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Supreme Court Upholds Native American Adoption Law

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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The Supreme Court on Thursday upheld a 1978 law aimed at keeping Native American adoptees with their tribes and traditions, handing a victory to tribes that had argued that a blow to the law would upend the basic principles that have allowed them to govern themselves.
Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote the majority opinion. She was joined by six other justices. Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr., dissented.
Justice Barrett acknowledged the myriad thorny subjects raised in the challenge to the law, which pitted a white foster couple from Texas against five tribes and the Interior Department as they battled over the adoption of a Native American child.
“The issues are complicated,” she wrote. “But the bottom line is that we reject all of petitioners’ challenges to the statute, some on the merits and others for lack of standing.”
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Under federal law, preference is given to Native families, a policy that the couple said violated equal protection principles and discriminated against Native children and non-Native families who wanted to adopt them because it hinges on placement based on race.
The tribes have said that they are political entities, not racial groups, and that doing away with that distinction, which underpins tribal rights, could imperil nearly every aspect of Indian law and policy, including measures that govern access to land, water and gambling.

The 1978 legislation, the Indian Child Welfare Act, was meant to address the legacy of abuses of Native American children, hundreds of thousands of whom had been separated from their tribes to be raised by families with no connection to their culture.
Typically, when it comes to a child’s welfare, a judge is charged with determining the best interest of the child. Under the act, however, Native American children are subject to different rules, in part to safeguard their tribal ties.
The law lays out priorities for adoption before a child can be placed with a non-Native family. Children should first be in the care of a member of their extended family. If that is not possible, then priority would move to a member of their tribe; failing that, children should go to “other Indian families.”








An evangelical couple from Texas, Jennifer and Chad Brackeen, along with other families, challenged the law after they took in a boy known in court records as A.L.M. The boy was less than a year old in 2016, when he entered the foster care system in the state. The boy, born to a Navajo mother and a Cherokee father, joined the couple after Navajo tribal placements fell through and eventually, both tribes agreed to let the couple adopt the child.

Their faith, the Brackeens have said, along with their comfortable living circumstances, called them to become foster parents.
In 2018, Judge Reed O’Connor of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas struck down the law as unconstitutional.
That same year, A.L.M.’s mother gave birth to another child, a girl. She, too, entered foster care. The Brackeens filed for custody, hoping she could join her brother. The Navajo sought to have the child placed with her great-aunt, who lives on a reservation.
A state judge determined that the Brackeens would share custody with the great-aunt, with the girl spending time with her extended family each summer on the reservation.
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Both the tribe and the couple appealed the decision as A.L.M.’s case wound its way through the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.
The court largely upheld the law, prompting both sides to seek Supreme Court review.
The Supreme Court has heard other challenges to the Indian Child Welfare Act, most recently in 2013, but the court’s composition has shifted considerably since then.
Other states, including Ohio and Oklahoma, have backed the Brackeens, arguing that the law intrudes on states’ ability to handle child welfare cases. The Goldwater Institute, a conservative policy center in Arizona, claimed the legislation interferes with the duty of states to protect abused and neglected children by improperly forcing state agencies to carry out a federal program.
Medical groups, including the American Academy of Pediatrics, have weighed in to support the legislation, arguing that it is an important tool to help redress “the intergenerational pain of lost connections and the trauma of historical loss.”
In wide-ranging arguments in November, the justices focused on whether Congress had the power to enact the legislation in the first place and whether it violated equal protection principles.
 
Tribes go 1 for 2 on the day, winning in the ICWA case, but losing in the bankruptcy/tribal immunity case.

Always fun to read Gorsuch's opinions on Indian law matters. I'm thinking he must have done his mission trip to the Flathead or Pine Ridge reservation when he was at Prep.
 
Tribes go 1 for 2 on the day, winning in the ICWA case, but losing in the bankruptcy/tribal immunity case.

Always fun to read Gorsuch's opinions on Indian law matters. I'm thinking he must have done his mission trip to the Flathead or Pine Ridge reservation when he was at Prep.
It's nice that all but the two most conservative justices found for the tribes!
 
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Tribes go 1 for 2 on the day, winning in the ICWA case, but losing in the bankruptcy/tribal immunity case.

Always fun to read Gorsuch's opinions on Indian law matters. I'm thinking he must have done his mission trip to the Flathead or Pine Ridge reservation when he was at Prep.
He’s a Westerner who may have grown up around and is thus more familiar with indigenous peoples.
I hope it works out well for the children in question. Both tribes are known for strong family and cultural traditions.
 
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He’s a Westerner who may have grown up around and is thus more familiar with indigenous peoples.
I hope it works out well for the children in question. Both tribes are known for strong family and cultural traditions.
Maybe? He was born in Denver, but the rest of his life mirrors the bulk of the members of the SCOTUS. Elite schools, the same law firms, the same DoJ assignments in DC, a trip to a federal circuit for a few years. He left Denver in the late 80s.
 
Maybe? He was born in Denver, but the rest of his life mirrors the bulk of the members of the SCOTUS. Elite schools, the same law firms, the same DoJ assignments in DC, a trip to a federal circuit for a few years. He left Denver in the late 80s.
Yeah Georgetown prep ain’t exactly a western mentality
 
Yeah Georgetown prep ain’t exactly a western mentality
Hey, there's hope for him, but Columbia was pretty popular with IC Libs. I know a few City High grads that went there. Harvard Law. Oxford... None of the Supremes are much like the rest of us. And, once they become entrenched in the DC life it gets worse.
Oh, I get it, the law supposedly is the law, but I don't think all of the Supremes get that their rulings have actual impacts.
 
I'm really happy about the Supreme Court's decision to uphold the 1978 law protecting Native American adoptees' connection to their tribes and traditions. It’s crucial for preserving their heritage and sovereignty. Justice Barrett’s opinion was thoughtful, acknowledging the complex issues but ultimately supporting the law. This ruling is a significant victory for Native American tribes.
 
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