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RE: Native Americans join together in protest of Dakota Access Pipeline
12/15/2016 6:24:06 AM

December 14, 2016 14:59·
Nov. 29 2016 A person walks through a snow storm at the Oceti Sakowin camp where people have gathered to protest the Dakota Access oil pipeline in Cannon Ball N.D

Nov. 29 2016 A person walks through a snow storm at the Oceti Sakowin camp where people have gathered to protest the Dakota Access oil pipeline in Cannon Ball N.D


!!!! also

Veterans Stand with Standing Rock! Will Serve as ‘Human Shield' for Protestors


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#NoDAPL ~ Corps, tribes to judge
1/12/2017 3:13:16 AM
Corps, tribes to judge: Reject Dakota Access company request

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and two Native American tribes that oppose the $3.8 billion Dakota Access oil pipeline have asked a federal judge to reject an effort by the four-state project's Texas-based developer to get permission to finish it

Oil Pipeline



BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and two Native American tribes that oppose the $3.8 billion Dakota Access oil pipeline have asked a federal judge to reject an effort by the four-state project’s Texas-based developer to get permission to finish it.

It’s the latest development in a saga that has played out over the past half-year, with months of protests in southern North Dakota and two separate but related court battles in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C.

Here’s a look at the status of the pipeline dispute as the new year begins:

WHAT IS THE DAKOTA ACCESS PIPELINE AND WHAT’S THE FUSS ABOUT?

Being developed by Energy Transfer Partners, the project will transport North Dakota oil 1,200 miles through South Dakota and Iowa to a shipping point in Illinois. Construction is nearly complete outside of a stretch under Lake Oahe, a Missouri River reservoir in southern North Dakota, where the work is stalled.

The Standing Rock and Cheyenne River Sioux tribes are fighting the pipeline because the tribes believe it threatens drinking water — both use the lake for that — and cultural sites. ETP disputes that and maintains the pipeline will be safe.

Opponents have protested for months in southern North Dakota, with nearly 600 arrests since August.

SO, EXPLAIN THE COURT BATTLES ...

There are two cases.

In one, ETP asked U.S. District Judge James Boasberg in November to declare it has legal right to lay pipe under Lake Oahe. ETP subsidiary Dakota Access LLC argues that the Army Corps of Engineers gave permission in July through a permit granted under the federal Rivers and Harbors Act, which safeguards public works projects, such as the dam-created reservoir system.

The Corps said in its response filed Friday that provisions of the federal Mineral Leasing Act also must be satisfied for ETP to drill under the lake. Those provisions include approval of an easement to work on federal land and the notification of Congress, neither of which has been done, agency attorneys said.

The two tribes also are asking Boasberg to reject ETP’s request.

In the other case, the tribes are challenging federal permits for the pipeline at more than 200 water crossings. Last month, the tribes said they were willing to put those claims on hold until the battle between ETP and the Corps is resolved, and Boasberg agreed.

WHAT’S AT STAKE?

For ETP, it’s money. The company had planned to finish the pipeline by the end of 2016. In November, it said delays already cost more than $450 million and anything more would be “tens of millions of dollars each month.”

The Sioux tribes maintain what’s at stake is clean water for more than 8,000 tribal members and millions of people downstream — as well as Native American cultural sites.

For the Corps, it’s the ability to do a more thorough environmental study of the project in the wake of the tribes’ concerns. Assistant Army Secretary Jo-Ellen Darcy in a Dec. 4 statement said study is needed on alternative locations for the river crossing, the potential for a leak and tribal treaty rights.

WHEN WILL IT BE RESOLVED?

A resolution is at least several weeks away under a scheduling order from Boasberg. In the meantime, he’s asked that “the government shall promptly notify the court should it change its position regarding the easement.” Some pipeline opponents worry that pro-energy President-elect Donald Trump will overturn the Army’s easement decision.

WHAT’S HAPPENING IN NORTH DAKOTA?

No construction work is being done while the court battles play out.

The once-large protest camp near the Standing Rock Reservation — and the pipeline route just to the north — has dwindled to a few hundred people due to the work stoppage and harsh winter weather.

Standing Rock Chairman Dave Archambault last month called for the camp to disband due to dangerous weather and because it’s in an area that could flood in the spring, possibly leading to the river being contaminated with garbage and debris. He told The Associated Press late last week that he’s unhappy people are still camped out and asked them to devise a plan for leaving the area and cleaning it up.



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RE: #NoDAPL ~ Corps, tribes to judge
3/7/2017 7:45:49 PM
BREAKING! CALIFORNIA BUREAU of INDIAN AFFAIRS DIRECT DESCENDANTS OF JOSE JUAN AND GUADALUPE, ORIGINAL MEMBERS OF THE HISTORICAL BAND OF SAN PASQUAL INDIANS, FORCED TO FILE SUIT IN FEDERAL COURT TO BE FEDERALLY RECOGNIZED MEMBERS OF THE SAN PASQUAL BAND

This despite the fact the Bureau has known for decades, the BIA wrongfully enrolled hundreds of Non-San Pasqual Indians in the Tribe and whose families have conspired with the BIA to keep the True San Pasqual Indians from enrollment in their Tribe, and from Federal Recognition .

I have the the complaint HERE (START AT PAGE 13)

How can Bureau of Indian Affairs defend their defense of non-San Pasqual Indians, versus their defense of non-San Pasqual Indians? It makes NO sense!
If you think the OROVILLE DAM break would be a disaster, think what is coming up for California's Bureau of Indian Affairs, headed by Amy (her again?) Dutschke. The implications of what the B.I.A. has done at San Pasqual is STUNNING. There is a lawsuit outstanding now for $89 million the last I heard. Is the Sacramento Office of Bureau of Indian Affairs going to attempt to defend their fraud and conspiracy, against the enrollment of the True San Pasqual Indians? How will Sacramento of Bureau of Indian Affairs, complicit in the corruption of THEFT of INDIAN HERITAGE of Jose Juan & Guadalupe Descendants, defend their enrollment of non-San -Pasqual Indians against the True San Pasqual Indians?

The matter of Jose Juan, wife Guadalupe and daughter Modesta Contreras, which we wrote about in April 2014 has reached the filing stage. Our U.S. Attorneys will be defending the United States of America. The documentary evidence we've seen is ...overwhelming. Might they settle to save this from becoming COBELL in magnitude and costing taxpayers hundreds of millions??



My free pacer account has expired, but I was able to cull some documents from the Case Alegre et al v. Contreras which is curious in that..it would seem that it should be v. Sally Jewell, as she was in charge of the Interior Department, so I guess RYAN ZINKE gets to be named?

We've reported quite a few times about Director Dutschke in this issue at San Pasqual here and her involvement with 'family membera' who all seem to be from different tribes. Click here to read about all those issues. And one of her family members used her position to threaten an attorney for the Pala disenrolled and putting some Pala people in danger.

We just wrote about the Bureau's OKIE-DOKE on FOIA requests by Coordinator Douglas Garcia, but is this incompetence, or intent?

Visit Blog click graphic

Tribal Disenrollment IMMORAL


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