NABA-AZ

Greetings NABA-AZ Members-

Please mark your calendars for the following dates:

  • January 11, 2008 – NABA-AZ Planning Meeting at the ASU Law Library 12 p.m. – 1 p.m.
  • February 28, 2008 – NABA-AZ Introductory Reception at the University Club

Additional information will be sent out closer to each event. Hope to see you there!

Wishing you and your families a Happy Holiday Season!

Kerry Patterson, Esq.
Fennemore Craig, P.C.
3003 North Central Avenue, Suite 2600
Phoenix, Arizona 85012
Phone: 602-916-5491
Facsimile: 602-916-5691
Email: kpatters@fclaw.com

New Course to help students with Bar Exam

A new course designed to help law students improve their performance on the Arizona Bar Exam has been organized for next semester by Professor Michael Berch of the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law.

Passage of the grueling Bar Exam is required before law-school graduates are allowed to practice law and is usually taken late in the summer after graduation. “This course was put together in response to requests by the third-year law students,” Berch said. “They have wanted something like this for a long time. We will look at the past five years of bar exams and, when we find a pattern of questions, we’ll be highlighting those patterns.”

The free, non-credit course will be taught by Berch and 16 other law professors and adjuncts. It will meet from 3:30-6 p.m. on Fridays, beginning Jan. 18, and requires no registration. Third-year law students who will graduate in May, first- and second-year students who want a preview of exam preparation, as well as any previous graduates still preparing to take the exam, are all welcome to attend. Each session will give an overview of a section of the bar, including real property, Constitutional law, evidence, community property, torts, criminal procedure/constitutional aspects, criminal law, contracts, professional responsibility, trusts and wills, civil procedure and corporations, partnerships and other business organizations. A four-person panel will discuss studying for the bar. Students can come to one session or all.

Professor Alan Matheson said his session will cover the basics of Arizona community property law, including the difference between community property and separate property for married persons; management and control for each spouse; community debts and separate debts; pensions; insurance; division of assets at death and at divorce; joint tenancy and its relationship to community property; joinder; gifts; duty to spouses; and other issues. “For those who have already taken the community property course, this will be a review,” Matheson said. “For others, it will be an introduction to this important area of the law that is on the Arizona Bar Examination at each offering.”

Professor Bob Bartels will cover evidence. “I think it should be possible to identify and discuss some points about how to approach bar-exam evidence questions that will add to the standard bar-review lectures,” Bartels said.

Professor Gary Lowenthal will cover substantive criminal law. “This is one of the core subjects on both the essay and the multistate portions of the bar exam,” Lowenthal said. “This course will provide students with a valuable framework for the bar exam, and will give them a strategic advantage when they begin to study for the bar during the summer.”

Berch said the course is not intended to replace the more intense bar review courses offered by private companies, but instead would supplement those courses. “The bar-prep courses are often straight lectures, and I hope these will be more interactive, allowing students to ask questions,” Berch said.

The schedule is:

  • Jan. 18 – Civil Procedure – Michael Berch
  • Jan. 25 – Real Property – Jones Osborn
  • Feb. 1 – Corporations, Partnerships & Other Business Organizations – Myles Lynk
  • Feb. 8 – Studying for the Bar Exam –
    Art Hinshaw, Chad Noreuil, Rebecca Berch and Corie Rosen
  • Feb. 15 – Constitutional Law/Arizona and Federal – Paul Bender
  • Feb. 22 – Contracts – Jonathan Rose
  • Feb. 29 – Community Property – Alan Matheson
  • March 7 – Torts – Betsy Grey
  • March 14 – No class – Spring Break
  • March 21 – Criminal Procedure/Constitutional Aspects – Carissa Hessick
  • March 28 – Criminal Law – Gary Lowenthal
  • April 4 – Trusts & Wills – John Becker
  • April 11 – Professional Responsibility – John Tuchi
  • April 18 – Evidence – Bob Bartels
  • A Uniform Commercial Code course offered by Dale Furnish will be announced at a later date.

Gover Bids Farewell to Law School

Gover bids farewell to law school:`This is what I’m supposed to do’

Among the guests at Kevin Gover’s farewellparty were, from left, Jacob Moore, of ASU’sOffice of Public Affairs, Patricia White, deanof the College of Law, Gover, and SandraFerniza, also of the Office of Public Affairs.

Colleagues, students and friends of Kevin Gover, a professor of the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law and co-executive director of the American Indian Policy Institute at Arizona State University, honored him with symbolic gifts and fond congratulations during a farewell party on Nov. 26.

Gover, a former Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Indian Affairs, is returning to Washington, D.C., to accept an appointment as director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian, effective Dec. 2.

Gover, who will remain a professor at the law school on leave for the duration of his time at the museum, will be welcomed back with open arms whenever he chooses, said Patricia White, dean of the College of Law.

“I want to say how excited we are for Kevin and how proud we are of Kevin and, more importantly, how sad we are for ourselves that Kevin will be leaving,” White said. “Kevin’s presence here has been a wondrous thing for all of us. He has contributed to this school in innumerable ways, as a fabulous teacher and a wonderful mentor to lots and lots of students, and he has been particularly important to the students in the Indian Legal Program.”

One of them, Joe Sarcinella, a second-year law student, presented Gover with an acrylic painting from the Native American Law Student Association, which was made by Phoenix artist Joseph Wolveskill. “You are very important to us,” Sarcinella told Gover. “We’re very happy to have had the chance to study with you.”

Gover, who practiced law in Washington, D.C., and Albuquerque before serving as Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Indian Affairs, joined the College of Law in 2003.

“We didn’t come here with any thought in mind that this was a way station, or that we were just passing through, but rather with the expectation and hope that this would be a place where we would do something completely different, something that seemed worthwhile, important and noteworthy,” said Gover, who also is an affiliate professor in the American Indian Studies Program at ASU. “My hopes and my expectations were not only fulfilled, they were exceeded.

“It means a great deal to be accepted here, into such an elite, intellectual, remarkable family.” Complimenting his colleagues in the renowned Indian Legal Program, Gover said he was certain the program would continue to blossom, and he praised the American Indian Policy Institute as one of the most important such enterprises in the country.

Pat Mariella, the institute’s director, presented Gover with a plaque and thanked him for his leadership, while Eddie Brown, the institute’s co-executive director with Gover, gave him an ASU polo shirt to remind him of his academic roots.

“It’s been a real pleasure,” Brown said. “Kevin because the mastermind of many of the ideas that we developed over the last few years.”

Jacob Moore, tribal relations coordinator for the ASU Office of Public Affairs, gave Gover a Tohono O’odham basket, then joked, “We know he’ll have lots of artwork around him, so this is something to remember us by.”

Gover said his desire to continue helping Native people tell their stories led, in part, to his decision to accept the appointment to the Smithsonian.

“This museum is a place where we can really reshape Americans’ understanding of who Indians are, of who they were and who they’re going to be,” said Gover, who grew up in Oklahoma and is a member of the Pawnee Tribe. “And that’s heady stuff, that’s a big deal to me because there’s so much misunderstanding.”

He also said the new job “seemed like what I’m supposed to do now. I’m very hopeful that it won’t be too long that it seems I’m supposed to come back. I really do like it here, in no small part because of our students.

“I look forward to when I’m in my rocking chair, and I say, `Oh, yeah, that was my student.’ I know the contributions these students will make,” he said.

Article about ILP

November 16, 2007
Law Firms and Legal Affairs November 2007
Laws across nations
ASU’s Indian Legal Program trains lawyers to practice on and off the reservation
By Debra Utacia Krol, Arizona Capitol Times correspondent

Myriad laws govern the intersection of American Indian tribes with the rest of the nation.
Among other issues, Indian law touches on land, water and environment, business and family. Gaming has become a hot topic, and many attorneys’ billable hours involve gaming ordinances and policies.

As tribal governments grow ever more sophisticated, experts on understanding the interaction of tribes with other governmental entities is paramount. More and more tribes and tribal members are doing business with non-Indian firms, making commercial codes, dispute resolution and contract law a must with Indian law attorneys.

Attorneys whose practice takes them into dealings with both tribal governments and individual Indians must have a firm grasp on not just federal, state and local laws, but on tribal ordinances. But where can attorneys and law students acquire the expertise necessary to navigate the maze of tribal, state and federal laws? They turn to schools like Arizona State University’s Indian Legal Program, headquartered at the Sandra Day O’Connor School of Law.

The program was established in 1988 to train attorneys in Indian law, assisting them in understanding how tribal laws differ from federal and state law – and how they resemble each other’s systems. Its mission includes providing legal education and public service to tribal governments, and helping support tribes in policy development. As one of the nation’s largest, the program provides its students with both a firm foundation in Indian law and a wealth of practical work experience.

“As people learn more about tribes and with all the economic development growth in Indian Country, the field of Indian law grows,” says Kathlene Rosier, the program’s director. “It’s exciting to see it grow. We see more and more people coming to do business on reservations, and it’s important to know how legal systems interact.” Rosier, a Comanche whose last position was tribal prosecutor for the Gila River Indian Community, oversees the program, which trains 10 to 15 native law students from the United States, Canada and Mexico and a number of non-Indians who sign up for the program’s Indian law certificate each year.

The school also holds a number of conferences, such as one in 2008 on the effects of 20 years under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, which in 1988 paved the way for tribal casinos in Arizona and other states.

Students in the program can develop their tribal law portfolios in several ways. In addition to ASU’s law degree, students can earn an Indian Law Certificate. The master of law, or L.L.M., degree in tribal law and government provides those who already have a juris doctorate (JD) or equivalent with an opportunity to increase their skills and knowledge specifically in the area of Indian law. For those who do not wish to practice law, but have a need or interest in tribal law, the master of legal studies or M.L.S. program provides students with the basics of law while allowing them to choose from elective classes to gain the tribal law knowledge they desire.

Attracting top talent
The school has also attracted some stellar academic talent. Professor Paul Bender is a well-known figure in Arizona jurisprudence. Bender, who has argued two dozen cases before the U.S. Supreme Court, is the dean emeritus of the law school.

Indian Legal Program Executive Director Rebecca Tsosie is acknowledged as one of Indian Country’s top attorneys. Tsosie, a Yaqui, is also an acclaimed legal scholar who serves as a Supreme Court justice for several tribal court systems. Tsosie has written and published widely on doctrinal and theoretical issues related to tribal sovereignty, environmental policy and cultural rights.

Professor Robert Clinton has co-authored several casebooks and articles on Indian law, including casebooks on Indian law and federal courts, and “The Handbook of Federal Indian Law” and “Colonial and American Indian Treaties: a Collection.”

Professor Kevin Gover, former Bureau of Indian Affairs head and a Pawnee, is headed back to Washington to take the reins of the National Museum of the American Indian. However, Rosier notes that he’s still associated with the law school, and will be back in town for the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act conference.

The program’s 100-plus alumni provide another valuable resource. Ranging from attorneys in private practice to the Arizona Governor’s Office and the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, program graduates are making their mark in tribal law.

Beyond book learning
Then there’s the Indian Legal Clinic, where students gain the practical experience that books just can’t supply. Patty Ferguson-Bohnee has only served as the director since June, but is already busy with her students and caseload. “Learning can be in a vacuum,” says Ferguson-Bohnee, a member of Louisiana’s Pointe-au-Chien Tribe. “Indian law touches every area of life. The clinic allows students to go out in the community and see how what you do impacts the community and the people in that community.”

The clinic accepts cases in any court that are related to tribal, state or federal Indian law, and is open to all law students. “We have students who are interested in Indian law but do not intend to practice Indian law full time,” says Ferguson-Bohnee. “They find our courses and clinic very helpful.”

In fact, the only limitation on the clinic’s caseload is the physical distance of the court from ASU’s Tempe campus, which is why the majority of cases accepted are local, says Ferguson-Bohnee. “But they will travel for big cases.” Clients don’t even have to be from an Arizona tribe.
“Urban Indians living in the Phoenix area also have legal issues related to Indian law,” she says. Cases may range from child custody and Indian Child Welfare Act cases, to helping draft policy documents for tribal, state or federal governments.

Revamping Indian probate
One big issue that Ferguson-Bohnee’s team and the entire Indian Legal Program is tackling: probate. With recent changes to federal Indian probate laws, including the requirement that any Indian who owns allotted property within reservation borders have a written will to prevent further “fractionation” of land, Indian law practitioners are learning how to address the new policies and provide support to tribes in rewriting probate ordinances.

Students’ motivations vary, but all appear to have a passion for the law. Nikki Borchardt, a member of the Southern Paiute Tribe of Utah, has a background in ethnography, but she always knew she was headed for law school: “My aunt was the tribal chairwoman,” says Borchardt, a second-year student. “I knew there was a need for lawyers.” She pushed to keep her grades high to ensure entry into a good school. “I worked as an ethnographer and archaeologist” before going to law school, she says. Borchardt intends to someday return to cultural resources work.
“This is just the next step,” she says. “We’re starting to see how Indian law impacts every aspect of life.” Borchardt also praises the active role the program’s alumni play in helping students with networking and support.

Raymond Campbell of the Gila River Indian Community decided he didn’t want to work in a lab and opted for law. “My undergrad is in biochemistry,” the second-year student says. “I served an internship in the U.S. Senate Finance Committee and decided on law instead. I’m interested in marrying science and technology to the practice of law.”

Mary Modrich-Alvarado, Jicarilla Apache/Mayan, decided on ASU because it was close to her New Mexico home. The third-year student who has a business degree was undecided what to do after graduation. “I was talking with my sister, guessing what to do next and we started talking about law,” says Modrich-Alvarado, who also intends to actively practice after finishing her degree.

Dreams of a Navajo Nation-based law firm
Jerome Clark leaves his wife and two children at home to make the five-hour drive from Gallup, N.M. each week to attend law school. Clark, a Navajo, already has an MBA but decided he needed more tools to spark economic development. “I wanted to evaluate how our Navajo laws interact with economic development concepts, how the Navajo Nation works.”

Clark hopes to use his legal education to help resolve underlying issues, such as land use policies to build a strong, sustainable economic base in his home. “My goal is to practice at least two or three years and then open a practice in the Navajo Nation.”

In order to practice at Navajo, however, Clark, a third-year student will have to jump through some unique hoops. “I’m going to take the Arizona, New Mexico and Navajo Nation bar exams,” he says. Clark also wants to help change the perception many people still have about tribal courts. “Navajo Nation’s judiciary is independent,” he says. “We’re not new to the game.
“But some businesses are deterred from coming to the Navajo Nation because they are reluctant to be subject to Navajo Nation courts if a dispute arises. If we can show people how evolved our court system is and how our contract law is similar to theirs, it may help attract more off-reservation business.”

The field of Indian law is growing across the nation. More than 15 other universities offer Indian law certificates or have legal programs geared to tribal law. Two states – New Mexico and Washington – now have Indian law questions on their bar exams. Arizona’s Indian law practitioners would also like to see tribal law placed on the Arizona bar exam, and the Native American Bar Association is working toward that goal.

“With over 560 tribes in the U.S., and people just want to learn more about them,” says Rosier, the Indian Legal Program’s director “It’s exciting for us because the more people who know about how tribal laws work, the better.”

Gover – New Director of NMAI

Gover to head Smithsonian museum

Kevin Gover, a professor at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University and former Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Indian Affairs, has been chosen to be director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian.

The museum made the announcement this week, saying Gover’s appointment will be effective Dec. 2. “We’re delighted that Kevin Gover will lead the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian in the next phase of its service to the public,” said Cristián Samper, Acting Secretary of the Smithsonian. “Mr. Gover’s extensive experience in Washington and with Indian communities, his deep interest in and knowledge of Indian history and culture and his commitment to bringing the vast resources of the National Museum of the American Indian to the broadest possible audience will enable him to provide strong and effective leadership to the museum.”

Gover said he was deeply honored by the appointment. “The museum’s mission of educating the public about living Native cultures is an important and challenging one, and I am grateful for the opportunity to build upon the strong foundation created by the museum’s founding director, Rick West,” Gover said. Gover thanked ASU President, Dr. Michael Crow, and Patricia White, Dean of the College of Law, for their support. “I’m grateful that I will maintain an association with ASU and the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law,” he said. “I will miss my colleagues and students at Arizona State University and my many friends from the Indian nations of Arizona, but I do look forward to serving in a new capacity.”

White said Gover will remain a professor at the law school on leave for the duration of his time at the museum. “The Smithsonian has made a magnificent appointment,” White said. “Kevin Gover is a man of rare talent and integrity. His knowledge of Indian affairs and policy is unmatched, and his interpersonal skills are truly wonderful. “We are proud to have him on our faculty and selfishly wish that he were not taking leave to take on this important post.” White said the College remains committed to maintaining the leading Indian Legal Program in the country and will seek new talent to fill the space left by Gover’s departure.

Rebecca Tsosie, Executive Director of the Indian Legal Program, said Gover is the ideal person to serve as the museum’s next director. “He has the knowledge and skills to lead this important institution, and to work collaboratively with policymakers and tribal leaders on the next phase of the Museum’s development,” Tsosie said. “The entire Nation will benefit from Professor Gover’s leadership, and therefore I am very supportive of Professor Gover’s decision to assume this important position. “Of course, at a personal level, those of us who worked closely with Professor Gover will miss having his daily presence at the law school, and his ever-present wisdom, practical genius, and sense of humor.” Tsosie said the faculty, students and staff of the Indian Legal Program, as well as the larger ASU community, have benefited from Gover’s leadership, knowledge and expertise, as well as his energy and commitment to serve Native communities “Professor Gover developed new offerings for the law school curriculum and worked in collaboration with Dr. Eddie Brown and other faculty to establish the interdisciplinary American Indian Policy Institute,” she said. “He is an extraordinarily popular professor and a valued member of the law faculty. We are very proud and honored that Professor Gover intends to keep his affiliation with ASU and the Indian Legal Program, and we foresee many benefits from the partnership with NMAI that we are currently contemplating.”

Kathlene Rosier, director of the Indian Legal Program, said Gover will continue to teach intersession and abbreviated courses as his time permits and will help support ASU students working and interning in Washington, D.C. “We hope to have him back as much as possible,” Rosier said. “Of course we are saddened to see Kevin leave and know that the students will miss seeing him on a day-to-day basis, but I know this will open up wonderful opportunities to collaborate down the road.”

Gover joined the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law in 2003 and teaches federal Indian law, administrative law and statutory interpretation. He is also an affiliate professor in ASU’s American Indian Studies Program and co-executive director of the university’s American Indian Policy Institute.

Gover, 52, grew up in Oklahoma and is a member of the Pawnee Tribe of Oklahoma. He earned his bachelor’s degree in public and international affairs from Princeton University and his law degree from the University of New Mexico School of Law. He was awarded an honorary doctor of laws degree from Princeton University in 2001. Gover also practiced law for more than 15 years in Albuquerque, N.M., and Washington, D.C. His legal career began in 1983 at Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Kampelman in Washington. In 1986, he moved to Albuquerque and founded Gover, Stetson & Williams (1986-1997). His last stint in law practice was with the Washington office of Steptoe & Johnson (2001-2003). His practice areas included federal Indian law, commercial transactions, environmental and administrative law, and legislative affairs.

He currently serves as associate judge on the Tonto Apache Tribal Court of Appeals and the San Carlos Apache Tribal Court of Appeals. He is a member of the board of trustees of the nonprofit Grand Canyon Trust in Flagstaff, and of the board of directors of the nonprofit Futures for Children in Albuquerque. Gover served as Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Indian Affairs from 1997 to 2000, where he was responsible for policy and operational oversight of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the agency responsible for the federal government’s relations with Indian tribes. He oversaw programs in Indian education, law enforcement, social services, treaty rights and trust asset management. During that time, Gover concentrated on upgrading Indian law enforcement, rebuilding decrepit Indian schools, reforming trust services and overhauling the Bureau of Indian Affairs’ management systems. His reform efforts, coupled with an eloquent apology to the nation’s Indian communities for the history of wrongs done to them by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, won him wide approval in Indian country and Congressional praise.

Established in 1989, through an Act of Congress, the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian is an institution of living cultures dedicated to advancing knowledge and understanding of the life, languages, literature, history and arts of the Native peoples of the Western Hemisphere. The museum includes the National Museum of the American Indian on the National Mall; the George Gustav Heye Center, a permanent museum in lower Manhattan; and the Cultural Resources Center, a research and collections facility in Suitland, Md.

Rod Lewis

Profile of Rodney Lewis from the Spring 2007 issue of Trinity Magazine–First Native American of record in Supreme Court

Rod Lewis was featured in a wonderful profile in Trinity Magazine (Spring 2007), the Magazine of Trinity University, San Antonio. Your recognition is well deserved!

NATIVE AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION
PLANNING MEETING

PLEASE JOIN US ON

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21ST
TO PLAN ACTIVITIES FOR 2007-2008!!

The Board of the newly formed Native American Bar Association will be hosting a planning meeting to discuss NABA plans for 2007-2008, including:

· scholarship/fundraising activities
· membership services
· CLE programs
· community outreach
· additional NABA co-sponsored events

Bring your ideas to the planning meeting! We look forward to seeing you!

Where: ASU College of Law Library

When: September 21, 2007

Time: 11:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.

RSVP: Please RSVP to Kerry Patterson at 602-916-5491 or kpatters@fclaw.com by September 18, 2007

Lunch will be provided

Free Training

Domestic Violence Expert Witness Institute
Victim Advocates And Tribal Law Enforcement
October 17–18, 2007
Tucson, Arizona
Marriott University Park Hotel
880 E. 2nd StreetTucson, Arizona 85719

This 2 day, tuition free course provides hands-on, experiential training on how to qualify as an expert witness on domestic violence in tribal, state, and federal courts. Learn from some of Indian Country’s leading judges, attorneys, law enforcement officers, and victim advocates how to prepare for trial, qualify as an expert witness on domestic violence, and provide effective, persuasive testimony.Participants will have the opportunity to simulate taking the stand and providing domestic violence expert witness testimony in small, interactive breakout groups facilitated by legal, advocacy, and law enforcement experts.This is an advanced level professional course to assist experienced victim advocates and law enforcement officers in qualifying and providing effective testimony as expert witnesses on domestic violence against Native women. Registration is free. You can register on-line at www.swclap.org The deadline for registration is September 17, 2007. Preference is given to OVW grantees working with Native women. There are a limited number of hotel rooms at the Marriott University Park Hotel at the discounted room rate of $83 a night single/double. Hotel reservations must be made no later than September 17, 2007 by calling the Marriott at (520) 792-4100. For more information, please see our website: www.swclap.org or contact us by phone at 520-623-8192.

Save the Date – Navajo DOJ CLE

Navajo Nation Department of Justice 25th Anniversary
Friday, November 9, 2007
Location: Window Rock Museum

The Navajo Nation Department of Justice, joined by University of New Mexico School of Law, the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at ASU, and Sutin, Thayer & Browne, P.C., is sponsoring a one-day Continuing Legal Education program in celebration of the 25th anniversary of the founding of Navajo DOJ and the 10th anniversary of Sutin, Thayer & Browne’s Navajo law seminar. The CLE is aimed at reflecting upon Navajo law and legal practice and its context within both federal and tribal environments.

More information will be coming soon.