This controversy is between the Omaha Tribe of Nebraska,, the Tribal Council of the Omaha Tribe and certain officers and members of the Council, as plaintiffs-appellees, and the Village of Walthill, Nebraska, Thurston County, Nebraska, the State of Nebraska, and certain village, county, and state officers, as defendants-appellants.
The dispute centers on the question of jurisdiction over crimes committed by or against Indians on the Omaha Reservation. Seeking a resolution of the problem, plaintiffs filed this action in the United States District Court for the District of Nebraska. They sought a declaration that exclusive jurisdiction over crimes committed by or against Indians is in the United States Government and the Omaha Tribe through the Federal Government, except as to offenses involving the operation of motor vehicles on public roads or highways.
Motions for summary judgment were filed by plaintiffs and defendants. The district court, Judge Robinson, granted the plaintiffs’ motion and entered judgment accordingly. Defendants have brought the case here by appeal.
The controlling facts are fully detailed in the district court’s opinion reported at
Concisely stated, defendants assert that under the 1968 Act authorizing retrocession, the Federal Government was obligated to accept all or none of the Indian country in Thurston County. They submit acceptance of only the Omaha Reservation was a nullity and consequently Nebraska retains jurisdiction over offenses committed on the Omaha Reservation. Conversely, plaintiffs vouch for the validity of the partial acceptance.
The district court fully explored every facet of the issue in a soundly reasoned opinion and convincingly demonstrated that the retrocession acceptance procedures comported with the 1968 Act and therefore exclusive jurisdiction over offenses committed on the Omaha Reservation is in the Federal Government.
We affirm on the basis of the opinion of Judge Robinson. See also United States v. Brown,
