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Alabama people

The Alabama or Alibamu (Alabama: Albaamaha) are a Southeastern culture people of Native Americans, originally from Alabama. They were members of the Muscogee Creek Confederacy, a loose trade and military organization of autonomous towns; their home lands were on the upper Alabama River.

Alabama
Alabama-Coushatta Reservation, Texas
Total population
1,517
Regions with significant populations
 United States (Oklahoma)
380 enrolled members, Alabama-Quassarte Tribal Town[1]
 United States (Texas)1,137 enrolled members, Alabama-Coushatta Tribe of Texas[2]
Languages
Originally Alabama; however, most now only speak English
Religion
Protestantism, traditional beliefs
Related ethnic groups
Coushatta, Hitchiti, Chickasaw, Choctaw, other Muscogee Creek people

The Alabama and closely allied Coushatta people migrated from Alabama and Mississippi to the area of Texas in the late 18th century and early 19th century, under pressure from European-American settlers to the east. They essentially merged and shared reservation land. Although the tribe was terminated in the 1950s, it achieved federal recognition in 1987 as the Alabama-Coushatta Tribe of Texas. Its 1,137 members[2] have about 4,500 acres (18 km2) of reservation.

The Alabama-Quassarte Tribal Town is a federally recognized tribe, headquartered in Wetumka, Oklahoma.[3]

Language edit

The Alabama language is part of the Muskogean language family. Alabama is closely related to Koasati and distantly to Hitchiti, Chickasaw and Choctaw. Also known as Alibamu, an estimated 100 speakers, primarily from Texas, still speak the language.[4]

History edit

 
A boy from the Alabama-Coushatta reservation planting Christmas trees.

The Alabama first encountered Europeans when Hernando de Soto arrived in 1540 and visited numerous places during his expedition. In the 18th century, the French arrived on the Gulf Coast and built a fort at what became Mobile, Alabama.

The Alibamu and Koasati tribes were part of the Creek Confederacy. They had less contact with British colonists from the Thirteen Colonies than other Creek tribes did. They were the first to migrate away when British colonists began to settle in the region by the middle of the 18th century, after the land was ceded by the French following Britain's victory in the Seven Years' War (known in the colonies as the French and Indian War). Under pressure as well by Native American enemies, the Alabama and Coushatta tribes wanted to avoid the powerful Choctaw in present-day Mississippi. They moved into territories of future states, first into Louisiana and then into Texas.

Alabama and Coushatta towns were divided into "red" and "white" towns. The "white" towns were responsible for keeping the peace and for providing refuge, while the "red" towns were responsible for conducting military campaigns. Though they had "red" and "white" towns, the Alabama-Coushattas thought of themselves as peace-loving people.[5]

In 1795, the Coushatta arrived in the Big Thicket area of East Texas. In 1805, nearly 1,000 Alabama came to Tyler County's Peach Tree Village in East Texas. The two tribes developed a strong friendship as they roamed and hunted their new land together. In the early 19th century, the Texas Congress granted each tribe two strips of land along the Trinity River. Their land was soon taken over by European-American settlers, leaving them homeless. Sam Houston, the governor of Texas, recommended that the state purchase 1,280 acres (5.2 km2) for the Alabamas; although money was appropriated to buy 640 acres (2.6 km2) for the Coushattas, the land was never bought. Either through marriage or special permission, many Coushatta went to live on the land given to the Alabama. Other Coushatta had stayed in an area in southern Louisiana near the Red River. Many of their descendants are enrolled members of the federally recognized Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana.

By 1820, there were three main Alabama towns and three large Coushatta towns in east Texas, in the region known as the Big Thicket. In 1854, the Alabama were given 1,280 acres (5 km2) in Polk County. The following year, 640 acres (2.6 km2), also in Polk County, were given to the Coushattas. The Coushatta claim was disputed by white settlers in 1859. When the Coushatta lost the land claim, the Alabama invited them to live on their land claim.

The federal government approved a large grant in 1928 to purchase additional land near the reservation; it was granted to the "Alabama and Coushatta tribes". Since that time, the reservation has officially been known as "Alabama-Coushatta".

Origin myths focus on the interconnectedness of the tribes. One myth states that the two tribes sprouted from either side of a cypress tree. Another legend was recorded in 1857 from Se-ko-pe-chi, one of the oldest Creeks in Indian Territory. He said that the tribes "sprang out of the ground between the Cohawba and Alabama Rivers." The symbol of the Alabama-Coushatta tribe comes from pre-contact Mississippian culture: two intertwined woodpeckers, now symbolic of the connection between the two tribes.

Cultural practices edit

Ethnobotany edit

The obtusifolium subspecies of the plant Pseudognaphalium obtusifolium is used in a compound decoction for nervousness and sleepiness,[6] and in a decoction as a face wash for nerves and insomnia.[7]

Contemporary tribes edit

Texas edit

The Alabama who relocated to Texas supported Texas independence. In gratitude, Governor Sam Houston recommended that Texas purchase land for the tribe when their existing land was overtaken by settlers.

The two tribes share many cultural characteristics. In a hearing before the Indian Claims Commission in 1974, Dr. Daniel Jacobson suggested that the Alabama and Coushatta tribes were culturally related because of intermarriage. The Handbook of Texas reports that the languages come from the same stock, even though there could be some word variance.

They merged with the Coushatta to become the present-day Alabama-Coushatta Tribe of Texas. Although long under state trusteeship because the state controlled public lands, the tribe achieved Federal recognition in 1987 by an act of Congress, rather than by administrative process of the Department of Interior. The law that restored the tribe's federal relationship prohibited such gaming as was then prohibited under state laws.

The current tribal lands are in eastern Polk County, Texas. The Alabama-Coushatta Indian Reservation, Texas' oldest reservation, located at 30°42′50″N 94°40′26″W / 30.714°N 94.674°W / 30.714; -94.674, has 18.484 km2 (7.137 sq mi) of land. The land purchased by the state and assigned to the Alabama in 1854 was expanded by another purchase, under a federal grant in 1928. The 2000 census reported a resident population of 480 persons within the reservation. As of 2010, there are some 1000 members of the Alabama-Coushatta tribe.[8]

Oklahoma edit

In Okmulgee County, Oklahoma, the Alabama-Quassarte Tribal Town was established and federally recognized in 1936. The descendants of the Alabama who live there are also affiliated with the federally recognized Muscogee Creek Nation.

Tribal economy and gaming edit

In the tribe's earlier years in Texas, gathering, hunting, agriculture, fishing, and trading were its main economic pursuits. In more recent years, the Alabama-Coushatta Tribe has relied on the service and entertainment industry to generate revenue and jobs on the reservation. In 2002, the Tribe opened a convenience store, gas station and tobacco store on U.S. Highway 190, which can sell products tax free because of the tribe's sovereign status. This business complex is slowly becoming profitable. The station generates a small profit margin and a limited number of jobs.[9]

The Tribe opened an entertainment center for tourists. The center offered casino gambling. The tribe believed it satisfied requirements of the 1992 Texas Lottery Law that permitted the state lottery, horse racing, and dog racing.[9] The Alabama-Coushatta, a Christian community, allows no alcohol in the casino.

The Tribe was successful in generating revenue and jobs. The center offered jobs to 87 Tribal members, greatly reducing unemployment from 46 percent to 14 percent.[9] Revenues from the entertainment center provided the Tribe with funding for health services, the elderly, educational opportunities for youth, social services, and housing. Such jobs had a multiplier effect within the regional economy, with businesses' reporting an increase in sales and tax revenues. The entertainment center benefited not only the Tribe, but also the surrounding regions by creating more than 495 jobs and paying US$4.3 million in wages and nearly US$400,000 in federal taxes.[10]

After the center had operated for nine months, the state brought suit against it in 1999. A Federal court ruled that the Alabama-Coushatta had to close their entertainment center. The federal courts made this determination based on the conditions of federal recognition in 1987, which banned tribes from gaming prohibited under state laws.

In July 2006 the Alabama-Coushatta sued lobbyist Jack Abramoff and his associates for attempts to defraud the tribe in seeking to defeat state legislation in 2001 that would have given them authority to run the casino. The tribe claimed the lobbyists had hidden their motives in representing the competing Coushatta of Louisiana, which ran their own casino, and mobilized Christian groups in an underhanded way. A Senate investigation in 2006 revealed that several tribes were defrauded of tens of millions of dollars by Abramoff and associates on issues associated with Indian gaming.

The four tribes that Abramoff persuaded to hire him were all newly wealthy Indian gaming tribes. They included: Michigan's Saginaw Chippewa, California's Agua Caliente, the Mississippi Choctaw, and the Louisiana Coushatta. The Abramoff scandal received widespread public attention and he was prosecuted.

On March 29, 2008, Jack Abramoff was sentenced to five years and ten months in prison for pleading guilty to fraud, tax evasion, and conspiracy to bribe public officials. Abramoff made a deal to cooperate with investigators to provide information about his relationships with several members of Congress. Federal sentencing guidelines indicated a minimum sentence of 108 months in prison. Because of Abramoff's cooperation with the government, his sentence was greatly reduced. He was released from prison on June 8, 2010 and completed the remaining six months of his sentence in a halfway house in Baltimore.[11]

Without the casino, the tribe has no funding for economic programs. More than 300 jobs have been lost in Polk County.[12][13] The Alabama-Coushatta tribe has been trying to gain state and Federal support to re-open the entertainment center, for the economy of both the Tribe and the surrounding regions. Over the years, the Tribe has struggled to rebuild its economy in a depressed Polk County.

We should be candid about the interests surrounding Indian gaming. The issue has never really been one of crime control, morality, or economic fairness...At issue is economics...Ironically, the strongest opponents of tribal authority over gaming on Indian lands are from States whose liberal gaming policies would allow them to compete on an equal basis with the tribes...We must not impose greater moral restraints on Indians than we do on the rest of our citizenry. - Daniel Inouye, senior United States senator from Hawaii.[14]

The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA), passed by Congress in 1988 (after the act that restored federal recognition to the Alabama-Coushatta), established the framework that governs Indian gaming. The IGRA allows tribes to develop casino-style operations that could improve governmental services and economic conditions in Indian country. According to the IGRA, tribes have the "exclusive right" to regulate gaming in Indian Territory "except when gambling is contrary to federal law or when a state completely prohibits a form of gaming."[15][page needed] The IGRA recognizes three different classes of gaming:

  • Class I Gaming: Includes traditional tribal gambling, such as stick and bone games
  • Class II Gaming: Includes bingo, pull tabs, etc.
  • Class III Gaming: Includes large-scale gambling operations

Class I gaming is controlled completely by the tribes. Class II gaming is regulated by the tribes with oversight by the National Indian Gaming Commission. Class III gaming may be allowed in a state that allows large-scale gambling operations, even if it allows only low-level operations. Also, Class III gaming is subject to agreed regulatory procedures in Tribal-State compacts, which states are required to negotiate in "good faith". Without a tribal-state compact, no tribal casino can be permitted.

Tribes find fault with the provision about Tribal-State compacts, because under the Eleventh Amendment, which provides for state sovereign immunity, tribes are not able to sue any state to enforce the requirement to enter into such compacts. Thus, while the IGRA gives tribes the right to have casinos, the Eleventh Amendment gives the states the right to refuse to negotiate tribal-state compacts.[15][page needed]

The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act requires that gaming revenues be used only for governmental or charitable purposes.[16] The tribal governments determine how gaming revenues are spent. They are typically used to invest in infrastructure for tribal members, such as housing, schools, and roads; to fund health care and education; and to develop a strong economy.

Indian gaming is considered the most powerful economic development tool available on most Indian reservations. The National Gaming Impact Study Commission has stated that "no...economic development other than gaming has been found."[16] Tribal governments also use gaming revenues to develop other economic enterprises, such as museums, malls, and cultural centers that attract tourists and other visitors. Indian gaming can provide substantial economic benefits in states where a tribe and state work together.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Pocket Pictorial." 2010-04-06 at the Wayback Machine Oklahoma Indian Affairs Commission. 2010: 9. (retrieved 4 May 2011)
  2. ^ a b "Welcome." The Alabama-Coushatta Tribe of Texas. (retrieved 4 May 2011)
  3. ^ Oklahoma Indian Affairs Commission. "2008 Pocket Pictorial" 2010-04-06 at the Wayback Machine. 2008: 3
  4. ^ "Alabama." Ethnologue. (retrieved 4 May 2011)
  5. ^ Hook, Jonathan. The Alabama-Coushatta Indians. Texas A&M University Press, 1997.
  6. ^ Swanton, John R. 1928, Religious Beliefs and Medical Practices of the Creek Indians. SI-BAE Annual Report #42:473-672 (p. 663,664)
  7. ^ Taylor, Linda Averill. (1940) Plants Used As Curatives by Certain Southeastern Tribes. Cambridge, MA. Botanical Museum of Harvard University (p. 61)
  8. ^ "History" 2008-09-17 at the Wayback Machine, Alabama-Coushatta Website, Retrieved on 2008-10-01.
  9. ^ a b c "Economic Opportunities". Official Site of The Alabama-Coushatta Tribe of Texas. http://www.alabama-coushatta.com/EconomicDev/EconomicOpportunities/tabid/76/Default.aspx 2008-05-23 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ "Economic Development". from the original on 2008-05-23. Retrieved 2008-10-04.
  11. ^ "Disgraced Lobbyist Jack Abramoff Working In Baltimore Pizza Shop". Huffington Post. 23 June 2010. Retrieved 30 April 2013.
  12. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 October 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-02.
  13. ^ GAMBOA, SUZANNE (2006-07-12). "Texas Tribe Names Abramoff, Reed in Suit". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2023-04-26.
  14. ^ Wilkinson, Charles (2006). Blood Struggle: The Rise of Modern Indian Nations. New York: W.W. Norton & Company. p. 331.
  15. ^ a b Wilkinson (2006), Blood Struggle
  16. ^ a b Darian-Smith, Eve. New Capitalists: Law, Politics, and Identity Surrounding Casino Gaming on Native American Land. Wadsworth/Thomson Learning, 2004.

See also edit

References edit

  • Grant, Bruce. Concise Encyclopedia of the American Indian, New York: Wings Books, 2000 (3rd Edition)
  • Waldman, Carl. Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes, New York: Checkmark, 1999. ISBN 0-8160-3964-X
  • Alabama-Coushatta Reservation, Texas United States Census Bureau
  • Jacobson, Daniel, Howard N. Martin, and Ralph Henry Marsh. (Creek) Indians Alabama-Coushatta, New York: Garland Publishing, Inc., 1974.
  • LaVere, David. The Texas Indians, College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 2004.
  • "Alabama Indians", Texas State Handbook Online
  • "The Legend of the Twin Manifestations" 2008-10-13 at the Wayback Machine, Alabama-Coushatta Official Website
  • "Tribal History" 2008-10-13 at the Wayback Machine, Alabama-Coushatta Official Website
  • "Alabama-Coushatta Tribe Seeks Gaming Support", 24 June 2008, Indianz.com, Accessed 2 Oct 2008
  • , 12 July 2006, Attorneys For Plaintiff, accessed 2 Oct 2008
  • Schmidt, James Grimaldi, R. Jeffrey Smith. "Investigating Abramoff." The Washington Post Online 29 Mar 2006 14 Nov 2008 <https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/linkset/2005/06/22/LI2005062200936.html>.
  • Schmidt, Susan. "A Jackpot from Indian Gaming Tribes." The Washington Post Online 22 Feb 2004 14 Nov 2008 <https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/06/AR2006030600702.html>.
  • Schmitt, Richard. "Jack Abramoff Sentenced to 48 Months." Los Angeles Times 05 Sep 2008 21 Nov 2008 <http://articles.latimes.com/2008/sep/05/nation/na-abramoff5>.

External links edit

  • Alabama Quassarte Tribal Town of Oklahoma
  • Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, notice returning artifacts to Alabama-Quasserte and others 2007-03-14 at the Wayback Machine

alabama, people, alabama, alibamu, alabama, albaamaha, southeastern, culture, people, native, americans, originally, from, alabama, they, were, members, muscogee, creek, confederacy, loose, trade, military, organization, autonomous, towns, their, home, lands, . The Alabama or Alibamu Alabama Albaamaha are a Southeastern culture people of Native Americans originally from Alabama They were members of the Muscogee Creek Confederacy a loose trade and military organization of autonomous towns their home lands were on the upper Alabama River AlabamaAlabama Coushatta Reservation TexasTotal population1 517Regions with significant populations United States Oklahoma 380 enrolled members Alabama Quassarte Tribal Town 1 United States Texas 1 137 enrolled members Alabama Coushatta Tribe of Texas 2 LanguagesOriginally Alabama however most now only speak EnglishReligionProtestantism traditional beliefsRelated ethnic groupsCoushatta Hitchiti Chickasaw Choctaw other Muscogee Creek peopleThe Alabama and closely allied Coushatta people migrated from Alabama and Mississippi to the area of Texas in the late 18th century and early 19th century under pressure from European American settlers to the east They essentially merged and shared reservation land Although the tribe was terminated in the 1950s it achieved federal recognition in 1987 as the Alabama Coushatta Tribe of Texas Its 1 137 members 2 have about 4 500 acres 18 km2 of reservation The Alabama Quassarte Tribal Town is a federally recognized tribe headquartered in Wetumka Oklahoma 3 Contents 1 Language 2 History 3 Cultural practices 3 1 Ethnobotany 4 Contemporary tribes 4 1 Texas 4 2 Oklahoma 5 Tribal economy and gaming 6 Notes 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksLanguage editThe Alabama language is part of the Muskogean language family Alabama is closely related to Koasati and distantly to Hitchiti Chickasaw and Choctaw Also known as Alibamu an estimated 100 speakers primarily from Texas still speak the language 4 History edit nbsp A boy from the Alabama Coushatta reservation planting Christmas trees The Alabama first encountered Europeans when Hernando de Soto arrived in 1540 and visited numerous places during his expedition In the 18th century the French arrived on the Gulf Coast and built a fort at what became Mobile Alabama The Alibamu and Koasati tribes were part of the Creek Confederacy They had less contact with British colonists from the Thirteen Colonies than other Creek tribes did They were the first to migrate away when British colonists began to settle in the region by the middle of the 18th century after the land was ceded by the French following Britain s victory in the Seven Years War known in the colonies as the French and Indian War Under pressure as well by Native American enemies the Alabama and Coushatta tribes wanted to avoid the powerful Choctaw in present day Mississippi They moved into territories of future states first into Louisiana and then into Texas Alabama and Coushatta towns were divided into red and white towns The white towns were responsible for keeping the peace and for providing refuge while the red towns were responsible for conducting military campaigns Though they had red and white towns the Alabama Coushattas thought of themselves as peace loving people 5 In 1795 the Coushatta arrived in the Big Thicket area of East Texas In 1805 nearly 1 000 Alabama came to Tyler County s Peach Tree Village in East Texas The two tribes developed a strong friendship as they roamed and hunted their new land together In the early 19th century the Texas Congress granted each tribe two strips of land along the Trinity River Their land was soon taken over by European American settlers leaving them homeless Sam Houston the governor of Texas recommended that the state purchase 1 280 acres 5 2 km2 for the Alabamas although money was appropriated to buy 640 acres 2 6 km2 for the Coushattas the land was never bought Either through marriage or special permission many Coushatta went to live on the land given to the Alabama Other Coushatta had stayed in an area in southern Louisiana near the Red River Many of their descendants are enrolled members of the federally recognized Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana By 1820 there were three main Alabama towns and three large Coushatta towns in east Texas in the region known as the Big Thicket In 1854 the Alabama were given 1 280 acres 5 km2 in Polk County The following year 640 acres 2 6 km2 also in Polk County were given to the Coushattas The Coushatta claim was disputed by white settlers in 1859 When the Coushatta lost the land claim the Alabama invited them to live on their land claim The federal government approved a large grant in 1928 to purchase additional land near the reservation it was granted to the Alabama and Coushatta tribes Since that time the reservation has officially been known as Alabama Coushatta Origin myths focus on the interconnectedness of the tribes One myth states that the two tribes sprouted from either side of a cypress tree Another legend was recorded in 1857 from Se ko pe chi one of the oldest Creeks in Indian Territory He said that the tribes sprang out of the ground between the Cohawba and Alabama Rivers The symbol of the Alabama Coushatta tribe comes from pre contact Mississippian culture two intertwined woodpeckers now symbolic of the connection between the two tribes Cultural practices editEthnobotany edit The obtusifolium subspecies of the plant Pseudognaphalium obtusifolium is used in a compound decoction for nervousness and sleepiness 6 and in a decoction as a face wash for nerves and insomnia 7 Contemporary tribes editTexas edit Main article Alabama Coushatta Tribe of Texas The Alabama who relocated to Texas supported Texas independence In gratitude Governor Sam Houston recommended that Texas purchase land for the tribe when their existing land was overtaken by settlers The two tribes share many cultural characteristics In a hearing before the Indian Claims Commission in 1974 Dr Daniel Jacobson suggested that the Alabama and Coushatta tribes were culturally related because of intermarriage The Handbook of Texas reports that the languages come from the same stock even though there could be some word variance They merged with the Coushatta to become the present day Alabama Coushatta Tribe of Texas Although long under state trusteeship because the state controlled public lands the tribe achieved Federal recognition in 1987 by an act of Congress rather than by administrative process of the Department of Interior The law that restored the tribe s federal relationship prohibited such gaming as was then prohibited under state laws The current tribal lands are in eastern Polk County Texas The Alabama Coushatta Indian Reservation Texas oldest reservation located at 30 42 50 N 94 40 26 W 30 714 N 94 674 W 30 714 94 674 has 18 484 km2 7 137 sq mi of land The land purchased by the state and assigned to the Alabama in 1854 was expanded by another purchase under a federal grant in 1928 The 2000 census reported a resident population of 480 persons within the reservation As of 2010 there are some 1000 members of the Alabama Coushatta tribe 8 Oklahoma edit Main article Alabama Quassarte Tribal Town In Okmulgee County Oklahoma the Alabama Quassarte Tribal Town was established and federally recognized in 1936 The descendants of the Alabama who live there are also affiliated with the federally recognized Muscogee Creek Nation Tribal economy and gaming editIn the tribe s earlier years in Texas gathering hunting agriculture fishing and trading were its main economic pursuits In more recent years the Alabama Coushatta Tribe has relied on the service and entertainment industry to generate revenue and jobs on the reservation In 2002 the Tribe opened a convenience store gas station and tobacco store on U S Highway 190 which can sell products tax free because of the tribe s sovereign status This business complex is slowly becoming profitable The station generates a small profit margin and a limited number of jobs 9 The Tribe opened an entertainment center for tourists The center offered casino gambling The tribe believed it satisfied requirements of the 1992 Texas Lottery Law that permitted the state lottery horse racing and dog racing 9 The Alabama Coushatta a Christian community allows no alcohol in the casino The Tribe was successful in generating revenue and jobs The center offered jobs to 87 Tribal members greatly reducing unemployment from 46 percent to 14 percent 9 Revenues from the entertainment center provided the Tribe with funding for health services the elderly educational opportunities for youth social services and housing Such jobs had a multiplier effect within the regional economy with businesses reporting an increase in sales and tax revenues The entertainment center benefited not only the Tribe but also the surrounding regions by creating more than 495 jobs and paying US 4 3 million in wages and nearly US 400 000 in federal taxes 10 After the center had operated for nine months the state brought suit against it in 1999 A Federal court ruled that the Alabama Coushatta had to close their entertainment center The federal courts made this determination based on the conditions of federal recognition in 1987 which banned tribes from gaming prohibited under state laws In July 2006 the Alabama Coushatta sued lobbyist Jack Abramoff and his associates for attempts to defraud the tribe in seeking to defeat state legislation in 2001 that would have given them authority to run the casino The tribe claimed the lobbyists had hidden their motives in representing the competing Coushatta of Louisiana which ran their own casino and mobilized Christian groups in an underhanded way A Senate investigation in 2006 revealed that several tribes were defrauded of tens of millions of dollars by Abramoff and associates on issues associated with Indian gaming The four tribes that Abramoff persuaded to hire him were all newly wealthy Indian gaming tribes They included Michigan s Saginaw Chippewa California s Agua Caliente the Mississippi Choctaw and the Louisiana Coushatta The Abramoff scandal received widespread public attention and he was prosecuted On March 29 2008 Jack Abramoff was sentenced to five years and ten months in prison for pleading guilty to fraud tax evasion and conspiracy to bribe public officials Abramoff made a deal to cooperate with investigators to provide information about his relationships with several members of Congress Federal sentencing guidelines indicated a minimum sentence of 108 months in prison Because of Abramoff s cooperation with the government his sentence was greatly reduced He was released from prison on June 8 2010 and completed the remaining six months of his sentence in a halfway house in Baltimore 11 Without the casino the tribe has no funding for economic programs More than 300 jobs have been lost in Polk County 12 13 The Alabama Coushatta tribe has been trying to gain state and Federal support to re open the entertainment center for the economy of both the Tribe and the surrounding regions Over the years the Tribe has struggled to rebuild its economy in a depressed Polk County We should be candid about the interests surrounding Indian gaming The issue has never really been one of crime control morality or economic fairness At issue is economics Ironically the strongest opponents of tribal authority over gaming on Indian lands are from States whose liberal gaming policies would allow them to compete on an equal basis with the tribes We must not impose greater moral restraints on Indians than we do on the rest of our citizenry Daniel Inouye senior United States senator from Hawaii 14 The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act IGRA passed by Congress in 1988 after the act that restored federal recognition to the Alabama Coushatta established the framework that governs Indian gaming The IGRA allows tribes to develop casino style operations that could improve governmental services and economic conditions in Indian country According to the IGRA tribes have the exclusive right to regulate gaming in Indian Territory except when gambling is contrary to federal law or when a state completely prohibits a form of gaming 15 page needed The IGRA recognizes three different classes of gaming Class I Gaming Includes traditional tribal gambling such as stick and bone games Class II Gaming Includes bingo pull tabs etc Class III Gaming Includes large scale gambling operationsClass I gaming is controlled completely by the tribes Class II gaming is regulated by the tribes with oversight by the National Indian Gaming Commission Class III gaming may be allowed in a state that allows large scale gambling operations even if it allows only low level operations Also Class III gaming is subject to agreed regulatory procedures in Tribal State compacts which states are required to negotiate in good faith Without a tribal state compact no tribal casino can be permitted Tribes find fault with the provision about Tribal State compacts because under the Eleventh Amendment which provides for state sovereign immunity tribes are not able to sue any state to enforce the requirement to enter into such compacts Thus while the IGRA gives tribes the right to have casinos the Eleventh Amendment gives the states the right to refuse to negotiate tribal state compacts 15 page needed The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act requires that gaming revenues be used only for governmental or charitable purposes 16 The tribal governments determine how gaming revenues are spent They are typically used to invest in infrastructure for tribal members such as housing schools and roads to fund health care and education and to develop a strong economy Indian gaming is considered the most powerful economic development tool available on most Indian reservations The National Gaming Impact Study Commission has stated that no economic development other than gaming has been found 16 Tribal governments also use gaming revenues to develop other economic enterprises such as museums malls and cultural centers that attract tourists and other visitors Indian gaming can provide substantial economic benefits in states where a tribe and state work together Notes edit Pocket Pictorial Archived 2010 04 06 at the Wayback Machine Oklahoma Indian Affairs Commission 2010 9 retrieved 4 May 2011 a b Welcome The Alabama Coushatta Tribe of Texas retrieved 4 May 2011 Oklahoma Indian Affairs Commission 2008 Pocket Pictorial Archived 2010 04 06 at the Wayback Machine 2008 3 Alabama Ethnologue retrieved 4 May 2011 Hook Jonathan The Alabama Coushatta Indians Texas A amp M University Press 1997 Swanton John R 1928 Religious Beliefs and Medical Practices of the Creek Indians SI BAE Annual Report 42 473 672 p 663 664 Taylor Linda Averill 1940 Plants Used As Curatives by Certain Southeastern Tribes Cambridge MA Botanical Museum of Harvard University p 61 History Archived 2008 09 17 at the Wayback Machine Alabama Coushatta Website Retrieved on 2008 10 01 a b c Economic Opportunities Official Site of The Alabama Coushatta Tribe of Texas http www alabama coushatta com EconomicDev EconomicOpportunities tabid 76 Default aspx Archived 2008 05 23 at the Wayback Machine Economic Development Archived from the original on 2008 05 23 Retrieved 2008 10 04 Disgraced Lobbyist Jack Abramoff Working In Baltimore Pizza Shop Huffington Post 23 June 2010 Retrieved 30 April 2013 Plaintiff Alabama Coushatta Tribe of Texas s Original Complaint PDF Archived from the original PDF on 4 October 2008 Retrieved 2008 10 02 GAMBOA SUZANNE 2006 07 12 Texas Tribe Names Abramoff Reed in Suit The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2023 04 26 Wilkinson Charles 2006 Blood Struggle The Rise of Modern Indian Nations New York W W Norton amp Company p 331 a b Wilkinson 2006 Blood Struggle a b Darian Smith Eve New Capitalists Law Politics and Identity Surrounding Casino Gaming on Native American Land Wadsworth Thomson Learning 2004 See also edit nbsp Alabama portalList of Native American peoples in the United StatesReferences editGrant Bruce Concise Encyclopedia of the American Indian New York Wings Books 2000 3rd Edition Waldman Carl Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes New York Checkmark 1999 ISBN 0 8160 3964 X Alabama Coushatta Reservation Texas United States Census Bureau Jacobson Daniel Howard N Martin and Ralph Henry Marsh Creek Indians Alabama Coushatta New York Garland Publishing Inc 1974 LaVere David The Texas Indians College Station Texas A amp M University Press 2004 Alabama Indians Texas State Handbook Online The Legend of the Twin Manifestations Archived 2008 10 13 at the Wayback Machine Alabama Coushatta Official Website Tribal History Archived 2008 10 13 at the Wayback Machine Alabama Coushatta Official Website Alabama Coushatta Tribe Seeks Gaming Support 24 June 2008 Indianz com Accessed 2 Oct 2008 Plaintiff Alabama Coushatta Tribe of Texas s Original Complaint 12 July 2006 Attorneys For Plaintiff accessed 2 Oct 2008 Schmidt James Grimaldi R Jeffrey Smith Investigating Abramoff The Washington Post Online 29 Mar 2006 14 Nov 2008 lt https www washingtonpost com wp dyn content linkset 2005 06 22 LI2005062200936 html gt Schmidt Susan A Jackpot from Indian Gaming Tribes The Washington Post Online 22 Feb 2004 14 Nov 2008 lt https www washingtonpost com wp dyn content article 2006 03 06 AR2006030600702 html gt Schmitt Richard Jack Abramoff Sentenced to 48 Months Los Angeles Times 05 Sep 2008 21 Nov 2008 lt http articles latimes com 2008 sep 05 nation na abramoff5 gt External links editAlabama Coushatta Tribe of Texas Alabama Quassarte Tribal Town of Oklahoma Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act notice returning artifacts to Alabama Quasserte and others Archived 2007 03 14 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alabama people amp oldid 1174998241, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

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