Search for: "City of Tulsa v. Oklahoma" Results 1 - 20 of 82
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31 Jul 2023, 3:47 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Oklahoma which means that the Major Crimes Act and other federal and tribal laws relating to Indians now apply in Eastern Oklahoma, including the City of Tulsa, and not Oklahoma law in applicable cases. [read post]
24 Mar 2023, 6:52 pm by Howard Bashman
City of Tulsa argues it has the ability to prosecute Native people under pre-statehood law; A pre-statehood law, known as the Curtis Act, was used to force allotment; It’s now being used as the latest way to challenge the landmark McGirt v. [read post]
4 Aug 2023, 1:13 pm by Amy Howe
When it reaches that court, he noted, the city can raise an argument made by Oklahoma in a “friend of the court” brief in the court of appeals – that under the Supreme Court’s 2022 decision in Oklahoma v. [read post]
20 Sep 2023, 5:24 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Here: Stitt Opening Brief.pdfDownload Creek Seminole Amicus Brief.pdfDownload Cherokee Chickasaw Choctaw Amicus Brief.pdfDownload Tulsa Brief.pdfDownload Stitt Reply.pdfDownload Creek Seminole Reply Brief.pdfDownload Cherokee Chickasaw Choctaw Reply Brief.pdfDownload [read post]
15 Apr 2012, 8:57 am by Alfred Brophy
   This story of official culpability in the riot is supported by such traditional sources as the Oklahoma Supreme Court in the 1926 case Redfearn v. [read post]
6 Apr 2011, 5:26 pm by Lawrence Solum
Tinker (University of Tulsa College of Law) has posted Is Oklahoma Still Indian Country? [read post]
12 May 2020, 1:24 pm by Ronald Mann
It would be the most populous reservation in the United States, and it would include the state’s second largest city, Tulsa, as well as many other predominantly non-Indian communities in the area. [read post]
22 Apr 2011, 4:31 am
Eligibility for overtimeSpradling v City of Tulsa, CA10, 95 F.3d 1492 The U.S. [read post]
5 Aug 2015, 9:29 pm by Alfred Brophy
The struggle in Oklahoma City over racially restrictive covenants stretched from the late 1920s to just after Shelley v. [read post]
24 Jan 2017, 4:10 am by Howard Friedman
Tulsa City-County Library Commission, (ND OK, Jan. 23, 2017), a Oklahoma federal district court dismissed plaintiff's complaint that "fake" recycling bins in the downtown Tulsa library unconstitutionally burden his practice of his religion which he says is Environmentalism. [read post]
2 Jul 2019, 9:08 am by Ronald Mann
As summarized in my prior posts, the case involves the question whether Oklahoma has jurisdiction to prosecute major crimes that Native Americans commit on the territory that was set aside in the 19th century as a reservation for the Five Civilized Tribes – land that covers the eastern half of Oklahoma, including the city of Tulsa. [read post]
11 Jul 2020, 7:35 am
  And it holds that this one promise could not be broken without Congress’s clear expression of intent: that the State of Oklahoma would have no right to prosecute Indians for crimes committed in a portion of Northeastern Oklahoma that includes most of the city of Tulsa. [read post]