| St.
                  Louis Post Dispatch-
                  August 10, 2000 ILLINOISANS SAY SUIT SEEKS THEIR LAND SO INDIANS CAN BUILD CASINO; MIAMI TRIBE INSISTS TREATIES, INJUSTICES
                GIVE RIGHT TO PROPERTY  Author:
            Deirdre Shesgreen  Dateline:
            WASHINGTON  In
            1846, the Miami Indian tribe was forced at gunpoint to flee their
            upper Midwestern homelands for Kansas, only to be removed again about
            10 years later to the northeastern corner of Oklahoma.  Now,
            the tribe is trying to reclaim some of its ancestral territory in
            Illinois -- possibly to build a casino -- in a lawsuit that seeks
            to eject landowners and farmers, some of whom have lived there for
            decades.  The
            tribe filed the suit in federal court in East St. Louis in June accusing
            15 Illinois landowners -- one for each county in dispute -- of "trespassing" on
            Indian land. Invoking 200-year-old treaties and historical injustices
            committed against American Indians, the suit pits tribal rights against
            the property rights of current landholders.  While
            the suit is unlikely to result in a mass turnover of land to the
            tribe, the legal action has alarmed the people who live on the disputed
            2.6 million acres in central and Southern Illinois, from Champaign
            to Effingham. The shockwaves have already been felt in Washington,
            where Sen. Peter Fitzgerald, R-Ill., has introduced legislation to
            give the Illinois residents new legal tools -- or to strip the tribe
            of its sovereignty, depending on whom you ask.  The
            legal battle began in June, when the tribe, called the Miami Tribe
            of Oklahoma, filed a 26-page complaint in federal court in East St.
            Louis. The suit says the government violated two treaties, made with
            the tribe in 1795 and 1805, when it sold the Illinois land to white
            settlers.  "We
            have one of the original contracts with America,
            and it was never fulfilled," said George Tiger, a spokesman
            for the tribe. "We have a treaty that says the land was never
            ceded."  That
            was news to Rex Walden, a 98-year-old farmer who is named in the
            suit. The tribe claims to own the 80 acres where he has lived for
            decades.  "That
            old man's lived out there for 70 years, and the farm's been in the
            family for 140," said Walden's daughter, Pauline Eaton, who
            is serving as her father's spokeswoman in the suit. "He doesn't
            understand, why now? If they wanted the land, why didn't they come
            100 years ago?" said Eaton, who is 70 and lives in Mahomet,
            Ill.  Josephine
            and Clarence Borries were similarly surprised when the Miami claimed
            title to about one third of their 200-acre farm in Teutopolis, where
            they've raised corn and soybeans for five decades.  "I
            couldn't believe it," said Josephine Borries, 72. Like other
            defendants, Borries said she believes the tribe is more interested
            in building a casino than in recouping any farmland.  "It's
            just a pressure thing to get the governor to give them a casino," she
            said of the suit.  Tiger,
            the Miami spokesman, denied that a casino is in the works. "The
            ultimate goal is to get the land back - period, exclamation point," Tiger
            said. He said the casino idea was "manufactured" by state
            officials who are seeking to tar the tribe.  Still,
            the tribe's lawyer, Thomas Osterholt of St. Louis, said a casino
            is "one alternative" tribe members will look at for economic
            development.  Osterholt
            said the tribe estimates that the current value of the land is $30
            billion. If the tribe cannot recoup all of the land, gambling is
            one of the only business ventures that would provide enough compensation,
            he said.  He
            said that in negotiations two years ago, Illinois officials raised
            the possibility of a riverboat casino for the tribe, but the talks
            ended in a stalemate. Gambling revenue is already a key source of
            income for the Miami tribe, which has run a high-stakes bingo hall
            in Oklahoma for two years and also has a factory that makes electronic
            bingo games.  The
            suit recalls a much different time in American Indian culture. "The
            Miami Tribe lived, hunted, fished, foraged and farmed upon lands
            in what is now Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin and Michigan," the
            suit says.  The
            tribe says that in the Treaty of Greenville in 1795 and the Treaty
            of Grouseland in 1805, the Miami ceded lands in Ohio and other states.
            But it never gave up its claim to the 2.6 million acres in Illinois.  The
            courts have been receptive to similar claims made by other tribes.
            In Texas, a federal court ruled in June that white settlers had illegally
            taken 2.8 million acres from the Alabama and Coushatta Indians. The
            ruling could allow the tribe to recoup millions of dollars.  And
            in New York, a jury recently awarded the Cayugas Indians $36.9 million
            for land that the court said was illegally acquired by the state.  Osterholt
            says that part of the reason Indian tribes are only now making such
            land claims is that they've only recently been given the tools to
            do so. One of the most important developments was a 1985 Supreme
            Court decision that sided with the Oneida tribe in its claim for
            270,000 acres of ancestral land in New York.  William
            Broom, a Carbondale attorney hired to represent 14 of the defendants,
            said that the Oneida suit involved different issues because that
            tribe sued the state of New York; the Miami have sued individual
            landowners. (The Illinois Farm Bureau and other groups have donated
            funds to pay Broom's fees for his 14 clients, who do not have title
            insurance.)  The
            landowners may have gotten a boost this week, when the Illinois Attorney
            General's office filed a motion to intervene in the case and said
            the state will seek to have the suit dismissed.  In
            addition, Sen. Fitzgerald introduced a bill last month that would
            subject the tribe to certain state laws, such as time limits for
            bringing land claims. But Tiger, the Miami spokesman, said Fitzgerald's
            legislation attacks tribal sovereignty, and he's confident it won't
            go anywhere.  In
            the meantime, the two sides appear to be headed for a lengthy legal
            battle. A trial is set for June 18.  John
            Dossett, general counsel for the National Congress of American Indians,
            said that such suits have often led to monetary settlements for the
            tribes. The case is a way of getting the settlement process going,
            Dossett said.  Eaton,
            the daughter of defendant Rex Walden, said the state and other defendants
            should mount a vigorous battle, because she fears that a settlement
            for the Miami tribe will just prompt other suits.  But
            Borries, the Teutopolis resident, said the state should look for
            ways - including giving the tribe a casino - to end the suit so she
            and other residents have peace of mind. Borries said she couldn't
            make "heads or tails" out of all the legalese and the treaties,
            but she sounded sympathetic to the tribe's claims.  "If
            the ground wasn't free to be sold, if the government didn't have
            title to it, how could they sell it?" she asked. "It's
            the federal government that's at fault here."  Caption:Color map by the POST-DISPATCH - Land claimed by Miami Tribe
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