News from Indian Country Pge 12 Spilysy Tymoo December 8, 2005 Abramoff investigator used lobbyist's skybox, helped client WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) - The top Senate Democrat in vestigating Jack Abramoff s In dian lobbying met several times with the lobbyist's team and cli ents, held a fundraiser in Abramoff's arena skybox and arranged congressional help for one of the tribes, records show. Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., acknowledges he got Congress in fall 2003 to press govern ment regulators to decide, after decades of delay, whether the Mashpce Wampanoag tribe of Massachusetts deserved federal recognition. Dorgan met with the tribe's representatives and collected at least $11,500 in political, dona tions from Abramoff partner Michael D. Smith, who was rep resenting the Mashpce, around the time he helped craft the leg islation, according to interviews and documents obtained by The Associated Press. The senator didn't reimburse die Mississippi Choctaw for the use of Abramoff's skybox in 2001, when the tribe threw him a fundraiser there, instead treat ing it as a tribal contribution. He only recently reimbursed the tribe for the box, four years later, after determining it was con nected to Abramoff. Dorgan says he sees no rea son to step down from the Abramoff investigation, which he and Sen. John McCain, R Ariz., are leading He said he had no idea at the time that any of the transactions were connected Tribal leader Allen honored : PORTLAND (AP) - W Ron Allen, executive director of the Jamestown S'Kallam tribe of Washington, has been awarded the $25,000 Buffet Award for Indigenous Leadership. Allen, of Sequim, Wash., was honored for his decades of work toward tribal sovereignty, treaty rights and governmental responsibilities. He said he will use some of Makahs buying timber land traded NEAH BAY, Wash. (AP) -The Makah Tribe has been buy ing land between its main reser vation here at the tip of Washington's Olympic Peninsula and the Ozette Indian Reserva tion to the south, potentially doubling its yearly timber rev enue. Much of the tribe's prop Warm Springs Full Gospel Church presents , For Unto Us A Child Is Born ) I to Abramoff or the alleged fleecing of tribes. "I never met Jack Abramoff but I am appalled by what we have learned about his actions," Dorgan said Thursday. "So I have never felt there was any conflict in my helping to lead that investigation. I think Sen. McCain would agree our inves tigation has been relentless and that neither of us will be di verted." Dorgan's contacts, donations and fundraisers involving Abramoff tribal clients and lob bying associates, as well as those of other lawmakers, have not been examined during the Sen , ate hearings into the lobbyist's roughly $80 million in charges to the tribes. The senator didn't volunteer the information, although he did disclose his donations in cam paign reports over the years. Larry Noble, the government's former chief elec tion enforcement lawyer, said Dorgan should have considered stepping aside from the inquiry and at the very least should have disclosed all his own intersec tions with Abramoff's associates and tactics. "I think any way you look at it he had an obligation to dis close," Noble said. "It is hard for anyone not to see a conflict when you're investigating the same activity you yourself were involved with." Over the last month, the AP has reported that about four (9 i , ,,;.'. ..TV..-, the award for a project by the National Congress of American Indians to create an Embassy of Tribal Nations, a permanent In dian presence and working space in Washington, D.C. Allen is a former tribal chair man and has been executive di rector since 1982. The annual award by the families of Howard and Peter Buffett recognizes indigenous erty was ceded to the U.S. gov ernment in 1855 for hunting and fishing rights. That land is now under private, non-Native American ownership. Makah Forestry Enterprises recently completed a more than $6 million land deal with Cas cade Timberlands LLC, which Dec. 21 -6 p.m. performance Dec. 23 - 6 p.m. performance Dec. 25-5 p.m. dinner, 6 p.m. performance dozen lawmakers, Republicans and Democrats, collected dona tions from Abramoff's tribal clients and firm around the time they wrote letters to the Bush administration or Congress fa vorable to the tribes. Congressional ethics rules require lawmakers to avoid even the appearance of a con flict of interest in performing official duties and accepting political money. The Justice Department is investigating whether Abramoff, already charged with fraud, won any undue influence through dona tions and favors. Dorgan on Monday sharply criticized the AP for reporting last week that he collected $20,000 from Abramoff's firm and tribes in the period when he wrote a letter urging the Sen ate Appropriations Committee to fund a school construction program that Abramoff's clients and other tribes wanted. The senator said he long sup ported the program, and the let ter and donations had no con nection. And he asserted that he never took any action or re ceived any campaign help that knowingly involved Abramoff. Dorgan, however, benefited from the very arena skybox that has become a symbol of Abramoff's controversial ef forts to win Washington influ ence, records show. The Choctaw tribe, an Abramoff client that was a pri mary focus of the Senate hear leadership that improves social, economic, political or environ mental conditions. Allen has served on the Af filiated Tribes of Northwest Indians and the Northwest In dian Fisheries Commission. From 1990 to 1996 he was chairman of the National Indian Policy Center at George Wash ington University. away in treaty will return to the tribe 3,811 acres of timber land, expand ing its land base by 1 1 percent. "The land was important to the tribe," said Meri Parker, chief operating officer of Makah Forestry. "So, too, was our right to fish and hunt in our usual and accustomed places." ings, sponsored a fundraiser March 28, 2001, for Dorgan's political group, the Great Plains Leadership Fund. The event treated Dorgan and his donors to a bird's-eye view of a profes sional hockey game from a skybox Abramoff leased in Washington's MCI Center, while lobbyists got the chance to bend his ear. Dorgan knew the fundraiser was sponsored by the Choctaw and that two Abramoff lobby ists attended, but at the time he didn't know they were con nected to Abramoff, his spokes man said. "He was told the skybox was the Choctaws," Barry Piatt said. Dorgan didn't reimburse the tribe, instead reporting the event as an "in-kind" $1,800 tribal contribution without specifying it involved the skybox. Piatt said reporting it that way was legal and normal. The sena tor reimbursed the tribe $1,800 for the skybox earlier this year when he learned from reports that it was connected to Abramoff, Piatt said. Documents the Senate re leased show Abramoff charged the Choctaw $223,679 to under write use of the skybox in 2001, the year of Dorgan's fundraiser, even though the tribe "very rarely" used it. Dorgan has de nounced the fees as outrageous. Dorgan and his staff met several times with Abramoff's lobbying team, according to the lobbying firm's billing records. KftE Why Wait 6 to 8 For Archaeologists dig into golf course NEW ULM, Minn. (AP) -Archaeologist Doug George knelt beside a foot-deep ex cavation unit at Fort Ridgcly and splayed his team's recent findings in a dustpan - nails and bits of glass. To an outsider, the frag ments found inches below the surface seem like rubbish. To George and fellow archaeolo gists LcRoy Gonsior and Dave Radford of the Minne sota Historical Society, the pieces tell a story about the stables that once stood on the grounds - where Dakota In dians sought shelter during an 1 862 battle. White men in the fort shot a cannon at the stables and burned them to the ground. The excavated pieces are clues to such events. The frag ments of glass told the men the stables had windows, which they hadn't known be fore. Because of the impor tance of piecing together the historical puzzle, each and every fragment will be cleaned, catalogued and even tually stored by the historical society. "We're managing to pre serve what we, as humans, did in the past," said George, the project director. George, Gonsior and Radford have been all over the Fort Ridgely grounds, seven miles south of Fairfax, rod Your Refund? to m a?) m mm Bring In Your Completed Tax Return And Let Us E-File If Today!!! Refund Checks Cashed Open Saturday 475-1508 since May mapping historic areas and finding six new ar chaeological sites with artifacts in an effort to study the im pact of the upcoming golf course rehabilitation project. Their findings are helping to draw the boundaries of the project, as not to encroach on burial grounds and other ar eas of historical significance. The men will quit for the season when the ground freezes and finish their work in spring 2006, when groundbreaking is to begin. The nine holes of the Fort Ridgely golf course originally were built by local residents in 1927, when few state regu lations stood in the way of al tering historic grounds. Now the site is protected - as Fort Ridgely I listoric District and is on the National Register of I listoric Places. Gonsior said the original golf course didn't disrupt many artifacts, as the build ers didn't dig too deeply. "The sites are in better con dition than I thought they'd be," Radford said. Thousands of years of In dian artifacts lie below the sur face of the Fort Ridgely area. George, Gonsior and Radford found new sites with artifacts, such as pottery and tools, dat ing back to the Oneota Cul ture, 1,100 to 1,600 A.D. Burial mounds dot the landscape. irToe . .. I REFUND in Weeks z MONEY ORDERS - TRANSFERS - CASH MCM - OSCAR BUILDING 378 SW 5th St. Admission: One can of soup (for the needy).