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Indian Gaming: More Corrupt Than Ever

By Stephen Pizzo, News for Real. Posted January 10, 2006.


While Democrats saw Indian gaming as supporting another downtrodden minority, the GOP saw it like the mob did: as a cash cow.
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When sleaze meets sleaze, magic happens. One glance across a crowded room, and they instantly recognize kinship. But when supersleaze teams up with supersleaze, a fusion-like chain reaction flashes to life, consuming everything in range.

And that's what happened when Jack Abramoff met Indian gambling.

Oh, I know the media is all atwitter over the political implications for ruling Republicans, but as usual, they are missing the soul of this saga -- the political correctness and hypocrisy that surrounds Indian gaming.

Let me explain. I have no moral objections to most vices, including gambling, and when I can get away with it, I indulge in several vices myself. So the morality of gaming is not my beef with Indian casinos. It's what I learned way back in the 1980s about what's really going on behind all that helping the poor Indians blather.

While working on our savings and loans book "Inside Job" in 1986, my co-author, Mary Fricker, and I followed one of our S&L crooks to a small Indian reservation outside Palm Springs. It was the home of the Cabazons, the very tribe that took their case for gambling rights to the U.S. Supreme Court and won -- sparking the Indian gaming revolution.

What we found there was unnerving, to say the least. Sure, there were Indians -- about 25 of them -- but they weren't in charge. Instead, a group of Los Angeles-based mafioso were running the operations, people with names like Rocco. The gaming operations were run by a non-Indian "management" company. They would front the money to build, maintain and operate the various gaming operations, with the promise that the tribe would get a share of the "profits" as calculated by Rocco and friends.

This is how Indian gaming began. After being chased out of Las Vegas and New Jersey by state and federal heat, the mob discovered Indian reservations. It was like a gift from the Mob Gods. One mobster testifying before Congress was asked how the mob viewed Indian reservations. He replied, "As our new Cuba."

That's because Indian reservations are sovereign nations within a sovereign nation. The mob could set up casinos, pay off tribal leaders and skim casino proceeds with impunity. If the FBI showed up, they had tribal security usher them out the gate, because they had no jurisdiction on reservation property.

During our short investigation of the goings-on at that Indio, Calif., Blazoning reservation:

    Three members of the tribe were found shot in the head a week after threatening to go public with corruption at the gaming facilities
  • An illicit arms-sales operation was set up peddling machine guns
  • The non-Indian head of the tribe's gaming management company, John Philip Nichols, was sent to prison on a hire-for-murder charge
  • The S&L crook who led us to the reservation in the first place, and who had financed the tribe's high-stakes bingo parlor, was charged with running fraudulent insurance companies and running off with customer premiums
  • The same fellow was later sued by the federal government for tens of millions in fraudulent loans he got from now-defunct S&Ls

There was more. And it's still going on.

We heard reports back then of similar activity on Indian reservations in Florida and Minnesota. Mobbed up management companies were rounding up their own tribes coast to coast. One operator was pitching so many tribes, he referred to his targets as "chief of the week" sessions.

Indian gaming proponents are quick to counter, "That was then; things have changed."

They've changed all right; they got smart. The likes of one-time Republican National Committee chairman Frank Farenkopf, and later, GOP lobbyist Jack Abramoff, stepped in. While Democrats saw Indian gaming as supporting another downtrodden minority, something "we have to put up with because of how we screwed the American Indians in the past," the GOP saw it another way. The GOP saw Indian gaming the same way the mob saw it: as a cash cow.


Digg!

Stephen Pizzo is the author of numerous books, including "Inside Job: The Looting of America's Savings and Loans," which was nominated for a Pulitzer.

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I am so glad
Posted by: Artkansas on Jan 10, 2006 6:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I voted against the initiative that allowed Indian casinos. I thought it would turn out like this.

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Reparations would have worked better.
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Jan 10, 2006 7:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why are Indian Casino's corrupted? White Folks got involved. Every time we get involved it has worked out bad for the Indians.Casino's are no exception. The gaming compacts are yet another 'bad traety'. We came here,stole their land,desimated their belief and social structure and sent their children off to boarding schools that were more like prison than a school. We forced a change on them that continues to this day.
Casino development was no different. The Tribes needed a little help getting casinos up and running and the reincarnation of the old 'Firewater' sellers showed up. Maybe they should have looked into their business partners better,
maybe development was too fast,or just maybe if they were'nt smokescreened by corrupt whites and heavy handed Gobt Compacts,things would have turned out better.
Indian gaming pays a higher tax than Big Business. In my State it's double the tax burden of Business, Why is that?
Probably it stems from the fact that the Indian Peoples of Turtle Island,America's real name, kept this land a Garden for better than 20,000 years and if they got the economic clout, they could begin getting back their Power,and retake the country. Let's see, living in balance with Nature,respecting all life as the Creator's gift, respecting women,children and Elders,realizing taking care of the People means a good lofe for all and doing as little harm as possible to the environment,
seems like a hell-of-a-lot better way to me. Of course we could have avoided this whole mess if we has 'honestly' made
Treaties, if when the whiteman's land grab was through they would have 'Paid for the Land', if they had'nt brunt folks at the stake as soon as they accepted Christianity,or made allies of them to later butcher them,like Washington,Jackson or Custer. Things might have been different. But then again,White folks have the worst record on dealing fairly with anyone,including themselves. White folks made the KKK. White folks wrote laws to suit their whim. Then feel they have the right to break them,without punishment. If the Casino's are corrupted. WE helped make it so. This is one of those instances where my whiteness feels very uncomfortable. It just proves the old addage' You can't trust Whitie"

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» You can't trust whitie but... Posted by: buffaloT
» RE B.I.A. = Berau of Ignorant Assholes Posted by: Againstthewindwalking
» RE: B.I.A. = Berau of Ignorant Assholes Posted by: montana freeman
The Mob & politics. . .politics & the Mob.
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jan 10, 2006 7:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Using the words "sleaze" and "politicians" in the same sentence is being redundant.

Also –– if indian gaming was (and still is I presume) infiltrated by the Mob, and now Republicans have infiltrated indian gaming as well, then just how deep do Mob ties go into the Republican Party? After all, would the Mob stand for Republicans, ANYBODY, invading their turf, unless they were getting something – a lot – from them as well? (We know how the Mob handles interlopers.)

Abramoff may be only the skim off the top of an ENORMOUS cesspool of corruption, and is being served up (along with the more stupid and greedy in Congress) as a "sacrificial lamb" for a partial and superficial Republican house-cleaning that will only serve to mollify the public. (And of course, that begs the question: are the Democrats in on it too? After all, they hold the reins of power some of the time, and they sure rolled over quickly after getting their butts kicked in the fixed and fraudulent 2004 presidential "election". . .)

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A sad situation
Posted by: MTguy on Jan 10, 2006 8:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How many folks reading this article have ever even BEEN to an Indian Reservation? Not many, I'll bet. The ones without anything to attract people to it are definitely located in a Valley of Tears. After all, we didn't give them the best land to live on after we ignored the treaties we signed with them and took all the land they lived on.

That would just be stupid.

So the Indians take a long hard look at Las Vegas and decide they might like to try something like that themselves.

Successful Indian casinos generate enough money to elevate all the tribal members economically above where they would be without it. What each member does with that extra dough is another story.

Example: fetal alcohol syndrome is 400% of the national average on Indian Reservations. So I guess you could say a lot of the cash flow goes into the next bottle. Drugs are also a preferred recreation in our reservation system.

Partly these two "vices" and their popularity comes from our total devastation of these peoples' cultures. In essence, they have nothing to hang their hats on culturally. We took all of it for ourselves.

So I, for one, do not begrudge the tribes their casinos. I certainly am outraged at the exploitation of these peoples by stalwart individuals such as Jack Abramhoff and his associates and clients. This story also points to the involvement by mob types which is just "survival of the fittest" and its core value of the strong preying upon the weak.

In America, we used to pride ourselves in protecting the weak among us. Strength in unity. I'm afraid we've taken everything we could from the Indian tribes and left them to fend for themselves.

We should ask ourselves every so often, "How's that working out for the Native Americans?"

Joe Jacobs
Helena, MT

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» A joyful solution Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: A sad situation Posted by: montana freeman
Ahh, Pericles, where are ye now?
Posted by: Bic Pentameter on Jan 10, 2006 9:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Even the ancient Greeks realized that they didn't have it figured out how to get honest, qualified people into office and keep the slackers and crooks out. The first objective was to get the hereditary tyrants out of power and allow for others to run things.

Pericles knew that fairness, consistency, wisdom and firm rule were all necessary to make it work. The idea was that he would breath down the necks of slackers and expose the crooks. And society flourished.

After he died, though, ambitious political hacks rose to control everything through what amounted to popularity contests and power grabs. Athens sunk to the point where bribery and corruption were the order of the day. Sparta and her allies thought they needed to knock the Athenian alliance down a peg or two.

What happened though, was that they were all subjugated by Phillip, whose son Alexander went on to such great heights - however briefly. Athens, and Greece as a whole, never again rose to forefront of civilization and human achievement.

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Not at the Cherokee Reservation in North Carolina!
Posted by: Againstthewindwalking on Jan 10, 2006 10:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Before the Harrah's Cherokee Casino was up and running, The science books at the reservation schools were 50 years old, and the Bibles were brand new! Most of the students there had never seen a computer. Most couldn't even spell the word much less use the device!

Now there are NEW computers and NEW science books and the Tribe is rapidly filling up with young people who have a clear posiitive plan for the future! Alcoholism is down and drug use is no more prevelant than for any town of like size. In a few short years we have gone from a hopeless band of beaten people to a vibrant community full of hard working citizens with a bright future ahead of them. Our children are being educated like never before, and are staying on the reservation now instead of fleeing it in droves.

Is everything rosey now since the casino opened up? NO! Of course not! The casino has brought about a lot of changes and not all of them are positive, but things are a lot better now than before!

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Americans created the problem
Posted by: afrothetics on Jan 10, 2006 10:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The reason the Mob is so heavily embedded in Indian casinos is because the American banking community, the government, and American citizens failed to support Native American sovereignty in the first place. They could not get financing. So, where do you turn when your credit is not acceptable -- predatory lenders. You and I, as citizens, are as responsible for this debacle as the morally bankrupt Indian councils that make really bad decisions.

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Hard Issue
Posted by: Llama11 on Jan 10, 2006 11:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Being mostly native, and being enrolled, I find myself conflicted on gaming. It is helping a lot of us. I probably wouldn't be in college if it wasn't for all the benefits I receive (free tuition, scholarships, grants). But I see native politics as a microcosm of American politics. We're good little capitalists now, just like you always wanted us to be. And we are very corrupt. If we want to play ball with Washington, we better be corrupt.

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» RE: Hard Issue, yes Posted by: Pocahontas
» RE: Hard Issue, yes Posted by: Llama11
Truth B Told
Posted by: Just Us on Jan 10, 2006 12:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The lobbying scandal has affected many people but the real victims are the tribal members themselves. In regards to the Choctaw Tribe, everyone knows how ridiculous it was to watch the June Indian Affairs hearing and how the representatives from the tribe painted themselves as "victims" and the Chief had the nerve not to show up and answer questions on his role during the ordeal. All of them knew exactly what they were doing and instead of reinvesting gaming funds into what it was initially intended for (new hospital, education and day care center) they each chose to go along with Abramoff. Cronyism plays a huge role in the current administration which is why the Choctaw people will not excel past their potential. Perhaps I will lose my job now for informing the public what we go through each day but atleast you guys know a little about the lies, schemes and deceit that takes place here on the Choctaw reservation. Unfortunately, their greed has tainted the Choctaw image. Many of us have asked for an investigation into the internal functions of our tribe but we continue to be ignored, but all is well that ends well. We all do not hate the chief but are increasingly tired of how this tribe has been dictated for the past 20+ years. It is time to move on with TRUE LEADERSHIP so that the Choctaws can experience real prosperity. The Creator sees what goes on here and justice will be served someday.

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» RE: Truth B Told Posted by: Pocahontas
the title of this piece was funny....
Posted by: folkdude01 on Jan 10, 2006 1:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"While Democrats saw Indian gaming as supporting another downtrodden minority"

This implies that the Democrats are innocent, too, which they aren't. Hopefully, this story will help wake America up to the corrupt values of both parties in Congress, and end the Presidency bid for Hilary Clinton. That's right, she was in with Abramhoff too. When do the Democrats support "downtrodden minorities"? Okay, besides lip service. How else? They don't, they're just as bad as the Republicans.

Seacrest out

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More Indian Casino Scams in Palm Springs
Posted by: tome on Jan 12, 2006 8:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Talk about scams. In Coachella, CA, next to Indio, there's an Indian Casino named Augustine Casino with one tribal member, named Maryann Martin. Not only does this tribal chairwoman hire dishonest people, she's controlled by them. They prey off poor, Hispanic migrant workers who often can't claim their promotional winnings because they don't have proper local ID. Their questionable business ethics include refusing to pay vendors and saying that since they are a sovereign nation, they can't be taken to court in the State of California.

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