Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 051

CourtMaryland Attorney General Reports
DecidedAugust 8, 2011
Docket96 OAG 051
StatusPublished

This text of Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 051 (Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 051) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Maryland Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 051, (Md. 2011).

Opinion

Gen. 51] 51

COMMISSION ON INDIAN AFFAIRS

RECOGNITION OF MARYLAND INDIAN STATUS – REVISED PETITION FOR RECOGNITION MAY BE CONSIDERED BY THE COMMISSION

August 8, 2011

E. Keith Colston Administrator Maryland Commission on Indian Affairs

On behalf of the Maryland Commission on Indian Affairs (“Commission”), you asked for our opinion about reconsideration of a petition for recognition of a group’s “Maryland Indian status” under State law. The petition was originally filed in 1995, received a favorable recommendation from the Commission, but was ultimately denied by the Governor in 2003. The denial expressly left open the possibility that the group could resubmit its petition with additional information. You ask whether that petition may now be resubmitted to the Governor, with or without a further recommendation by the Commission.

For the reasons explained below, it is our opinion that the Commission should not simply resubmit the 1995 petition to the Governor, as the relevant statute contemplates that the Commission and Governor will have reasonably current sociological information concerning the applicant group. However, if the petitioning group wishes to pursue recognition of Maryland Indian status, a revised petition including current information should be submitted to the Commission for its consideration. Based on that information, the Commission may reiterate or revise its recommendation to the Governor.

I

Background

A. Recognition of Maryland Indian Status

1. Recognition Process

State law establishes a process by which the Governor may formally recognize, by executive order, the “Maryland Indian status” 52 [96 Op. Att’y

of a Native American community indigenous to the State. Annotated Code of Maryland, State Government Article (“SG”), §§ 9.5-309 through 9.5-312. The recognition process does not purport to adjudicate Native American status generally, but rather simply identifies communities that have existed in Maryland since the founding of the United States.1 Moreover, the law provides that it does not create a benefit or entitlement of any kind; nor does it impair existing rights, benefits or entitlements of Native Americans living in the State. SG §9.5-309(d).2 Nor does any act or omission of the Commission create a private cause of action. SG §9.5- 309(c)(3).

Pursuant to the statute, the Commission has adopted regulations that govern the recognition process. SG §§9.5-309(a), 9.5-311; COMAR 01.06.01.3 Under the regulations, a tribe, band, group, or clan indigenous to the State that wishes to receive State recognition must submit to the Commission a petition containing specified information and documentation. COMAR 01.06.01.05. The Commission publishes notice of receipt of the petition, and provides an opportunity for the public to submit comments in support of or in opposition to the petition. COMAR 01.06.01.07. The Commission then refers the petition and all comments timely received to a Recognition Advisory Committee4 for review and

1 For example, many well known Native American groups of the western United States would not qualify for “Maryland Indian status.” 2 The statute requires that, as a condition of formal recognition of Maryland Indian status, members of the petitioning group file an affidavit renouncing all tribal rights to ownership of land in Maryland. SG §9.5- 310. However, such an affidavit is likely without legal effect. See Letter of Attorney General J. Joseph Curran, Jr. to Governor William Donald Schaefer, concerning House Bill 126 and Senate Bill 421 (May 23, 1988). 3 The regulations were first adopted in 1992. 19:9 Md. Reg. 878. Although they have been recodified several times over the past two decades, their basic requirements and process have remained the same. 4 Pursuant to the regulations, a Recognition Advisory Committee consists of five persons appointed by the Commission to review a petition. COMAR 01.06.01.11. The Committee is to have at least two Native American members, none of whom may be members of the petitioning group, as well as experts in genealogy, anthropology, and related fields. Id. Gen. 51] 53

recommendation for Commission action, based on criteria set out in the statute and the regulations. COMAR 01.06.01.08D through 01.06.01.08J; COMAR 01.06.01.04; COMAR 01.06.01.05B. The Commission reviews the Recognition Advisory Committee’s recommendation and, if the Commission determines that the petition adequately demonstrates that the group satisfies the criteria in the regulations, recommends to the Governor that the petitioning group be formally recognized as a Maryland Indian tribe, band, group, or clan. COMAR 01.06.01.08K through COMAR 01.06.01.08M. (Any Commission members who belong to the petitioning group are barred from participation in the Commission’s deliberations. SG §9.5-309(b)(2)).

If the Governor concurs in the Commission’s recommendation, the Governor issues an executive order that recognizes formally the Maryland Indian status of the petitioning group. The executive order is submitted to the General Assembly’s Joint Committee on Administrative, Executive, and Legislative Review and takes effect 30 days after submission. SG §9.5-309(c); COMAR 01.06.01.10A and C. If the Governor does not concur with a recommendation of the Commission, the Governor notifies the Commission of the reasons and the Commission must promptly notify the petitioning group and all persons requesting notice. COMAR 01.06.01.10B.

Neither the statute nor the regulations address reconsideration of a petition by the Governor or whether a petitioning group is precluded from filing a new petition after a petition has been rejected.

2. Petition Requirements

The regulations set forth the information and documentation that make up a petition for State recognition. “[T]aking into account the special circumstances of Native Americans indigenous to Maryland,” a petition must establish that:

A. The group has been:

(1) Identified as Native American from before 1790 until the present, and

(2) Part of a continuous Native American community from before 1790 until the present; 54 [96 Op. Att’y

B. The members of the group are descendants from a tribe that: (1) Existed before 1790,

(2) Is indigenous to Maryland, and

(3) Inhabited a specific area in Maryland before 1790; and

C. The membership of the group is composed principally of persons who are not members of any other acknowledged or recognized Native American tribe, band, group, or clan.

COMAR 01.06.01.04. To document that the petitioning group satisfies these criteria, the petitioning group is to submit:

(a) Documents showing, from before 1790 until the present: (i) Longstanding relationships of the group with the government of Maryland or the United States, based on identification of the group or the group's members as Native American indigenous to Maryland;

(ii) Repeated dealings of the group with a county or other local government in a relationship, based on identification of the group or the group's members as Native American indigenous to Maryland;

(iii) Repeated dealings of the group with other tribes, bands, groups, or clans, or national Native American organizations, based on identification of the group as Native American indigenous to Maryland;

(iv) Identification of the group as Native American indigenous to Maryland by anthropologists, historians, genealogists, or other scholars; or Gen. 51] 55

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Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-attorney-general-opinion-96-oag-051-mdag-2011.