Senate Bill S6721

Vetoed By Governor
2023-2024 Legislative Session

Relates to the reinstatement of state recognition and acknowledgement of the Montaukett Indian Nation

download bill text pdf

Sponsored By

Current Bill Status Via A6919 - Vetoed by Governor


  • Introduced
    • In Committee Assembly
    • In Committee Senate
    • On Floor Calendar Assembly
    • On Floor Calendar Senate
    • Passed Assembly
    • Passed Senate
  • Vetoed By Governor
  • Signed By Governor

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2023-S6721 (ACTIVE) - Details

See Assembly Version of this Bill:
A6919
Law Section:
Indian Law
Laws Affected:
Amd §2, add Art 11 §§170 - 173, Indian L
Versions Introduced in Other Legislative Sessions:
2017-2018: S7770, A9898
2019-2020: S3691, A5411
2021-2022: S6889, A4069

2023-S6721 (ACTIVE) - Summary

Provides for the reinstatement of state recognition and acknowledgement of the Montaukett Indian Nation; provides that the Montaukett Indian nation shall have a chief or sachem, three tribal trustees and a tribal secretary; provides for the qualification of voters; makes related provisions.

2023-S6721 (ACTIVE) - Sponsor Memo

2023-S6721 (ACTIVE) - Bill Text download pdf

                             
                     S T A T E   O F   N E W   Y O R K
 ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                   6721
 
                        2023-2024 Regular Sessions
 
                             I N  S E N A T E
 
                                May 5, 2023
                                ___________
 
 Introduced  by  Sen. PALUMBO -- read twice and ordered printed, and when
   printed to be committed to the Committee on Investigations and Govern-
   ment Operations
 
 AN ACT to amend the Indian law, in  relation  to  the  reinstatement  of
   state recognition and acknowledgement of the Montaukett Indian Nation

   THE  PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND ASSEM-
 BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
 
   Section 1. Legislative findings. The Montaukett  Indian  Nation  seeks
 reinstatement  of its recognition and acknowledgment by the state of New
 York. Such recognition and acknowledgment was  improperly  removed  from
 the  Montaukett  Indian Nation in 1910 in the case of Pharaoh v. Benson,
 69 Misc. Rep. 241(Supreme, Suffolk Co., 1910) affirmed 164 App. Div. 51,
 affirmed 222 N.Y. 665, when the Montaukett Indian Nation was declared to
 be "extinct".
   The court ruled that "the tribe has disintegrated  and  been  absorbed
 into the mass of citizens and at the time of commencement of this action
 there  was  no  tribe  of  Montaukett  Indians". This   arbitrary ruling
 ignored earlier U.S. Supreme Court  decisions  defining  Indian  Nations
 according to criteria under which the Montaukett Indian Nation qualified
 as  an  existing  sovereign  tribe  and giving Congress, rather than the
 courts, power to decide the status of an Indian.
   In the first of these U.S. Supreme Court decisions, United  States  v.
 Roger, 45 U.S. 567 (1848), the court ruled that the primary criteria for
 Indian  identity was evidence that an Indian had to have some genealogi-
 cal connection with a recognized  group  that  had  existed  before  the
 arrival  of  the European white explorers, traders, and settlers.  Veri-
 fied evidence demonstrates that the  Montaukett  Indian  Nation  existed
 prior to the Doctrine of Discovery and, as a sovereign tribe, ruled from
 the end of the Island to what is today the town of Hempstead.
   Subsequently,  a  decade before the Montaukett decision, in Montoya v.
 U.S., 180 U.S. 261 (1901), the U.S. Supreme  Court  further  defined  an
 
  EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                       [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                            LBD11003-03-3
              

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