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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: rich4eagle who wrote (1950)1/10/2002 4:22:36 AM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Rich, Bush makes the rules. His aides are puppets. Bush will not tolerate anyone who disagrees
with him. And Bush nominated Ashcroft and Norton. Norton is the Interior Secretary. Did
you know that she is in court because a judge said she lied to him?

Norton Contempt Trial Opens Over Indian Trust
December 11, 2001



By ROBERT L. JACKSON, TIMES STAFF WRITER

WASHINGTON -- Interior Secretary Gale A.
Norton went on trial Monday on charges of
contempt of court, accused by a federal judge of
lying to him about her efforts to clean up the
long-mismanaged Indian trust fund system.

U.S. District Judge Royce C. Lamberth ordered
testimony to begin about the Interior Department's
mishandling of the multibillion-dollar fund, held in
trust for 300,000 Native Americans. The trust
holds and distributes fees for 54 million acres of
land leased for drilling, grazing and logging. The
fund, the department acknowledges, has been
mismanaged almost since its inception more than a
century ago.

The Interior secretary, whose presence is not required at the civil proceeding,
did not attend the first day of the trial. She is expected to testify later this
month that she has made a good-faith effort to correct decades of fund
mismanagement and tried to submit accurate reports to Lamberth, who has
sought for five years to straighten out the tangled system. The trial could last
for several weeks. Mark Nagle, an assistant U.S. attorney representing
Norton, told Lamberth: "Evidence will demonstrate that contempt of court is
not warranted." Nagle said he would provide a fuller explanation of Norton's
case later.

Thomas M. Thompson, the congressional overseer of the fund and the trial's
first witness, said he found records in disarray dating back more than 100
years. The Bureau of Indian Affairs, a division of Interior, has been trying to
establish an accurate database, "but it's pretty clear there wasn't anyone
managing the process on a day-to-day basis," Thompson said. He began
looking into the trust fund at the request of Congress in January 1999.

The government has admitted that it cannot determine how much money is
involved because the records are, in Thompson's words, "jumbled and
confused." About $500 million in royalties is believed to be deposited into the
fund each year. Many documents were mishandled, destroyed by floods or
simply lost, and Thompson said he found a lack of security for records stored
electronically, leaving them open to tampering.

Besides money owed to living Native Americans, there is a backlog of 15,000
probate cases in which Interior officials have not been able to determine how
much is owed to the heirs of deceased Indians, he told the court. These
probate accounts, which may total as much as $100 million, have been locked
up for as long as six years awaiting determination of who owns the leases,
Thompson said.

To protect the trust-fund records, the judge last week ordered all Internet and
computer connections in the Interior Department shut down after finding them
particularly vulnerable to hackers.

But after protests of the U.S. Geological Survey, a division of Interior, that its
Web site was needed for public information in event of a major earthquake,
Lamberth issued a formal order Monday that any connections not related to
the trust fund could be restored.

Crediting Norton's actions since she took office early this year, Thompson
told the court that she had instructed her aides to undertake a historical
accounting of trust-fund money and to consider how to "prioritize" this work.

More recently, Norton announced she was reorganizing management of the
fund under one official and would consult with representatives of Native
Americans and other interested parties on reform efforts. An initial meeting is
to take place Thursday in Albuquerque.

latimes.com