesota Data Practices Act, and when
DPS refused to provide them, challenged the legality of DPS’s refusal.
In April, Administration Commissioner Fisher ruled that Red Lake casino
audits held by the State are public information under State law. (Such
financial information is also “a matter of public record” under Article
VII, §1(a) of the 1958 constitution of the Red Lake Band of
Chippewa Indians, and Press/ON publisher and Red Lake enrollee Bill
Lawrence has also made several attempts to obtain the audits from the
Red Lake tribal council.)
On June 15th, Press/ON published excerpts from the
1996-97 Red Lake audit—the only Red Lake casino audit obtained by DPS
throughout the decade during which its Alcohol and Gambling Enforcement
Division has been responsible for monitoring casino operations run by
the Red Lake Band. Press/ON then requested the other Indian gambling
enterprise audits held by DPS, and DPS responded by Commissioner
Weaver’s application to reclassify the audits as nonpublic information.
The Attorney General’s Office’s recent ruling that
casino audits held by the State are public information under State law
could result in the audits being released as early as Friday. Press/ON
requested the audits under the Minnesota Data Practices Act last June.
They have also been formally requested by the Minneapolis Star Tribune,
and by State Senate Minority Leader Dick Day.
But, according to an article by David Hawley published
by the St. Paul Pioneer Press on September 18, Don Gemberling, director
of the Department of Administration’s information policy analysis
division, lawsuits challenging the Attorney General’s ruling and
seeking injunctions to block the release of the Indian casino audits
are likely. “Most of the letters we got from the tribes that complained
about our earlier ruling said they would sue of the audits were made
public,” Gemberling is quoted as saying.
In an article published the next day, Minneapolis Star
Tribune staff writer Robert Franklin, also indicates that further legal
action is likely. He quotes Minnesota Indian Gaming Association
executive director John McCarthy as explaining that, “there’s not too
many other avenues” by which release of the Indian gambling enterprise
audits could be halted. (The Minnesota Data Practices Act could also be
repealed the State Legislature.)
Challenges to the Attorney General’s ruling by tribal
attorneys could escalate the controversy over Indian gambling
operations in Minnesota, and could easily result in public pressure to
renegotiate the compacts, which likely would result in compacts more
favorable to the State. Minnesota is one of the few states which does
not have provisions in its state-tribal compacts mandating that the
State receive a percentage of Indian casino revenues. Court action
could also lead to legal decisions ruling that Indian gambling is
illegal in Minnesota—as the federal district court has already ruled
with respect to Arizona.
Press/ON publisher Bill Lawrence commented on possible
legal action by the Indian gambling establishment seeking to preserve
the cloak of secrecy which surrounds their $3 billion monopoly: “Let
them sue all they want, but the federal courts have already ruled that
the data is subject to the respective states’ public records laws,
which includes the Minnesota Data Practices Act. The greedy lawyers are
just wasting more of our tribal money trying to fight it.”
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