Under Oklahoma law, “[a]ll unstamped cigarettes ... found in the possession ... of any person, for the purpose of being ... transported from one place to another in this state, for the purpose of evading . .. the provisions of [the Cigarette Stamp Tax Act] ... may be seized by any authorized agent of the Tax Commission ..., without process.” 68 Okla. Stat. § 305.E.1. These contraband cigarettes “shall be, from the time of such seizure, forfeited to the State of Oklahoma” subject to “a proper proceeding.” Id. Similarly, “all unstamped cigarettes sold or shipped to tribally owned or licensed stores in this state by wholesalers ... not licensed by this state ... for the purpose of selling or consuming unstamped cigarettes in this state in violation of [the Sale of Cigarettes at Tribally Owned or Licensed Stores Act] shall be subject to seizure of the shipments and *1226 forfeiture of the inventory pursuant to the provisions of [68 Okla. Stat. § 305].” Id. § 351.A. In support of the latter provision, Oklahoma law authorizes “[a]ny peace officer of this state ... to stop any vehicle upon any road or highway of this state in order to inspect the bill of lading or to take such action as may be necessary to determine if unstamped cigarettes are being sold or shipped in violation of the provisions of this section.” Id. § 351.B. In conducting these inspections, “[s]uch officers shall ... have a duty to cooperate with the Oklahoma Tax Commission to enforce the provisions of this act.” Id. Purportedly suspicious that Muscogee Creek Nation (MCN) was supplying off-reservation Oklahoma smoke shops with unstamped cigarettes, the Oklahoma Tax Commission (OTC), pursuant to the foregoing provisions, directed the state highway patrol to stop MCN’s vehicles on public thoroughfares outside Indian country and inspect their lading. Following inspection and search of the vehicles, OTC agents were summoned to seize any cigarettes failing to bear a tax stamp. Over the course of three stops (only two of which uncovered suspected contraband), OTC seized unstamped cigarettes purportedly worth $107,000. Objecting to OTC’s interference with MCN’s vehicles and their lading, MCN filed suit.
I.
Specifically, MCN filed suit against both OTC and its Tax Commissioners, the latter in their official capacities: “The individual Defendants are sued in their official capacities as officers of the OTC charged with enforcement of Oklahoma tax laws.” MCN asserted jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1362, which provides: “The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of all civil actions, brought by any Indian tribe ... wherein the matter in controversy arises under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States.” At the outset of its amended complaint, MCN “complains of Defendants for causing Plaintiffs trucks to be illegally stopped, illegally searched, and for illegally seizing Plaintiffs property.” Consistent therewith, Count I of MCN’s amended complaint—the complaint’s only substantively labeled count—alleged a violation of MCN’s civil rights pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, specifically that OTC and its Commissioners’ conduct denied MCN due process of law and “deprived [MCN] of rights protected by the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.” The remaining counts of MCN’s amended complaint sought only remedial relief and were so labeled. Count II sought a declaratory judgment that OTC’s stops and searches of MCN’s vehicles and seizures of their lading were unlawful. Count III sought a prohibitory injunction directing OTC to cease interfering with MCN’s vehicles and their lading. Count IV requested mandatory injunctive relief directing the return of the seized cigarettes. Count V, in the alternative, sought damages to compensate MCN for the monetary value of the cigarettes.
In a thorough order, the district court granted OTC and its Commissioners’ Rule 12(b) motion and dismissed MCN’s amended complaint in its entirety. As to OTC, the court dismissed the complaint for want of subject matter jurisdiction based on OTC’s defense of sovereign immunity.
See Republic of Austria v. Altmamn,
MCN appeals the district court’s judgment, challenging each of the court’s adverse determinations. Our jurisdiction arises under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Our review of the district court’s dismissal of MCN's amended complaint, for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim respectively, is de novo.
1
See Kane County Utah v. Salazar,
II.
The Supreme Court has interpreted the Eleventh Amendment to mean “States may not be sued in federal court unless they consent to it in unequivocal terms or unless Congress, pursuant to a valid exercise of power, unequivocally expresses its intent to abrogate the immunity.”
Green v. Mansour,
A.
In
Blatchford v. Native Village,
In
Pierce,
we relied on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Moe v. Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes,
Plainly, sovereign immunity would not have barred the United States acting as the tribe’s trustee from suing Pierce in her official capacity, the equivalent of suing the state itself.
See United States v. Mississippi,
Neither
Moe
nor
Pierce
may be read to stand for the proposition that § 1362 provides an Indian tribe access to federal court identical to that of the United States
in all respects. Blatchford
makes this painfully apparent.
See Osage Nation v. Oklahoma ex rel. Oklahoma Tax Comm’n,
B.
Our decision in
Pierce
simply does not apply here because MCN’s amended complaint, even under a generous reading, does not seek to enjoin state taxation “within the tribe’s territorial boundaries.”
Wagnon,
Though MCN’s pleading is hardly a model of clarity, its theory of the case as set out mthin the four comers of its am,ended complaint is, as best we can discern, this: MCN-owned cigarettes in transit between Indian country are not subject to the State of Oklahoma’s tax enforcement scheme because that scheme interferes with Indian commerce; therefore OTC’s searches of MCN’s vehicles and seizures of their lading absent probable cause constitute a violation of the Fourth Amendment’s reasonableness requirement redressable pursuant to § 1983. MCN, in effect, seeks to render nugatory, via the Fourth Amendment, the state’s cigarette tax enforcement scheme as an affront to Indian sovereignty. This is precisely what MCN tells us on page fifteen of its opening brief:
As the Amended Complaint makes clear, this is not just an action seeking to enjoin the state from civil rights violations, but also an action to enjoin the State from continuing its tax scheme which seeks to impose a tax on the Creeks by simply seizing Creek property. Such stops, searches, and seizures unduly burden Indian commerce and wrongfully interfere with the Creek’s sovereignty.[ 8 ]
But MCN’s approach sounds the death knell of MCN’s amended complaint as to OTC and its Commissioners sued in their official capacities because
Blatchford
tells us § 1362 does not constitute a general waiver of the State of Oklahoma’s sovereign immunity and any limited waiver based on
Pierce
does not extend beyond an Indian tribe’s direct challenge, sufficiently alleged in a complaint, to the imposition of a state tax within Indian country. The district court was quite correct in deciding the Eleventh Amendment bars MCN’s action against OTC and its Commissioners sued in their official capacities. That is the end of our jurisdictional inquiry as to OTC.
See Seminole Tribe v. Florida,
III.
In Young, the Supreme Court held the Eleventh Amendment did not bar an action by railroad stockholders against a state attorney general sued in his official capacity to enjoin an ongoing violation of federal law:
If the act which the state [official] seeks to enforce be a violation of the Federal Constitution, the officer in proceeding under such enactment comes into conflict with the superior authority of that Constitution, and he is in that case stripped of his official or representative character and is subjected in his person to the consequences of his individual conduct. The State has no power to impart to him any immunity from responsibility to the supreme authority of the United States.
Young,
Here, Count III of MCN’s amended complaint “requests a preliminary and permanent injunction restraining OTC from further interference with Indian commerce.” (emphasis added). Count III easily satisfies Verizon’s “ ‘straightforward inquiry.’” That count seeks a judgment, based on an ongoing violation of federal law, that OTC, and necessarily its Commissioners, may not henceforth employ Oklahoma’s cigarette tax enforcement scheme to interfere with MCN’s vehicles. MCN’s prayer for declaratory relief contained in Count II “adds nothing” to the state’s exposure because it too asserts an ongoing violation of federal law and asks for a declaration that OTC’s interference with MCN’s vehicles is unlawful. The district court properly applied the fiction of Young and exercised subject matter jurisdiction over MCN’s § 1983 claim contained in Count I as against the Commissioners to the extent that claim, by way of Counts II and III, sought prospective relief based on an ongoing violation of federal law. 9
*1233
Counts IV and V of MCN’s amended complaint, however, are of a different ilk. Those counts, which respectively request return of the seized cigarettes or, in the alternative, their monetary value, undoubtedly bring into issue the past liability of OTC’s Commissioners, and thus seek retrospective relief. When a state official is sued in his or her official capacity, the Eleventh Amendment bars retrospective relief, usually in the form of money damages, because any such judgment is deemed directed at the state as the real party in interest rather than the nominal officer.
See Edelman v. Jordan,
IV.
Section 1983 permits “citizen[s]” and “other
persm[s]
within the jurisdiction” of the United States to seek legal and equitable relief from “person[s]” who, under color of state law, deprive them of federally protected rights. 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (emphasis added). We have just seen that a suit for prospective relief against state officials named in their official capacities, based upon an ongoing violation of federal law, is not considered an action against the state within the meaning of the Eleventh Amendment because, under such circumstances, the officials are stripped of their representative character. Oddly enough, however, such officials constitute persons acting “under color of state law” within the meaning of § 1983.
See Will,
In
Inyo County v. Paiute-Shoshone Indians,
Mindful of
Inyo County,
we read those portions of MCN’s amended complaint over which the district court had subject matter jurisdiction as seeking prospective relief “to vindicate its status as a
*1235
sovereign immune from state processes under federal law.”
11
Id.
at 706,
Referring on multiple occasions in the amended complaint to its sovereign status, MCN, as we read its amended complaint, in effect seeks to vitiate Oklahoma’s cigarette tax enforcement scheme to the extent it authorizes interference with MCN’s vehicles and seizure of their lading while those vehicles are in transit between Indian country because such seizures purportedly interfere with “Indian commerce.” As MCN tells us on page two of its reply brief: “Here, the Creek are challenging the Oklahoma Taxing Authority’s stop, searches and seizures of Creek property while in transit between Indian coun try.” (emphasis added). This most certainly is not a personal challenge to OTC’s activity. No exemption from the state’s statutory scheme based on Indian commerce would be available to MCN suing as a non-sovereign “person.” The final two paragraphs of the amended complaint’s “General Allegations” well illustrate the sovereign element of MCN’s claim. Paragraph 28 alleges: “The intrusion of the taxing, prosecutorial and civil authority of the OTC into intra-tribal Indian Commerce violates and threatens The Nation’s sovereign rights as those rights have been defined and guaranteed by the Treaties, Statutes and court decisions of the United States.” Paragraph 29 follows (subsequently repeated verbatim in paragraph 30): “The OTC’s attempt to exercise taxing and civil authority against The Nation violates The Nation’s sovereign immunity *1236 and impermissibly burdens Indian commerce in violation of the Constitution.” Of course, a “person” within the meaning of § 1983 possesses neither “sovereign rights” nor “sovereign immunity.” The district court eorrectly construed MCN’s § 1983 claim as designed to vindicate MCN’s status as a sovereign immune from Oklahoma’s cigarette tax enforcement scheme, and thus correctly held MCN did not constitute a “person” entitled to bring suit for prospective relief against the Commissioners under § 1983. This brings us to the final section of our discussion in which we address MCN’s argument that the district court erred in refusing to read the amended complaint as containing, apart from its claimed civil rights violations, a claimed violation of the Indian Commerce Clause, U.S. Const, art. I, § 8.
V.
We have no quarrel with the district court’s sound construction of MCN’s amended complaint because, given the applicable law, the complaint contains no claim under the Indian Commerce Clause that “ ‘is plausible on its face.’ ”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
— U.S.-,
[Congressional authority [to regulate tribal affairs under the Indian Commerce Clause] and the ‘semi-independent position’ of Indian tribes have given rise to two independent but related barriers to the assertion of state regulatory authority over tribal reservations and members. First, the exercise of such authority may be preempted by federal law. Second, it may unlawfully infringe on the right of reservation Indians to make their own laws and be ruled by them. The two barriers are independent because either, standing alone can be a sufficient basis for holding state law inapplicable to activity undertaken on the reservation or by tribal members.
Bracker,
As to the first “barrier,” the Court observed in
Washington v. Confederated Tribes,
In
Confederated Tribes,
the Supreme Court held “the State may validly require the tribal smokeshops to affix tax stamps purchased from the State to individual packages of cigarettes prior to the time of sale to nonmembers of the Tribe.”
Confederated Tribes,
We find that Washington’s interest in enforcing its valid taxes is sufficient to justify these seizures. Although the cigarettes in transit are as yet exempt from state taxation, they are not immune from seizure when the Tribes, as here, have refused to fulfill collection and remittance obligations which the State has validly imposed. It is significant that these seizures take place outside the reservation, in locations where state power over Indian affairs is considerably more expansive than it is within reservation boundaries. By seizing cigarettes en route to the reservation, the State polices against wholesale evasion of its own valid taxes without unnecessarily intruding on core tribal interests.
Id.
at 161-62,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. A motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) may take one of two forms. A facial attack looks only to the factual allegations of the complaint in challenging the court's jurisdiction. A factual attack goes beyond the factual allegations of the complaint and presents evidence in the form of affidavits or otherwise to challenge the court’s jurisdiction.
See Stuart v. Colorado Interstate Gas Co.,
. "While 28 U.S.C. § 1331 grants [federal] court jurisdiction over all ‘civil actions arising under the Constitution, laws or treaties of the United States,’ it does not independently waive the Government’s sovereign immunity, § 1331 will only confer subject matter jurisdiction where some other statute provides
*1228
such a waiver.”
High Country Citizens Alliance v. Clarke.
. On appeal, MCN argues for the first time in its reply brief that 68 Okla. Stat. § 226, which provides a right of action to an aggrieved taxpayer against the State under defined circumstances, constitutes a waiver of OTC's sovereign immunity in the context of this case. Absent exceptional circumstance, however, we do not consider arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief, and will not do so here. As we explained in
Hill v. Kemp,
[T]he reasons for our rule are two-fold: First, to allow an appellant to raise new arguments at this juncture would be manifestly unfair to the appellee who, under our rules, has no opportunity for a written response. Secondly, it would also be unfair to the court itself, which, without the benefit of a response from appellee to an appellant’s late-blooming argument, would run the risk of an improvident or ill-advised opinion, given our dependence ... on the adversarial process for sharpening the issues for decision.
. In Osage Nation, the tribe sued OTC and its Commissioners in their official capacities to enjoin assessment of the state’s income tax on tribal members who were employed by the tribe but resided in Osage County. In rejecting the tribe's reliance on Pierce to argue § 1362 abrogated defendants' Eleventh Amendment immunity, the panel explained:
[Pierce ] does not speak to the real issue in this case, which is not whether the State’s income tax is proper. While the Nation claims to be seeking only injunctive relief from state taxation, the essence of this case is whether the Nation or the State of Oklahoma is the supreme sovereign with respect to Osage County or whether some form of dual sovereignty may apply.... Whether the non-trust portions of Osage County are Indian country is a question of jurisdiction, not of tax, and the relief the Nation seeks is to divest Oklahoma of sovereign rights, not simply to enjoin a tax. Because this suit is *1230 not a mere tax injunction suit, [Pierce ] is not controlling. Rather, we must look to the principle announced in Blatchford—that 28 U.S.C. § 1362 does not override the State's Eleventh Amendment immunity.
Osage Nation,
.We acknowledge the view expressed by the panel in
Osage Nation,
. Notably, OTC and its Commissioners’ counsel stated at oral argument that they were not asking us to reconsider Pierce for the reason that it has no application to this case.
. Any suggestion that Article I’s Indian Commerce Clause, U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, abrogates OTC and its Commissioners' sovereign
*1231
immunity is misplaced. In
Seminole Tribe v. Florida,
. Nowhere in its amended complaint does MCN expressly request injunctive relief from Oklahoma's cigarette tax enforcement scheme. In its reply brief, MCN acknowledges in footnote 1 that its challenge to the taxing scheme is indirect: “[T]he Creek are also challenging the district court construction of these statutes and, if necessary, their constitutionality. However, the Creek statutory challenge is indirect. It is not the focus of the Amended Complaint.” Of course, because no such challenges appear in the amended complaint, they are of no concern to us in adjudicating the complaint's sufficiency.
. Part III of our opinion raises the question of why in
Pierce
we did not simply rely on
Young
to hold the tribe's suit for prospective injunc-tive relief could proceed against Pierce in her official capacity.
See Pierce,
The principal opinion reasons that federal courts determining whether to exercise jurisdiction over any suit against a state officer must engage in a case-specific analysis of a number of concerns, including whether a state forum is available to hear the dispute, what particular federal right the suit implicates, and whether “special factors counsel hesitation” in the exercise of jurisdiction.
Id.
at 291,
. We are cognizant of
Fla. Dept. of State v. Treasure Salvors, Inc.,
The plurality’s conclusion that the suit was not against the State was based on its view that state officials lacked any colorable basis under state law for claiming rightful possession of the artifacts. Put another way, the plurality in Treasure Salvors would have permitted the suit to proceed not because the plaintiff's claim of title arguably rested on federal law, but because state officials were acting beyond the authority conferred on them by the State, quite apart from whether their conduct also violated federal law.
Coeur d’Alene,
. Because the Court in
Inyo County
determined the tribe sought to assert sovereign rights, the Court did not definitively resolve whether a sovereign could sue under § 1983 to vindicate personal, non-sovereign rights.
Inyo County,
. As we most recently explained in
United States v. Johnson,
