Law

State won't dismiss charges over Narragansett raid

The state of Rhode Island and the Narragansett Tribe are still at odds over the state's raid of the reservation over four years ago.

Gov. Donald Carcieri (R) ordered state troopers to shut down a tax-free smoke shop on July 14, 2003. Seven tribal members -- including Chief Sachem -- were charged for resisting arrest and disorderly conduct.

Carcieri has since been ordered to testify about his role in the raid. But he has asked the state Supreme Court to block him from testifying.

The Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case but it also issued an order that suggested the parties mediate. The state, however, says it won't be dropping the charges against any of the Narragansett defendants.

"They want the chief. That’s what it comes down to," a lawyer for six of the defendants told The Providence Journal.

Get the Story:
Court comment on smoke-shop case perplexing (The Providence Journal 9/10)
pwpwd

Relevant Links:
Narragansett Tribe - http://www.narragansett-tribe.org

Related Stories:
Rhode Island court to hear Narragansett case (9/7)
Rhode Island governor fights Narragansett testimony (9/6)
Governor fights ruling on Narragansett testimony (8/17)
Column: Right call on Narragansett testimony (8/9)
Rhode Island governor must testify about raid (8/6)
Rhode Island governor fights subpoena over raid (8/3)
Column: Unanswered questions on smokeshop raid (8/2)
Rhode Island governor contradicted on raid (8/1)
Narragansett smokeshop defendants head to trial (7/31)
Race, history at issue in Narragansett case (07/12)
Narragansett smokeshop case moved to new court (3/6)
Narragansetts in court over smokeshop raid (01/24)
Column: Smokeshop raid still burns years later (1/23)
Narragansett smokeshop case delayed a week (1/15)