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New Podcast: Native American Rights Fund Lawyer Joel Williams on Tribal Sovereignty and the U.S. Death Penalty

By Death Penalty Information Center

Posted on Oct 01, 2020 | Updated on Sep 25, 2024

In the September 30, 2020 episode of the Discussions With DPIC pod­cast, Native American Rights Fund senior staff attor­ney Joel Williams joins Death Penalty Information Center exec­u­tive direc­tor Robert Dunham for a con­ver­sa­tion about trib­al sov­er­eign­ty, the death penal­ty, and the his­toric U.S. Supreme Court rul­ing in McGirt v. Oklahoma.

Williams, a cit­i­zen of the Cherokee Nation, explains how 2020 has been a land­mark year on the ques­tion of trib­al sov­er­eign­ty and the death penal­ty. He and Dunham dis­cuss the impact of McGirts affir­mance of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation’s sov­er­eign­ty over lands with­in the his­tor­i­cal bor­ders of the Creek Reservation, includ­ing the void­ing of the death sen­tence imposed in Oklahomas state courts on Creek cit­i­zen Patrick Dwayne Murphy. Williams and Dunham then dis­cuss the fed­er­al government’s very trou­bling” dis­re­gard of native sov­er­eign­ty less than a month lat­er in sched­ul­ing and car­ry­ing out the exe­cu­tion of Navajo cit­i­zen Lezmond Mitchell, the only Native American on fed­er­al death row, over the oppo­si­tion of the Navajo gov­ern­ment and trib­al lead­ers across the country.

Williams and the Native American Rights Fund became involved in the Oklahoma lit­i­ga­tion through the Tribal Supreme Court Project, a joint project of NARF and the National Congress of American Indians. Under the fed­er­al Major Crimes Act, states have no author­i­ty to pros­e­cute a range of seri­ous crimes com­mit­ted by or against Native Americans on their trib­al lands. Murphy argued that Oklahoma lacked juris­dic­tion to try him because the mur­der took place on the Creek Reservation. Like Murphy, Jimcy McGirt, a Creek cit­i­zen who was tried for rape in the Oklahoma state courts, chal­lenged his con­vic­tion on juris­dic­tion­al grounds, say­ing the offense had occurred on tribal lands.

Though the cas­es arose in the con­text of crim­i­nal pro­ceed­ings, Williams said they raised exis­ten­tial ques­tions relat­ing to trib­al sov­er­eign­ty. For a lot of peo­ple, par­tic­u­lar­ly Native peo­ple from Oklahoma, these cas­es were real­ly about debunk­ing th[e] cre­ation myth of Oklahoma … that Oklahoma state­hood and Indian reser­va­tions were fun­da­men­tal­ly incom­pat­i­ble,” Williams explained. That’s been a nar­ra­tive that’s been pushed by non-trib­al peo­ple about Oklahoma from the very begin­ning … and so real­ly that was, in my view, at the very heart of this case.”

Williams said, con­trary to the sky-is-falling argu­ments offered by state pros­e­cu­tors, “[t]he case was nev­er about these peo­ple going free. The argu­ment for the tribes was nev­er that their crimes shouldn’t be pun­ished. The ques­tion was, Who should have the author­i­ty to do that?’”

The crit­i­cal focus, Williams said, was that Indian tribes are gov­ern­ments, and one of the fun­da­men­tal roles of gov­ern­ment is to pro­vide for pub­lic safe­ty. Tribal gov­ern­ments are no dif­fer­ent in that respect, and they take their role of pro­tect­ing the pub­lic very seri­ous­ly. If you par­tic­u­lar­ly look at the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, that is a tribe with a very well-devel­oped judi­cial sys­tem, a state-of-the-art police force. … The alarm bells about ram­pant crime and anar­chy that would ensue from this case just were sim­ply not true,” he said.

Patrick Murphy

The U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear Murphy’s case in 2017, but because he had been involved in a pro­ce­dur­al rul­ing as a cir­cuit court judge ear­li­er in the case, Justice Neil Gorsuch recused him­self. After oral argu­ment and sup­ple­men­tal brief­ing, the eight-mem­ber court was unable to reach a deci­sion. When the Court decid­ed to review McGirts case, Williams said, it was very clear the Court couldn’t come to a major­i­ty posi­tion, and that Justice Gorsuch … would be the decider here.”

That, Williams felt, gave me a lot of opti­mism.” In Indian law cas­es, he told Dunham, the Justices’ deci­sions had not always bro­ken down along ide­o­log­i­cal lines. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, he explained, had authored a num­ber of adverse opin­ions in Indian law cas­es that Williams con­sid­ered espe­cial­ly trou­bling, while Justice Clarence Thomas had writ­ten an opin­ion favor­ing the tribes. With Justice Gorsuch, it was cer­tain­ly clear from his record that Indian law was some­thing that he had thought a lot about.” He was deeply steeped in the law in this area [and] famil­iar with trib­al com­mu­ni­ties from his upbring­ing in Colorado in the West. And so cer­tain­ly, for me and I think oth­ers, had a lot of hope when this case took that turn and Justice Gorsuch was imme­di­ate­ly in the cen­ter of the case.”

One of NARF’s great­est con­cerns was that the Court would be swayed by Oklahoma’s argu­ment that, whether Congress explic­it­ly said so or not, the Creek Reservation estab­lished by treaty in the 1800s had been dis­es­tab­lished in prac­tice by gen­er­a­tions of out­siders mov­ing onto and liv­ing on the land. The reser­va­tion encom­passed parts of 11 Oklahoma coun­ties and most of the city of Tulsa. Part of the strat­e­gy of Oklahoma in both Murphy and McGirt was to say, … But look, here’s Tulsa.’ And here’s all of these non-Indian peo­ple who flocked into this area, whether legal­ly or ille­gal­ly. They’ve estab­lished their lives here for 120 years, and you can’t sud­den­ly cre­ate a sit­u­a­tion where, one morn­ing, they wake up to find out they live on an Indian Reservation. That upsets all of their settled expectations.” 

Instead, Justice Gorsuch respond­ed by writ­ing: The mag­ni­tude of a legal wrong is no rea­son to per­pet­u­ate it.” Williams said this was one of the most impor­tant parts of this opin­ion …. Justice Gorsuch and the oth­ers in the major­i­ty say­ing, No, you can’t rely on this long course of con­duct. In many ways, this con­duct vio­lat­ed the law and vio­lat­ed these treaties.’ And [the Court said] you can’t go back and depend upon that and say that we should ignore what the law was and still is.”

In the wake of McGirt, many trib­al lead­ers across the coun­try viewed the exe­cu­tion of Lezmond Mitchell one month lat­er as a return to the U.S. his­to­ry of bro­ken promis­es. Mitchell, a Navajo cit­i­zen, was the first Native American exe­cut­ed by the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment for a crime com­mit­ted against a mem­ber of his own tribe on trib­al lands. The Navajo Nation gov­ern­ment has long opposed the death penal­ty and opposed Mitchell’s exe­cu­tion. Not only the Navajo Nation spoke up about it,” Williams said, but a lot of oth­er trib­al lead­ers, trib­al orga­ni­za­tions, and indi­vid­u­als as well. The fact that it was ignored was very troubling.”

However, to Williams, the fed­er­al government’s dis­re­gard of trib­al views in Mitchell’s case was not sur­pris­ing. McGirt and Murphy were fan­tas­tic deci­sions that came out of the Supreme Court [but t]he United States was oppos­ing the trib­al posi­tion in those cas­es.” Williams finds a cer­tain amount of con­sis­ten­cy” in the fed­er­al government’s actions in McGirt and Mitchell: one of the per­sis­tent com­plaints of tribes in rela­tion to the United States,” he said, is that deci­sions are made that affect our peo­ple and affect our gov­ern­ments and we’re nev­er con­sult­ed about those deci­sions. You know, more than any­thing, that real­ly gets people angry.”

The cas­es, Williams said, illus­trate the often con­tentious rela­tion­ship between the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment and tribes. It’s a trou­bled rela­tion­ship because the United States has these mul­ti­ple roles. The United States is sup­posed to be a trustee for Indian tribes. And so, in that role, it is sup­posed to work in our best inter­est but also is free to work in its own self-inter­est.” Those deci­sions often have deep effects on our tribes and on our trib­al cit­i­zens,” Williams said, and “[w]e need to be at the table as a part of the deci­sion-mak­ing in those conversations.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Death Penalty Information Center, Native American Rights Fund Lawyer Joel Williams on Tribal Sovereignty and the U.S. Death Penalty, Discussions With DPIC Podcast, September 302020.