Pubdate: Mon, 17 Aug 2015
Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI)
Copyright: 2015 Journal Sentinel Inc.
Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/general/30627794.html
Website: http://www.jsonline.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265
Author: Cary Spivak

MENOMINEE TO VOTE ON MARIJUANA

Seeking Revenue, Tribe Weighs Legalizing Use

Still burning from the January rejection of its long-sought Kenosha 
casino, leaders of the Menominee tribe will find out this week 
whether tribal members want to tap a new vice to help it find 
economic bliss - growing and selling marijuana.

The approximately 9,000 members will vote Wednesday and Thursday in a 
two-question advisory referendum asking whether the Menominee should 
legalize marijuana on their reservation for medical and/or 
recreational use. If either question is approved, tribal legislators 
would begin the process of writing ordinances to legalize marijuana 
on the reservation, located near Shawano, said Gary Besaw, tribal chairman.

The Menominee would become the third tribe in the state whose 
membership approved some form of marijuana legalization in a referendum.

"We're very poor and do not have the luxury of turning our back on 
any potential revenue sources," said Besaw, who was a driving force 
in his tribe's bid to build an off-reservation casino in Kenosha. 
Gov. Scott Walker rejected the casino in February. "Because he denied 
the casino, the tribe still has need for a revenue source."

The Menominee and tribes throughout the state and nation have been 
buzzing about the possibility of growing and selling marijuana since 
December, when the U.S. Department of Justice released a memo telling 
federal prosecutors not to prevent tribes from growing or selling pot 
on their reservations - even in states such as Wisconsin where it is illegal.

In Wisconsin, the Menominee are seen as having the best opportunity 
to take advantage of the Justice Department position because they 
enjoy a legal status different from the state's other 10 tribes.

The Menominee tribe - which had its tribal status restored in the 
early 1970s - is the only tribe in the state that is a non-Public Law 
280 tribe. That means the federal government enforces the laws on its 
reservation. Local and state authorities have jurisdiction for crimes 
committed on the state's other reservations.

"The Menominee is always the exception because we don't have any 
jurisdiction" on the reservation, state Attorney General Brad Schimel 
said Friday.

Schimel said he has spoken to leaders of several tribal governments 
about the impact of the Justice Department memo. Schimel said he has 
provided tribal leaders with his interpretation of the memo and the 
law, though he has not told the tribes what to do.

"These are sovereign nations and they have treaty rights," Schimel said.

Still, he said, the memo does not mean that Wisconsin tribes can 
become weed dealers.

"We haven't given the green light to anybody and it's not clear that 
we will give the green light to anybody," Schimel said.

In fact, Schimel said, if any of the tribes where the state has law 
enforcement authority began growing or selling marijuana on their 
reservation, his reaction would be the same as if the illegal act 
occurred on non-Indian land.

"We would work to shut it down," Schimel said. "We're not going to 
sit back and let it happen."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom