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Accounting Coup

News: When banker Elouise Cobell added up the Indian trust money lost, looted, and mismanaged by the U.S. government, the tab came to $176 billion. Now she's here to collect.

September/October 2005 Issue


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ALONG HIGHWAY 89, south of the Two Medicine River on the slope of Glacier National Park, at a place Elouise Pepion Cobell passes every day on her way from her ranch to her office in Browning, stands a historical marker erected by the state of Montana:

OLD AGENCY: The Starvation Winter of 1883-1884 took the lives of about 500 Blackfeet Indians who had been camping in the vicinity of Old Agency. This tragic event was the result of an inadequate supply of government rations during an exceptionally hard winter.

The story of that winter that came down to Cobell from her parents and grandparents is a darker one: of Indians effectively imprisoned by what locals called the Indian Agency (now the Bureau of Indian Affairs or BIA) on land that had been emptied of the bison and pronghorn that had been their staples, and with their promised government provisions lost to pervasive corruption. "All the Blackfeet know," says Cobell, "that the Agency man was black-marketing the Indians' rations, and that the reservation was enclosed in barbed wire."

In the winter of 1883, as the cattle of white settlers grazed illegally on Indian lands, the Blackfeet began to die of starvation and a streptococcal epidemic. In the spring, they ate their last government-provided seed potatoes; by June they were stripping cottonwood trees to chew the inner bark; and by the time BIA officials in Washington, D.C., finally responded with extra rations, a Blackfeet man called Almost-A-Dog was said to have cut 555 notches in a willow stick, one for every Indian who had died -- one in every four Blackfeet in the state of Montana.

Just west of the Old Agency historical marker, in what is now the Blackfeet Nation, lies an unmarked, wind-scoured rise of hills the Indians call Ghost Ridge, where the dead from the Starvation Winter, which actually lasted 18 unrelenting months, were buried in mass graves. When Cobell was a child, an uncle lived nearby, and every time they visited him, her parents repeated the story of Ghost Ridge. Cobell says it's those dead who give her the courage to fight on. "Fighting for them," she says. "Fighting the same government that tried to get rid of this entire race of people."


HER FIGHT TAKES THE FORM of Cobell v. Norton, a federal lawsuit on behalf of a half-million Indians across America whose individual property is held in trust by the Department of the Interior, which oversees the BIA. Interior leases these private Indian lands to oil, timber, and agricultural corporations and other commercial entities, then pays the Indians the revenues those leases yield. But Cobell claims the government has been grossly negligent in its 118 years of managing the Individual Indian Trust, treating the Indians not as clients and beneficiaries but as easy marks.

While generations of non-Indians have become rich harvesting the abundant resources of private Indian lands -- which once included virtually all the oil fields of Oklahoma -- Indian landowners have been paid only erratically, and far less than their due. Consequently, even landowning Indians remain among the nation's poorest citizens, joining the 23 percent of Indians in America living in poverty, and the nearly 40 percent who are unemployed. Some tribes fare even worse, and the Blackfeet suffer a 34 percent poverty rate and a 70 percent unemployment rate. Overall, Indians are more than twice as poor as the average American.

Cobell filed her lawsuit in 1996 after years of kinder entreaties failed, demanding payment of all unpaid revenues from Indian leases for the past century, a tally of past revenues, and a new accounting system to deal with future revenues. According to Cobell's forensic accountants, the government owes $176 billion to individual Indian landowners, averaging $352,000 per plaintiff, making this monetarily the largest class-action lawsuit ever launched.

If successful, Cobell's lawsuit may force a historical shift of America's capital away from the cowboys -- the oil, gas, timber, mining, grazing, and agriculture industries, along with their political cohorts -- toward the Indians. Furthermore, there's a nearly identical case waiting in the wings regarding Tribal Trust lands, also managed by Interior. Not surprisingly, the Clinton and Bush administrations have flexed unprecedented bureaucratic muscle to delay the resolution of Cobell v. Norton, spending hundreds of millions of dollars defending Interior.

In court, Interior is backed by the formidable resources of the Department of Justice, along with 35 of the country's most expensive private law firms. Cobell, meanwhile, rents a modest four-room office in Browning and has funded her legal challenge with $11 million in grant money. Small, soft-voiced, and an energetic 59 years old -- she refers to herself as "kind of hyper" even six weeks after undergoing surgery to donate a kidney to her husband -- Cobell seems an unlikely crusader. But she is the great-granddaughter of Mountain Chief, part of a pantheon of legendary Blackfeet warriors who battled the U.S. government as far back as its original real estate emissaries, Lewis and Clark.

To those concerned that the United States can't afford a Cobell v. Norton settlement, she says, "It's not your money and never was."




 

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thank you for fighting for all that can't
Posted by:ron robbinsJuly 19, 2007 8:29:13 AMRespond ^
Julia Whitty, I am also native american and have wondered many years about this subject. Although, I am Chippewa and not Blackfoot, I believe, we are all in the same boat, getting took by the government. I would like to talk further about this if possible some time. Thank you.
Posted by:Sheila (Jerome) ForreySeptember 3, 2007 7:30:07 PMRespond ^
I have been told by my mother and aunt that my great great grandmother was a blackfoot they remember her as having long black silky hair.I want to learn more and I would like to know if this is so which I'm not sure how to go about finding out the truth.I would like for my kids to know their heritage as well. You can email me @ zamesh2000@yahoo.com
Posted by:ShanitaDecember 26, 2007 7:28:10 PMRespond ^
Having grown up in Cut Bank, MT, some 45 miles from Browning, I can attest to the shabby conditions endured by many of the Blackfoot tribe. Simply put, the US government is a disgrace when it comes to dealing with the Native Americans. End of argument.
Posted by:mike phillipsFebruary 6, 2008 5:23:26 PMRespond ^
I have followed this case for years and asked what presidental hopefuls plan to do. No answers.
Posted by:Verla SweereFebruary 8, 2008 1:03:47 PMRespond ^
I love it!!! Cobell, thanks so very much. Gov. leaders that lie, cheat or steal allways take people on as if they are never wrong or with a "Prove it" attitude. IN YOUR FACE, Kempthorne!!! Now pay the taxes back to us that you spent printing up lies and for screwing around the Judicial system for 11 years.
Posted by:RandallFebruary 10, 2008 3:46:47 AMRespond ^
Im alive and still waiting for some back pay...Im here!
Posted by:prairiefireFebruary 21, 2008 12:51:21 PMRespond ^
Find out more about this injustice and support this story by going to:
www.brokenpromisesthemovie.com

peace, Stephon, Researcher for "Broken Promises" - stephon@brokenpromisesthemovie.com
Posted by:Stephon LitwinczukAugust 7, 2008 10:50:40 PMRespond ^

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