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Wampanoag's casino hangs in balance in Supreme Court decision
Ex-solicitor general to argue tribal land case at high court
Case ruling could stop Wampanoag Casino
[Editor's Note: On Monday the United States Supreme Court will hear arguments in a case originally broogh by Governor Carcieri of Rhode Island that could stop the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe's plans for both a homeland and a casino.]
Rhode Island asserts that the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 prevented the federal government from allowing tribes to take land into trust after the date of the act.
A former U.S. solicitor general will represent Rhode Island before the U.S. Supreme Court next week in a case involving a parcel of American Indian tribal land, state officials announced Friday.
The decision resolves a weeks-long dispute between the state and town officials in Charlestown RI over who was going to make the arguments before the high court Monday.
Attorney General Patrick Lynch and Gov. Don Cariceri had delegated Theodore Olson, the former U.S. solicitor general, to do the job, but Joseph Larisa Jr., an attorney for the town, had asked for the arguments to be split so he also could participate.
Larisa, who has handled the case for a decade in lower courts, stepped aside after the Supreme Court refused a motion for divided time on Friday and instructed all sides to agree on a single attorney.
Olson has argued dozens of cases before the Supreme Court, including on behalf of George W. Bush in the disputed 2000 presidential election.
Larisa said he will help Olson prepare for the arguments.
The case involves whether the Narragansett Indian Tribe, Rhode Island's only federally recognized American Indian tribe, can put a 31-acre lot in Charlestown into federal trust, which would essentially free it from state and local law... The Day.
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