“With today’s decision, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against legal precedent and the basic principles of congressional authority and Indian law.”

The following report is from People:

A divided Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that states now have the authority to prosecute crimes committed by non-Natives on tribal land when the victim is Native American.

The high court’s 5-4 decision follows a plead by Oklahoma lawmakers, led by Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt, to revisit a landmark verdict in 2020 which saw SCOTUS side with Indigenous sovereignty and reserved the right to prosecute these crimes to federal and tribal officials.

In a 5-4 decision of the 2020 McGirt v. Oklahoma ruling, with Justice Neil Gorsuch penning the majority opinion, he maintained that Oklahoma did not possess the authority nor jurisdiction to prosecute McGirt, an individual who was convicted by the state for sex abuse crimes and is a member of the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma.

The new arguments were centered around Victor Castro-Huerta, a non-Native who was charged by state prosecutors for the malnourishment of his disabled 5-year-old stepdaughter, who is Native-American and a member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians in Oklahoma.

Crucially, the court acknowledged when it accepted Castro-Huerta’s case that it rejected the state’s request to overturn the McGirt ruling in its entirety, and it has only agreed to reconsider the jurisdictional issue. The court noted this is specifically for cases in “Indian Country” where the victim is Native American and the defendant is not.

An important precedent established in the court’s 2020 decision is that a significant portion of eastern Oklahoma is still an American Indian reservation. The ruling mandated that the state is unable to prosecute Native Americans accused of crimes on tribal lands that include most of Tulsa, Oklahoma’s second-largest city and also one of the most dangerous metro areas in the United States.

A major component in both McGirt v. Oklahoma and Castro-Huerta’s case is the fact that federal officials have conceded they lack the resources to prosecute the totality of crimes that have fallen on their laps.

Justice Kavanaugh, a dissenter in the 2020 ruling, weighed in and stated, if the court rules against the state, “it’s going to hurt Indian victims,” he said.

Kannon Shanmugam, an attorney representing the state of Oklahoma, emphatically denounced the high court’s previous verdict, stating that only the federal government possesses the authority to prosecute crimes in almost half the state, which poses a substantial problem and leaves criminals on the street.

On the contrary, Sarah Hill, who serves as attorney general for the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, blasted SCOTUS’ decision to revisit the issue, stating, “prior to the decision in McGirt, Oklahoma had never attempted to assert jurisdiction over non-Indians who committed crimes against Indians,” adding that Oklahoma was trying to “create as much chaos and doubt as possible.”

A key swing vote in the case was Justice Amy Coney Barrett, the only current member who did not sit on the court when they debated the McGirt case. The associate justice sided with the majority.

Notably, Coney Barrett replaced Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg after her death, who sided with the majority in McGirt v. Oklahoma, emphasizing the importance of a single justice.

In the majority’s explanation Wednesday, the five justices stressed that extending prosecutorial jurisdiction to the state would not impede on tribal independence.

Here, the exercise of state jurisdiction would not infringe on tribal self-government. And because a State’s jurisdiction is concurrent with federal jurisdiction, a state prosecution would not preclude an earlier or later federal prosecution.

Finally, the State has a strong sovereign interest in ensuring public safety and criminal justice within its territory, including an interest in protecting both Indian and non-Indian crime victims.

The verdict will be widely viewed as an attack on the sovereignty of tribal lands and a breach of agreements between the government and Native American tribes, as the McGirt ruling previously solidified several treaties between the two sides.

Hill weighed in after that ruling, stating,

It’s incredibly important to the tribe to preserve the maximum amount of sovereignty that we have because that’s how we protect our communities.

Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. said in a statement Wednesday:

With today’s decision, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against legal precedent and the basic principles of congressional authority and Indian law.

As the court’s dynamics continue to shift, many previously ruled upon cases could be reviewed by the high court, with verdicts continuing to change.


AUTHOR COMMENTARY

For those do not quite understand, large portions of Oklahoma (and other parts of Arizona, Utah, and more) are home to Native American reservoirs, where the indigenous people are allowed to have their own form of sovereign government, along with many other reparations given to them by the state and federal government. This ruling is essentially stripping away more of that sovereignty.


[7] Who goeth a warfare any time at his own charges? who planteth a vineyard, and eateth not of the fruit thereof? or who feedeth a flock, and eateth not of the milk of the flock? [8] Say I these things as a man? or saith not the law the same also? [9] For it is written in the law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn. Doth God take care for oxen? [10] Or saith he it altogether for our sakes? For our sakes, no doubt, this is written: that he that ploweth should plow in hope; and that he that thresheth in hope should be partaker of his hope. (1 Corinthians 9:7-10).

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8 Comments

  • The papists are behind this. I learned from our hero, Bryan Denlinger that all along it wasn’t the pilgrims it was the papists that murdered and persecuted the native Americans.
    Mystery Babylon is going to be wiped off of the planet!

    • We all love brother Bryan, but we aren’t papists or idolatrous humanists following men. Our authority is the word of God, & I don’t think Bryan would accept that type of responsibility over anyone. Not to mention that Augustinian philosophical doctrine resulting in abuses was held to by both Protestants & Reformed, as well as papists. It was the early baptists in America who promoted the scripture as our authority in life & practice, & the separation of church & state, the rights of every man & woman created in the image of God. Men like John Clark who founded the first baptist church in America (1638) & then lobbied King Charles for the Rhode Island Charter for years (1651-1660) before returning to pastor in America, establishing a free school in Rhode Island, Providence Plantation in 1676. Roger Williams who suffered banishment from the northern puritan settlement for doctrinal differences, sheltered with & shared the gospel with the native peoples, & wrote ‘The Bloody Tenet of Persecution’. And Obadiah Holmes who took the 40 stripes save one rather than accept the anonymously paid fine for his & John Clarke’s in-home visit & worship with an elderly baptist, Mr. Crandall, living in Congregationalist State Church territory. Revival spread south along the Eastern seaboard as a result, and before the ritualist Campbellites & Masons undid much of that good work.

      The difference between the Puritans to the north of the pilgrims at Plimoth Plantation was between the Puritans’ adherence to the Geneva & Institutes of Calvin in the north, and the pilgrims at Plimoth having both the Geneva & the tempering, King James Bible, which came with the cooper they hired, John Alden. (1620) Their dealings with the banished, those of differing doctrine, & the native peoples were tempered as a result, & further removed from popery.

      There were always abuses on both sides of the European & native peoples dealings because of sin, but certain doctrines make it more likely, & institutionalized.

      Nicolaitanism which thing Christ hates never died, but was always tempered wherever the people had the Bible, read & believed it. It got really bad when the excuse for elitist presumptions & tyranny got a boost from pagan evolutionary philosophy & filth with the idolatrous humanist ‘Enlightenment’ & ‘Renaissance’, growing especially in France & Germany w/ some covert help of Weishaupt’s ‘Les Perfectibles’, & the so-called rationalists…picked up by elites like Erasmus Darwin in England who loved its excuse for their sins & apparent escape from personal responsibility, especially in family & sexual matters & crimes. The wealthy Darwin’s & Wedgwood’s were intertwined in marriage, & kept up a Unitarian fake ‘Christian’ front as the revival of pagan mores & craft was not popular at the time. Two generations later, the grandson, Charles, and his friend, Thomas Huxley were shocked by how rapidly the people accepted their ‘new’ ideas given the dearth of evidence for it…surmising in letters written between them & still extant, published by later ancestors, that it must be because of the sexual license it afforded that it was so easily & readily accepted.

      They should have read Numbers 23-31 concerning the Baals of Peor, about the groves, & so forth….and about God’s judgment due to those things: but by then those holding the truth in unrighteousness & elite, influential in politics, education & philosophy, theology etc were buying into the crass spiritualizing of scripture into little more than moral tales & myths, or going off entirely into humanist rationalism. Professing wisdom they became fools, changed the truth of God into a lie, & worshipped & served the creature more than the Creator who is forever blessed. Sinning & repeating the error of the Jews before them who’d been entrusted with & privileged as the new testament believers had been, to have the very words of God. Romans 1 -3 KJB/AV.

      Some things never change. As evolutionary ideas were carried back here with men like Benjamin Franklyn, & Unitarians like Joseph Priestley who was a radical supporter of evolutionary theory & the French Revolution, coming here in 1791. (to Northumberland Country, PA)…..the bigotry against native americans & blacks had an apparent ‘scientific’ footing, and things escalated, evangelism & preaching to the native peoples’ cooled, & it became about land & dominion, supposed ‘manifest destiny’….papist, Augustinian doctrine & eschatology. Kingdom building at any cost.

  • As for the papists being behind the recent Supreme Court rulings….in total agreement, & Bryan’s recent video teaching on that makes it plain, along with the liberal Jewish connection to Rome & how that sets the stage for the coming antichrist beast system & fornicating union.

    The institution of Law is one of their ‘seven pillars’ or ‘seven mountains’ of their supposed dominion ‘mandate’. Masons like David Barton, & the charismatics, & Reformed & Protestants all teach that, just like their Mama, Rome. Took me longer than it should have to figure that one out, as a new Christian & just the perversions, the busy-ness & lean into social justice of the emergents & self-transformers, but God is merciful. Who knew what a blessing the school of hard knocks & getting ‘loved out the door’ wondering what hit us really was at the time? Hebrews 12 KJB/AV.

    One of the assurances of salvation is the chastisement of sons by our faithful Father. Can be rough stuff: but so much better than being without it & found to be a spiritual bastard.

  • Galatians 2:4
    And that because of false brethren unawares brought in, who came in privily to spy out our liberty which we have in Christ Jesus, that they might bring us into bondage:

  • Galatians 5:20
    Idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies,
    21 Envyings , murders, drunkenness, revellings, and such like: of the which I tell you before, as I have also told you in time past, that they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God.

    ******* SHALL NOT INHERIT ********
    ******* THE KINGDOM OF GOD ******

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