Abramoff
Scandal Sheds Light
on the Murky World of Indian Casinos
By Fergus M. Bordewich
THE SCRUBBY PINE FOREST of East Texas hardly seem the setting for national
scandal any more than the thousand conservative Baptist members of the
Alabama-Coushatta Indian Tribe who live there seem likely protagonists for a
shameless circus of gambling-related influence-peddling that has echoed through
the halls of Congress. Wannabe tribal croupiers turned out to be road kill on
“Casino Jack” Abramoff’s speedway to wealth when it was revealed that he, with
his associate Michael Scanlon, scammed the Alabama-Coushattas for $50 thousand
by pretending to lobby the federal government to permit them to build a casino,
even as they were working—for millions of dollars more—on behalf of rival
tribes.
Abramoff
sent shock waves through Washington recently when he pleaded guilty to three
felony counts, and agreed to testify against his former associates. Like a
darkened landscape suddenly illuminated by the sweep of headlights, the flash
of the Abramoff scandal has thrown lurid light on a murky world of tribal
“gaming,” which in less than twenty years has burgeoned from a handful of
basement bingo operations to a $19 billion industry involving 228 tribes
operating 405 gambling operations in thirty states.
SEEN FROM ONE ANGLE, casinos are a dynamic engine of economic
development for the nation’s most deprived citizens. There is no question that
many tribes have benefited from legalized gambling. According to a 2005 study
by Harvard economists Joseph Kalt and Jonathan Taylor, per capita income in
gaming tribes grew by 36 percent between 1990 and 2000, compared to 21 percent
in non-gaming tribes. Gaming tribes also enjoyed a decline in unemployment two and
a half times greater than tribes without casinos. “With gaming tribes, we see a
situation where for the first time tribes have money that they generate
themselves, and they’re generally plowing it back into their communities,
rebuilding water systems, building libraries, and ball fields,” says Kalt.
“This era of self-determination is finally bearing fruit in terms of sustained
economic development for the first time in one hundred years.”
Despite
the gains made in recent years, many Native Americans still live in appalling
poverty. Nationally, Indians’ per capita income is less than $8,000, about
one-third of the national average.
From
the point of view of gaming’s beleaguered opponents, however, tribal casinos
represent a legal monstrosity that subverts the nation’s constitutional order,
and breeds corruption. “Lobbyists, legislators, and inside-the-Beltway lawyers
are the real stakeholders in Indian gambling,” says Alexis Johnson, a lawyer
based in Arizona, who has served as an advisor to campaigns against the
legalization of tribal gambling in several states. “Abramoff is just the tip of
the iceberg.” Johnson likens casinos to the infected goods that the British
distributed to Indians during the colonial period. “This is the new smallpox
blanket,” he says. “But everyone is enamored of it because it has got dollar
signs all over it.”
Nationally,
between 1990 and 2004, tribal political contributions to federal candidates
alone have ballooned from less than $2,000 to more than $7 million. In
California, Native Americans have become the largest contributor to political
campaigns, spending $70 million on the successful 1998 campaign to require the
governor to approve any tribal casino proposal (the proposal was struck down by
the state courts a year later), another $30 million in a similar and also
successful campaign in 2000, and nearly one-fifth of all the money that was
spent in the 2003 gubernatorial recall campaign.
TO AN EXTENT, of course, Indian tribes have merely learned to
work the American political system in ways that non-Indians always have.
However, tribal sovereignty skews garden variety self-interest into a
phenomenon with Constitutional implications.
Tribal
gambling may be the least transparent large industry in the United States. Constitutional protections reach only feebly onto Indian land, where tribal
governments enjoy a degree of secrecy that would never be tolerated in any
other American community. Gigantic sums disappear from public view as soon as
they have left tribal gaming tables, shielded from view and from outside
regulation by the principle of tribal sovereignty, upheld by the Supreme Court,
which regards tribes as autonomous “nations,” enjoying self-regulation,
immunity from lawsuit, and independence from state laws. In practical terms,
they are also spared scrutiny by investigative journalism and citizen watchdog
groups, which are almost completely absent on Indian reservations. Although
some tribes have agreed to oversight for their casinos in pacts with the state
governments where they are based, the difficulty of penetrating the iron
curtain that surrounds the disposition of casino earnings on many reservations
offers an open invitation to money launderers of all varieties.
WHEN THE INDIAN Gaming Regulatory Act became law in 1988, no one
imagined that it would become a Trojan Horse that would deliver Las Vegas-style
casino gambling into communities across America. Having saturated local
markets, many tribes are now seeking to acquire land near sometimes distant
population centers, converting it to “sovereign” territory, in an effort to shoehorn casinos into areas where they’re often not wanted by local
populations. Once land becomes part of a reservation, it typically becomes
exempt from local taxes, state labor laws, municipal ordinances, zoning
restrictions, and environmental review. In one of the most egregious cases, in
2004, the Cheyenne-Arapahoe Tribes of Oklahoma filed a 27 million acre land
claim which included all of Denver and Colorado Springs, but offered to drop it
in exchange for the approval of a Las Vegas-style casino near Denver Airport.
“These
efforts are being funded by ‘shadowy’ developers who underwrite the litigation
expenses, lobbyist fees, and even the cost of land in exchange for a cut of the
profits,” James T. Martin, the executive director of the United South and
Eastern Tribes, told the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, in May 2005. “If
even one of these deals is approved, the floodgates for this kind of
‘reservation shopping’ will open throughout the country.” (Martin, it should be
said, is no opponent of gambling: his organization includes tribes whose main
goal is to thwart new competition against their own casinos.)
The
dazzling lure of casino profits has inspired hundreds of groups often with
doubtful credentials to seek federal recognition as Indian tribes. Stringent
federal standards have defeated the vast majority of dubious applicants. But
some do slip through. For example, virtually all members of the tiny
Mashantucket Pequot tribe, which was recognized on a technicality in 1983, are
related to just two elderly women who lived on a scrap of land in the 1930s.
The modern tribe is thus a sort of family condominium that reconstituted itself
as an Indian tribe, and which has in turn become a corporation that is also a
“sovereign” state. It also operates the largest casino in the world on its
ever-burgeoning reservation in eastern Connecticut.
IN AN AGE when guilt and romantic fantasy often masquerade as
politics, tribal sovereignty has seemed like a cure-all for the genuine wounds
of the past. There is no doubt that it has brought self-empowerment and
relative prosperity to many tribes that were long paralyzed by federal
paternalism. However, without more public debate than it has so far received, tribal
sovereignty and the casinos that are its offspring will continue to transform
the United States in ways that are impossible to predict, and not always for
the better.
Many
Indians treat scrutiny of the tribal casino industry as an attack on tribal sovereignty,
and racist virtually by definition. Tribal ideologues claim an absolute right
to self-government without “interference” from state and federal governments,
or any other outside institutions, such as the independent press. This vision
of sovereignty serves the self-interest of tribal officials and predators like
Jack Abramoff much more than it does the welfare of rank and file tribal
members, who are the most vulnerable victims of closed-door government and
official corruption. Nor should any $19 billion industry enjoy a “sovereign”
protection from regulatory laws that are meant to protect all
Americans—including Native Americans.
Without
a clear, nationally agreed-upon idea of what tribal sovereignty is really
supposed to be, we may one day find ourselves living in a land that has little
in common with the goals of today’s good intentions, and in which hundreds of
“tribes” of Americans are permanently distinguished from their fellow citizens
by the special rights that were bestowed on their Indian ancestors, and by the
privilege of operating unregulated gambling casinos. —Fergus M. Bordewich