TULSA (AP) – A small American Indian tribe doesn’t have the jurisdiction to build a casino in a Tulsa suburb because the 20-acre site lies within the boundaries of another larger tribe, attorneys told a federal judge Wednesday.
Construction on the project continues amid protest from thousands of area residents, lawmakers and pastors. The lawyers presented their arguments during a court hearing in the casino construction fight. They said the 350-member Kialegee Tribal Town has no right to stake a claim to the land in the city of Broken Arrow because it’s owned by two Muscogee Creek Nation tribal members.
“Jurisdiction is something one can’t acquire by planting a flag” on a parcel of land, state’s attorney Lynn Slade argued.
Furthermore, the tribe has no court system, no full-time police force and no personnel to properly monitor a casino with hundreds of slot machines, Slade said. He added that the project is in an area near schools, churches and neighborhoods and asked the judge to spare the community.
Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt sued the Kialegee Tribal Town in federal court in February, accusing the tribe of moving ahead with construction without obtaining federal approval to lease the property. Pruitt is asking U.S. District Judge Gregory K. Frizzell to grant an injunction to stop construction at the site.
The hearing on the injunction began Wednesday in federal court in Tulsa and is expected to wrap up by Friday.
An attorney for the Kialegee, Dennis Whittlesey, argued that the tribe has had the project under review by the National Indian Gaming Commission for months and no one at that agency has complained about the project’s legality.
“At no point has anyone suggested to us they have a problem with gaming on this land,” Whittlesey told the judge in opening statements.
The state’s first witness, University of Oklahoma history professor Gary Anderson, spent the bulk of the morning and afternoon tracing the intricate relationship between the Kialegee and Muscogee Creek Nation, dating back to treaties signed in the late 1800s and going forward.
Anderson, an expert in American Indian history, said the difference between the groups is that the Muscogee have a historical claim on the geographic area where the proposed casino sits.
Slade, the state’s attorney, asked Anderson if there was any example in his research of the Kialegee being granted authority outside the tribe’s Wetumpka headquarters in southeastern Oklahoma.
“I found nothing providing them any (authority), period,” Anderson answered.
During cross-examination, Whittlesey accused Anderson of inventing a “two-tier” system for labeling some tribes, suggesting that the Kialegee were somehow subservient to the Muscogee Creek Nation.
Whittlesey also quizzed Anderson on his knowledge of American Indian history.
“How many tribal constitutions have you helped write?” he asked.
“None,” Anderson replied.
Oklahoma News
BA casino fight moves to federal court
- Oklahoma News
-
- Harrowing scene inside school
- Moore residents seek to recover after blow
-
Moore digs out of devastation
-
LIVE BLOG:Coverage of Monday's devastating tornado
A massive tornado touched down Monday afternoon in Moore, Okla., just south of Oklahoma City. Follow live coverage of the aftermath of the storm.
- Group renews store wine proposal
- Tuttle looks to recover from downtown fire
- Time waning for legislators to tackle Oklahoma tax credits
- State AG sought to delay Monday’s regional haze hearing
- Oklahoma lawmakers near passage of DNA testing bill
- Board denies clemency for inmate
- More Oklahoma News Headlines




