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Dept. of Interior issues finding in favor of Shinnecock Nation right to Westwoods land
- 2025/01/03
- 再生時間: 5 分
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The U.S. Department of the Interior has issued a long-awaited finding that the 79 acres of land in Hampton Bays owned by the Shinnecock Tribe…known as Westwoods…should be considered “aboriginal territory” that the Shinnecock Nation has occupied “since time immemorial” — phrasing with specific importance to the ability of the tribe to develop the property free from local government oversight. Michael Wright reports on 27east.com that the letter issued yesterday by Bryan Newland, the assistant secretary of the Department of the Interior for Indian affairs, comes in the wake of the lawsuit filed late last month by Southampton Town challenging the Shinnecock’s right to develop the property based on claims that the Westwoods land was not legally sovereign territory. The foundation of the town’s claims are 17th century documents that seem to indicate Native American leaders — one of them not even Shinnecock — had sold or traded away the lands surrounding and including Westwoods to European settlers. Shinnecock Nation leaders have, for decades, dismissed that premise as either an ill-informed or duplicitous misreading of the deeds themselves and legal standards they would have to be held to to be valid. In his January 2 letter, Newland says that he instructed the Bureau of Indian Affairs on December 23 to record the Westwoods property in the BIA’s Trust Asset and Accounting Management System as a parcel of “restricted fee” land. Newland said that the federal assessment came after three years of research into the legal history of the Westwoods land and dealings with the Shinnecock people dating back to the late 1600s. “The Department examined the land title status of the Westwoods parcel and determined…that Westwoods is within the purview of the Non-Intercourse Act and is therefore restricted against alienation absent consent of the United States,” the letter says, referring to the federal statutes that first created “Indian reservations” for displaced Native Americans and prohibited any indigenous nation’s lands to be taken, traded or purchased without consent of the U.S. Congress.
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