Transcript Slide 1

Basics of the
Indian Child Welfare Act
Poverty Law- University of St. Thomas School of Law
Katalina Jiménez
Legal Aid Society of Minneapolis
February 16, 2009
Why Necessary?
• 1 of 4 Indian children adopted into nonIndian homes
• Dr. Westemeyer study: Indian adolescents
in non-Indian homes psychiatric issues
• Mass extermination of Indian cultural by
removing the children
Why treat Indian children any
different?
• The United States Supreme Court held that distinct
congressional treatment of Indians is not a prohibited
racial classification. The Court held that deferential
treatment provided under Congressional acts is allowed
by the “special relationship” that the federal government
has established with Indian tribes. The special
relationship is derived from the separate constitutional
status of Indian tribes under the United States
Morton v. Mancari, 417 U.S.
535, 551-554 (1974).
Constitution.
• Not based on racial preference
• Based on sovereign status of the tribe &
membership to the nation/tribe
• It’s Federal and State law
Basic Law & Resources
• Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978, 25 U.S.C. §19011963 (ICWA).
• Minnesota Indian Family Preservation Act, Minn. Stat.
§§260.751-260.835 (MIFPA).
• BIA Guidelines for State Courts, Indian Child Custody
Proceedings, 44 Fed. Reg. 67584-67595 (November 16,
1979).
• Tribal State Agreement as Amended in 2007, MN DHS
Website(http://edocs.dhs.state.mn.us/lfserver/Legacy/DH
S-5022-ENG)
• Minnesota Department of Human Services Social
Services Manual Section XIII-3500 on Indian Children
Does ICWA apply?
• ICWA applies to child custody proceedings
where court “knows or has reason to know
that an Indian child is involved”- ICWA
§1903(1) & §1912(a)
Is the child and “Indian child”?
•
(a)
(b)
•
(1)
(2)
“Indian child” is “any unmarried person who is under
18 and is either
a member of a tribe; or
is eligible for membership is an Indian tribe and is the
biological child of a member of an Indian tribe” ICWA,
§1903(4).
“Indian child” is “an unmarried person who is under 18
and is:
a member of an Indian tribe; or
Eligible for membership in an Indian tribe.
• The Tribe determines whether a child is a
member or eligible for membership.
§1903(5).
• A tribal determination that a child is a
member or eligible for membership in that
Tribe is conclusive evidence that a child is
an Indian child. In re Welfare of SNR, 617, N.W.2d
77 (Minn.App. 2000).
Is this a applicable proceeding?
• Child Custody Proceedings:
(1) CHIPS cases
(2) Voluntary placements
(3) TPR
(4) Adoptions
(5) Third Party custody matters (AKH, 502
N.W.2d 790 (Minn. 1993).
(6) Certain delinquencies (truancy, runaway)
Does NOT apply…
• Custody proceedings between parents
• Placements based on acts that if
committed by an adult would be a crime.
(this excludes status offenses, truancy,
runaway, curfew, smoking, which used to
be called “status offenses”)
Procedural Requirements
• Notice to parents, Indian custodians and
tribes within 10 days
• Transfer to tribal court jurisdiction
• Tribes have right to intervene in state court
• Parents and Indian custodian have right to
legal counsel
more requirements…
• Qualified Expert Witness testimony
required before out of home placement or
TPR
• Higher burden of proof for TPR- beyond a
reasonable doubt
• Active Efforts
• Voluntary placement must be in writing
Mandatory Placement Priorities
•
Adoptive Placement Preferences, §1915(a)
(1) Member of child’s extended family;
(2) Other member of the Indian child’s Tribe; or
(3) Other Indian family.
• Foster Care/ pre-adoptive placement
Preferences
(1)Member of Indian child’s extended family;
(2)Foster home licensed, approved or specified by child’s
Tribe;
(3)Indian foster home licensed or approved by an
authorized non-Indian licensing authority;
(4)An institution for children approved by an Indian Tribe or
operated by an Indian organization which has a program
suitable to meet the Indian child’s needs.