United States v. Cleveland
This text of 356 F. Supp. 3d 1215 (United States v. Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
JAMES O. BROWNING, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
THIS MATTER comes before the Court on the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss *1219Counts 1 and 5 of the Indictment, filed September 24, 2018 (Doc. 72)("Motion"). The primary issues are whether: (i) a Navajo Nation Department of Public Safety ("NDPS") officer, Houston Largo, was a federal officer for purposes of
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
In its Memorandum Opinion and Order, No. CR 17-0965 JB,
The Court draws its facts about the offense at issue from the Indictment, *1220filed April 12, 2017 (Doc. 20)("Indictment"). The Court recognizes that the Indictment largely represents Plaintiff United States of America's version of events and that Cleveland is presumed innocent.
....
On July 18, 2013, Cleveland pled guilty to violations of18 U.S.C. § 1153 and18 U.S.C. § 113 (a)(6), for an assault on Jane Doe resulting in serious bodily injury. See United States v. Cleveland, No. CR. 12-2062 MCA, Judgment at 1, filed November 27, 2013 (Doc. 102)("Judgment"). The Honorable M. Christina Armijo, then-Chief United States District Judge for the District of New Mexico, sentenced Cleveland to 24 months in prison and three years of supervised release. See Judgment at 1. Cleveland entered supervision on April 7, 2014, but after absconding from supervision, he was remanded to custody on July 14, 2016, for lying to the probation officer, violating the probation officer's instructions, using alcohol and other intoxicants, and not completing a substance abuse treatment program. See United States v. Cleveland, No. CR. 12-2062 MCA, Petition for Revocation of Supervised Release at 1, filed July 17, 2015 (Doc. 109); Judgment at 1-2, filed August 8, 2016 (Doc. 121); Second Petition for Revocation of Supervised Release at 1, filed February 27, 2017 (Doc. 122). Cleveland returned to supervision on September 6, 2016, with the supervision set to end on September 5, 2018. See United States v. Cleveland, No. CR. 12-2062 MCA, Second Petition for Revocation of Supervised Release at 1. Before completing his supervised release, around February 26, 2017, to March 11, 2017, Cleveland escaped "from Diersen Residential Reentry Center in Albuquerque," New Mexico. Indictment at 2....
See MOO at 1-2;
The NDPS employed Largo. See Response at 2-3. The BIA did not employ Largo, and Largo did not have a BIA SLEC. See Motion at 2; Response at 2. The Navajo Nation has a Self-Determination Contract with the BIA; the Self-Determination Contract provides for "the provision of law enforcement" by the Navajo Nation, and incorporates the Annual Funding Agreement (executed December 28, 2016), filed September 24, 2018 (Doc. 72-3), and the Statement of Work, filed September 24, 2018 (Doc. 72-4), which conditions federal funds on the provision of law enforcement services pursuant to ILERA. Motion at 5. The Self-Determination Contract states:
Each provision of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act ... and each provision of this Contract shall be liberally construed for the benefit of the Contractor to transfer the funding and the following related functions, services, activities and programs (or portions thereof), that are otherwise contractible under Section 102(a) of such Act, including all related administrative functions, from the Federal Government to the Contractor: Law Enforcement-Patrol Services.
Self-Determination Contract ¶ 2, at 1 (emphasis in original).
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JAMES O. BROWNING, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
THIS MATTER comes before the Court on the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss *1219Counts 1 and 5 of the Indictment, filed September 24, 2018 (Doc. 72)("Motion"). The primary issues are whether: (i) a Navajo Nation Department of Public Safety ("NDPS") officer, Houston Largo, was a federal officer for purposes of
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
In its Memorandum Opinion and Order, No. CR 17-0965 JB,
The Court draws its facts about the offense at issue from the Indictment, *1220filed April 12, 2017 (Doc. 20)("Indictment"). The Court recognizes that the Indictment largely represents Plaintiff United States of America's version of events and that Cleveland is presumed innocent.
....
On July 18, 2013, Cleveland pled guilty to violations of18 U.S.C. § 1153 and18 U.S.C. § 113 (a)(6), for an assault on Jane Doe resulting in serious bodily injury. See United States v. Cleveland, No. CR. 12-2062 MCA, Judgment at 1, filed November 27, 2013 (Doc. 102)("Judgment"). The Honorable M. Christina Armijo, then-Chief United States District Judge for the District of New Mexico, sentenced Cleveland to 24 months in prison and three years of supervised release. See Judgment at 1. Cleveland entered supervision on April 7, 2014, but after absconding from supervision, he was remanded to custody on July 14, 2016, for lying to the probation officer, violating the probation officer's instructions, using alcohol and other intoxicants, and not completing a substance abuse treatment program. See United States v. Cleveland, No. CR. 12-2062 MCA, Petition for Revocation of Supervised Release at 1, filed July 17, 2015 (Doc. 109); Judgment at 1-2, filed August 8, 2016 (Doc. 121); Second Petition for Revocation of Supervised Release at 1, filed February 27, 2017 (Doc. 122). Cleveland returned to supervision on September 6, 2016, with the supervision set to end on September 5, 2018. See United States v. Cleveland, No. CR. 12-2062 MCA, Second Petition for Revocation of Supervised Release at 1. Before completing his supervised release, around February 26, 2017, to March 11, 2017, Cleveland escaped "from Diersen Residential Reentry Center in Albuquerque," New Mexico. Indictment at 2....
See MOO at 1-2;
The NDPS employed Largo. See Response at 2-3. The BIA did not employ Largo, and Largo did not have a BIA SLEC. See Motion at 2; Response at 2. The Navajo Nation has a Self-Determination Contract with the BIA; the Self-Determination Contract provides for "the provision of law enforcement" by the Navajo Nation, and incorporates the Annual Funding Agreement (executed December 28, 2016), filed September 24, 2018 (Doc. 72-3), and the Statement of Work, filed September 24, 2018 (Doc. 72-4), which conditions federal funds on the provision of law enforcement services pursuant to ILERA. Motion at 5. The Self-Determination Contract states:
Each provision of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act ... and each provision of this Contract shall be liberally construed for the benefit of the Contractor to transfer the funding and the following related functions, services, activities and programs (or portions thereof), that are otherwise contractible under Section 102(a) of such Act, including all related administrative functions, from the Federal Government to the Contractor: Law Enforcement-Patrol Services.
Self-Determination Contract ¶ 2, at 1 (emphasis in original). The Funding Agreement *1221states: "The Navajo Nation agrees to administer and perform those portions of the Bureau of Indian Affairs' ... Law Enforcement-Patrol Services identified in the Scope of Work...." Annual Funding Agreement ¶ A(1), at 1 (emphasis in original). The Statement of Work describes that the Navajo Nation will maintain "law enforcement and crime prevention services," Statement of Work ¶ 101(A), at 1, enforce "Navajo Nation and federal laws and ordinances," Statement of Work ¶ 101(B), at 1, protect "private, public and government property" within the Navajo Nation, Statement of Work ¶ 101(C), at 1, respond to "citizen's [sic] complaints or other request [sic] for law enforcement services," Statement of Work ¶ 101(F), at 1, patrol the roadways within the Navajo Nation, see Statement of Work ¶ 101(G), at 1, and engage in other law enforcement activities, see Statement of Work ¶ 101(E), (H)-(M), at 1-2. The Statement of Work further provides: "The Bureau may commission any law enforcement officer as a Federal Law Officer as set out in Attachment A-B." Statement of Work ¶ 104, at 6. The Deputation Agreement (executed March 13, 2013), filed September 24, 2018 (Doc. 72-5), states its intent to
provide for the deputation of law enforcement officers employed by the [NDPS] ... so that the [NDPS] law enforcement officers will be authorized to assist the BIA in its duties to provide law enforcement services and to make lawful arrests in Indian country within the jurisdiction of the Tribe or as described in section 5.
Deputation Agreement at 1. The Deputation Agreement explains the purpose for deputizing NDPS officers:
Both parties to this Agreement recognize that when law enforcement officers arrest a criminal suspect, the officers may not know whether the suspect or the victim is an Indian or a non-Indian, or whether the arrest or the suspected crime has occurred in Indian country ... and that therefore there is great difficulty in determining immediately the proper jurisdiction for the filing of charges.
Deputation Agreement at 2. The Deputation Agreement provides for the BIA to issue SLECs to NDPS officers. See Deputation Agreement ¶ 2(A), at 3. NDPS officers with SLECs have authority to enforce "[a]ll Federal laws applicable within Indian country, and specifically the Navajo Nation's Indian country, including the General Crimes Act,
[A]ny Navajo Nation Division of Public Safety Law Enforcement Officer who is deputized by the Bureau of Indian Affairs Special Law Enforcement Commission will only be deemed an employee of the Department of the Interior for the Purposes of the Federal Tort Claims Act[, 28 USCA §§ 1291, 1346, 1402, 2401, 2402, 2411, 2412, 2671 to 2680, ("FTCA"),] while carrying out those laws applicable in Indian country.... Therefore, such officer will not be deemed a federal employee under25 U.S.C. § 2804 (f), or for purposes of the Federal Tort Claims Act with respect to the enforcement of any other law except those applicable in Indian country....
Deputation Agreement ¶ 8(b), at 7.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
"A federal Grand Jury indicted Cleveland in the current case on April 12, 2017.
*1222See Indictment at 1." MOO at 2;
On January 26, 2018, the United States filed the Notice of Intent to Seek the Death Penalty, filed January 26, 2018 (Doc. 39)("Intent Notice"), stating that it would seek the death penalty for Count 2, "Committing Felony Murder while in Violation of
1. The Motion.
Cleveland filed the Motion on September 24, 2018. See Motion at 1. Cleveland *1223argues that Largo "was not a federal employee and was not engaged in the performance of official duties of a federal officer." Motion at 3. Cleveland contends that, because Largo was not a federal officer, the Court does not have jurisdiction over Counts 1 and 5 of the Indictment, and should dismiss those Counts. See Motion at 7.
Cleveland explains that the United States is relying on the ILERA to establish that Largo was a federal officer. See Motion at 3. According to Cleveland, the ILERA "clarifies that the BIA's responsibility is 'the enforcement of Federal law and, with the consent of the Indian Tribe, Tribal law.' " Motion at 3-4 (quoting
Cleveland cites
[A]ny Navajo Nation Division of Public Safety Law Enforcement Officer who is deputized by the Bureau of Indian Affairs Special Law Enforcement Commission will only be deemed an employee of the Department of the Interior for purposes of the Federal Tort Claims Act while carrying out those laws applicable in Indian Country as described in Section 3.A and Appendix A [which list only federal laws]. Therefore, such officer will not be deemed a federal employee under25 U.S.C. § 2804 (f)(1) [which in turn references §§ 111 & 1114 ], or for purposes of the FTCA with respect to enforcement of any other law except those enforceable in Indian country as described in Section 3.A and Appendix A.
Motion at 6 (citing Deputation Agreement ¶ 8(B), at 7).
Cleveland contends that, because NDPS, not the BIA, employed Largo, and the BIA had not given Largo a SLEC, he was not a federal officer. See Motion at 7 (citing United States v. Tauz Abner Henderson, 3:18-cr-08112-DJH, Order (filed June 11, 2018)(Humetewa, J.)(unpublished), filed September 24, 2018 (Doc. 50)("United States v. Tauz Abner Henderson Order") ). Cleveland avers that, in United States v. Tauz Abner Henderson, the Honorable Diane J. Humetewa, United States District Judge for the District of Arizona, concluded that an officer, like Largo, who "was employed by the Navajo Nation and did not hold a[n]" SLEC, was not a federal officer. Motion at 7 (citing United States v. Tauz Abner Henderson Order at 3). Cleveland argues that, because
Finally, Cleveland argues that, even were Largo a federal officer, he was not "engaged in the 'official duties' of a federal employee" at the time Cleveland killed him. Motion at 10 (citing
2. The Response.
The United States replied on November 2, 2018. See Response at 1. The United *1225States contends that the Court should not dismiss Counts 1 and 5. See Response at 9. The United States first notes in a footnote that it does not object to the introduction of the Self-Determination Contract, providing for NDPS authority over law enforcement within the Navajo Nation; the Annual Funding Agreement, establishing BIA funding for NDPS law enforcement activities; the Statement of Work, stating the scope of NDPS authority; or the Deputation Agreement, providing for the BIA to give SLECs to NDPS officers, although it cannot determine if the Deputation Agreement is current. See Response at 3 n.2. Further, the United States responds that Largo was acting as a federal officer, because domestic violence implicates federal crimes -- including "[A]ssault resulting in serious bodily injury,"
Next, the United States argues that, as Largo "was acting within the scope of his duties as a law enforcement officer pursuant to a contract between the BIA and the Navajo Nation for law enforcement services," he was a federal officer. Response at 4 (citing United States v. Janis,
The United States argues that, "when a Tribe opts to assume the functions of law enforcement under ISDA, it must also assume BIA's legal authority to execute federal functions legally assigned to BIA officers." Response at 6 (citing United States v. Schrader,
The United States continues, noting that the ILERA authorizes SLECs, but it does not replace Congress' grant of law enforcement authority through the ISDA. See Response at 7 (citing
3. The Reply.
On November 19, 2018, Cleveland filed the Reply in Support of Defendant Kirby Cleveland's Motion to Dismiss Counts 1 and 5 of the Indictment [Doc. 72] (Doc. 104)("Reply"). See Reply at 11. Cleveland cites Dry v. United States,
Cleveland cites again to
Cleveland further notes that the United States "ignores the ILERA's implementing regulations ... and the language of the relevant contract documents" when it argues that, because earlier statutes allowed the employment of American Indians, Tribal officers are federal employees under the ILERA are federal employees. Reply at 6. Cleveland indicates that, were the SLEC unnecessary, the Deputation Agreement would not explain that
Finally, according to Cleveland, Largo could not have been enforcing federal law, because he was not a federal officer. See Reply at 7-8. Further, Cleveland explains that Largo reported to a call "that Mr. Cleveland was drunk and disorderly, not that he had assaulted anyone," and, according to Cleveland, such facts "do not support a finding that Officer Largo was enforcing federal law," because the domestic violence had not escalated to a crime "of sufficient seriousness to be prosecutable under the Major Crimes Act." Reply at 8. Cleveland additionally contends that Largo could only have enforced federal law if he acted outside his authority's scope, because he had no SLEC. Reply at 8. Cleveland notes that the United States has previously argued that Tribal officers require SLECs to enforce federal law. See Reply at 8-9 (citing Etsitty-Thompson v. United States, No. 2:13-CV-159 TS,
LAW REGARDING THE INDIAN CANON
The Indian canon of construction requires that courts liberally construe treaties, agreements, statutes, and executive orders in the American Indians' favor.
*1228See Montana v. Blackfeet Tribe,
The Indian canon sometimes can come into conflict with other canons of statutory interpretation. When canons clash, the Indian canon usually trumps competing canons. See Cohen's Handbook of Federal Indian Law § 2.02[3], at 119-123 (Nell Jessup Newton et al. eds., 2012). See Navajo Health Found.-Sage Mem'l Hosp., Inc. v. Burwell,
LAW REGARDING JUDICIAL REVIEW OF AGENCY ACTION
Under the APA,
[a] person suffering legal wrong because of agency action, or adversely affected or aggrieved by agency action within the meaning of a relevant statute, is entitled to judicial review thereof. An action in a court of the United States seeking relief other than money damages and stating a claim that an agency or an officer or employee thereof acted or failed to act in an official capacity or under color of legal authority shall not be dismissed nor relief therein be denied on the ground that it is against the United States or that the United States is an indispensable party. The United States may be named as a defendant in any such action, and a judgment or decree may be entered against the United States: Provided , that any mandatory or injunctive decree shall specify the Federal officer or officers (by name or by title), and their successors in office, personally responsible for compliance. Nothing herein (1) affects other limitations on judicial review or the power or duty of the court to dismiss any action or deny relief on any other appropriate legal or equitable ground; or (2) confers authority to grant relief if any other statute that grants consent to suit expressly or impliedly forbids the relief which is sought.
*1229
(1) compel agency action unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed; and
(2) hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions found to be --
(A) arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law;
(B) contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege, or immunity;
(C) in excess of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations, or short of statutory right;
(D) without observance of procedure required by law;
(E) unsupported by substantial evidence in a case subject to sections 556 and 557 of this title or otherwise reviewed on the record of an agency hearing provided by statute; or
(F) unwarranted by the facts to the extent that the facts are subject to trial de novo by the reviewing court.
Under Olenhouse v. Commodity Credit Corp.,
1. Reviewing Agency Factual Determinations.
Under the APA, a reviewing court must accept an agency's factual determinations in informal proceedings unless they are "arbitrary [or] capricious,"
In reviewing agency action under the arbitrary-or-capricious standard, a court considers the administrative record *1230-- or at least those portions of the record that the parties provide -- and not materials outside of the record. See
To fulfill its function under the APA, a reviewing court should engage in a "thorough, probing, in-depth review" of the record before it when determining whether an agency's decision survives arbitrary-or-capricious review. Wyoming v. United States,
"[I]n determining whether the agency acted in an 'arbitrary and capricious manner,' we must ensure that the agency 'decision was based on a consideration of the relevant factors' and examine 'whether there has been a clear error of judgment.' " We consider an agency decision arbitrary and capricious if "the agency ... relied on factors which Congress had not intended it to consider, entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the problem, offered an explanation for its decision that runs counter to the evidence before the agency, or is so implausible that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency expertise."
Colo. Envtl. Coal. v. Dombeck,
2. Reviewing Agency Legal Interpretations.
In promulgating and enforcing regulations, agencies must interpret federal statutes, their own regulations, and the Constitution of the United States of America, and Courts reviewing those interpretations apply three different deference standards, depending on the kind of law at issue. First, the federal judiciary accords considerable deference to an agency's interpretation of a statute that Congress has tasked it with enforcing. See United States v. Undetermined Quantities of Bottles of an Article of Veterinary Drug,
we must be guided by the directives regarding judicial review of administrative agency interpretations of their organic statutes laid down by the Supreme Court in Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. ,467 U.S. 837 ,104 S.Ct. 2778 ,81 L.Ed.2d 694 (1984). Those directives require that we first determine whether Congress has *1232directly spoken to the precise question at issue. If the congressional intent is clear, we must give effect to that intent. If the statute is silent or ambiguous on that specific issue, we must determine whether the agency's answer is based on a permissible construction of the statute.
United States v. Undetermined Quantities of Bottles of an Article of Veterinary Drug,
Chevron's second step is all but toothless, because if the agency's decision makes it to step two, it is upheld almost without exception. See Jason J. Czarnezki, An Empirical Investigation of Judicial Decisionmaking, Statutory Interpretation, and the Chevron Doctrine in Environmental Law,
Chevron's first step, in contrast, has bite, but there is substantial disagreement about what it means. The Court has noted the varying approaches that different Supreme Court Justices have taken in applying Chevron deference:
The Court notices a parallel between the doctrine of constitutional avoidance and the Chevron doctrine. Those Justices, such as Justice Scalia, who are most loyal to the doctrines and the most likely to apply them, are also the most likely to keep the "steps" of the doctrines separate: first, determining whether the statute is ambiguous; and, only then, assessing the merits of various permissible interpretations from the first step. These Justices are also the most likely to find that the statute is unambiguous, thus obviating the need to apply the second step of each doctrine. Those Justices more likely to find ambiguity in statutes are more likely to eschew applying the doctrines in the first place, out of their distaste for their second steps -- showing heavy deference to agencies for Chevron doctrine, and upholding facially overbroad statutes, for constitutional avoidance.
Griffin v. Bryant,
Second, when agencies interpret their own regulations -- to, for example, adjudicate whether a regulated party complied with them -- courts accord agencies what is known as Auer or Seminole Rock deference. See *1233Auer v. Robbins,
For decades, and for no good reason, we have been giving agencies the authority to say what their rules mean, under the harmless-sounding banner of "defer[ring] to an agency's interpretation of its own regulations." This is generally called Seminole Rock or Auer deference.
....
The canonical formulation of Auer deference is that we will enforce an agency's interpretation of its own rules unless that interpretation is "plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation." But of course whenever the agency's interpretation of the regulation is different from the fairest reading, it is in that sense "inconsistent" with the regulation. Obviously, that is not enough, or there would be nothing for Auer to do. In practice, Auer deference is Chevron deference applied to regulations rather than statutes. The agency's interpretation will be accepted if, though not the fairest reading of the regulation, it is a plausible reading -- within the scope of the ambiguity that the regulation contains.
Our cases have not put forward a persuasive justification for Auer deference. The first case to apply it, Seminole Rock, offered no justification whatever -- just the ipse dixit that "the administrative interpretation ... becomes of controlling weight unless it is plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation." Our later cases provide two principal explanations, neither of which has much to be said for it. First, some cases say that the agency, as the drafter of the rule, will have some special insight into its intent when enacting it. The implied premise of this argument -- that what we are looking for is the agency's intent in adopting the rule -- is false. There is true of regulations what is true of statutes. As Justice Holmes put it: "[w]e do not inquire what the legislature meant; we ask only what the statute means." Whether governing rules are made by the national legislature or an administrative agency, we are bound by what they say , not by the unexpressed intention of those who made them.
The other rationale our cases provide is that the agency possesses special expertise in administering its "complex and highly technical regulatory program." That is true enough, and it leads to the conclusion that agencies and not courts should make regulations. But it has nothing to do with who should interpret regulations -- unless one believes that the purpose of interpretation is to make the regulatory program work in a fashion that the current leadership of the agency deems effective. Making regulatory programs effective is the purpose of rulemaking , in which the agency uses its "special expertise" to formulate the best rule. But the purpose of interpretation *1234is to determine the fair meaning of the rule -- to "say what the law is." Not to make policy, but to determine what policy has been made and promulgated by the agency, to which the public owes obedience. Indeed, since the leadership of agencies (and hence the policy preferences of agencies) changes with Presidential administrations, an agency head can only be sure that the application of his "special expertise" to the issue addressed by a regulation will be given effect if we adhere to predictable principles of textual interpretation rather than defer to the "special expertise" of his successors. If we take agency enactments as written, the Executive has a stable background against which to write its rules and achieve the policy ends it thinks best.
Another conceivable justification for Auer deference, though not one that is to be found in our cases, is this: If it is reasonable to defer to agencies regarding the meaning of statutes that Congress enacted, as we do per Chevron , it is a fortiori reasonable to defer to them regarding the meaning of regulations that they themselves crafted. To give an agency less control over the meaning of its own regulations than it has over the meaning of a congressionally enacted statute seems quite odd.
But it is not odd at all. The theory of Chevron (take it or leave it) is that when Congress gives an agency authority to administer a statute, including authority to issue interpretive regulations, it implicitly accords the agency a degree of discretion, which the courts must respect, regarding the meaning of the statute. While the implication of an agency power to clarify the statute is reasonable enough, there is surely no congressional implication that the agency can resolve ambiguities in its own regulations. For that would violate a fundamental principle of separation of powers -- that the power to write a law and the power to interpret it cannot rest in the same hands. "When the legislative and executive powers are united in the same person ... there can be no liberty; because apprehensions may arise, lest the same monarch or senate should enact tyrannical laws, to execute them in a tyrannical manner." Congress cannot enlarge its own power through Chevron -- whatever it leaves vague in the statute will be worked out by someone else. Chevron represents a presumption about who, as between the Executive and the Judiciary, that someone else will be. (The Executive, by the way -- the competing political branch -- is the less congenial repository of the power as far as Congress is concerned.) So Congress's incentive is to speak as clearly as possible on the matters it regards as important.
But when an agency interprets its own rules -- that is something else. Then the power to prescribe is augmented by the power to interpret; and the incentive is to speak vaguely and broadly, so as to retain a "flexibility" that will enable "clarification" with retroactive effect. "It is perfectly understandable" for an agency to "issue vague regulations" if doing so will "maximiz[e] agency power." Combining the power to prescribe with the power to interpret is not a new evil: Blackstone condemned the practice of resolving doubts about "the construction of the Roman laws" by "stat[ing] the case to the emperor in writing, and tak[ing] his opinion upon it." And our Constitution did not mirror the British practice of using the House of Lords as a court of last resort, due in part to the fear that he who has "agency in passing bad laws" might operate in the "same spirit" in their interpretation. Auer deference *1235encourages agencies to be "vague in framing regulations, with the plan of issuing 'interpretations' to create the intended new law without observance of notice and comment procedures." Auer is not a logical corollary to Chevron but a dangerous permission slip for the arrogation of power.
It is true enough that Auer deference has the same beneficial pragmatic effect as Chevron deference: The country need not endure the uncertainty produced by divergent views of numerous district courts and courts of appeals as to what is the fairest reading of the regulation, until a definitive answer is finally provided, years later, by this Court. The agency's view can be relied upon, unless it is, so to speak, beyond the pale. But the duration of the uncertainty produced by a vague regulation need not be as long as the uncertainty produced by a vague statute. For as soon as an interpretation uncongenial to the agency is pronounced by a district court, the agency can begin the process of amending the regulation to make its meaning entirely clear. The circumstances of this case demonstrate the point. While these cases were being briefed before us, EPA issued a rule designed to respond to the Court of Appeals judgment we are reviewing. It did so (by the standards of such things) relatively quickly: The decision below was handed down in May 2011, and in December 2012 the EPA published an amended rule setting forth in unmistakable terms the position it argues here. And there is another respect in which a lack of Chevron -type deference has less severe pragmatic consequences for rules than for statutes. In many cases, when an agency believes that its rule permits conduct that the text arguably forbids, it can simply exercise its discretion not to prosecute. That is not possible, of course, when, as here, a party harmed by the violation has standing to compel enforcement.
In any case, however great may be the efficiency gains derived from Auer deference, beneficial effect cannot justify a rule that not only has no principled basis but contravenes one of the great rules of separation of powers: He who writes a law must not adjudge its violation.
Decker v. Nw. Envtl. Def. Ctr.,
Last, courts afford agencies no deference in interpreting the Constitution. See U.S. W., Inc. v. FCC,
3. Waiving Sovereign Immunity.
The APA waives sovereign immunity with respect to non-monetary claims. See
An action in a court of the United States seeking relief other than money damages and stating a claim that an agency or an officer or employee thereof acted or failed to act in an official capacity or under color of legal authority shall not be dismissed nor relief therein be denied on the ground that it is against the United States or that the United States is an indispensable party. The United States may be named as a defendant in any such action, and a judgment or decree may be entered against the United States ....
The APA's sovereign immunity waiver for claims "seeking relief other than money damages" does not apply, however, "if any other statute that grants consent to suit expressly or impliedly forbids the relief which is sought."
LAW REGARDING THE ISDA
The ISDA authorizes American Indian Tribes and Tribal organizations to contract with either the Department of the Interior ("DOI") or the Health and Human Services ("HHS") Secretary9 to provide their *1237members federally funded services that a federal agency would otherwise provide directly. See
An ISDA contract proposal typically consists of two parts: (i) a multi-year agreement that satisfies
1. The Declination Process.
The ISDA contracting process begins when a Tribe or Tribal organization submits a contract proposal to the Secretary. See
Should the Secretary decide to decline the proposal in part or in its entirety, he or she must do so based on one of these five reasons:
(A) the service to be rendered to the Indian beneficiaries of the particular program or function to be contracted will not be satisfactory;
(B) adequate protection of trust resources is not assured;
(C) the proposed project or function to be contracted for cannot be properly completed or maintained by the proposed contract;
(D) the amount of funds proposed under the contract is in excess of the applicable funding level for the contract, as determined under section 450j-1(a) of this title; or
(E) the program, function, service, or activity (or portion thereof) that is the subject of the proposal is beyond the scope of programs, functions, services, or activities, ... because the proposal includes activities that cannot lawfully be carried out by the contractor.
*1238
There are a number of limitations on the Secretary's authority to apply § 5321(a)(2)'s declination criteria. The Secretary cannot decline a contract renewal proposal "where no material and substantial change to the scope or funding of a program, functions, services, or activities has been proposed by the Indian Tribe or Tribal organization."
After the Secretary declines a proposal, he or she must: (i) state any objections in writing to the Tribe or Tribal organization; (ii) provide assistance to the Tribe or Tribal organization to overcome the stated objections; and (iii) provide the Tribe or Tribal organization with a hearing on the record with the right to engage in full discovery on any issue raised in the matter and the opportunity to appeal the Secretary's objections. See
2. The Reassumption Process.
The Secretary also has the authority to reassume ISDA contracts. See
In an emergency reassumption, the Secretary must: (i) immediately rescind, in whole or in part, the contract; (ii) assume control or operation of all or part of the program; and (iii) give written notice of the rescission to the Tribe or Tribal organization, and to the community that *1239the contract serves. See
In a non-emergency reassumption, the Secretary must: (i) notify the Tribe or Tribal organization in writing of the deficiencies in contract performance; (ii) ask the Tribe or Tribal organization to take specific corrective action within a reasonable period of time, which cannot be less than forty-five days; and (iii) offer and provide, if requested, the necessary technical assistance and advice to help the Tribe or Tribal organization overcome the deficiencies. See
3. The ISDA and the FTCA.
The United States has provided that it will assume liability under the FTCA for activities undertaken by Tribal agencies under 638 contracts. See
For purposes of section 233 of Title 42, with respect to claims by any person, initially filed on or after December 22, 1987, whether or not such person is an Indian or Alaska Native or is served on a fee basis or under other circumstances as permitted by Federal law or regulations for personal injury, including death, resulting from the performance prior to, including, or after December 22, 1987, of medical, surgical, dental, or related functions, including the conduct of clinical studies or investigations, or for purposes of section 2679, Title 28, [part of the FTCA] with respect to claims by any such person, on or after November 29, 1990, for personal injury, including death, resulting from the operation of an emergency motor vehicle, an Indian Tribe, a Tribal organization or Indian contractor carrying out a contract, grant agreement, or cooperative agreement under sections 5321 or 5322 of this title is deemed to be part of the Public Health Service in the Department of Health and Human Services while carrying out any such contract or agreement and its employees (including those acting on behalf of the organization or contractor as provided in section 2671 of Title 28, and including an individual who provides health care services pursuant to a personal services contract with a *1240Tribal organization for the provision of services in any facility owned, operated, or constructed under the jurisdiction of the Indian Health Service) are deemed employees of the Service while acting within the scope of their employment in carrying out the contract or agreement: Provided , That such employees shall be deemed to be acting within the scope of their employment in carrying out such contract or agreement when they are required, by reason of such employment, to perform medical, surgical, dental or related functions at a facility other than the facility operated pursuant to such contract or agreement, but only if such employees are not compensated for the performance of such functions by a person or entity other than such Indian Tribe, Tribal organization or Indian contractor.
With respect to claims resulting from the performance of functions during fiscal year 1991 and thereafter, or claims asserted after September 30, 1990, but resulting from the performance of functions prior to fiscal year 1991, under a contract, grant agreement, or any other agreement or compact authorized by the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975, as amended ..., an Indian Tribe, Tribal organization or Indian contractor is deemed hereafter to be part of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in the Department of the Interior or the Indian Health Service in the Department of Health and Human Services while carrying out any such contract or agreement and its employees are deemed employees of the Bureau or Service while acting within the scope of their employment in carrying out the contract or agreement: Provided, That after September 30, 1990, any civil action or proceeding involving such claims brought hereafter against any Tribe, Tribal organization, Indian contractor or Tribal employee covered by this provision shall be deemed to be an action against the United States and will be defended by the Attorney General and be afforded the full protection and coverage of the FTCA; Provided further, That beginning with the fiscal year ending September 30, 1991, and thereafter, the appropriate Secretary shall request through annual appropriations funds sufficient to reimburse the Treasury for any claims paid in the prior fiscal year pursuant to the foregoing provisions: Provided further, That nothing in this section shall in any way affect the provisions of [25 U.S.C. § 5301 ].
Pub. L. 101-512,
4. Relief Available Under the ISDA.
The ISDA provides a comprehensive range of remedies for a Tribe or Tribal organization whose contract the Secretary unlawfully terminates. See
money damages, injunctive relief against any action by an officer of the United States or any agency thereof contrary to this subchapter or regulations promulgated thereunder, or mandamus to compel an officer or employee of the United States, or any agency thereof, to perform a duty provided under this subchapter or regulations promulgated hereunder (including immediate injunctive relief to reverse a declination finding *1241under section 450f(a)(2) of this title or to compel the Secretary to award and fund an approved self-determination contract).
Applying § 5331(a) to the DOI Secretary's contract declination decision in Crownpoint Institute of Technology v. Norton, No. CIV 04-0531 JP/DJS, Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, filed September 16, 2005 (D.N.M.)(Parker, J.)(unpublished), the Honorable James A. Parker, United States Senior District Judge for the District of New Mexico, said that "[t]he specific mandamus relief authorized by the ISDA relieves [the plaintiff] of proving the usual equitable elements including irreparable injury and absence of an adequate remedy at law." Crownpoint Inst. of Tech. v. Norton, Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law at 26 (citing Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. v. Lennen,
THE ISDA'S LEGISLATIVE HISTORY
If possible, the Court interprets statutes according to the statutory text's plain meaning and structure. When the text's meaning and structure leave ambiguities, however, even the ardent textualist "routinely takes purpose into account, but in its concrete manifestations as deduced from close reading of the text." Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 20 (2012). The Court gives special interpretive weight to committee reports,10 which congressional *1242staffers consider the most reliable sources of congressional intent. See Abbe R. Gluck & Lisa Schultz Bressman, Statutory Interpretation from the Inside -- An Empirical Study of Congressional Drafting, Delegation, and the Canons: Part I,
1. Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975.
The ISDA became law in 1975. See Pub. L. No. 93-638,
a. Background.
The 1960s, a decade that unmoored so many other longstanding federal policies, barely left a ripple in federal policies related to American Indian self-determination. Shortly after his Senate confirmation in 1961, Stewart Udall, President John F. Kennedy's Secretary, assembled a taskforce to study the issue of American Indian self-determination. See Udall Tells of Plan for Reorganization, N.Y. Times, Jan. 29, 1961, at A32. Yet the task force accomplished little of practical value, more replete with grandiloquence than grand strategy. See Bureau of Indian Affairs, Report of Task Force on Indian Affairs at 2-7 (1961)("1961 Report of Task Force"). In a stunning rebuke of the very concept of self-determination even at the ideational stage, Udall paternalistically told task force members that "test[ing] our thinking against the thinking of the wisest Indians and their friends did not mean that we are going to let, as someone put it, the Indian people decide what the policy should be." 1961 Report of Task Force at 2. For the remainder of the Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson Administrations, neither the White House nor Congress paid much attention to American Indians. See generally Thomas Francis Clarkin, The New Trail and the Great Society: Federal Indian Policy During the Kennedy-Johnson Administrations (May 1998)(unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas at Austin)(on file with ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global).
Beginning in the 1960s, the Indian Health Service ("IHS") also faced problems along many fronts, including congressional attempts to control its budget. See Leah Kalm-Freeman, The Community Health Representative Program: Early Voices and Program History 115-18 (June 2009)(unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Johns Hopkins University)(on file with *1243ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global)(providing an easily digestible summary of IHS finances and budgetary concerns from the late 1950s until the passage of the ISDA). For their part, Tribal leaders nationwide began to agitate for a greater say in healthcare services on their reservations. See, e.g., Indians of North America, Declaration of Indian Purpose: The Voice of the American Indian 9-10 (1961)(coauthored by leaders of sixty-seven American Indian Tribes). Tribes also began to undertake small federally funded local projects through Indian Community Action Programs established under President Johnson's War on Poverty, spurring greater American Indian agitation for self-determination in general. See Sar Levitan & Barbara Hetrick, Big Brother's Indian Programs, With Reservations 90 (1971).
During his presidential campaign in 1968, Richard M. Nixon issued a statement to the National Congress of American Indians in Omaha, Nebraska in which he seconded Tribes' calls for greater self-determination. See Richard Nixon and the American Indian: The Movement to Self-Determination (Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian broadcast Nov. 15, 2012) at 20:14-:30, https://www.nixonfoundation.org/2012/11/nixon-and-the-american-indian-the-movement-to-self-determination/ ("Smithsonian Video").
Nixon did not forget this support for greater American Indian self-determination after the election.12 On October 8, 1969, Nixon sent Vice President Spiro Agnew to Albuquerque, New Mexico, to deliver a speech on the topic to lay the groundwork for American Indian legislation that Nixon's domestic policy advisers were drafting. See Smithsonian Video at 24:15-25:21. The legislative proposal was ready by the following summer, and Nixon proposed to Congress, at the start of July 1970, what eventually would become the ISDA. See Richard Nixon, Special Message to the Congress on Indian Affairs ( July 8, 1970), reprinted in The American Presidency Project (John Woolley & Gerhard Peters eds.), https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/special-message-the-congress-indian-affairs (last visited Nov. 21, 2016)("Nixon's Special Message to Congress").13
Decrying the disorientation and excessive dependency that federal hegemony over American Indian healthcare had spawned as "morally and legally unacceptable," Nixon challenged Congress (i) to assure Tribes that the federal government would continue to perform its treaty and trusteeship obligations;14 and (ii) to guarantee *1244that, "whenever Indian groups decided to assume control or responsibility for government service programs, they could do so and still receive adequate Federal financial support." Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 1. The second assurance, according to Nixon, is a very important rejection of suffocating paternalism and bureaucratic inefficiency in favor of American Indian self-determination. See Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 1.
Nixon told Congress that the assumption prevailing at the time was that American Indian programs could not exist without Federal administration. See Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 1. Nixon said that he believed this assumption is incorrect and that there is no reason that Congress should deprive American Indians of the privilege of self-determination merely because they receive monetary support from the federal government. See Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 2. In Nixon's opinion, it "should be up to the Indian Tribe to determine whether it is willing and able to assume administrative responsibility for a service program which is presently administered by a Federal agency." Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 3. He therefore proposed legislation that would:
empower a Tribe or a group of Tribes or any other Indian community to take over the control or operation of Federally-funded and administered programs in the Department of the Interior and the Department of Health, Education and Welfare whenever the Tribal council or comparable community governing group voted to do so.
Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 3.15
Nixon proposed that discretion to take on a program or to not take on a program should lie completely with American Indians; it would not be necessary for the federal agency administering a program to approve the transfer of responsibility to a Tribe or Tribal organization, nor could a Tribe or Tribal organization be compelled into a transfer it did not want. See Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 3. Tribes or Tribal organizations also would, under Nixon's proposal, retain the "right of retrocession," by which he meant that an American Indian group could elect to administer a program and then later decide to give it back to the federal government. Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 3. Nixon wanted appropriate technical assistance to help local organizations successfully operate programs they took over and for locally administered programs to be funded on equal terms with services that federal agencies continue to administer. See Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 3.
Nixon said that his proposed legislation would triply benefit American Indians. See Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 3. First, Nixon wrote, contracting out programs to Tribes or Tribal organizations would directly channel more money into American Indian communities, because American Indians -- not federal bureaucrats -- would be administering the programs and drawing salaries. See Nixon's *1245Special Message to Congress § 3. Second, Nixon contended, contracting out programs to Tribes or Tribal organizations would "help build greater pride and resourcefulness within the Indian community." Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 3. Third, Nixon asserted, American Indians would get better and more efficacious programs if the people whom the programs most directly affected were responsible for creating them. See Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 9.
Nixon insisted that, "[a]s we move ahead in this important work, it is essential that the Indian people continue to lead the way by participating in policy development to the greatest possible degree." Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 9. According to Nixon, the federal government has not always realized that it needs American Indian energy and leadership if its assistance is to be effective in improving the conditions of American Indian life. See Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 9. Nixon concluded that his proposed legislation would turn a new page, however, striking a "new and balanced relationship between the United States government and the first Americans...." Nixon's Special Message to Congress § 9.
During 1970 and 1971, Nixon Administration officials met with Tribal leaders at ten regional conferences and discussed the President's proposed legislation with them. See generally Smithsonian Video. The ISDA's first version was introduced in the Senate as 92 S. 3157 on February 9, 1972, and was reported to the Senate on July 27, 1972. See Indian Self-Determination Act of 1972, S. 3157, 92d Cong. (1972)("1972 ISDA"). It was referred to the House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs on August 3, 1972, see 1972 ISDA, but it died there as Washington became embroiled in the Watergate scandal and the related conviction of some of Nixon's White House aides, see Bob Woodward & Carl Bernstein, The Final Days 14-17 (2005)(providing a detailed chronology of the last two years of Nixon's presidency).
Undaunted, Nixon called for greater American Indian self-determination in his fourth State of the Union Address in 1973.16 In that Address, Nixon indicated that his Administration would continue to advance opportunities for American Indian self-determination. See Richard Nixon, State of the Union Message to the Congress on Human Resources, 61 Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States 143-44 (1973)(John Woolley & Gerhard Peters eds. 2005)("1973 Address"). Expounding in more depth on the same issue, Nixon said:
Just as it is essential to put more decision-making in the hands of the State and local governments, I continue to believe *1246that Indian Tribal governments should assume greater responsibility for programs of the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare which operate on their reservations. As I first proposed in 1970, I recommend that the Congress enact the necessary legislation to facilitate this take-over of responsibility.
1973 Address at 144 (emphasis in the original). Nixon continued:
Meanwhile the new statutory provisions for Indian Tribal governments under General Revenue Sharing will assist responsible Tribal governments in allocating extra resources with greater flexibility. I shall also propose new legislation to foster local Indian self-determination by developing an Interior Department program of bloc[k] grants to Federally recognized Tribes as a replacement for a number of existing economic and resource development programs. The primary purpose of these grants would be to provide Tribal governments with funds which they could use at their own discretion to promote development of their reservations.
1973 Address at 144 (emphasis in the original). Nixon concluded his remarks on American Indians with an expression of exasperation with Congress for having failed to pass the version of the ISDA that he had proposed in his Nixon's Special Message and said that, "[t]o accelerate organizational reform, I have directed the Secretary of the Interior to transfer day to day operational activities of the Bureau of Indian Affairs out of Washington to its field offices." 1973 Address at 144.
The bill languished in committee for nearly a year before Nixon drove home the pressing need for it in his 1974 State of the Union Address. See Richard Nixon, Annual Message to the Congress on the State of the Union, 26 Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States 56 (1974)(John Woolley & Gerhard Peters eds. 2005)("1974 Address"). Perhaps sensing that this address would be his final opportunity to advocate for American Indian self-determination in a State of the Union Address, Nixon spoke passionately:
For too many years the American Indians -- the first Americans -- have been the last Americans to receive the rights and opportunities to which they are entitled. This Administration has taken the initiative to change this picture. For its part, the Federal Government must put behind it the role of autocratic manager of Indian reservations. We shall continue to encourage Indians and their Tribal governments to play an increasing role in determining their own future.
1974 Address at 75. Nixon noted that "[o]ne measure of our attempt to foster a better, more humane policy is the level of Federal funding benefitting American Indians -- over twice what it was five years ago or about $1.6 billion." 1974 Address at 76. Nixon chided Congress for not having acted on his proposals "to permit turning over to Indian Tribal governments the management and control of Indian programs," and "to provide greater local control over federally assisted reservation programs through a program of Tribal grants." 1974 Address at 76. Nixon then closed his discussion of American Indian self-determination with a final promise to American Indians that had first taken embryonic form in his 1968 campaign speech in Omaha: "I shall ask that the Bureau of Indian Affairs make specific plans to accelerate the transfer of significant portions of its programs to Indian Tribal management, although I repeat my assurance that, while accelerated, these transfers will not be forced on Indian Tribes not willing to accept them." 1974 Address at 76.
*1247Even as the long shadows of possible impeachment over Watergate began to darken the Oval Office in the spring of 1974, Nixon pressed forward with his efforts to pressure the Senate into passing the ISDA. Resurrecting his strategy of sending out surrogates with speeches that he first had tried with Vice President Agnew's Albuquerque speech in 1969, Nixon dispatched his special counsel and the executive assistant to his special counsel to Albuquerque, New Mexico in March, 1974, to deliver two more speeches advocating for the ISDA and American Indian self-determination. See Leonard Garment, Speech to Indian Law Students Association, Albuquerque, New Mexico (March 14, 1974)(available for scan or photocopy at the Nixon Presidential Library); Bradley H. Patterson, Albuquerque Speech. After having sat on the bill for nearly a year, the Senate reported it out from the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs two weeks later, on March 28, 1974. See S. Rep. No. 93-682.
b. Senate Report No. 93-682.
The section of the Senate Committee Report dedicated to congressional findings left no doubt that Congress had followed Nixon's lead in advocating for "a definitive break from the past." Smithsonian Video at 19:40. After careful review of the federal government's historical and special legal relationship with American Indians and of federal responsibilities that result from it, the Senate Committee found that:
(1) the prolonged Federal domination of Indian service programs has served to retard rather than enhance the progress of Indian people and their communities by depriving Indians of the full opportunity to develop leadership skills crucial to the realization of self-government, and has denied to the Indian people an effective voice in the planning and implementation of programs for the benefit of Indians which are responsive to the true needs of Indian communities; and
(2) the Indian people will never surrender their desire to control their relationships both among themselves and with non-Indian governments, organizations, and persons.
S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 1 (1974). The Senate Committee further recognized
the obligation of the United States to respond to the strong expression of the Indian people for self-determination by assuring maximum Indian participation in the direction of educational as well as other Federal services to Indian communities so as to render such services more responsive to the needs and desires of those communities.
S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 2. Furthermore, the Senate Committee declared that its
commitment to the maintenance of the Federal Government's unique and continuing relationship with and responsibility to the Indian people through the establishment of a meaningful Indian self-determination policy which will permit an orderly transition from Federal domination of programs for and services to Indians to effective and meaningful participation by the Indian people in the planning, conduct, and administration of those programs and services.
S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 2. After diving into the bill's text, section by section, see S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 3-11, the Senate Committee wrote at length about the purpose behind and the need for the bill that it had just christened the "Indian Self-Determination and Educational Reform Act." S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 1, 12-14.
Priming fellow senators for the discussion about the ISDA's purpose, the Senate Committee chronicled the history of federal relations with American Indians. See S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 12-13. The Supreme *1248Court, the Senate Committee said, first recognized Tribal sovereignty in 1832. See S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 12 (citing Worcester v. Georgia, 31 U.S. (6 Pet.) 515, 519,
The ISDA, the Senate Committee indicated, would be the next stage in this progression, being "in essence an effort to provide Tribes with the means to implement Tribal self-governing power by providing finances and procedures to achieve progressive development of Tribal resources and institutions." S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 13. Lest the bill's purpose not yet be clear enough, the Senate Committee continued: "The purpose of [the ISDA] is to implement a policy of self-determination whereby Indian Tribes are given a greater measure of control over the programs and services provided to them by the Federal government." S. Rep. No. 93-862, at 13.
Having discussed the ISDA's purpose, the Senate Committee then turned to discussing the need for the bill. See S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 13. In the recent past, the Senate Committee said, federal Indian policy had experienced a dramatic shift with respect to the delivery of programs and services that the BIA and the IHS formerly had administered. See S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 13 (citing four different statutes). The Senate Committee noted, however, that the policy changes had been made on very shaky authority, through a "mixture of broad interpretation and unrelated statutes...." S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 13. Such policy potpourri, the Senate Committee said, had created "numerous administrative and management problems," such as "the inability of the Federal government to exempt Tribal contracts from Federal Procurement Regulations and to authorize payments in advance of Tribal performance on such contracts." S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 13, 14. The ISDA, according to the Senate Committee, was designed to alleviate such problems by providing direct statutory authority for American Indians' federal contracting. See S. Rep. No. 93-682, at 14.
c. House Report No. 93-1600.
The House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs ("1974 House Committee") reported S. 1017 to the House floor on December 16, 1974. H.R. Rep. No. 93-1600 (1974). In the preamble to its report, the 1974 House Committee indicated that one of the bill's goals was to "provide for the full participation of Indian Tribes in programs and services conducted by the Federal Government for Indians." 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7775. The bill, according to the 1974 House Committee, therefore "authorizes and directs the Secretary of the Interior and the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare to contract with Indian Tribes or Tribal organizations for the operation of programs provided by the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Indian Health Service under guidelines and criteria established by the bill...." 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7775.
Providing fellow House members with a quick rationale to support the bill, the 1974 House Committee indicated that S. 1017 provides "flexible authority to efficiently *1249and realistically permit contracting of Bureau of Indian Affairs and Indian Health Service programs to the Indian Tribes while maintaining the integrity of the programs and services funded by Federal appropriations." 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7782. According to the 1974 House Committee, S. 1017 simultaneously would expand the DOI Secretary's authority and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare ("HEW") Secretary's authority to enter into negotiated contracts with Indian Tribes and Tribal organizations under clear guidelines and contract requirements. See 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7782.
The 1974 House Committee also explained, mostly at the DOI's and the General Accounting Office's recommendation, that it had adopted several major amendments to S. 1017 which the Senate passed. See 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7782. First, the 1974 House Committee adopted three new sections in S. 1017's preliminary provisions that it meant to tighten the ISDA's contract requirements in the areas of auditing and reporting, criminal penalties for the misuse of contract funds, applicability of the Davis-Bacon Act,
(1) permit Tribes and Tribal contractors to be eligible for grants from the Civil Service Commission under the Intergovernmental Personnel Act to strengthen personnel administration of the contractors; (2) permit Federal employees transferring to Tribal employment under such contracts to retain various fringe benefits of Federal employment; and (3) exempt such transferring employees from the conflict-of-interest provisions of section 205 and 207 of title 18 U.S.C., which would be inappropriate to the circumstances of such contracts.
1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7783. Just as important, the 1974 House Committee indicated that it had deleted four parts of the Senate bill authorizing new programs, based on the DOI's advice, because the DOI believed that such programs would be duplicative of existing programs. See 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7783.
The Senate ISDA bill had made no explicit mention whether the HEW Secretary could reduce the amount of funding a Tribe or Tribal organization received if the Tribe or Tribal organization took control of administration of a program. The House Committee added subsection 106(h) that addressed this issue; it provided that
the amount of any funds provided to a contractor under a contract shall not be less than the amount the Secretary would have expended had the United States performed the service itself. It also provides that savings, if any, realized by the Tribal contractor would be available for additional services and benefits.
1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7779. This subsection that made it into the enacted ISDA retains the sense of the House Committee version but neither the House Committee version's sentence structure nor wording, reading as follows:
The amount of funds provided under the terms of contracts entered into pursuant to sections 102 nad [sic] 103 shall not be less than the appropriate Secretary would have otherwise provided for his direct operation of the programs or portions thereof for the period covered by *1250the contract: Provided, that any savings in operation under such contracts shall be utilized to provide additional services or benefits under the contract.
Pub. L. 638, 88 Stat 2204.
d. President Ford's Signing Statement.
Nixon resigned the presidency approximately four months before Congress passed the ISDA. See Richard Nixon, Letter to Henry Kissinger Resigning the Office of President of the United States (dated Aug. 9, 1974), reprinted in The American Presidency Project (John Woolley & Gerhard Peters eds.), https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/letter-resigning-the-office-president-the-united-states (last visited Nov. 21, 2016). Gerald Ford succeeded Nixon as President on August 9, 1974. See Gerald Ford, Remarks on Taking the Oath of Office (Aug. 9, 1974), reprinted in The American Presidency Project (John Woolley & Gerhard Peters eds.), https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/remarks-taking-the-oath-office (last visited Nov. 21, 2018). On January 4, 1975, Ford signed the ISDA. See Gerald R. Ford, Statement on Signing the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (Jan. 4, 1975), reprinted in The American Presidency Project (John Woolley & Gerhard Peters eds.), https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/signing-the-indian-self-determination-and-education-assistance-act (last visited Nov. 21, 2018)("1975 Signing Statement").
In his signing statement, Ford indicated that his Administration "is committed to furthering the self-determination of Indian communities without terminating the special relationships between the Federal government and the Indian people. The Congress is to be congratulated for its passage of the legislation. It will enhance our efforts to implement the policy of Indian self-determination." 1975 Signing Statement. Ford continued
Title I of this act gives the permanence and stature of law to the objective of my Administration of allowing -- indeed encouraging -- Indian Tribes to operate programs serving them under contract to the Federal Government. Furthermore, with the passage of this act Indian communities and their leaders now share with the Federal Government the responsibility for the full realization of this objective. It will be through the initiatives of Indian communities that the authorities provided in this act will be implemented. I urge these communities to make the fullest possible use of them and pledge the support of this Administration.
1975 Signing Statement. Ford concluded his discussion of American Indian self-determination on a practical note: "In addition to making this kind of contracting a right, the act does much to make it feasible and practical.... The granting authority in this act can also be used to strengthen Tribal governments and Tribally-funded programs." 1975 Signing Statement.
2. 1988 Amendments to the ISDA.
ISDA implementation did not go completely smoothly in the years after 1975. See S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 6-7 (1988). In the years after ISDA enactment, Tribes had encountered many problems in their contracts with the federal agencies. See, e.g., Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act, Public Law 93-638 : Hearing Before the Select Comm. on Indian Affairs, 101st Cong. at 156-58 (prepared statement on behalf of Standing Rock Sioux Tribes, North and South Dakota; Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes, Fort Peck Reservation, Montana; Seneca Nation, New York; Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corporation; Kodiak Area Native Association;
*1251Aleutian/Fribilof Islands Association; Bristol Bay Native Association; and the Association of Regional Health Directors, Alaska ("Standing Rock") )("1987 Senate Committee Hearing"). Tribes complained that federal contracting requirements and bureaucratic regulations were too rigid and too burdensome, preventing the Tribes from being able to implement their own priorities and agenda for Tribal self-determination. See, e.g., Second 1987 Senate Hearing at 24 (Suzan Shown Harjo, Executive Director, National Congress of American Indians). Moreover, many Tribes contended that they were paying a financial penalty for the right to contract for the administration of federal programs, as federal agencies did not cover many costs associated with the contract's performance, and these costs therefore came from the Tribes' coffers. See, e.g., 1987 Senate Committee Hearing at 93-97 (Edward Loke Fight).
Federal agencies such as IHS recognized that many of these "contract support costs" ("CSC") -- first defined in the 1988 amendments, and including costs associated with audits, insurance, legal fees, and accounting fees -- are ones that the agencies would not have incurred themselves had they still been administering the same programs. See S. Rep. No. 100-393, at 4 (1987). In an effort to cover such costs for the Tribes, the BIA started to use a special line item in its Congressional Budget Requests that called for such CSC. See S. Rep. No. 100-393, at 4. The House and Senate Appropriation Committees, however, requested the BIA to merge CSC with other program funds. See H.R. Rep. No. 99-761, at 4 (1986). Starting in 1985, the BIA decided to cover CSC in another way, grandfathering the costs on a one-time basis in one lump sum in existing contracts at one hundred percent of the level of need in the previous year. See H.R. Rep. No. 99-761, at 4-5. The BIA never requested, however, that the additional CSC funding from Congress and never received sufficient funds to fully cover CSC that Tribes were incurring. See S. Rep. No. 100-393, at 4. Because many Tribes lacked sufficient resources to continue operating programs without CSC, many threatened to invoke their right to retrocede contracts to federal agencies under the ISDA. See H.R. Rep. No. 99-761, at 5. Wishing to prevent a mass termination of Tribal contracts, the House of Representatives began to consider ISDA amendments in February 1987, that would (i) guarantee Tribes an adequate level of funding for CSC; and (ii) give Tribes a stronger voice in determining policies affecting the various federal programs for which they were contracting. See S. Rep. No. 100-393, at 4.
a. House Report No. 103-653.
On October 26, 1987, the House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs reported proposed ISDA amendments out to the floor. See H.R. Rep. No. 100-393 (1987). The House Committee found:
The Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act ... has furthered the development of local self-government and education opportunities for Indian Tribes, but its goal and progress have been impeded by lack of clarity and direction on the part of Federal agencies regarding their role in implementing the Federal policy of Indian self-determination.
H.R. Rep. No. 100-393, at 1. The House Committee further found that the "Federal responsibility for the welfare of Indian Tribes demands effective self-government by Indian Tribal communities," and that "additional legislation is necessary to assure that Indian Tribes have an effective voice in the planning and implementation of programs for the benefit of Indians." H.R. Rep. No. 100-393, at 1 (1987).
*1252The House Committee therefore proposed multiple ISDA amendments. See H.R. Rep. No. 100-393, at 2-3. It recommended amending ISDA § 4 to define "contract support costs" as the reasonable costs for activities which must be carried on by a Tribal organization as a contractor to ensure compliance with the terms of the contract and prudent management, but which --
(1) normally are not carried on by the respective Secretary in his direct operation of the program; or
(2) are provided by the Secretary in support of the contracted program from resources other than those under contract
H.R. Rep. No. 100-393, at 2 (1987). The House Committee then tackled the issue of CSC funding levels, proposing that the ISDA § 106(h) be amended to read as follows:
(1) The amount of funds provided under the terms of contracts entered into pursuant to this Act shall be no less than the appropriate Secretary would have otherwise provided for his operation of the programs or portion thereof for the period covered by the contract.
(2) To the amount available under subsection (h)(1) of this section shall be added the negotiated contract support costs.
....
(4) Costs incurred by the contracting agency in monitoring contracts shall not be subtracted from the amount of funds provided under subsection (h)(1).
(5) Contract support costs shall be awarded for all programs for which a Tribal organization has contracted pursuant to sections 102 and 103 of this Act.
(6) Except for general assistance grants, once contract and grant obligations are negotiated, the contract or grant amount may be decreased only with the consent of the contractor or grantee or to reflect a reduction in congressional appropriations from the previous fiscal year as reflected in the appropriation line item from which the contract or grant funds are derived.
(7) Any savings realized by the contractor or grantee in the operation or administration of such contract or grant shall be used to provide additional services or benefits under the contract or grant and shall be carried over to the succeeding fiscal years without any reduction in the funding to which the contractor or grantee is otherwise entitled.
(8) The appropriate Secretary shall provide supplemental reports to the Congress on or before March 15 of each year identifying any deficiency of funds needed to provide required contract support costs and indirect costs to all contractors for that fiscal year.
(9) The appropriate Secretary shall advise the Congress in annual budget requests of the amount of funds which should have been appropriated in the preceding fiscal year in order to have funded at the full amount the indirect costs and contract support costs negotiated by Tribal organizations pursuant to this Act. The appropriate Secretary shall also provide the Congress with an estimate of the indirect costs and contract support costs that will be needed for new contracts in the fiscal year covered by the budget request.
(10) At the request of any Indian Tribe, the appropriate Secretary shall disclose to such Tribe the current amount of funds allocated, obligated, and expended for any program, or portion thereof, administered for the benefit of such Tribe.
H.R. Rep. No. 100-393, at 2-3. The House Committee recommended more than just *1253amendments to existing ISDA sections; it also proposed that entirely new sections be added to the ISDA. See H.R. Rep. No. 100-393, at 3. A new ISDA § 112 would read as follows:
(a) Whenever an indirect cost rate is negotiated annually between a Tribe or Tribal organization and the cognizant federal agency, that rate shall be applicable to all contracts and grants made with such Tribe or Tribal organization pursuant to Sections 102, 103, and 104 of this Act.
(b) Where a contractor's allowable indirect cost recoveries are below the level of indirect costs that the contractor should have received for any given year pursuant to its approved indirect cost rate, and such shortfall is the result of lack of full indirect cost funding by any Federal, state, or other agency, such shortfall shall not form the basis for any theoretical under or over-recovery or other adverse adjustment to any future years' indirect cost rate or amount for such contractor, nor shall any agency seek to collect such short fall from the contractor.
(c) Indian Tribal governments shall not be held liable for amounts of indebtedness attributable to theoretical or actual under-recoveries or over-recoveries of indirect costs, as defined in Office of Management and Budget Circular A-87, incurred for fiscal years prior to fiscal year 1988.
H.R. Rep. No. 100-393, at 3.
b. Senate Report No. 100-274.
On April 22, 1987, in response to multiple complaints from American Indian Tribes about problems associated with ISDA implementation, the Senate Indian Affairs Committee conducted an oversight hearing. See First Session on Recommendations for Strengthening the Indian Self-Determination Act: Hearing Before the S. Comm. on Indian Affairs, 100th Cong. (1987)("1987 Senate Committee Hearing"). At that hearing, Tribal witnesses described the ISDA as a constructive public policy that had, among other things, resulted in American Indians using healthcare facilities more frequently. See, e.g., 1987 Senate Committee Hearing at 30 (Ron Allen, Chairman, Jamestown Klallam Tribe, Sequim, Washington). At the same time, Tribal witnesses told the Senate Committee that inappropriate application of labyrinthine federal procurement law and federal acquisition regulations to self-determination contracts had resulted in excessive paperwork and unduly burdensome reporting requirements. See 1987 Senate Committee Hearing at 156-58 (Standing Rock).
Perhaps the single most serious problem with ISDA implementation, however, according to the Tribal witnesses at the hearing, was BIA's and IHS' failure to provide full funding for the indirect costs associated with self-determination contracts.
It is very difficult not to believe that the BIA has been playing the budget cutting game largely at the expense of Tribes. For a number of years in its [budget] justification the Bureau under-estimated ... Tribal administrative needs ... and funded Tribes for only a percentage of the indirect costs that were due them.
1987 Senate Committee Hearing at 172 (United South & Eastern Tribes, Inc.). The Tribal witnesses said that the agencies' consistent failure to fully fund Tribal indirect costs had resulted in financial management problems for Tribes as they struggled to pay for federally mandated annual single-agency audits, liability insurance, financial management systems, personnel systems, property management and procurement systems, and other administrative *1254requirements. See, e.g., 1987 Senate Committee Hearing at 93-97 (Fight)(showing indirect CSC calculations and incomplete federal reimbursement for them). Tribal witnesses indicated that their Tribes had diverted trust resources needed for community and economic development to cover these CSC. See 1987 Senate Committee Hearing at 150 (Standing Rock).
The Senate Committee took note of these Tribal concerns and held another hearing featuring American Indian Tribal leaders on September 21, 1987 -- this one to discuss proposed ISDA amendments. See First Session on S. 1703 to Amend the Indian Self-Determination and Education Act: Hearing Before the S. Select Comm. on Indian Affairs, 100th Cong. (1987)("Second 1987 Senate Hearing").17 After eight months of working together with Tribal leaders, according to Committee Chairman Daniel K. Inouye, then-United States Senator from Hawaii, the Committee produced a draft bill meant to address many Tribal concerns, including
the need for the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Indian Health Service to fully fund Tribal indirect costs for self-determination contracts; the need for year-to-year stability of contract funding levels in order to improve planning and management of programs; clarifying that Federal acquisition regulations do not apply to self-determination contracts; ... reducing the paperwork and reporting requirements for mature contracts; alleviating problems associated with over-recovery and under-recovery of indirect costs from Federal agencies other than the BIA and IHS....
Second 1987 Hearing at 1-2 (Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, Chairman, S. Select Comm. on Indian Affairs). Then-United States Senator Daniel Evans from Washington, the Vice Chairman of the Senate Committee, further shared with witnesses:
It is certainly my hope -- and I know that of the chairman and the members of the committee -- to attempt to move strongly in this field during this congress to try to open up new opportunities to finally fulfill, as closely as we can, the real concepts of self-determination that have been the goal of so many years.
Second 1987 Hearing at 2 (Sen. Daniel Evans, Vice Chairman, S. Select Comm. on Indian Affairs). Tribal leaders, for the most part, praised the Senate Committee for the progress it had made to address these concerns over the previous few months, but still insisted there were structural problems with the ISDA's approach to CSC that needed to be remedied. See, e.g., Second 1987 Senate Hearing at 24 (Suzan Shown Harjo, Executive Director, National Congress of American Indians). Most particularly, the Tribal leaders indicated that they preferred the language of the House bill amending the ISDA as it related to CSC recovery:
The second recommended change to accomplish is full recovery of costs and funding allocations. The House bill language amending the P.L. 93-638 [the ISDA], defining contract support costs and requiring full allocation of contract support costs, provides a more complete description of what contract funding allocations should be based upon. We *1255would like to see that language given full consideration.... By including this proposed language, Tribes would receive a fair allocation of funds, irrespective of their indirect cost rates.
Second 1987 Senate Hearing at 78 (Joseph B. DeLaCruz, President, Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians). Unless Tribes could rely on such strong statutory protection for recovery of full CSC, Tribal leaders maintained that BIA and IHS would continue to fail to provide sufficient funds to cover CSC. See Second 1987 Senate Hearing at 83 (Clarence W. Skye, Director, United Sioux Tribes of South Dakota Development Cooperation).
Taking such critiques to heart, the Senate Committee went to work on the amendments and scheduled a Third Hearing on them for the following month. See First Session on S. 1703 to Amend the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act: Hearing Before the S. Select Comm. on Indian Affairs, 100th Cong. (1987)("Third 1987 Senate Hearing"). The Third Hearing, unlike the first two, provided the BIA and IHS witnesses with significant time to present their view of the amendments. See Third 1987 Senate Hearing at 25-52. The Vice Chairman of the Senate Committee grilled then-United States Senator John McCain from Arizona, the Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs, with the latter noting that the agency had veered very far from Nixon's clear intent in Nixon's Special Message to Congress, and had gotten "bound up in conflicting and probably unnecessary regulations." Third 1987 Senate Hearing at 34 (Evans). Responding to a question about CSC from McCain from Arizona indicated that Tribes which found themselves short of CSC to cover overhead could simply dip into their program costs to pay for it. See Third 1987 Senate Hearing at 37 (Ross Swimmer, Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs, United States Department of the Interior). Responding to a question from then-Senator Daniel Evans, the IHS Director indicated that inadequate appropriations for CSC at the overall agency level meant that there was a chronic CSC shortfall spread around at the Tribal contractor level as well, but that there was no better solution, because funding excess CSC for one Tribe from a finite pot of money meant that IHS would need to shortchange other Tribes by the equivalent amount. See Third 1987 Senate Hearing at 47-48 (Everett Rhoades, Director, Indian Health Services).
Tribal leaders at the hearing took issue with the Assistant Secretary's and the IHS Director's statements about CSC. See Third 1978 Senate Hearing at 53-61 (William Ron Allen, Chairman, Jamestown Klallam Tribe, Sequim, Washington). They rejected the suggestion that excess CSC should be funded out of the Secretarial amount. See, e.g., Third 1978 Senate Hearing at 53-54 (William Ron Allen, Chairman, Jamestown Klallam Tribe, Sequim, Washington). Tribes also rejected any proposal that CSC should be funded using a flat fee or some other simplified approach, arguing that "any kind of approach of a flat rate is just not workable within the system of addressing the true costs of the recovery of those costs by the Tribes administering BIA/IHS contracts and grants." Third 1978 Senate Hearing at 54 (Allen).
A little more than two months following the Third 1978 Senate Hearing, the Senate Committee had considered and marked up CSC amendments, reporting them to the full Senate on December 22, 1987. See S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 1 (1987). The Senate Committee called for a "comprehensive reexamination" of the ISDA "to increase Tribal participation in the management of Federal Indian programs," and to "remove many of the administrative and practical *1256barriers that seem to persist" under the ISDA. S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 2.
The Senate Committee also commended ISDA's enactment twelve years earlier as the "the major reason for assumption by Indian Tribes of responsibility for Federal Indian programs." S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 2-3. The transfer of responsibility had been a boon to American Indians, the Senate Committee said:
In addition to operating health services, human services, and basic governmental services such as law enforcement, water systems and community fire protection, Tribes have developed the expertise to manage natural resources and to engage in sophisticated economic and community development. All of these achievements have taken place during a time when Tribes have also developed sophisticated systems to manage and account for financial, personnel and physical resources.... Compared to state, county and municipal governments of similar demographic and geographic characteristics, the level of development attained by Tribal governments over the past twelve years is remarkable.
S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 4. The Senate Committee further found:
Improvements in Tribal financial, personnel, property, and procurement systems have enabled Tribes to manage increasingly complex matters. In response to both federal and Tribal demands for accountability, most Indian Tribes that operate programs now have annual single-agency audits of Tribal finances. The Department of Interior Office of Inspector General has reported an increase in Tribal assumption of responsibility for Tribal financial management.
S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 4. The Senate Committee noted many more of the improvements that the ISDA had induced in American Indian communities, including custodial care placements for children, outreach to isolated American Indian families through community health workers, increased health facility use, and the construction of safe water and sanitation systems. See S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 5. The common thread among all these successes, according to the Senate Committee, is that the ISDA has given Tribal communities an opportunity to "plan and deliver services appropriate to their diverse demographic, geographic, economic, and institutional needs. S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 5.
The Senate Committee also found that IHS' actions attempting to implement the ISDA largely had been praiseworthy. See S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 6. As of 1987, the Senate Committee said, IHS directly operated forty-five hospitals, seventy-one health centers, and several hundred smaller health stations and satellite clinics. See S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 6 (citing Indian Health Service, Fiscal Year 1988 Budget Request). Nevertheless, the Senate Committee noted with concern that many Tribes had reported that the IHS had refused to negotiate for the transfer of central office funds and had exhibited an overall resistance to Tribal efforts to redesign programs, and to reallocate resources and personnel in support of Tribal self-determination. See S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 6. The Senate Committee therefore provides:
[T]he [HHS] Secretary shall negotiate annual funding agreements with each Indian Tribe. These agreements authorize the Tribe to plan, conduct, consolidate, and administer programs, services, functions, and activities to Indian Tribes or Indians. Pursuant to the terms of the agreement and at the request of the Tribe, the Secretary shall provide funds to carry out the agreement in a [sic] amount equal to the amount that the *1257Indian Tribe would have been eligible for under Self-Determination Act contracts and grants. The bill also provides that the Secretary shall interpret each Federal low [sic] in a manner that will facilitate inclusion of programs or activities under the agreement.
S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 8. The Senate Committee then adopted an amendment in the nature of a substitute that made several modifications to language in H.R 3508 as introduced. See S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 8-13. The Senate Committee stated that it was concerned that "if an Indian Tribe is participating as part of a consortium that Tribe should not be able to contract for any of the programs or activities which are already part of the consortium's self-governance agreement." S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 8. The Senate Committee also adopted language which instructed the HHS Secretary to "interpret each Federal law and regulation in a manner that will facilitate the inclusion of programs and services and the implementation of agreements." S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 15.
A more noticeable change to the ISDA that the Senate Committee proposed, however, was to add a sixth title to the statute focused squarely on Tribal self-governance. See S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 14, 17-21. Section 403(g)(3) within that proposed sixth title stated that, subject to exclusions for community colleges, public primary and secondary schools, the Flathead Agency Irrigation Division, and the Flathead Agency Power Division,
the HHS Secretary shall provide funds to the Tribe for one or more programs, services, functions, or activities in an amount equal to the amount that the Tribe would have been eligible to receive under contracts and grants under this Act, including amounts for direct programs and contract support costs and amounts for those activities that are specifically or functionally related, but not part of the service delivery program, without regard to the organizational level within the Department where such functions are carried out.
S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 20. Furthermore, the Senate Committee clarified in a proposed Section 406(a): "Nothing in this title shall be construed to limit or reduce in any way the services, contracts, or funds that any other Indian Tribe or Tribal organization is eligible to receive under section 102 or any other applicable Federal law." S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 21.
The Senate Committee proposed to add section 106 to clarify provisions for funding self-determination contracts, including direct costs. See S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 30. The Senate Committee walked slowly through each subsection to explain its import. See S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 30-34. Starting off with its proposed subsection 106(a), the Senate Committee said:
It is apparent from the wording of the new section 106(a) that the Committee is strongly committed to the principle of assisting Tribes to succeed in their efforts to plan, manage and operate programs and services under self-determination contracts.... The intent of these amendments is to protect and stabilize Tribal programs from inappropriate administrative reduction by Federal agencies.
S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 30. The Senate Committee alleged that the BIA had made many such reductions over the years in direct contravention of Tribal funding priorities, see S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 30-31, and threw up subsection 106(a)(5) as a barricade to prevent any such chicanery in the future:
Section 106(a)(5) would prevent the [HHS] Secretary from reducing funds for a self-determination contract, except in response to a reduction in appropriations *1258enacted by the Congress. Such a reduction should be a proportional, across-the-board reduction.... These amendments are intended to prevent Federal agencies from passing on the entire amount, or a disproportionate amount, of a reduction in Congressional appropriations, to Tribal contracts in order to protect the base for Federally-operated functions.
S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 31. The Senate Committee accused the BIA of cutting Tribal self-determination budgets to free up money for pay increases for BIA personnel, of financial mismanagement, and of over-aggressively reducing Tribal programmatic budgets under the guise of congressional-imposed sequestrations, see S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 31-32, adding with comparative sangfroid that "the intent of these amendments is to prevent such administrative reductions of Tribal contract funds," S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 31.
The Senate Committee briefly discussed its proposed subsections 106(b)-(f), before turning to its proposed subsection 106(g). See S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 33. That subsection, according to the Senate Committee, would "require the [HHS] Secretary to add indirect costs to the amount of funds provided for direct program costs associated with self-determination contracts for the initial year of Tribal program operation, upon the request of the Tribal contractor." S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 33. The intent behind this provision, according to the Senate Committee, is
to require the [HHS] Secretary to provide indirect costs for each contract year in addition to the program funding which would have been available to the Secretary to operate a contracted program and to prohibit the practice which requires Tribal contractors to absorb all or part of such indirect costs within the program level of funding, thus reducing the amount available to provide services to Indians as a direct consequence of contracting.
S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 33. The Senate Committee then added:
The combined amount of direct and indirect costs shall then be available for each subsequent year that the program remains continuously under contract. While the Committee has concerns about the changes to the methods of budgeting for and allocating indirect costs funds, whether those methods be the so-called "grandfather" approach,18 the single line-item indirect cost fund, or some other method, the Committee does not believe that it should determine the method of distribution. The "grandfather" approach and the "single fund" approach both have advantages and disadvantages from the perspective of Federal agency budgets and from the perspective of individual Tribal contracts. It is the Committee's hope that the Department of the Interior Office of Inspector *1259General, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and the Indian Health Service will coordinate their efforts with the Tribes to develop the most effective method of distributing indirect cost funds. The Committee amendment will insure that, whatever method is used, the Tribal contractor will realize the full amount of direct program costs and indirect costs to which the contractor is entitled.
S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 33-34. The Senate Committee then turned to its proposed subsection 106(h). See S. Rep. No. 100-274, at 34.
c. President Reagan's Signing Statement.
In his first Statement on Indian Policy, issued January 24, 1983, Reagan extended his general philosophical preference for programmatic decentralization to American Indian Tribes. See Ronald Reagan, Statement on Indian Policy (Jan. 24, 1983), reprinted in The American Presidency Project (John Woolley & Gerhard Peters eds.), https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/statement-indian-policy (last visited Nov. 21, 2018)("Reagan Statement on Indian Policy").19 Reagan praised Nixon's policy of Tribal self-determination from Nixon's Special Message to Congress and noted how the 1975 ISDA had captured Nixon's vision. See Reagan Statement on Indian Policy at 1. Reagan believed, however, that the ISDA had not gone far enough, having been "more rhetoric than action." Reagan Statement on Indian Policy at 796. Instead of fostering and encouraging Tribal self-government, Reagan said, "Federal policies have by and large inhibited the political and economic development of the Tribes. Excessive regulation and self-perpetuating bureaucracy have stifled local decision-making, thwarted Indian control of Indian resources, and promoted dependency rather than self-sufficiency." Reagan Statement on Indian Policy at 796. Reagan established that his Administration intended to
reverse this trend by removing the obstacles to self-government and by creating a more favorable environment for the development of healthy reservation economies. Tribal governments, the Federal Government, and the private sector will all have a role. This administration will take a flexible approach which recognizes the diversity among Tribes and the right of each Tribe to set its own priorities and goals.
Reagan Statement on Indian Policy at 796-97. Reagan acknowledged that "[c]hange will not happen overnight," but he was determined to "honor the commitment this nation made in 1970 and 1975 to strengthen Tribal governments and lessen Federal control over Tribal governmental affairs." Reagan Statement on Indian Policy at 797. Delving into specifics, Reagan noted:
Tribal governments, like State and local governments, are more aware of the needs and desires of their citizens than is the Federal Government and should, therefore, have the primary responsibility for meeting those needs. The only effective way for Indian reservations to develop is through Tribal governments *1260which are responsive and accountable to their members.
Reagan Statement on Indian Policy at 797. For generations, according to Reagan, federal employees had performed functions on American Indians' behalf. See Reagan Statement on Indian Policy at 797-98. Despite ISDA passage, Reagan continued, "major Tribal government functions -- enforcing Tribal laws, developing and managing Tribal resources, providing health and social services, educating children -- are frequently still carried on by Federal employees." Reagan Statement on Indian Policy at 797.
Reagan asked Tribes to reduce their dependence on Federal funds by contributing to a larger percentage of the cost for their self-government and pledged to "assist Tribes in strengthening their governments by removing the Federal impediments to Tribal self-government and Tribal resource development." Reagan Statement on Indian Policy at 797. At the same time, Reagan would not simply make Tribes fly before they were fully fledged, ensuring that "[n]ecessary Federal funds" would remain available for all Tribes, and developing a Small Tribes Initiative to provide financial support smaller Tribes need to develop basic Tribal administrative and management capabilities. Reagan Statement on Indian Policy at 797.
Reagan's interest in American Indian issues seemed to wane during his second term, being expressed only in a trio of ceremonial proclamations in the three years leading up to the ISDA amendment of 1988.20 In Reagan's 1986, and 1988, proclamations marking National American Indian Heritage Week, however, Reagan revisited his theme of increased Tribal self-sufficiency. See Ronald Reagan, Proclamation 5868 -- National American Indian Heritage Week, 1988,
Indians make contributions in every area of endeavor and American life, and our literature and all our arts draw upon Indian themes and wisdom.... We look to the future with the expectation of even stronger Tribal governments and lessened Federal control over Tribal government affairs. We look to a future of development of economic independence and self-sufficiency, and an enhanced government-to-government relationship that will allow greater Indian control of Indian resources.
Despite past periods of conflict and changes in Indian affairs policies, the government-to-government relationship between the United States and Indian Tribes has endured. The Constitution, treaties, laws, and court decisions have consistently recognized a unique political relationship between Tribal elected governments and the United States. We look to a future of increasing economic independence and self-sufficiency on Indian reservations, and we support efforts to foster greater Indian control of Indian resources.
Reagan started the signing statement on a general note: "This Act will assist in furthering Administration efforts to transfer the development and operation of programs from the Federal Government to Indian Tribes. Tribal self-governance allows Tribes more freedom to design programs to serve the specific needs of their members." Reagan Signing Statement at 1284. He immediately thereafter turned, however, to a rejection of one of the provisions in the bill added to the proposed new ISDA. See Reagan Signing Statement at 1284. Reagan writes: "A provision in ... the Act stated that the Secretaries of the Interior and Health and Human Services shall reduce funding to Indian Tribes if so directed by a statement from a Member of Congress that accompanies a conference report." Reagan Signing Statement at 1284.21 Reagan asserted that the provision purported to authorize a process altering Executive branch officials' legal duties without both congressional houses and the President's participation, thus violating the requirements for presentment and bicameralism that the Supreme Court five years earlier had enunciated in Immigration and Naturalization Service v. Chadha,
3. 1994 Amendments.
Under the 1988 ISDA amendments' terms, the DOI and the HHS were supposed to work with Tribes to reach agreement on draft regulations to cover self-determination contracts within ten months of bill enactment. See Indian Self-Determination Amendments of 1987, Pub. L. 100-472 § 207(b)(3) -(4),
Oftentimes such payments never materialized, at least not in full. See United States General Accounting Office, GAO/RCED 99-150, Indian Self Determination Act: Shortfalls in Indian Contract Support Costs Need to be Addressed at 6 (June 1999), http://www.gao.gov/assets/230/227485.pdf (last visited Nov. 21, 2018)("GAO Report"). Although CSC funding had been incommensurate with Tribal needs since the ISDA's enactment in 1975, the shortfalls started to become acute at the end of the 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s, because of Congress' failure to anticipate the increased Tribal demand for self-determination contracts that arose after the 1988 ISDA amendments. See GAO Report at 25-28. From 1989 to 1994, these CSC shortfalls ranged from seventy million dollars to over one hundred million dollars per year. See GAO Report at 32 fig.2.5.
Nearly five years after the statutory deadline and still without having meaningfully consulted with Tribes, the DOI and the HHS published eighty pages of proposed regulations conforming to the 1988 ISDA amendments in the Federal Register.23 See Indian Self-Determination and Education Act Amendments; Proposed Rule,
*1263a. House Report 103-653.
On August 3, 1994, the House Committee on Natural Resources reported to the full House on another set of ISDA amendments. See H.R. Rep. No. 103-653 (1994). In its report's preamble, the House Committee indicated that the bill's purpose was "to amend the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance [A]ct to permanently establish Tribal Self-Governance in the Department of the Interior." H.R. Rep. No. 103-653, at 5. The House Committee commended the IHS for having entered into self-determination contracts with fourteen American Indian Tribes during the previous two-and-a-half years, see H.R. Rep. No. 103-653, at 6, but it also revealed that it was
very concerned about reports from many of the Self-Governance Tribes that officials of the Indian Health Service have refused to negotiate for the transfer of central office funds and have exhibited an overall resistance to Tribal efforts to redesign programs and reallocate resources and personnel under the authority of Tribal Self-Governance.
H.R. Rep. No. 103-653, at 6. The House Committee diagnosed the cause of such resistance within the IHS to be "a misapprehension that Tribal Self-Governance is a temporary project." H.R. Rep. No. 103-653, at 6. To the contrary, the House Committee said, Tribal self-determination is to be a permanent policy, and IHS must take steps to "begin to plan for and implement changes that will result in reductions in the Federal bureaucracy which correspond to the transfer of program funds, resources, and responsibilities to Self-Governance Tribes." H.R. Rep. No. 103-653, at 6.
The House Committee proposed adding an entire ISDA section dedicated exclusively to AFAs; in one subsection, it packed a punch far above its weight, instructing the HHS to interpret not just the ISDA, but rather "each Federal law and regulation," except where otherwise provided by law, in a manner that would facilitate "the inclusion of programs, service, functions, and activities in the agreements entered into under" Tribal self-determination contracts. H.R. Rep. No. 103-653, at 20.
b. Senate Committee Report.
On April 20, 1994, McCain and Inouye introduced a Senate version of the 1994 ISDA amendments, and the bill was referred to the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs. See S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 4 (1994). On August 10, 1994, the Senate Committee reported the bill to the full Senate. See S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 1. According to the Senate Committee, the major impetus for the bill was the HHS and the DOI's incorrigibility; Congress mandated in 1988 to quickly promulgate simple regulations to govern Tribal self-determination contracts, but the agencies had done the opposite for six years.25 See S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 14. The Senate Committee keelhauled the agencies:
This action is a direct result of the failure of the Secretaries to respond promptly and appropriately to the comprehensive *1264amendments developed by this Committee six years ago. The recently promulgated proposed regulations severely undercut Congress' intent in the original Act and those [1988] amendments to liberalize the contracting process and to put these programs firmly in the hands of the Tribes. The proposed regulations erect a myriad of new barriers and restrictions upon contractors rather than simplifying the contracting process and freeing Tribes from the yoke of excessive federal oversight and control.
S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 14. The Senate Committee explained that, because of the agencies' recalcitrance, its proposed 1994 ISDA amendments would cabin their rulemaking authority even more than the original ISDA and the 1988 ISDA amendments had. See S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 14 :
Section 5(1) delegates to the Secretary the authority only to promulgate implementing regulations in certain limited subject matter areas.... A second key limitation on the delegation of rulemaking authority is provided in the twelve month limitation on the Secretaries' authority to promulgate the regulations. This limit is necessary to prevent another regulation drafting process that goes on for years without satisfactory or final resolution.
S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 14. Because of the agencies' obduracy in refusing to follow congressional instructions to consult Tribes before proposing regulations,26 the Senate Committee explained, its proposed 1994 ISDA amendments also would require the DOI and the HHS to employ the negotiated rulemaking process, publishing a proposed rule within six months of the amendments' enactment. See S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 14.
Having ground its ax, the Senate Committee also delved deeply into amendments that it proposed for ISDA § 106, which Congress had added to the ISDA in 1988. See S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 8-14. The Senate Committee proposed to amend §§ 106(a)(2) and (3) to more fully define the meaning of the term "contract support costs," to "include both funds required for administrative and other overhead expenses and 'direct' type expenses of program operation." S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 8-9. The Senate Committee said that, in the event that the secretarial amount for a particular function proves to be insufficient in light of a contractor's needs for prudent management, "contract support costs are to be available to supplement such sums." S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 9. The Senate Committee proposed retaining the ISDA's process for negotiations between the agencies and Tribes for indirect cost agreements, see S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 9, but still smarting from the agencies' impenitent disregard for its earlier instructions, the Senate Committee drew a line in the sand even on these negotiations:
*1265Throughout this section the Committee's objective has been to assure that there is no diminution in program resources when programs, services, functions or activities are transferred to Tribal operation.... [If] a Tribe would be compelled to divert program funds to prudently manage the contract, [it is] a result Congress has consistently sought to avoid.
S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 9. The Senate Committee micromanaged even further, sidestepping the DOI and the HHS and directing the Office of Management and Budget ("OMB") to develop new cost principles unique to Tribal organizations for the DOI and the HHS to apply to self-determination contracts. See S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 10.
The Senate Committee also proposed new ISDA subsections that would codify existing practice and policy, and two new subsections that would reverse existing practice. See S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 10-12. The first new subsection would codify "the current policy and practice regarding program income earned by a Tribal organization during the course of administering a contract (such as third party income paid by insurance companies insuring persons served by a Tribal organization's health program)." S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 10. The second new subsection would
Incorporate ... the longstanding canon of statutory interpretation that laws enacted for the benefit of Indians are to be liberally construed in their favor, and further to clarify that all functions, services, activities or programs or portions thereof, as well as all administrative functions, are contractible, as clearly provided in the Act.
S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 11. The third new subsection would make it clear that Tribal contractors operating under self-determination contracts are "not subject to [the HHS or the DOI] manuals, guidelines, regulations or unpublished requirements unless expressly authorized under the [ISDA] or agreed to by the Contractor." S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 12. The fourth new subsection would permit "a unilateral modification of [a self-determination] contract when that modification only adds supplemental funding for programs or other functions that are already included in the annual funding agreement." S. Rep. No. 103-374, at 13.
c. President Clinton's American Indian Policy.
President William J. Clinton issued more than fifty percent more signing statements than any other President in history. See Congressional Research Service, Presidential Signing Statements: Constitutional and Institutional Implications 5-7 (Jan. 4, 2012), http://fas.org/sgp/crs/natsec/RL33667.pdf (last visited Nov. 20, 2018). His choice not to issue one on the ISDA amendments is therefore as notable as a dog that does not bark,27 especially given that he wrote four other signing statements on other bills the same day that he signed the ISDA amendments of 1994. See Presidential Signing Statements -- 1994, The American Presidency Project, https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/presidential-documents-archive-guidebook/presidential-signing-statements-hoover-1929-obama *1266(last visited Nov. 20, 2018)(providing a chronological listing of every presidential signing statement from 1994).
Clinton had not been silent about American Indian self-determination, however, during the months when the 1994 ISDA amendments were coursing through Congress; six months before the ISDA amendments reached his desk, Clinton had summoned the leaders of all 547 federally recognized Tribes to the meeting on the White House lawn. See Douglas Jehl, Clinton Meets Indians, Citing a New Respect, N.Y. Times, April 30, 1994. In his welcoming remarks to the Tribal leaders, Clinton said:
All governments must work better. We must simply be more responsive to the people we serve and to each other. It's the only way we'll be able to do good things with the resources we have. I know that you agree with that. More and more of you are moving to assume fuller control of your governments. Many are moving to take responsibility for operating your own programs. Each year the Bureau of Indian Affairs is providing more technical services and fewer direct services.
One avenue for greater Tribal control is through self-governance contracts. There are about 30 self-compacting Tribes today. We're working with Congress to raise that number by 20 Tribes every year. We'd like self-governance to become a permanent program. But we must ensure services will still be provided to the smaller Tribes that do not choose to participate
William J. Clinton, Remarks to Native American and Native Alaskan Tribal Leaders, (April 29, 1994), reprinted in The American Presidency Project (John Woolley & Gerhard Peters eds.), https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/remarks-native-american-and-native-alaskan-tribal-leaders (last visited Nov. 21, 2018). In the memorandum that Clinton ceremoniously signed immediately after his welcoming remarks, Clinton went further: "Each executive department and agency shall take appropriate steps to remove any procedural impediments to working directly and effectively with Tribal governments on activities that affect the trust property and/or governmental rights of the Tribes." William J. Clinton, Memorandum on Government-to-Government Relations with Native American Tribal Governments (April 29, 1994), reprinted in The American Presidency Project (John Woolley & Gerhard Peters eds.), https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/memorandum-government-government-relations-with-native-american-tribal-governments (last visited Nov. 21, 2018).
At Clinton's instruction, the Departments of Justice, Interior, and Housing and Urban Development followed up on the White House meeting with a joint "National American Indian Listening Conference" in Albuquerque. Louis Sahagun, Tribal Leaders Meet, Voice Sovereignty Concerns, L.A. Times, May 6, 1994, at 12 ("Tribal Leaders Meet"). At that meeting, ninety federal officials, including Attorney General Janet Reno, and DOI Secretary Bruce Babbitt and United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Henry Cisneros, fielded questions from more than 200 Tribal leaders to discuss how Tribes could develop their economies and social services free of the interference of federal agencies. Tribal Leaders Meet at 12. Reno indicated that the goal of the conference was to make a first "step toward doing away with the old, closed way of doing business." See Tribal Leaders Meet at 12.
*1267LAW REGARDING THE ILERA
Congress enacted the ILERA in 1990 "to clarify and strengthen the authority for certain Department of the Interior law enforcement services, activities, and officers in Indian country." Indian Law Enforcement Reform Act, Pub. L. No. 101-379
*1268
Section 2804 of the ILERA provides for the DOI Secretary to enter agreements, similar to 638 contracts, with Tribal authorities allowing the United States to use Tribal personnel for law enforcement functions. See
Employees of Tribal law enforcement programs are deemed federal employees only for the FTCA's purposes, and for the federal prohibition on killing federal employees and officers:
While acting under authority granted by the Secretary under subsection (a), a person who is not otherwise a Federal employee shall be considered to be --
(1) an employee of the Department of the Interior only for purposes of --
(A) the provisions of law described in section 3374(c)(2) of Title 5, and
(B) sections 111 and 1114 of Title 18, and
(2) an eligible officer under subchapter III of chapter 81 of Title 5.
The ILERA does not change preexisting jurisdictional and law enforcement divisions between governmental entities; the statute clarifies:
The authority provided by this chapter is in addition to, and not in derogation of, any authority that existed before August 18, 1990. The provisions of this chapter alter neither the civil or criminal jurisdiction of the United States, Indian Tribes, States, or other political subdivisions or agencies, nor the law enforcement, investigative, or judicial authority of any Indian Tribe, State, or political subdivision or agency thereof, or of any department, agency, court, or official of the United States other than the Secretary.
Subsequent ILERA sections allow the DOI Secretary to enact regulations relating to enforcing criminal laws and entering self-determination contracts, see
Regulations promulgated pursuant to the ILERA establish rules for the BIA, and for "Tribal law enforcement program[s] receiving Federal funding or operating under a BIA law enforcement commission."
The BIA can commission Tribal law enforcement officers to assist with enforcing federal criminal laws, but the BIA clarifies that not all Tribal law enforcement "officers operating under a BIA contract or compact are ... automatically commissioned as Federal officers."
Additionally, in operating law enforcement programs, "Tribal [law enforcement programs] are encouraged to develop" employment standards similar to those enforced by the BIA.
LAW REGARDING TRIBAL POLICE OFFICERS AND
The ILERA's section 2804(f) makes officers employed by Tribal law enforcement programs with authority from the DOI Secretary federal employees for purposes of
Whoever kills or attempts to kill any officer or employee of the United States or of any agency in any branch of the United States Government (including any member of the uniformed services) while such officer or employee is engaged in or on account of the performance of official duties, or any person assisting such an officer or employee in the performance of such duties or on account of that assistance, shall be punished --
(1) in the case of murder, as provided under section 1111 ;29
*1271(2) in the case of manslaughter, as provided under section 1112;30 or
(3) in the case of attempted murder or manslaughter, as provided in section 1113.31
(a) In general. -- Whoever --
(1) forcibly assaults, resists, opposes, impedes, intimidates, or interferes with any person designated in section 1114 of this title while engaged in or on account of the performance of official duties; or
(2) forcibly assaults or intimidates any person who formerly served as a person designated in section 1114 on account of the performance of official duties during such person's term of service,
The Tenth Circuit has seldom considered the legal inquiry that is a court's responsibility -- whether the class of individuals are federal employees -- in the context of Tribal police officers. The Tenth Circuit has addressed whether Tribal police officers are federal employees under
*1273The Tenth Circuit first concludes that the officers were acting under the Choctaw Nation's inherent criminal jurisdiction. See
In United States v. Smith, the Tenth Circuit concluded that a Tribal officer assaulted while arresting an individual for "disorderly conduct" was a federal officer for
In United States v. Schrader, the Eighth Circuit concluded that, where Tribal police officers "encountered defendants because they were engaged in law enforcement activities and were acting pursuant to a 638 contract," the officers were federal officers.
*1274
When a 638 contract meets the definition of a § 2804(a) agreement, and when Tribal police officers designated under that contract enforce laws that BIA officers would otherwise enforce, § 2804(f) expressly provides that those Tribal police officers are afforded the same protection under18 U.S.C. § 111 that Congress has afforded BIA employees. This is so regardless of whether the officer is enforcing a Tribal, state, or federal law, so long as he is engaged in the performance of his official duties rather than "a personal frolic of his own."
United States v. Schrader,
More recently, in United States v. Janis, the Eighth Circuit rejected an argument that, because the Oglala Sioux Tribe retained inherent authority over Tribal law, it did not receive a delegation of law enforcement authority over such laws from the BIA, and a Tribal officer assaulted when he responded to individuals "consuming alcohol" in violation of Tribal law was not a federal officer for
[T]he Department of Public Safety "agree[d] to provide for the protection of lives and property for persons visiting or residing within the ... Pine Ridge Indian Reservation." The contract required the department to "assist the [BIA], and other federal, Tribal and state law enforcement officials in the investigation of Tribal, state or federal offenses."
In United States v. Roy, the Eighth Circuit clarified when a 638 contract grants authority to Tribal law enforcement programs sufficient to bring Tribal police officers under § 2804(f). The Eighth Circuit explains:
[T]o constitute a proper delegation, the contract need only be "an agreement for the use ... of the personnel or facilities of a Federal, Tribal, State, or other government agency" to aid in law enforcement in Indian Country and authorize that agency to perform some law enforcement activity that the Secretary could authorize the Bureau to perform under section 2803.
In United States v. Tauz Abner Henderson, Judge Humetewa reached a conclusion different from the Eighth Circuit's and declined to find jurisdiction over a Tribal law enforcement officer without a SLEC under
THE ILERA'S LEGISLATIVE HISTORY
As mentioned in the ISDA's Legislative History Section, if possible, the Court interprets statutes according to the statutory text's plain meaning and structure. While the Court would, if writing on a clean slate, stop there, see Navajo Health Found.-Sage Mem'l Hosp., Inc. v. Burwell,
Before the ILERA's passage, no statute explicitly granted the BIA authority to engage in law enforcement activities on Tribal property. See, e.g., S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 5 (1989). The BIA based its authority on implicit authorizations contained, frequently, in appropriation statutes with language such as "[f]or maintaining law and order on Indian reservations." H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 5 (1989). The BIA also relied on the Snyder Act,
The BIA was commissioning Tribal police officers and contracting with Tribal law enforcement programs before Congress enacted the ILERA. See, e.g., S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 5. At the Law Enforcement Reform Act: Hearing Before the Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs, 101st Cong. (1989)("Senate ILERA Hearing"), the Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs determined that, at the time -- 1989, the BIA employed around 503 officers, for 163 Tribal areas, in twenty-three states. See S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 5 ; Senate ILERA Hearing at 23 (Walter R. Mills, Acting Deputy to the Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs, United States Department of the Interior). American Indian Tribes employed around 900 officers, around 700 of whom the BIA had specially commissioned. See S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 5 ; Senate ILERA Hearing at 23 (Walter R. Mills, Acting Deputy to the Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs, United States Department of the Interior). The ISDA provided grounds for Tribal authorities to contract with the BIA for law enforcement authority. H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 11; Senate ILERA Hearing at 20 (Philip N. Hogen, United States Attorney, District of South Dakota, Sioux Falls, South Dakota)(explaining that the BIA contracted for Tribal law enforcement after ISDA's passage); Senate ILERA Hearing at 35 (Ed Reina, Jr., Chief, Law Enforcement Program, Salt River Indian Community, Phoenix, Arizona)(describing over twenty years of 638 contracts for law enforcement authority). At the Senate ILERA Hearing, for instance, testifiers assumed the 638 contract's authorizations for the Tribal law enforcement agencies; people debated the relationships between Tribal and federal law enforcement agencies, rather than the Tribal law enforcement agencies' authority. See Senate ILERA Hearing at 21, 24 (Stephen M. McNamee, United States Attorney, District of Arizona, Phoenix, Arizona)(stating that, after the ISDA's passage, Arizona encouraged 638 contracts for law enforcement and describing 638 contracts as a means to extend Tribal sovereignty); Senate ILERA Hearing at 13 (Hogen)(describing that his office prosecutes crimes brought to it by BIA officers and Tribal officers); Senate ILERA Hearing at 23 (Mills)(stating that Tribal law enforcement agencies with 638 contracts have "done an excellent job").
Legislators stressed that the ILERA would clarify the BIA's law enforcement authority, not that it would grant such authority. See, e.g., H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 5; S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 6. The House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs wrote: "The bill, which was submitted by executive communication to the Congress during the 100th Congress, addresses the authority question by authorizing the Secretary to charge an officer or employee of the Department of the Interior with law enforcement responsibilities and by delineating specific authorities of such personnel." H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 5. The Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs copied the language. See S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 6. Likewise, in the House Floor Debates, Representative George Miller of California argued: "The bill is needed because the existing law enforcement authorities under which the Bureau of Indian *1278Affairs operates are not sufficiently clear, explicit, or comprehensive." 135 Cong. Rec. 10,031 (1989)(Miller). See 135 Cong. Rec. 10,031 (Rhodes)("H.R. 498 would clarify and strengthen the Interior/Bureau of Indian Affairs to engage in law enforcement activities in Indian country."); Senate ILERA Hearing at 1 (Sen. Daniel Inouye, Chairman, S. Select Committee on Indian Affairs)("The intent of this bill is to provide greater clarity with respect to the authority of BIA police officers, or programs operated by the Tribes under contracts with the Bureau; better protection and benefits to those serving as Indian police officers; and enhancement of training programs for the Indian Police Service.").
Legislators worried that, without explicit authority to undertake law enforcement activities, individuals acting under the BIA's purported authority would face jurisdictional problems and individual liability for their actions. See S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 5. According to the Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs, "many of the problems of law enforcement programs in Indian country resulted from the lack of clear statutory authority for the law enforcement functions of the Bureau of Indian Affairs on Indian reservations and in Indian country." S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 5. The House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs stated: "Without explicit statutory authority for the BIA to carry out these law enforcement functions, a court could decide that BIA officers lack the authority to carry firearms and make arrests. Thus, these officers could be exposed to lawsuits alleging they are personally liable for unauthorized law enforcement actions." H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 5. See S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 5 ("Without express statutory authority to carry out these functions, BIA law enforcement authority could be challenged in the courts and BIA officers could be subject to suit and held personally liable for their actions."); 135 Cong. Rec. 10,031 (1989)(Rhodes)("[B]ecause these laws do not provide clearly stated and comprehensive statutory authorities, the BIA law enforcement officers run the risk of having their authority successfully challenged in court and of being found liable for unauthorized law enforcement actions."). The BIA's implicit authority contrasted with similar law enforcement agencies' explicit authorizations, and the difference highlighted the potential for liability. See S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 5 ("In comparison, other federal agencies charged with performing law enforcement functions have explicit statutory authority which delineates their powers and duties. For example, title 8 of the United States Code provides explicit authority for Federal Bureau of Investigation officers to carry firearms and to make arrests...."); H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 5 ("A successful challenge of such authority might be possible because the statutes codified in title 8 of the United States Code that delineate the powers of other Federal law enforcement officers ... all provide explicit authority for those officers to carry arms and to make arrests.").
The ILERA purportedly did not change the BIA's or Tribal law enforcements agencies' authority for law enforcement; rather than change existing BIA and Tribal roles, the ILERA clarified the authority that legislators understood the BIA to possess. See, e.g., H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 6. The House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs clarified that the ILERA did not change existing jurisdictional lines: the ILERA "also contains a section clarifying that the bill does not alter the civil or criminal jurisdiction of an Indian Tribe, State or political subdivision or agency." H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 6. Similarly, the Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs Report acknowledged Tribal criminal jurisdiction.
*1279See S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 6 ("Intrinsic to the sovereignty of Indian Tribes is the power of a Tribe to create and administer a criminal justice system. Indian Tribal police forces have long been an integral part of such systems."). The bill's title, "Clarifying and Strengthening the Authority for Certain Departments of Inferior Law Enforcement Services, Activities, and Officers in Indian Country ...," reflects the goal to specify, rather than to alter, the BIA's authority. Indian Law Enforcement Reform Act, H.R. 498, 101st Cong. (1st Sess., 1989). The Congressional Budget Office emphasized the status quo's maintenance when it wrote: "H.R. 498 would provide a statutory foundation for the ongoing law enforcement activities of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) on Indian reservations and in Indian country. The functions authorized in the bill are already undertaken by the BIA under various less comprehensive authorities." H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 10.
The legislative history contains little language directly addressing § 2804(f). The House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs and Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs Reports paraphrase the section using the same language:
Subsection (f) provides that non-Federal personnel under any agreement under this section shall be considered an employee of the Department of Interior only for purposes of section 3374(c)(2) of title 15, U.S.C., relating to assignments of employees from State, Tribal, or local governments; sections 111 and 1114 of title 18, U.S.C., relating to assaulting or killing Federal officials or employees, and subchapter III of chapter 81 to title 5, U.S.C., relating to work injury compensation for law enforcement officers not employed by the United States.
H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 8; S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 11. The legislative history is similarly quiet about authorizing the Secretary to enter agreements for law enforcement authority with Tribes, likely because the legislators understood such contracts to already exist. The Committee Reports summarized the subsection briefly:
Subsection (a) authorizes the Secretary to enter into agreements for the use of personnel or facilities of a Federal, Tribal, state or other governmental agency to aid in the enforcement of Federal criminal law, and Tribal law where the Tribe has consented, within Indian country. The Secretary may authorize such personnel to perform those functions set out in section 4.
H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 8; S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 10. The House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs paraphrased the section in similar terms early in its report:
The bill also authorizes the Secretary to enter into agreements for the use of the personnel and facilities of a Federal, Tribal, State or other government agency to assist in the enforcement of Federal laws or Tribal laws, if requested by the Tribe, in Indian country. Under these agreements, law enforcement officers of such agencies could be authorized to take any action otherwise authorized for BIA law enforcement officers. Agreements would have to meet guidelines established by the Secretary and the Attorney General.
H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 5. Rationalizing criminal investigation work's exemption from 638 contracting, the House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs suggested that those working under 638 contracts were not federal employees when it commented on the relationship between 638 contracts and federal official status, worrying that contract criminal investigators would lose that status: "Investigative *1280personnel operating under Tribal supervision under a '638 contract' might well lose their status as Federal Law enforcement officials...." H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 6.
In the House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs and Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs reports, professionalizing the BIA and Tribal law enforcement agencies receives more attention than how the BIA granted authority to Tribal law enforcement agencies, or such authority's relationship to the FTCA, worker's compensation, or
Section 3(e)(1) directs the Secretary to establish appropriate standards of education, experience, training and other relevant qualifications for law enforcement personnel of the Division of Law Enforcement Services who are charged with law enforcement responsibilities pursuant to Section 4. The Committee is concerned that the standards established by the Secretary should be comparable to the standards of other Federal law enforcement officers, and believes that the training and educational standards of the United States Marshals Office would provide an appropriate guide to establishment of standards for BIA law enforcement officers.
S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 7-8.
The Investigation and Prosecution of Federal Crimes on Indian Reservations Hearing before the House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, 101st Congress (1989)("House ILERA Hearing"), similarly focused on personnel, professionalism, budgetary concerns, and practical relationships between various agencies. See, e.g., House ILERA Hearing at 124 (William Rhodes, Lieutenant Governor, Gila River Indian Community Council)(discussing training and budgetary concerns); House ILERA Hearing at 126 (Carlton Giff, Tribal Councilman, Sixth District of Gila River Indian Community)(describing problems with the Federal Bureau of Investigation ("FBI") declining to investigate major crimes on Tribal lands); House ILERA Hearing at 153 (Jerry W. Doyle, Jr., Supervisory Special Agent and Program Coordinator for Crimes on Indian Reservations)(expressing reservations about the quality of Tribal law enforcement agencies' investigation work); House ILERA Hearing at 163 (Daniel J. Eddy, Jr., Chairman, Colorado River Tribal Council William Rhodes, Lieutenant Governor, Gila River Indian Community Council)(identifying problems with funding and communication for investigations); House ILERA Hearing at 173 (Gilbert Jones, Tribal Council Member and Executive Director of the Tribal Housing Authority, Fort Mcdowell Reservation of the Mahave-Apache Community)(identifying lack of FBI and BIA personnel as a problem facing Tribes); House ILERA Hearing at 180 (Buck Kitcheyan, Chairman, San Carlos Tribal Council)(complaining about inadequate law enforcement resources). Ivan Sidney, the Chairman for the Hopi Tribal Council, spoke to concerns about the statutory authority *1281for BIA law enforcement before the ILERA's passage and the desire for Tribal authority over law enforcement matters. House ILERA Hearing 82 (Sidney). See House ILERA Hearing at 94 (Wilbur Kellogg, Jr. Chief of Police, Navajo Nation)(emphasizing similarly the need to contract for criminal investigations for Tribal sovereignty). McNamee described that his office changed guidelines for investigations "due in large measure to the Navajo Tribal Police Department taking over the law enforcement responsibilities from the B.I.A." House ILERA Hearing at 14 (McNamee). Edward Reina, the Chief of Police for the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community, speaking on the Intertribal Council of Arizona's behalf, discussed the need for knowledgeable individuals in law enforcement positions. See House ILERA Hearing at 11 (Reina). For Senate ILERA Hearing discussions about professionalism, see Senate ILERA Hearing at 18-19 (Hogen)(describing decentralized law enforcement authority under the BIA); Senate ILERA Hearing at 21 (McNamee)(requesting increased standards for law enforcement under 638 contracts); Senate ILERA at Hearing 27 (Hogen)(encouraging law enforcement line authority, with authority centered in Washington, D.C., because the BIA should be "a professional law enforcement organization").
Concerns about the ILERA and changes to the ILERA after referral to the Senate centered around whether Congress would except criminal investigative functions from those activities contractible under the ISDA and whether the ILERA infringed on Tribes' inherent, sovereign criminal jurisdiction. See, e.g., S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 6. Several Tribes expressed opposition to exempting criminal investigation from 638 contracting, and federal officers offered mixed experiences with working with Tribal criminal investigators. See, e.g., Senate ILERA Hearing at 13 (Sen. John McCain, Member, S. Select Comm. on Indian Affairs)(explaining that several Tribes expressed concerns about exempting criminal investigations from 638 contracts); Senate ILERA Hearing at 32 (Hon. Manuel, Chief Judge, Tohono O'Odham Judiciary, Sells, Arizona)(objecting to eliminating criminal investigation contracting); Senate ILERA Hearing at 35 (Herb Yazzi, Attorney General, Navajo Nation Department of Justice, Window Rock, Arizona)(same); Senate ILERA Hearing at 42 (Major George John, Acting Chief of Police, Navajo Nation, Window Rock, Arizona)(same); Senate ILERA Hearing at 23 (Walter R. Mills, Acting Deputy to the Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs, Department of the Interior)(admitting no problem with contracting with Tribal law enforcement agencies for criminal investigation if the investigation work is of sufficient quality); Senate ILERA Hearing at 20 (Hogen)(describing problems with criminal investigations undertaken under 638 contracts); Senate ILERA Hearing 35 (Reina)(same); Senate ILERA Hearing at 43-44 (Don Bleakney, Administrator, Law and Justice Committee, Colville Confederated Tribes)(same). At the Senate ILERA Hearing, several people testified that they did not understand the proposed ILERA to undermine Tribal sovereignty. See, e.g., Senate ILERA Hearing at 42 (John)(opining that the ILERA would not reduce the Navajo Nation's law enforcement authority); Senate ILERA Hearing at 45 (Gene Joseph, Chairman, Colville Legislative Comm., Colville Environmental Quality Commission, Colville Confederated Tribes, Nespelem, Washington)(describing the BIA as an adjunct to Tribal law enforcement). Multiple Tribes opposed, however, centralizing authority over the BIA and contracting Tribal law enforcement agencies in Washington, D.C. and enabling the *1282BIA to contract with authorities' other than the Tribes for law enforcement activities on Tribal lands. See, e.g., Senate ILERA Hearing at 35 (Yazzi)(opining that establishing a line of authority to Washington, D.C. would be ineffective); Senate ILERA Hearing at 46 (Alvino Lucero, President, Isleta Pueblos Tribal Council, Isleta Pueblos, New Mexico)(objecting to centering authority in Washington, D.C. and allowing the BIA to contract with third parties for law enforcement on Tribal lands); Senate ILERA Hearing at 46 (R. Bruce Haley, United States Deputy Special Officer, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Bellingham, Washington)(same). The Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs responded to these concerns by removing the sections of the House bill exempting criminal investigations from 638 contracts, eliminating the language establishing line authority, and disallowing the BIA from contracting with law enforcement agencies other than the Tribe's on Tribal lands without Tribal permission. See S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 6.
LAW REGARDING TRIBAL LAW ENEFORCEMENT JURISDICTION
[P]owers of self-government" means and includes all governmental powers possessed by an Indian tribe, executive, legislative, and judicial, and all offices, bodies, and tribunals by and through which they are executed, including courts of Indian offenses; and means the inherent power of Indian tribes, hereby recognized and affirmed, to exercise criminal jurisdiction over all Indians.
ANALYSIS
Based upon the record presented to the Court, the Court concludes that, under the Self-Determination Contract, a Tribal officer without an SLEC does not have authority from the Secretary to enforce federal laws, and so is not a federal employee for § 2804(f)'s purposes. As § 2804(f) allows § 1114 -- which criminalizes killing federal officers -- to apply, if a Tribal officer without a SLEC is not a federal employee for § 2804(f), the Court must dismiss Counts 1 and 5 against Cleveland. The Court does not, however, have sufficient information to determine definitively whether the Navajo Nation allowed the BIA to enforce Tribal law, which would enable the Secretary to authorize both federal and Navajo Nation law enforcement activity, and bring Tribal officers enforcing Tribal law under § 2804(f) and, consequently, criminalize killing such Tribal officers under § 1114. Accordingly, *1283the Court will allow the parties to submit additional information on this topic. If, as is most likely the case, the Navajo Nation did not authorize the BIA to undertake Tribal law enforcement activities, a Tribal officer without an SLEC, like Largo, is not a federal employee for § 2804(f)'s purposes, and through § 2804(f), for § 1114's purposes, and the Court will dismiss Counts 1 and 5.
Contrary to the parties' suggestions, see Motion at 3; Response at 8-9, the Court need not and should not decide whether Largo was engaged in federal, official duties. Whether Largo was engaged in federal, official duties for § 1114's purposes is a question of fact for the jury. See United States v. Martin,
As an initial matter, the question turns on how the Secretary grants authority under § 2804(a). As Judge Humetewa notes, § 2804(a)(2) provides: "the Secretary may authorize a law enforcement officer of such an agency to perform any activity the Secretary may authorize under section 2803...."
The Court treats the Tenth Circuit's unpublished decision in United States v. Smith as highly persuasive in determining the Court should begin its inquiry. In United States v. Smith, the Tenth Circuit suggested that "the authority granted in
As the Court follows the Tenth Circuit's opinion in United States v. Smith, the Court declines to read the statute as establishing SLECs as the means by which the Secretary authorizes Tribal officers, as Judge Humetewa did.37 See United States *1284v. Tauz Abner Henderson Order at 10. Further, the Court disagrees with Judge Humetewa's interpretation. Judge Humetewa relies on § 2804(a)(3), which follows § 2804(a)(2)'s authorization to the Secretary, to conclude that "the authority granted by the Secretary under subsection (a) is tied to the establishment of special law enforcement commissions, as well as the special law enforcement commission agreements referred to in § 2804(a)(3)(b)." United States v. Tauz Abner Henderson Order at 4. Nothing in § 2804(a)(3) indicates that the Secretary transfers authority through SLECs. Rather, § 2803(a)(3)'s title, "Program Enhancements," reflects that the provisions are addenda to the Secretary's authorization to enter agreements and confer authority rather than the recipe for conveying such authority.
Legislative history and analogous ISDA provisions support the Court's conclusion. See, e.g., H. Rep. No. 101-60, at 8; S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 11. The language summarizing § 2804(f) in the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs and House Committee on Internal and Insular Affairs Reports supports this conclusion. See H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 8; S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 11. The language references "non-Federal personnel under any agreement under this section." H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 8; S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 11. "[A]ny agreement" denotes agreements between the United States and other governmental entities -- state, local, and Tribal -- because § 2804's crux is the BIA's ability to enter aid agreements with other law enforcement agencies. H.R. Rep. No. 101-60, at 8; S. Rep. No. 101-167, at 11. Further, that Congress -- in 1990 and 1991 -- extended FTCA coverage to all activities undertaken *1285according to 638 contracts, indicates a Congressional tendency toward providing federal coverage for activities that Tribes undertake in lieu of the federal government. Pub. L. 101-512,
That the Court begins its inquiry about the authority granted Tribal officers with the Self-Determination Contract, however, does not mean that all employees under the NDPS, which operates under the Self-Determination Contract, are federal employees for § 2804(f)'s purposes. See United States v. Young,
More importantly, while United States v. Smith does not directly address what authority the Secretary can grant Tribes -- the Tenth Circuit in United States v. Smith specifies that the officer in the case "was enforcing federal law on tribal lands" and does not address whether the officer was, in fact, enforcing a federal statutes or whether the Secretary could authorize Tribes to enforce Tribal law -- in Dry v. United States, decided one year after United States v. Smith, the Tenth Circuit recognized that, when a Tribal law enforcement officer acts under a tribe's inherent criminal jurisdiction, the officer is not considered a federal employee under § 2804(f). See
A tribal officer is only considered to be a federal employee for FTCA purposes "[w]hile acting under authority granted by the Secretary [of the Interior]" (see25 U.S.C. § 2804 (f) ) and a tribal officer is not acting in such capacity when he is enforcing tribal (not federal) law and is doing so without having received a SLEC from the BIA.
Boney v. Valline,
Looking to the relevant contracts between the BIA and the Navajo Nation, the Court notes that the agreements contemplate authority to enforce both United States and Tribal laws. See Self-Determination Contract ¶ A(2), at 1; Annual Funding Agreement ¶ A(1), at 1; Statement of Work ¶ 101(B), at 1. The Self-Determination Contract, the Navajo Nation's 638 contract, transfers "law enforcement-patrol services" from the BIA to the Navajo Nation. Self-Determination Contract ¶ A(2), at 1. The Self-Determination Contract also incorporates the annual funding agreement, see Self-Determination Contract ¶ B(4), at 2, which defines the scope of the Navajo Nation's law enforcement-patrol services according to the Statement of Work, see Annual Funding Agreement ¶ A(1), at 1. The Statement of Work describes a variety of work within the Navajo Nation's Scope of Work, including "enforcing applicable Navajo Nation and federal laws and ordinances." Statement of Work ¶ 101(B), at 1.
As neither party has submitted evidence demonstrating whether the Navajo Nation waived its inherent criminal jurisdiction -- through treaty or statute -- or whether the Navajo Nation authorized the BIA to enforce its laws, the Court lacks sufficient evidence to definitively determine whether the Navajo Nation has retained its inherent criminal jurisdiction, and thus whether the Secretary could authorize a Tribal Law Enforcement Officer to enforce Tribal law. Neither the United States nor Cleveland suggest that the Secretary authorizes the Navajo Nation to enforce Tribal law; rather, both assume that only by connecting a Tribal officer's actions to enforcing federal law, does § 2804(f)'s hook apply. See Motion *1287at 2-6; Response at 7-8. The Court suspects, however, that neither party contemplated the question; the Court, therefore, will allow the parties, if they desire, to submit additional information on the question.39
If the Navajo Nation does not retain inherent criminal jurisdiction or authorized the BIA to enforce Tribal law, the 638 contract authorizes all law enforcement activities in the Navajo Nation, and Tribal officers without SLECs are persons authorized by the Secretary for the § 2804(f)'s purposes. If, as is more likely the case, the Navajo Nation retains inherent authority to enforce Tribal law, the Court must determine whether a NDPS officer acting without an SLEC has authority from the Secretary to enforce federal law. The Statement of Work provides that the BIA may, according to the Deputation Agreement, commission NDPS officers as "Federal Law Officer[s]." Statement of Work ¶ 104, at 6. Aside from the general statement defining the scope of work for which the NDPS contracts, see Statement of Work ¶ 1, at 1, the Statement of Work does not otherwise specify who has authority to enforce federal laws. According to BIA regulations, however, that: "BIA may issue law enforcement commissions to other Federal, State, local and tribal full-time certified law enforcement officers to obtain active assistance in enforcing applicable Federal criminal statutes, including Federal hunting and fishing regulations, in Indian country."
Navajo Nation Division of Public Safety law enforcement officers carrying SLECs issued by the BIA pursuant to this Agreement are given the power to enforce:
All Federal laws applicable within Indian country, and specifically the Navajo Nation's Indian country, including the General Crimes Act,18 U.S.C. § 1152 , and the Major Crimes Act,18 U.S.C. § 1153 , consistent with the authority conveyed pursuant to Federal law through the issuance of commissions or other delegations of authority.
Deputation Agreement ¶ 3(A), at 4 (bold in original).40 Because
IT IS ORDERED that: (i) the parties shall submit evidence, if any, within fourteen calendar days of the date of this Memorandum Opinion and Order, regarding the status of the Navajo Nation's Tribal law enforcement authority; and (ii) if there is no more evidence, based upon the record before the Court, the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss Counts 1 and 5 of the Indictment, filed September 24, 2018 (Doc. 72), is granted.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
356 F. Supp. 3d 1215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-cleveland-nmd-2018.