"Cherokee Nation Courthouse"
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WASHINGTON, D.C. - A Washington, D.C. federal District Court judge
denied today an attempt by six non-Indian Freedmen to stop the Cherokee
Nation’s general election to be held on June 23, 2007.
Judge Kennedy's decision denied the injunction based on the fact that a
Cherokee tribal court order had reinstated the non-Indian Freedmen
descendants to citizenship and the right to vote on May 14, as well as
the fact that the Bureau of Indian Affairs had approved the June 23
election procedures.
“Judge Kennedy showed great wisdom in his decision. We have said that
this group's effort to stop the election was a remedy in search of a
wrong, as all eligible non-Indian Freedmen citizens of the Cherokee
Nation can vote in this election," said Chad Smith, Principal Chief of
the Cherokee Nation.
"We're also pleased that his decision respects our tribal court
decisions and the more than 300 non-Indian Freedmen who won a ruling in
our tribal court to participate in the June 23 election," Smith said.
In the June 23 election, Cherokee Nation citizens will vote for, among
other things, candidates for Principal Chief, Deputy Principal Chief,
and Tribal Council.
The Cherokee Nation passed a Constitutional amendment in March 2007 with
approval of 77 percent of the voters, limiting Cherokee Nation
citizenship only to those who can trace an Indian ancestor listed on U.S.
Government census rolls of the Nation taken in the early 1900s, also
known as the Dawes Rolls. The Dawes Rolls is the existing objective
basis for establishing Indian lineage for the Cherokee Nation. Since the
March amendment's passage, the Nation has been targeted with false
charges of racism and misinformation. Most maliciously, the Nation has
been falsely accused of expelling all black citizens -- a charge that is
100 percent wrong. Black citizens with Cherokee ancestry have long been,
and will continue to be, citizens of the Cherokee Nation.
"This issue has nothing to do with race. It has everything to do with
who can be an Indian in an Indian tribe and the proper exercise of our
sovereignty to define our citizens," Smith added.
The following are undisputed facts:
1. While only 2 percent of Cherokees held slaves, the Cherokee Nation
abolished slavery in 1863, prior to the end of the Civil War. More than
1,500 descendants of these freed slaves have full, indisputable Cherokee
Nation citizenship rights because they have Indian ancestry. These
Freedmen descendants remain citizens and are completely unaffected by
the March 2007 constitutional amendment.
2. Thousands of other Cherokees of African and other heritage (but not
of Freedmen descent) are also citizens because they have an Indian
ancestor on the Cherokee Dawes Roll.
3. The March 2007 amendment permits the more than 2,800 affected
Freedmen descendants to become permanent Cherokee citizens if they can
prove lineage to an Indian ancestor on the Dawes Roll.
4. Notwithstanding the March 2007 amendment, the Nation supported a stay
in its implementation while a Cherokee tribal court evaluates its
legality. All non-Indian Freedmen who were disenrolled have been
reinstated as citizens pending a final resolution of the tribal court,
including economic and health benefits and the right to vote in the June
23 election.
5. The Nation has provided legal counsel at its own expense to the
300-plus non-Indian Freedmen descendants who are challenging the March
2007 amendment in tribal court.