Skip to main content

Supreme Court Rejects Utah Poaching Case | 2007

   Published: Nov 6, 2007, 12:07 a.m. MST


By Deseret News, Geoff Liesik


The nation's highest court will not hear the appeal of a Utah man who claims his conviction on a state poaching charge should be overturned because his "treaty rights" allow him to hunt and fish without a license.

Rickie L. Reber, 53, petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court in August to have his case heard after the Utah Supreme Court reinstated his 2004 conviction for poaching a trophy deer with his teenage son in Uintah County. On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court denied the petition.

"It's not a judgment on the merits (of the case). They simply have too many cases," said Reber's attorney, Mike Humiston.

In a unanimous decision in April, the Utah Supreme Court ruled that Reber had no tribal hunting or fishing rights, despite his assertion of membership in the Uintah Tribe, a tribe that is not federally recognized. Reber's parents were among the 490 mixed-blood Uintah Band members of the Ute Indian Tribe whose tribal memberships were terminated in 1956. He was a child at the time.

Humiston has argued that terminating tribal membership only cuts off federal benefits for individuals, it doesn't mean the tribe ceases to exist.

"The tribe still remains the tribe. Hunting and treaty rights are not terminated," he told a Deseret Morning News reporter in August. "That is well-written federal law. They retain their treaty rights."

State and local officials expressed satisfaction with the U.S. Supreme Court's decision not to hear Reber's appeal. The case — through a 2006 Utah Court of Appeals reversal of Reber's conviction — had jeopardized a well-established jurisdictional agreement between the state and the Ute Indian Tribe concerning law enforcement on 2 million acres of prime hunting and fishing land in the Uinta Basin.

The Utah Supreme Court's decision overturned the lower court's ruling, reinstating Reber's conviction and reaffirming the agreement between the state and the tribe.

"It's nice to have closure on the issues. It allows us to go on with the appropriate law enforcement that the state and county are required to accomplish," said Deputy Uintah County Attorney Ed Peterson, concerning the U.S. Supreme Court decision not to hear the case. Peterson prosecuted Reber on the poaching charge.

Humiston said he will continue to challenge the state on legal issues involving Uintah Tribe members. "The Utah Supreme Court ruling remains erroneous, but it will have to be addressed through a different case," he said.


 

Popular posts from this blog

The Dispossessed: Cultural Genocide of the Mixed-Blood Utes, an Advocate's Chronicle

PDF DOWNLOAD AUDIO BOOK The Dispossessed: Cultural Genocide of the Mixed-Blood Utes, an Advocate's Chronicle. In this disturbing and provocative study, Salt Lake City attorney Parker M. Nielson chronicles the termination of the mixed-blood Utes from the Northern Ute Indian Tribe. He outlines how the termination process, initiated by Utah Senator Arthur V. Watkins, was visited on the Utes in a singular action by the U.S Congress and the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the only partial termination of any tribe in the nation. Termination for the mixedbloods meant loss of both tribal membership and any further claims upon the Bureau of Indian Affairs, similar to the impact of the termination policy upon other tribes in the 1950s. But for the mixed-blood terminated the losses went much further than being cut off from government assistance. Nielson, with first-hand information gained as legal representative for the terminated Utes, details how the separation of the terminees from tribal member...

Death of Utah Chiefs | Walker, Arapeen, Ammon, Peteetneet, Sanpitch, Kanosh, Tabby, Santaquin, Andrew Frank, Jim Atwine

  Deseret News | 1855-02-08 | Page 3 | Death of Indian Walker Deseret News | 1860-02-08 | Page 4 | Later from San Pete County Deseret News | 1860-12-19 | Page 1 | Death of Arapeen Deseret News | 1861-06-19 | Page 4 | Death of Ammon Deseret News | 1862-01-01 | Page 1 | Death of Peteetneet Deseret News | 1866-04-26 | Page 5 | Whites and Indians Killed Deseret News | 1866-05-10 | Page 5 | Home Items Killing of Sanpitch Deseret News | 1868-12-16 | Page 5  Deseret News | 1881-12-28 | Page 3 | Death of Kanosh Salt Lake Telegram | 1902-10-30 | Page 1 | Fifty Ponies Killed over Grave of Chief Tabby Deseret Evening News | 1902-11-03 | Page 7 | Fort Duchesne Salt Lake Tribune | 1902-11-23 | Page 6 | The Death of Chief Tabby Inter-Mountain Farmer | 1902-11-25 | Page 2 | The Death of Chief Tabby Wasatch Wave | 1902-10-31 | Page 3 | Chief Tabby Dead Spanish Fork Press | 1911-10-26 | Page 2 Roosevelt Standard | 1951-12-20 | Page 2 | Andrew Frank Vernal Express | 1951-12-27 | Page 1 | F...

Termination's Legacy: The Discarded Indians of Utah by R. Warren Metcalf

  Termination's Legacy: The Discarded Indians of Utah [PDF DOWNLOAD] Termination's Legacy: The Discarded Indians of Utah [AUDIO BOOK] Termination's Legacy describes how the federal policy of termination irrevocably affected the lives of a group of mixed-blood Ute Indians who made their home on the Uintah-Ouray Reservation in Utah. Following World War II many Native American communities were strongly encouraged to terminate their status as wards of the federal government and develop greater economic and political power for themselves. During this era, the rights of many Native communities came under siege, and the tribal status of some was terminated. Most of the terminated communities eventually regained tribal status and federal recognition in subsequent decades. But not all did. The mixed-blood Utes fell outside the formal categories of classification by the federal government, they did not meet the essentialist expectations of some officials of the Mormon Church, and th...