‘Special master' may determine Indian payouts
'Special master' may determine American Indian payouts
Published: April 7, 2008
WASHINGTON — If a federal judge agrees that the government owes Indian trust account holders billions of dollars, he would then have to determine how the money should be allocated among nearly 300,000 people, their attorney said.
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Complex trust
At a hearing in March, a government attorney argued to Robertson that the case should not involve any financial remedies because the suit filed in 1996 didn't seek damages. Robert E. Kirschman, a Justice Department attorney, said the plaintiffs sought reforms of the system and an accounting of their funds.
Robertson, the second district judge to preside over the case, ruled this year that an accurate accounting would be impossible.
The trust account system was set up in the late 19th century when millions of acres — estimates range from 40 million to 54 million — were allotted in parcels to individual Indians and the government promised to manage the land. Counting land owned by tribes, it is the biggest trust in the United States.
Gingold called it "the most complex trust in the United States” since it involves so many people and so many activities — such as oil and gas drilling — and said it's being run by people with no expertise in trust management.
Two U.S. district judges and the U.S. Court of Appeals here have ruled that the government failed to properly manage the trust.
Since ruling that an accounting was impossible, Robertson, anxious to resolve the controversial and highly contentious case in the next few months, has been looking for a remedy.
Gingold said last week, "Where an accounting is impossible, you're looking at real rough justice.”
The government's own figures, he said, show that an average of 65 percent of the money collected for the Indians has been paid out. While holding on to the rest — more than $3 billion — the government has been able to lower its borrowing costs to finance its debt. Spread out over more than 100 years, that has allowed the government to benefit to the tune of $58 billion, the Indians say.
Gingold said he expected the government to argue that Robertson can't award damages against the federal government. But he said the Indians aren't asking for damages.
"We're seeking the benefit the government gained as a result of its breach of trust,” Gingold said. "You're not allowed to benefit from your improper accounting.”
The Indians are also asking that Robertson return all the land originally in the trust unless the government could prove it was sold at fair market value. Of the original acreage — much of which was in what is now Oklahoma — only about 10 million acres remain.
Gingold said he expects the judge to say that it wasn't practical to try to return land sold to third parties. But he said the judge could look at land that was owned by Indians that is now being used by the government.
Robertson has scheduled a trial for early June on the proposals for resolving the case.


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