McGirt V Oklahoma - 070920
McGirt V Oklahoma - 070920
McGirt V Oklahoma - 070920
Syllabus
Syllabus
McGIRT v. OKLAHOMA
Syllabus
Syllabus
patent the Creek received somehow made their tribal sovereignty eas-
ier to divest. Congress established a reservation, not a dependent In-
dian community, for the Creek Nation. Pp. 28–31.
(d) Even assuming that the Creek land is a reservation, Oklahoma
argues that the MCA has never applied in eastern Oklahoma. It
claims that the Oklahoma Enabling Act, which transferred all non-
federal cases pending in the territorial courts to Oklahoma’s state
courts, made the State’s courts the successors to the federal territorial
courts’ sweeping authority to try Indians for crimes committed on res-
ervations. That argument, however, rests on state prosecutorial prac-
tices that defy the MCA, rather than on the law’s plain terms. Pp. 32–
36.
(e) Finally, Oklahoma warns of the potential consequences that will
follow a ruling against it, such as unsettling an untold number of con-
victions and frustrating the State’s ability to prosecute crimes in the
future. This Court is aware of the potential for cost and conflict around
jurisdictional boundaries. But Oklahoma and its tribes have proven
time and again that they can work successfully together as partners,
and Congress remains free to supplement its statutory directions
about the lands in question at any time. Pp. 36–42.
Reversed.
No. 18–9526
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I
At one level, the question before us concerns Jimcy
McGirt. Years ago, an Oklahoma state court convicted him
of three serious sexual offenses. Since then, he has argued
in postconviction proceedings that the State lacked jurisdic-
tion to prosecute him because he is an enrolled member of
the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma and his crimes took place
on the Creek Reservation. A new trial for his conduct, he
has contended, must take place in federal court. The Okla-
homa state courts hearing Mr. McGirt’s arguments rejected
them, so he now brings them here.
Mr. McGirt’s appeal rests on the federal Major Crimes
Act (MCA). The statute provides that, within “the Indian
country,” “[a]ny Indian who commits” certain enumerated
offenses “against the person or property of another Indian
or any other person” “shall be subject to the same law and
penalties as all other persons committing any of the above
offenses, within the exclusive jurisdiction of the United
States.” 18 U. S. C. §1153(a). By subjecting Indians to fed-
eral trials for crimes committed on tribal lands, Congress
may have breached its promises to tribes like the Creek
that they would be free to govern themselves. But this par-
ticular incursion has its limits—applying only to certain
enumerated crimes and allowing only the federal govern-
ment to try Indians. State courts generally have no juris-
diction to try Indians for conduct committed in “Indian
country.” Negonsott v. Samuels, 507 U. S. 99, 102–103
(1993).
The key question Mr. McGirt faces concerns that last
qualification: Did he commit his crimes in Indian country?
A neighboring provision of the MCA defines the term to in-
clude, among other things, “all land within the limits of any
Indian reservation under the jurisdiction of the United
States Government, notwithstanding the issuance of any
patent, and, including rights-of-way running through the
reservation.” §1151(a). Mr. McGirt submits he can satisfy
Cite as: 591 U. S. ____ (2020) 3
gress not only “solemnly guarantied” the land but also “es-
tablish[ed] boundary lines which will secure a country and
permanent home to the whole Creek Nation of Indians.”
1832 Treaty, Art. XIV, 7 Stat. 368; 1833 Treaty, preamble,
7 Stat. 418. The government’s promises weren’t made gra-
tuitously. Rather, the 1832 Treaty acknowledged that
“[t]he United States are desirous that the Creeks should re-
move to the country west of the Mississippi” and, in service
of that goal, required the Creeks to cede all lands in the
East. Arts. I, XII, 7 Stat. 366, 367. Nor were the govern-
ment’s promises meant to be delusory. Congress twice as-
sured the Creeks that “[the] Treaty shall be obligatory on
the contracting parties, as soon as the same shall be ratified
by the United States.” 1832 Treaty, Art. XV, id., at 368; see
1833 Treaty, Art. IX, 7 Stat. 420 (“agreement shall be bind-
ing and obligatory” upon ratification). Both treaties were
duly ratified and enacted as law.
Because the Tribe’s move west was ostensibly voluntary,
Congress held out another assurance as well. In the statute
that precipitated these negotiations, Congress authorized
the President “to assure the tribe . . . that the United States
will forever secure and guaranty to them . . . the country so
exchanged with them.” Indian Removal Act of 1830, §3, 4
Stat. 412. “[A]nd if they prefer it,” the bill continued, “the
United States will cause a patent or grant to be made and
executed to them for the same; Provided always, that such
lands shall revert to the United States, if the Indians be-
come extinct, or abandon the same.” Ibid. If agreeable to
all sides, a tribe would not only enjoy the government’s sol-
emn treaty promises; it would hold legal title to its lands.
It was an offer the Creek accepted. The 1833 Treaty fixed
borders for what was to be a “permanent home to the whole
Creek nation of Indians.” 1833 Treaty, preamble, 7 Stat.
418. It also established that the “United States will grant
a patent, in fee simple, to the Creek nation of Indians for
the land assigned said nation by this treaty.” Art. III, id.,
Cite as: 591 U. S. ____ (2020) 5
at 419. That grant came with the caveat that “the right
thus guaranteed by the United States shall be continued to
said tribe of Indians, so long as they shall exist as a nation,
and continue to occupy the country hereby assigned to
them.” Ibid. The promised patent formally issued in 1852.
See Woodward v. De Graffenried, 238 U. S. 284, 293–294
(1915).
These early treaties did not refer to the Creek lands as a
“reservation”—perhaps because that word had not yet ac-
quired such distinctive significance in federal Indian law.
But we have found similar language in treaties from the
same era sufficient to create a reservation. See Menominee
Tribe v. United States, 391 U. S. 404, 405 (1968) (grant of
land “ ‘for a home, to be held as Indian lands are held,’ ” es-
tablished a reservation). And later Acts of Congress left no
room for doubt. In 1866, the United States entered yet an-
other treaty with the Creek Nation. This agreement re-
duced the size of the land set aside for the Creek, compen-
sating the Tribe at a price of 30 cents an acre. Treaty
Between the United States and the Creek Nation of Indi-
ans, Art. III, June 14, 1866, 14 Stat. 786. But Congress ex-
plicitly restated its commitment that the remaining land
would “be forever set apart as a home for said Creek Na-
tion,” which it now referred to as “the reduced Creek reser-
vation.” Arts. III, IX, id., at 786, 788.1 Throughout the late
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1 The dissent by THE CHIEF JUSTICE (hereinafter the dissent) suggests
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Creek nation entered into before” the Civil War).
Cite as: 591 U. S. ____ (2020) 7
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2 The dissent stresses, repeatedly, that the Dawes Commission was
charged with seeking to extinguish the reservation. Post, at 18, 24. Yet,
the dissent fails to mention the Commission’s various reports acknowl-
edging that those efforts were unsuccessful precisely because the Creek
refused to cede their lands.
10 MCGIRT v. OKLAHOMA
Parker, 577 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 7) (“[T]he 1882 Act falls
into another category of surplus land Acts: those that
merely opened reservation land to settlement. . . . Such
schemes allow non-Indian settlers to own land on the res-
ervation” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
It isn’t so hard to see why. The federal government issued
its own land patents to many homesteaders throughout the
West. These patents transferred legal title and are the ba-
sis for much of the private land ownership in a number of
States today. But no one thinks any of this diminished the
United States’s claim to sovereignty over any land. To ac-
complish that would require an act of cession, the transfer
of a sovereign claim from one nation to another. 3 E. Wash-
burn, American Law of Real Property *521–*524. And
there is no reason why Congress cannot reserve land for
tribes in much the same way, allowing them to continue to
exercise governmental functions over land even if they no
longer own it communally. Indeed, such an arrangement
seems to be contemplated by §1151(a)’s plain terms. Cf.
Seymour, 368 U. S., at 357–358.3
Oklahoma reminds us that allotment was often the first
step in a plan ultimately aimed at disestablishment. As
this Court explained in Mattz, Congress’s expressed policy
at the time “was to continue the reservation system and the
trust status of Indian lands, but to allot tracts to individual
Indians for agriculture and grazing.” 412 U. S., at 496.
Then, “[w]hen all the lands had been allotted and the trust
expired, the reservation could be abolished.” Ibid. This
plan was set in motion nationally in the General Allotment
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3 The dissent not only fails to acknowledge these features of the statute
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4 The dissent seemingly conflates these steps in other ways, too, by im-
plying that the passage of an allotment Act itself extinguished title. Post,
at 18–19. The reality proved more complicated. Allotment of the Creek
lands did not occur overnight, but dragged on for years, well past Okla-
homa’s statehood, until Congress finally prohibited any further allot-
ments more than 15 years later. Act of Mar. 2, 1917, 39 Stat. 986.
Cite as: 591 U. S. ____ (2020) 13
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5 The dissent doesn’t purport to find any of the hallmarks of diminish-
Creek. But, just as plainly, they left the Tribe with signifi-
cant sovereign functions over the lands in question. For ex-
ample, the Creek Nation retained the power to collect taxes,
operate schools, legislate through tribal ordinances, and,
soon, oversee the federally mandated allotment process.
§§39, 40, 42, id., at 871–872; Buster v. Wright, 135 F. 947,
949–950, 953–954 (CA8 1905). And, in its own way, the
congressional incursion on tribal legislative processes only
served to prove the power: Congress would have had no
need to subject tribal legislation to Presidential review if
the Tribe lacked any authority to legislate. Grave though
they were, these congressional intrusions on pre-existing
treaty rights fell short of eliminating all tribal interests in
the land.
Much more ominously, the 1901 allotment agreement
ended by announcing that the Creek tribal government
“shall not continue” past 1906, although the agreement
quickly qualified that statement, adding the proviso “sub-
ject to such further legislation as Congress may deem
proper.” §46, 31 Stat. 872. Thus, while suggesting that the
tribal government might end in 1906, Congress also neces-
sarily understood it had not ended in 1901. All of which
was consistent with the Legislature’s general practice of
taking allotment as a first, not final, step toward disestab-
lishment and dissolution.
When 1906 finally arrived, Congress adopted the Five
Civilized Tribes Act. But instead of dissolving the tribal
government as some may have expected, Congress
“deem[ed] proper” a different course, simply cutting away
further at the Tribe’s autonomy. Congress empowered the
President to remove and replace the principal chief of the
Creek, prohibited the tribal council from meeting more than
30 days a year, and directed the Secretary of the Interior to
assume control of tribal schools. §§6, 10, 28, 34 Stat. 139–
140, 148. The Act also provided for the handling of the
Cite as: 591 U. S. ____ (2020) 15
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7 The dissent ultimately concedes what Oklahoma will not: that no
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8 The dissent suggests Parker meant to say only that evidence of sub-
sequent treatment had limited interpretative value “in that case.” Post,
at 12. But the dissent includes just a snippet of the relevant passage.
Read in full, there is little room to doubt Parker invoked a general rule:
“This subsequent demographic history cannot overcome our conclusion
that Congress did not intend to diminish the reservation in 1882. And it
is not our rule to ‘rewrite’ the 1882 Act in light of this subsequent demo-
graphic history. DeCoteau, 420 U. S., at 447. After all, evidence of the
changing demographics of disputed land is ‘the least compelling’ evi-
20 MCGIRT v. OKLAHOMA
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9 In an effort to support its very different course, the dissent stitches
together quotes from Rosebud Sioux Tribe v. Knelp, 430 U. S. 584 (1977),
and South Dakota v. Yankton Sioux Tribe, 522 U. S. 329 (1998). Post, at
10–11. But far from supporting the dissent, both cases emphasize that
“[t]he focus of our inquiry is congressional intent,” Rosebud, 430 U. S., at
588, n. 4; see also Yankton Sioux, 522 U. S., at 343, and merely
acknowledge that extratextual sources may help resolve ambiguity about
Congress’s directions. The dissent’s appeal to Solem fares no better. As
we have seen, the extratextual sources in Solem only confirmed what the
relevant statute already suggested—that the reservation in question was
not diminished or disestablished. 465 U. S., at 475–476.
22 MCGIRT v. OKLAHOMA
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10 The dissent tries to avoid this inconvenient history by distinguishing
fee allotments from reservations, noting that the two categories are le-
gally distinct and geographically incommensurate. Post, at 27. But this
misses the point: The reason that Oklahoma thought it could prosecute
Indians for crimes on restricted allotments applied with equal force to
reservations. And it hardly “stretches the imagination” to think that
reason was wrong, post, at 28, when the dissent itself does not dispute
our rejection of it in Part V.
24 MCGIRT v. OKLAHOMA
criminal statute before us, the dissent travels far afield, pointing to the
fact an Oklahoma court heard a civil case in 1915 about an inheritance—
involving members of a different Tribe—as “evidence” Congress dises-
tablished the Creek Reservation. See post, at 21 (citing Palmer v. Cully,
52 Okla. 454, 455–465, 153 P. 154, 155–157 (1915) (per curiam)). But
even assuming that Oklahoma courts exercised civil jurisdiction over
Creek members, too, the dissent never explains why this jurisdiction im-
plies the Creek Reservation must have been disestablished. After all,
everyone agrees that the Creeks were prohibited from having their own
courts at the time. So it should be no surprise that some Creek might
have resorted to state courts in hope of resolving their disputes.
Cite as: 591 U. S. ____ (2020) 25
tive that it cites them not just as evidence about the meaning of treaties
the Tribe signed but even as evidence about the meaning of general pur-
pose laws the Creek had no hand in. See post, at 26 (citing Chief Porter’s
views on the legal effects of the Oklahoma Enabling Act). That is quite
a stretch from using tribal statements as “historical evidence of ‘the man-
ner in which [treaties were] negotiated’ with the . . . Tribe.” Parker, 577
U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 9) (quoting Solem v. Bartlett, 465 U. S. 463, 471
(1984)).
26 MCGIRT v. OKLAHOMA
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14 The dissent asks us to examine a hodge-podge of other, but no more
State.” Act of Mar. 3, 1885, ch. 341, §9, 23 Stat. 385 (em-
phasis added); see also 18 U. S. C. §1151 (defining “Indian
country” even more broadly). By contrast, every one of the
statutes the State directs us to merely discusses the assign-
ment of cases among courts in the Indian Territory. They
say nothing about the division of responsibilities between
federal and state authorities after Oklahoma entered the
Union. And however enlightened the State may think it
was for territorial law to apply to all persons irrespective of
race, some Tribe members may see things differently, given
that the same policy entailed the forcible closure of tribal
courts in defiance of treaty terms.
Left to hunt for some statute that might have rendered
the MCA inapplicable in Oklahoma after statehood, the
best the State can find is the Oklahoma Enabling Act. Con-
gress adopted that law in preparation for Oklahoma’s ad-
mission in 1907. Among its many provisions sorting out the
details associated with Oklahoma’s transition to statehood,
the Enabling Act transferred all nonfederal cases pending
in territorial courts to Oklahoma’s new state courts. Act of
June 16, 1906, §20, 34 Stat. 277; see also Act of Mar. 4,
1907, §3, 34 Stat. 1287 (clarifying treatment of cases to
which United States was a party). The State says this
transfer made its courts the inheritors of the federal terri-
torial courts’ sweeping authority to try Indians for crimes
committed on reservations.
But, at best, this tells only half the story. The Enabling
Act not only sent all nonfederal cases pending in territorial
courts to state court. It also transferred pending cases that
arose “under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the
United States” to federal district courts. §16, 34 Stat. 277.
Pending criminal cases were thus transferred to federal
court if the prosecution would have belonged there had the
Territory been a State at the time of the crime. §1, 34 Stat.
1287 (amending the Enabling Act). Nor did the statute
make any distinction between cases arising in the former
Cite as: 591 U. S. ____ (2020) 35
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15 For example, Oklahoma appears to apply a general rule that “issues
that were not raised previously on direct appeal, but which could have
been raised, are waived for further review.” Logan v. State, 2013 OK CR
2, ¶ 1, 293 P. 3d 969, 973. Indeed, JUSTICE THOMAS contends that this
state-law limitation on collateral review prevents us from considering
even the case now before us. Post, at 2 (dissenting opinion). But while
that state-law rule may often bar our way, it doesn’t in this case. After
noting a potential state-law obstacle, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal
Appeals (OCCA) proceeded to address the merits of Mr. McGirt’s federal
MCA claim anyway. Because the OCCA’s opinion “fairly appears to rest
primarily on federal law or to be interwoven with federal law” and lacks
any “plain statement” that it was relying on a state-law ground, we have
jurisdiction to consider the federal-law question presented to us. See
Michigan v. Long, 463 U. S. 1032, 1040–1041, 1044 (1983).
Cite as: 591 U. S. ____ (2020) 39
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16 This sense of cooperation and a shared future is on display in this
No. 18–9526
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environmental law.
None of this is warranted. What has gone unquestioned
for a century remains true today: A huge portion of Okla-
homa is not a Creek Indian reservation. Congress disestab-
lished any reservation in a series of statutes leading up to
Oklahoma statehood at the turn of the 19th century. The
Court reaches the opposite conclusion only by disregarding
the “well settled” approach required by our precedents. Ne-
braska v. Parker, 577 U. S. 481, ___ (2016) (slip op., at 5).
Under those precedents, we determine whether Congress
intended to disestablish a reservation by examining the rel-
evant Acts of Congress and “all the [surrounding] circum-
stances,” including the “contemporaneous and subsequent
understanding of the status of the reservation.” Id., at ___
(slip op., at 6) (internal quotation marks omitted). Yet the
Court declines to consider such understandings here, pre-
ferring to examine only individual statutes in isolation.
Applying the broader inquiry our precedents require, a
reservation did not exist when McGirt committed his
crimes, so Oklahoma had jurisdiction to prosecute him. I
respectfully dissent.
I
The Creek Nation once occupied what is now Alabama
and Georgia. In 1832, the Creek were compelled to cede
these lands to the United States in exchange for land in pre-
sent day Oklahoma. The expanse set aside for the Creek
and the other Indian nations that composed the “Five Civi-
lized Tribes”—the Cherokees, Chickasaws, Choctaws, and
Seminoles—became known as Indian Territory. See F. Co-
hen, Handbook of Federal Indian Law §4.07(1)(a), pp. 289–
290 (N. Newton ed. 2012) (Cohen). Each of the Five Tribes
formed a tripartite system of government. See Marlin v.
Lewallen, 276 U. S. 58, 60 (1928). They “enact[ed] and ex-
ecut[ed] their own laws,” “punish[ed] their own criminals,”
and “rais[ed] and expend[ed] their own revenues.” Atlantic
Cite as: 591 U. S. ____ (2020) 3
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1 I assume that the Creek Nation’s territory constituted a “reservation”
at this time. See ante, at 5–6. The State contends that no reservation
existed in the first place because the territory instead constituted a “de-
pendent Indian communit[y].” Brief for Respondent 8 (quoting 18
U. S. C. §1151(b)). The United States disagrees and states that defining
the territory as a dependent Indian community could disrupt the appli-
cation of various federal statutes. Tr. of Oral Arg. 79–80. I do not ad-
dress this debate because, regardless, I conclude that any reservation
was disestablished.
Cite as: 591 U. S. ____ (2020) 5
Tribes failed to hold the communal lands for the “equal ben-
efit” of all members. Woodward v. De Graffenried, 238 U. S.
284, 297 (1915). Instead, a few “enterprising citizens” of the
Tribes “appropriate[d] to their exclusive use almost the en-
tire property of the Territory that could be rendered profit-
able.” Id., at 297, 299, n. 1 (internal quotation marks omit-
ted). As a result, “the poorer class of Indians [were] unable
to secure enough lands for houses and farms,” and “the
great body of the tribe derive[d] no more benefit from their
title than the neighbors in Kansas, Arkansas, or Missouri.”
Id., at 299–301, n. 1 (emphasis deleted; internal quotation
marks omitted).
Attuned to these new realities, Congress decided that it
could not maintain an Indian Territory predicated on “ex-
clusion of the Indians from the whites.” S. Rep. No. 377, at
6. Congress therefore set about transforming the Indian
Territory into a State.
Congress began by establishing a uniform body of law ap-
plicable to all occupants of the territory, regardless of race.
To apply these laws, Congress established the U. S. Courts
for the Indian Territory. Next Congress systematically dis-
mantled the tribal governments. It abolished tribal courts,
hollowed out tribal lawmaking power, and stripped tribal
taxing authority. Congress also eliminated the foundation
of tribal sovereignty, extinguishing the Creek Nation’s title
to the lands. Finally, Congress made the tribe members
citizens of the United States and incorporated them in the
drafting and ratification of the constitution for their new
State, Oklahoma.
In taking these transformative steps, Congress made no
secret of its intentions. It created a commission tasked with
extinguishing the Five Tribes’ territory and, in one report
after another, explained that it was creating a homogenous
population led by a common government. That contempo-
raneous understanding was shared by the tribal leadership
6 MCGIRT v. OKLAHOMA
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2 Our precedents have generally considered whether Congress dises-
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3 The Court rejects this reading of Parker based on a quotation that
ends with what sounds like a general principle that “[e]vidence of the
subsequent treatment of the disputed land by Government officials like-
wise has ‘limited interpretive value.’ ” Ante, at 19, n. 8 (quoting Parker,
577 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 11)). But that sentence was actually the
topic sentence of a new paragraph that addressed the particular evidence
of subsequent treatment of the particular land by the particular govern-
ment officials in that case. Id., at ___–___ (slip op., at 11–12). It is clear
Cite as: 591 U. S. ____ (2020) 13
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that Parker merely concluded that the evidence cited by the parties pro-
vided a “mixed record of subsequent treatment” that did not move the
needle either way. Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted). Parker did
not silently overturn our precedents requiring us to consider—and accord
“weight” to—subsequent evidence that plainly favors, or undermines,
disestablishment. Rosebud Sioux Tribe v. Kneip, 430 U. S. 584, 604
(1977); see supra, at 6–9.
14 MCGIRT v. OKLAHOMA
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4 The Court, citing United States v. Sandoval, 231 U. S. 28, 47–48
(1913), argues that including a tribe within a new State is not necessarily
incompatible with the continuing existence of a reservation. Ante, at 15–
16, n. 6. But the tribe in Sandoval, the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico,
retained a rare communal title to their lands—which Congress explicitly
extinguished here. 231 U. S., at 47. More fundamentally, the Court’s
argument suffers from the same flaw that runs through its entire ap-
proach, which maintains that each of Congress’s actions alone would not
be enough for disestablishment but never confronts the import of all of
them.
22 MCGIRT v. OKLAHOMA
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5 The Court discounts the views of the principal chiefs as mere predic-
tions about what Congress “would” do, ante, at 25, but the Court ignores
statements made after statehood, describing what Congress did do. The
Court also asserts that the chiefs’ views cannot serve as “evidence” of the
“meaning” of laws enacted by Congress. Ante, at 25, n. 12. That is in-
consistent with our precedent, which specifically instructs us to deter-
mine Congress’s intent by considering the “understanding of the status
of the reservation by members” of the affected tribe. Parker, 577 U. S.,
at ___ (slip op., at 6). The contemporaneous understanding of the leaders
of the tribe is highly probative.
28 MCGIRT v. OKLAHOMA
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6 The Court claims that the Oklahoma courts’ reasons for treating re-
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7 The Court suggests that these statutes only show that there are some
“former reservations” in Oklahoma, not that the Five Tribes’ former do-
mains are necessarily among them. Ante, at 27, n. 14. History says oth-
erwise. For example, the Five Tribes actively lobbied for inclusion of this
language in the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. See Hearing on S. 902
et al. before the Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs, 99th Cong.,
2d Sess., 299–300 (1986). They observed that the term “reservation,” as
originally defined, did not pertain to the “eastern Oklahoma tribes, in-
cluding the Five Civilized Tribes.” Ibid. (statement of Charles Blackwell,
representative of the Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma). Accordingly, they
“recommend[ed] inclu[ding] . . . the wording ‘or in the case of Oklahoma
tribes, their former jurisdictional and/or reservation boundaries in Okla-
homa.’ ” Id., at 300 (emphasis added). The National Indian Gaming As-
sociation, which proposed the language on which the final act was ulti-
mately modeled, made the same point, observing that in Oklahoma
“reservation boundaries have been extinguished for most purposes” so
the statute should refer to “former reservation[s] in Oklahoma.” Id., at
312 (Memorandum from the National Indian Gaming Assn. to the Senate
Select Committee on Indian Affairs (June 17, 1986)).
32 MCGIRT v. OKLAHOMA
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(Principal Cherokee Chief, 1982), “Oklahoma, . . . of course, is not a res-
ervation State” (Chickasaw Governor, 1988), “Oklahoma is not [a reser-
vation State]” and “[w]e have no surface reservations in Oklahoma”
(Chickasaw advisor, 2011), as well as references to the boundaries and
lands of “former reservation[s]” (Chickasaw nominee for Assistant Sec-
retary of Indian Affairs, 2012; Inter-Tribal Council of the Five Civilized
Tribes, 2016)).
34 MCGIRT v. OKLAHOMA
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10 See, e.g., White Mountain Apache Tribe, 448 U. S., at 148–151 (bar-
ring State from imposing motor carrier license tax and fuel use taxes on
non-Indian logging companies that harvested timber on a reservation);
Warren Trading Post Co. v. Arizona Tax Comm’n, 380 U. S. 685, 690–
692 (1965) (barring State from taxing income earned by a non-Indian
who operated a trading post on a reservation); New Mexico v. Mescalero
Apache Tribe, 462 U. S. 324, 325 (1983) (barring State from regulating
hunting and fishing by non-Indians on a reservation); see also Brendale
v. Confederated Tribes and Bands of Yakima Nation, 492 U. S. 408, 448
(1989) (opinion of Stevens, J.) (arguing that it is “impossible to articulate
precise rules that will govern whenever a tribe asserts that a land use
approved by a county board is pre-empted by federal law”).
Cite as: 591 U. S. ____ (2020) 37
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