Schaghticokes seek court decision

KENT — The Schaghticoke Tribal Nation is looking to the Supreme Court to overturn the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs’ 2005 ruling that they do not merit official recognition as an Indian tribe.

In an interview with The Lakeville Journal, Schaghticoke Tribal Nation Chief Richard Velky said he is not too optimistic about his chances of winning the case.

“I have been told that the Supreme Court only hears about 1 percent of cases that get submitted to them,� Velky said. “It is my understanding that when it comes to Native American issues they have not been too favorable toward us.�

But, he said, “We feel we have enough evidence to show that without a doubt there is political influence in the bureau’s overturning of its original decision.�

Velky said the state of Connecticut has set up “a wall� to keep the Schaghticoke Tribal Nation from getting recognition.

“In 2005 when the decision for recognition was overturned, the governor, along with the congressmen and senators, met with the secretary of the Department of the Interior [who was then Gale Ann Norton] and threatened to have her fired,� Velky said.

“We won our recognition in 2004 based solely on our merits. For our petition of recognition, we had 45,000 pages of documentation. The state attacked us and it was reversed because they had lobbyists walk into the White House.�

The Supreme Court’s summer recess begins this week.

The court is scheduled to be back in session sometime in late September.

The group first petitioned with the bureau in 1981. In 2004, the bureau officially recognized the tribe.

However, after the decision was made, Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, then-Congresswoman Nancy Johnson, Sen. Joseph Lieberman, Congressman Christopher Shays and others denounced the decision.

In 2005, the recognition was overturned by the bureau. In September 2008, a federal court reaffirmed the decision of the bureau.

In 2009, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit also reaffirmed the original 2005 decision.

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