Advertise:   ads@blueearthmarketing.com   712.224.5420

Law
Connecticut's top court hears Indian taxation case


The Connecticut Supreme Court heard arguments on Tuesday in an Indian taxation case.

Jo Ann Dark Eyes, a member of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation, says the state cannot tax income she earned as tribal councilor. At the time of her employment, she was living on land that is part of the tribe's settlement reservation but had not yet been taken into trust.

State attorney general Richard Blumenthal argues that Dark Eyes owes the money because she didn't live in Indian Country. He cites the U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision in Sherill v. Oneida Nation, which held that the Oneida Nation couldn't "unilaterally" assert sovereignty without going through the land-into-trust process.

Get the Story:
State Supreme Court Hears Mashantucket Woman's Tax Case (The New London Day 9/7)
pwday

Related Stories:
Connecticut towns join case over Indian taxation (08/10)
Connecticut towns want to join case over taxation (07/30)
Brief filed in Indian taxation case in Connecticut (07/19)
State claims tribal tax decision could be costly (05/21)
Mashantucket Tribe joins appeal over taxation (5/20)