Bree Black Horse Named to ACLU's Legal Committee

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Bree Black Horse has been appointed the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington’s Legal Committee.  

The Committee serves as legal counsel to ACLU-WA and provides advice to the staff in the strategic development and execution of litigation to advance the ACLU’s civil liberties and civil rights agenda.

The Committee combines seasoned and newer attorneys who together offer expertise on a range of civil and criminal law as well as civil liberties matters. It advises on cases under consideration for litigation as well as provides ideas, advice and assistance in the early stages of developing a case.

Bree is an associate in the Seattle office of Galanda Broadman and an enrolled member of the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma.  Her practice focuses on defending individuals’ civil rights in federal, state and tribal courts against various law enforcement agencies. She can be reached at (206) 735-0448 or bree@galandabroadman.com

Is Disenrollment---Are Its Grafters---On the Run?

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After the disenrollment scourge suffered by Indian Country since the mid-2000s, there are signs that disenrollment and the tribal grafters who practice it, are on the run.

1. There has not been a new mass tribal disenrollment effort since the spring of 2016 (Elem), after several consecutive years during which mass tribal disenrollments (plural) were happening.  

2. After suffering a federal court defeat in August 2017, the Cherokee Nation opted against appealing the decision and instead decided to re-enroll 2,800 Cherokee Freedmen.

3. Earlier in 2017, Robinson Rancheria brought 67 relatives home, on the tribe's own volition.

4. Like the Obama Administration, after an apparent shift in policy in late 2016, the Trump Administration has maintained federal involvement in particularly atrocious disenrollment-related situations.  See "Trump administration calls out Nooksack Tribe for 'abuses of power.'"

5. Indian Country is getting re-educated about disenrollment, like through David and Shelly Wilkins' book, "Dismembered"; and, as cited by other scholars, "a dedicated social media movement, http://stopdisenrollment.com, and national media coverage."

So, is it---are they---on the run? 

Time will tell.

Gabriel S. Galanda is the managing lawyer of Galanda Broadman, PLLC, in Seattle. Gabe is a descendant of the Nomlaki and Concow Tribes, belonging to the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Northern California.  

 

 

Game On: Christie v. NCAA and Tribal Governmental Sports Betting

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By Anthony Broadman

If the bookmakers are right, the U.S. Supreme Court will lift the national ban on sports betting sometime in early 2018. 

If the Court makes clean work of it, and simply leaves sports-betting laws to the states, we can expect states like New Jersey and Pennsylvania to jump in quickly.  Elsewhere, lifting of the law—the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA)—may change very little if states don’t wish to allow sports betting.

Conventional wisdom says that Tribes don’t need sports betting—that Tribal casinos will not be able to book sports.  But conservative estimates suggest Americans bet $150 billion a year on sports.  And as slot machine players age, new offerings to attract younger players will become increasingly valuable.

For states containing significant Indian gaming interests, a clean decision in Christie will be complicated by IGRA and Tribal exclusivity.  Roughly put, if states allow sports betting in their jurisdictions, Tribes can do the same.  Situations will vary by state and compact.  But where Tribes have exclusivity, sports betting would violate Class III compacts. 

Further complicating how Christie will affect Tribes, almost every forum that has looked at the internet and IGRA takes the view that “because not all of [internet] gaming occurs on Indian lands, internet bingo lies outside Class II gaming or compacted Class III gaming and could subject the game's operators to state or federal criminal prosecution.”  California v. Iipay Nation of Santa Ysabel, 14CV2724 AJB (NLS), 2014 WL 12526720, at *8 (S.D. Cal. Dec. 12, 2014)  (citing 2000 Letter of NIGC General Counsel Kevin Washburn).  The same would have to be true for internet-based Tribal sports betting.  And Christie does not purport to affect Unlawful Internet Gambling and Enforcement Act of 2006 (UIGEA), which addresses Internet gaming separately from PASPA.

But none of that changes the simple point that if states offer sports betting, Tribes may too.  And sports betting probably doesn’t adequately describe what will be happening in the next few decades.  Sports books will include live-betting televised sporting events, wagering on e-sports, and booking bets on competition held at Tribal facilities. 

As the betting markets evolve, Christie could prove to be the biggest federal gaming court decision to impact Tribes since Seminole.  Either way, sports betting is here to stay and Tribes need to get in game.

Anthony Broadman is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC. He can be reached at 206.321.2672, anthony@galandabroadman.com, or via www.galandabroadman.com.

Gabe Galanda Via Above The Law Re: Indian Lawyer Authenticity, Passion & Relentlessness

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Leading lawyer blog, Above The Law, has published the transcript of Ari Kaplan's recent interview of Gabe Galanda, the co-founder and managing lawyer of Galanda Broadman. Aimed at young lawyers and students, the interview is titled: "How To Find And Pursue Your Passion In the Law."

A few excerpts: 

  • "First, be authentic. Second, be relentless. By authentic, I mean you have to be yourself. Folks don’t want to associate with somebody who is trying to be something other than himself or herself. . . . And, being yourself is the only way you’ll ever find passion in the law and without passion, I suggest that a lawyer is simply mediocre. Unless you’re passionate, you will never play to your ultimate strengths."
  • "In terms of our focus and choosing cases, we watch and listen very carefully to what’s happening throughout Indian country. We look for opportunities that will help us advance budding social justice causes that will eventually benefit all of Indian country."
  • "[W]e took on tribal disenrollment before any other law firm would do that in any concerted way, and took on Indian prisoner religious freedoms seeing the rise in religious discrimination throughout state and local prisons. We’ve now taken on federal state and local law enforcement officers and agencies [who are killing Natives]."
  • "[W]e place a lot of emphasis on our social media marketing, which is a 24/7/365 effort. The hallmark of my career and now my law firm’s business development is and always has been writing....[W]hether it is a Tweet or an occasional blog post that one of my partners or associates is writing, we share and allow our ideas to reach as far and wide as we can in Indian country."

Gabe also addresses disenrollment, taking the opportunity to educate Above The Law's Big Law readership about the troubling subject:

Tribal disenrollment is a process designed by the United States over the last 200 years, but unknowingly, co-opted by tribal governments and tribal officials that leads to Indians being exiled from their own tribal communities. Since the advent of Indian gaming and its success over the last couple of decades many Indians losing their identities, livelihoods, and sense of belonging by way of this process. Indian gaming represents relatively new wealth in Indian country that has, unfortunately, has caused greed to grip certain tribal politicians, who create cohorts of tribal members or factions or tribal members to then get rid of their own relatives. Over the last five years, we have represented about 600 Indians from Washington, Oregon, and California, among other areas, in these matters.

In the process, we have re-educated ourselves about what it really means and does not mean to belong to a tribal community, and have also tried to help re-educate Indian country about those ideals before it’s too late because what we’re witnessing really is Native Americans self-terminating or self-annihilating with devices created by the federal government.

Gabriel S. Galanda is the managing lawyer of Galanda Broadman, PLLC, in Seattle. Gabe is a descendant of the Nomlaki and Concow Tribes, belonging to the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Northern California.  

 

 

Gabe Galanda Podcast: "How to Find and Pursue Your Passion in the Law"

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Ari Kaplan---author of Reinventing Professional Services: Building Your Business in the Digital Marketplace and The Opportunity Maker: Strategies for Inspiring Your Legal Career Through Creative Networking and Business Development--interviewed Gabe Galanda for his Reinventing Professionals podcast series. Listen to the interview here.

As Ari explains his chat with Gabe on his ABA award-winning blog:

I spoke with Gabe Galanda, the co-founder and managing lawyer of Galanda Broadman, an Indian Country law firm, with headquarters in Seattle.

We discussed his background and the genesis of Galanda Broadman, how he identified his preferred practice area, his approach to case selection, his firm’s commitment to addressing tribal disenrollment, how he divides his time between business development and practicing law, and his recommendations for lawyers seeking to build a practice or students interested in striking out on their own.

Gabriel S. Galanda is the managing lawyer of Galanda Broadman, PLLC, in Seattle. Gabe is a descendant of the Nomlaki and Concow Tribes, belonging to the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Northern California.  

 

 

 

Dwyer Inn of Court Profiles Galanda Broadman: "Courage and Civility" in Disenrollment Defense

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On Tuesday, the William L. Dwyer American Inn of Court--an exclusive assembly of judges, lawyers and other legal professionals in Seattle--profiled the disenrollment advocacy of Galanda Broadman as part of its program series, "Profiles in Courage and Civility: Washington Lawyers.”

Members of the Dwyer Inn were provided Gabe Galanda and Ryan Dreveskracht's Arizona Law Review article, "Curing the Tribal Disenrollment Epidemic: In Search of a Remedy," and witnessed a skit loosely based on a prominent disenrollment controversy in the Pacific Northwest.

Galanda Broadman, PLLC, was recently named a “Best Law Firm” by U.S. News - Best Lawyers in the arena of Native American Law and Gaming Law, for the sixth year in a row.  With eight lawyers and offices in Seattle and Yakima, Washington and Bend, Oregon, the firm is dedicated to advancing tribal legal rights and Indian business interests, and defending Indian civil rights.

Gabe Galanda: Will the NIGC Help Stop Disenrollment in 2018?

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Indian Gaming magazine included Gabe Galanda forecast in its "Predictions for the Indian Gaming Industry in 2018."  The text of Gabe's contribution is below.

In 2017, the National Indian Gaming Commission took the unprecedented step of intervening in a tribal disenrollment dispute, when it shuttered the Nooksack Northwood Casino for the summer.

The NIGC had previously shut down gaming facilities amidst so-called “internal tribal disputes”—at Elem, Sac and Fox and Picayune, to name a few—but never where disenrollment was at the heart of a tribe’s implosion.  As explained by Dentons—the lawyers who appeared before the NIGC on behalf the purported Nooksack Indian Tribe—the Commission’s closure of Northwood was “unprecedented.”

Only time will tell if the NIGC’s intercession at Nooksack is a bellwether.  In May 2017 the NIGC hosted Indian legal historian, Professor Robert Williams, for a lecture on disenrollment and the deconstruction of federal Indian law at the agency’s headquarters in Washington, DC.  The NIGC closed Northwood the next month.

Although, NIGC Chairman Jonodev Chaudhuri generally toes the conventional line that the Trustee should play no role in disenrollment disputes.  He also rejects the premise that the NIGC should at all regulate gaming per capita payments to tribal members—even when illegally paid or otherwise misappropriated in the disenrollment context.  While illegal gaming per capita checks were issued at both Picayune and Nooksack, the NIGC looked away from that malfeasance, closing each tribe’s casinos on other grounds.

There are, however, countervailing winds emanating from Washington, DC and Indian Country. 

Past U.S. Department of the Interior Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs, Professor Kevin Washburn, opined this year that one federal solution to the “vexing problem” of disenrollment is “to assert diplomatic consequences, which could be fiscal in nature, equivalent to international economic sanctions, or political in nature, such as loss of federal recognition.”  The NIGC’s temporary closure of Northwood last summer does fall within that paradigm.

In the same vein, former NIGC Chairman Harold Monteau proclaimed this year that the Interior Department, including its NIGC, owes a tribe and its members a trust responsibility “to not let an illegitimate organization take, spend and distribute tribal gaming revenues, unless they are a bona fide tribal government”—especially in the disenrollment context.  To remedy such federal illegality, he recommends NIGC facility closure (or Inspector General inquiry), and FBI criminal investigation and prosecution.

Meanwhile, the Chairpersons of several gaming tribes—like Yakama, Spokane, Graton, Coyote Valley, Robinson, Ramona and Ft. McDowell—have either lent their power to the #StopDisenrollment visual advocacy movement; or publicly expressed that disenrollment is not their tribe’s way.  The Spokane and Graton tribes have gone so far as to outlaw disenrollment.  Other tribal leaders are privately denouncing disenrollment, most notably the insanity at Nooksack, to each other and to Interior and NIGC officials. 

As 2018 approaches, hopefully the NIGC will hear and heed these policy proclamations.

After all, at the end of the day, federal regulatory enforcement is a policy call. 

Gabriel S. Galanda is the managing lawyer of Galanda Broadman, PLLC, in Seattle. Gabe is a descendant of the Nomlaki and Concow Tribes, belonging to the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Northern California.  

Navajo Times Tackles Disenrollment; Cites Diné Kinship As its Foil

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The Navajo Times covered Gabe Galanda's recent lecture to students at UNM-Gallup, publishing a column titled: "Lawyer: Disenrollment Threatens Indian Country."  The article makes the point that disenrollment is not the way the Diné People; instead kinship is the norm on Navajo Nation.

An excerpt:

To mitigate disenrollment Galanda suggested kinship and a Navajo student who saw his talk pointed out that the Dine certainly have a word for that.
'We call it k'e,' Vanessa Leonard, a sophomore at UNM, said.
For Galanda, k'e is the natural foil of the imposed system of enrollment and disenrollment based on so-called 'blood quantum'...
He recognized that changing the view from blood quantum to kinship to deter disenrollment could take a ling time, but he saw a means by which Navajo could provide a kind of model as a tribe that doesn't have disenrollment.
'It seems that tribes that are still rooted in their traditions, specifically their language, their songs, their customs, aren't [disenrolling] themselves.'

    Gabriel S. Galanda is the managing lawyer of Galanda Broadman, PLLC, in Seattle. Gabe is a descendant of the Nomlaki and Concow Tribes, belonging to the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Northern California.  

     

     

    Federal Judge Allows Indigenous Environmental Network's Challenge to Keystone XL Pipeline to Proceed

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    By Bree Black Horse

    On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Brian M. Morris allowed a lawsuit challenging the Keystone XL Pipeline to move forward.

    The TransCanada Corporation applied for a Presidential Permit in 2008 and reapplied in 2012 for the Keystone XL Pipeline, which would run 875 miles from the Canadian border to connect to another pipeline in Nebraska.  The Keystone XL Pipeline will transport up to 830,000 barrels per day or crude oil from Alberta and the Bakken in Montana to existing pipeline facilities in Nebraska and eventually to Oklahoma and the Gulf Coast region.

    Secretary of State John Kerry denied TransCanada’s Presidential Permit application on November 6, 2017.  Secretary Kerry determined that issuing a Presidential Permit for the Keystone XL Pipeline would not serve the national interest.  Secretary Kerry’s denial did not, however, stop TransCanada and the Keystone XL Pipeline.

    Republican Donald Trump was then elected President of the United States.

    Just days after being sworn into office on January 20, 2017, President Trump issued a Presidential Memorandum Regarding Construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline on January 24.  In this Memorandum, President Trump invited TransCanada “to resubmit its application to the Department of State for a Presidential permit for the construction and operation of the Keystone XL Pipeline.”

    That same day, President Trump also issued an Executive Order on Expediting Environmental Reviews and Approvals for High Priority Infrastructure Projects.  In this Executive Order, President Trump announced a new general Executive Branch policy “to streamline and expedite, in a manner consistent with law, environmental reviews and approvals for all infrastructure projects, especially projects that are a high priority for the Nation.”  The Executive Order cites Keystone XL Pipeline as an example of such a high priority project.

    Two days later, TransCanada resubmitted its Keystone XL Pipeline Presidential Permit application to the State Department—for the third time.

    The State Department approved a Presidential Permit to TransCanada for the Keystone XL Pipeline on March 23, 2017, and issued the permit on April 4, 2017.  The State Department relied on environmental reviews conducted in 2013 and 2014 in determining whether the issuance of the Presidential Permit would serve the national interest.  The State Department did not supplement or revise either the 2013 or 2014 environmental review.

    The Indigenous Environmental Network (“IEN”) and North Coast Rivers Alliance (“NCRA”) (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) filed a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief in the U.S. District Court for the District of Montana on March 27, 2017, challenging that Presidential Permit. Indigenous Environmental Network v. U.S. Dep’t of State, No. 4:17-cv-00029-BMM (D. Mont.). 

    Plaintiffs sued the State Department, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and various federal officials (collectively, “Federal Defendants”) for alleged violations of the National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”), the Endangered Species Act (“ESA”), the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (“MBTA”), the Bald Eagle and Golden Eagle Protection Act (“Eagle Act”) and the Administrative Procedures Act (“APA”) and corresponding federal regulations.

    Plaintiffs ask the U.S. District Court to order the Federal Defendants to withdraw their environmental review and Keystone XL Pipeline approvals until the Federal Defendants have complied with NEPA, ESA and APA.  Plaintiffs seek a declaration from the Court that Federal Defendants violated NEPA, ESA and APA and to issue permanent injunctive relief that would prevent Federal Defendants and TransCanada from initiating any activities in furtherance of the Keystone XL Pipeline.

    The Court granted TransCanada’s motion to intervene as a defendant alongside the Federal Defendants in this litigation.

    The Federal Defendants and TransCanada then together moved to dismiss Plaintiffs’ complaint for lack of jurisdiction.

    U.S. District Court Judge Brian M. Morris denied those motions on November 22, 2017.  To summarize that 33 page opinion:

    o   The Court rejected all of Federal Defendants’ and TransCanada’s challenges to Plaintiffs’ NEPA claims.

    o   The Court found that the issuance of the Presidential Permit for the Keystone XL Pipeline did not qualify as a “Presidential action” exempt from judicial review or NEPA compliance.

    o   The Court determined the Presidential Permit for the Keystone XL Pipeline is subject to judicial review and State Department must comply with NEPA in issuing a Presidential Permit for the Keystone XL Pipeline.

    o   The Court concluded that the Federal Defendants and TransCanada had failed to meet their burden to demonstrate that Congress has committed to agency discretion by the law the State Department’s decision to issue the Presidential Permit for the Keystone XL Pipeline.

    o   The Court also held that Plaintiffs’ had standing to bring their NEPA claims against the Federal Defendants.

    ·      The Court rejected all of Federal Defendants’ and TransCanada’s challenges to Plaintiffs’ ESA claims. 

    o   The Court found that Plaintiffs had properly alleged their ESA claims and possessed standing to bring their ESA claims.

    o   Plaintiffs’ ESA claims were not barred by sovereign immunity because the issuance of the Presidential Permit for the Keystone XL Pipeline did not qualify as a “Presidential action.”

    NEPA Claims Against The Federal Defendants.

    The Court first addressed the various challenges to Plaintiffs’ NEPA claims.  Federal Defendants and TransCanada argued that the issuance of a Presidential Permit constitutes a presidential action that a court may not review under the APA.  They also argued that even if the issuance of a Presidential Permit could be deemed an agency action, it represents an action committed to agency discretion by law thereby shielding it from judicial review under the APA.  Federal Defendants and TransCanada further argued that Plaintiffs lack the ability to redress their alleged injuries

    The Court looked to the actions of the State Department since 2008 regarding the Keystone XL Pipeline and observed that the State Department previously acknowledged that it needed to comply with NEPA and issue an EIS when TransCanada applied for the Presidential Permit in 2008 and again in 2012.  “The logical conclusion to be drawn,” the Court determined, “is that the State Department intended for the publication of the ROD/NID and the issuance of the accompanying Presidential Permit to be reviewable as final agency action.”  The Court admonished the Federal Defendants for “now attempt[ing] to recast the State Department’s original decision to comply with NEPA, as required for a major Federal action, into a policy choice, or ‘act of grace,’ to avoid judicial review.”

    Federal Defendants and TransCanada claimed the State Department acted pursuant to the President’s inherent authority under the Constitution when it issued the ROD/NID and when it issued the accompanying Presidential Permit.  Although the issuance of the Presidential Permit represents the kind of action from which legal consequences will flow, the Federal Defendants and TransCanada argued that Plaintiffs could not challenge this kind of Presidential action under the APA because Executive Order 13337 renders any decision on a cross-border project “Presidential action” that stands beyond judicial review.  The Court rejected this argument. 

    The Court determined that no “Presidential action” preclusive of judicial review exists in this case.  The Court concluded that “[t]he President waived any right in his Memorandum  to review the State Department’s decision under Executive Order 13337 or to make any final decision regarding the issuance of the Presidential Permit.

    Federal Defendants and TransCanada next argued that the issuance of the Presidential Permit is not subject to judicial review because Congress committed the State Department’s decision to issue the Presidential Permit “to agency discretion by law.”  The Court held that Congress did not commit this decision to agency discretion because NEPA provides a meaningful standard against which to judge the State Department’s conduct. 

    Further, the Court cited the Ninth Circuit’s decision in ASSE International v. Kerry, 803 F.3d 1059 (9th Cir. 2015), which made clear that the State Department cannot avoid judicial review simply by invoking its consideration of “foreign policy” or “security factors,” as the Federal Defendants have attempted to do in this matter.  The Court emphasized that the State Department’s own regulations require compliance with NEPA for projects like the Keystone XL Pipeline and that Congress enacted NEPA for just this purpose; to ensure full analysis of potential environmental impacts of pipeline projects like the Keystone XL Pipeline.

    Federal Defendants next argued that a court order enjoining the Presidential Permit unconstitutionally would infringe on the President’s authority.  The Court observed that Plaintiffs had alleged procedural injuries under NEPA similar to those alleged in Sierra Club v. Clinton, 689 F.Supp.2d 1147 (D. Minn. 2010), and that “[t]he Ninth Circuit has determined that a remedy ‘procedural in nature’ would redress a procedural NEPA injury” in Ocean Advocates v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 402 F.3d 846 (9th Cir. 2005).  The Court thus concluded, “Plaintiffs’ alleged procedural injuries could be redressed through the procedural remedy of adequate environmental review under NEPA.”   

    ESA and APA Claims Against U.S. Fish and Wildlife  

    Federal Defendants further argued that the Court should dismiss for lack of standing the alleged ESA and APA violations committed by FWS in preparing the 2013 BiOp. 

    The Court first addressed the standing issue.  Plaintiffs allege that the Keystone XL Pipeline would affect a host of species and that its members highly value those species.  The Court found that Plaintiffs had met the redressability requirement for the ESA and APA claims and the alleged harms confer standing on Plaintiffs based on the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555 (1991).

    ESA and APA Claim Against the Federal Defendants

    Federal Defendants and TransCanada argued that Plaintiffs’ alleged violations of the ESA and APA should be dismissed because no waiver of sovereign immunity for the ESA citizen-suit claim exists and Plaintiffs lack standing to bring the ESA citizen-suit claim.

    Although the citizen-suit provision of the ESA represents a wavier of sovereign immunity, Federal Defendants and TransCanada claimed this waiver excludes the President.  They again argued that the State Department’s issuance of the Presidential Permit qualify as a Presidential action.  “They do not” the Court held, explaining “[t]hey represent agency actions by the State Department.”

    The Court noted that at oral argument TransCanada dismissed FWS’s actions regarding the preparation of the 2013 BiOp as “acts of grace.”  The Court squarely rejected this notion: “The State Department, or any other federal agency, rarely undertakes needless activities as acts of grace to our citizens.” 

    The Court concluded “[t]he State Department’s publication of the ROD/NID and its issuance of the accompanying Presidential Permit qualify as agency actions subject to review by this Court under the ESA citizen-suit provision.”

    Finally, the Court rejected TransCanada’s argument that Plaintiffs’ lacked standing and found that Plaintiffs had properly alleged their ESA claims.  “Plaintiffs’ injuries would be redressed,” the Court observed, “if the State Department were to set aside the Presidential Permit and engage in a more thorough analysis of the Keystone XL Pipeline’s impacts on the protected species and the protected habitat to ensure compliance with the ESA.”

    The Federal Defendants have 60 days to appeal—by the end of January 2018—the denial of their motion to dismiss to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

    Bree is an associate in the Seattle office of Galanda Broadman and an enrolled member of the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma.  Her practice involves complex federal court litigation. She can be reached at (206) 735-0448 or bree@galandabroadman.com