
“It’s a classic struggle over money and tribal rights and control for what everybody recognizes is a very lucrative enterprise,” said Denise Runge, a gambling industry researcher at Helena College University of Montana.Ĭongress passed the Indian Gaming Regulation Act in 1988, setting the stage for sovereign Native American governments to open full-blown casinos. Lawrence O’Neill of Fresno called an “explosive keg” of emotions. The casino remains closed - with estimated losses in the millions each week - because rivals have yet to diffuse what U.S. Charges have been filed against 15 men - two tribal council members, the tribal police chief and a hired security team that included a former sheriff’s deputy and onetime Marine, and a former Navy Seal. The National Indian Gaming Commission, which regulates Indian casinos, and a federal judge shut down the Chukchansi Gold Resort and Casino, citing safety concerns. 9 by one faction that caused gamblers to flee, leaving their chips on the table. The most recent case, involving the Picayune Rancheria of Chukchansi Indians near Yosemite National Park, climaxed in an armed raid on Oct. With this backdrop, several tribes in the past two years have fallen into nasty, sometimes violent, power struggles pitting factions and families against one another. – When it comes to controlling California’s flashy Las Vegas-style casinos, the stakes are enormous for tribes who own the gambling operations that collectively generate billions of dollars a year to sustain Native Americans up and down the state.
