Elouise Cobel statement at fairness hearing for settlement

Tuesday, June  21,  2011

The following is the statement made by Elouise Cobell, the lead 
plaintiff in the Indian trust fund lawsuit, at the fairness hearing for 
the $3.4 billion settlement. June 20, 2011.



Your Honor, my name is Elouise Cobell. I am an enrolled member of the 
Blackfeet Tribe and I was born, raised and presently reside on the 
Blackfeet Reservation in Montana. I am also the lead plaintiff in this 
litigation. My great grandfather was Mountain Chief, the last war chief 
of the Blackfeet Nation.


I wish I could be present at today’s fairness hearing so I could 
introduce myself and personally explain to you how important this 
settlement is to 500,000 individual Indian trust beneficiaries. However,
 physically, I am unable to do so. Therefore, I sincerely thank you for 
the opportunity to participate by telephone.


I want to explain that few if any other legal cases in modern times have
 embodied the pain of so many people in Indian Country and also embodied
 the hopes of these people. The possibility of settling this century old
 injustice has provided hope for the future and a light on the horizon.



For over 100 years, individual Indians have been victimized by the 
government’s gross mismanagement of the Individual Indian Trust and our 
trust assets, including the income earned on our trust lands. And, for 
the last 15 years, this Court, alone, has held out hope for individual 
Indians. No other place and no other institution – not the Executive 
Branch nor, with some notable exceptions, did Congress provide such 
promise. Successive administrations stubbornly resisted and bitterly 
fought our efforts with everything it has. Congress was unable to bring 
resolution, despite great effort to do so.


Finally, in 2009, through the extraordinary efforts of this Court, Class
 Counsel and the Class Representatives, for the first time since this 
case was filed on June 10, 1996, the Executive Branch sat down in good 
faith and negotiated a fair settlement of this case. Then, in December 
2010, after a year of meeting with members of Congress and their staff, 
we were able to obtain Congressional approval of this settlement. 

In this tight budget environment, that was extremely difficult to do, 
particularly since 100% of the Senate was needed to pass the 
ratification of our settlement.
What has been accomplished here is historic and unprecedented – a $3.4 
billion settlement – with $1.5 billion distributed directly to 
individual Indians and $1.9 billion to address fractionation – a 
necessary investment for improving future management. And this is tax 
free. In addition, $5 billion has been spent by the government on trust 
reform brought about by the pressure this case has brought to bear. 
Nothing like this has ever been done for individual Indians.


I am confident that this Court understands our history of abuse. Its 
opinions and decisions speak eloquently and sincerely of the challenges 
we have had to face. The record is plain to anyone who spends the time 
to read and understand it. It is permanent testimony to the importance 
of this case and why it has been one of the most difficult challenges I 
have ever faced.



The terms of settlement bring a measure of justice to some of the most 
vulnerable people in this country. The settlement isn’t perfect. I do 
not think it compensates all for all the losses sustained but I do think
 it is fair and it is reasonable. That is what matters – a fair 
resolution has been achieved. I am convinced that it is the best 
settlement possible. I am convinced also that if this settlement failed,
 there would be many more years of litigation with little possibility of
 a more favorable resolution.


While you will hear from several objectors today, the overwhelming 
majority of class members -- over 99.98% -- agree that the settlement is
 fair and want this matter resolved now. This support is not surprising 
to me. When I have visited innumerable Indian communities over the last 
year to speak about this settlement, I have heard first hand the wide 
support this settlement enjoys.


I don’t want to get into the details of our settlement. Those issues 
have been fully briefed and debated. And, I know that they will be 
discussed further in this hearing. However, I want to address an issue 
that has been addressed by the defendants and a couple of members of 
Congress. That issue is the reasonableness of the legal fees for our 
Class Counsel.


I have said that if our attorneys are not treated fairly and in 
accordance with controlling law, we will never be able to retain 
competent lawyers who would be willing to battle the government until 
justice is served – how ever long that takes. I strongly believe that is
 true. An overwhelming majority of individual Indian class members 
agree. Please let the message be that lawyers who represent native 
people will be treated no worse or compensated no less than those who 
represent people who are not Indians.


Until Class Counsel accepted our case, we had no hope and no remedy for 
the abuse that we have been forced to endure for decade after decade, 
generation after generation. Our attorneys have labored tirelessly and 
at great sacrifice for many years. They never wavered in their 
commitment to us and they helped us accomplish something that most 
people felt would be impossible to achieve.


We would have not have this success without our Class Counsel and I urge you to 
treat them fairly in accordance with the law.


In closing, 124 years of abuse of our trust is enough. 15 years of 
intense, difficult litigation is more than enough. Too many of us have 
died without justice. Any more delays will mean that still more will die
 without justice. Enough is enough.


On behalf of Native people, I appreciate beyond words what Judge 
Lamberth, Judge Robertson, and you have done and how each of you has 
stepped up and courageously resolved some of the thorniest issues that 
any judge in this country has ever had to address and resolve. I am 
deeply grateful that this Court has not failed us.


I thank this Court again for this opportunity to provide my views, and 
pray and hope that I can see the distribution of our settlement funds 
later this year. That is very important to me, my fellow class members, 
and justice.

http://64.38.12.138/News/2011/002047.asp


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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