COVER STORY
Wheel of Misfortune
Why Indian casinos aren't all they're promised to be


Who Gets the Money?
Indian casinos are making millions for their investors and providing little to the poor

Family Feud
Whose tribe is it, anyway?

Getting It Right
This tribe plays for keeps

Table of Contents
The complete list of stories from the Dec. 16 issue of TIME magazine

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Hitting The Jackpot
Where does Indian casino revenue go?
Timeline
Washington's history of failed aid to Native Americans


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Big Money & Politics 
When powerful interests buy political access, little guys pay
2/7/2000
Corporate Welfare 
TIME uncovers how hundreds of companies get on the dole
11/9/1998
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JOE TORENO FOR TIME


Family Feud
Whose tribe is it, anyway?

Posted Sunday, December 8, 2002; 10:31 a.m. EST
One of the country's most lucrative Indian casinos is on the Table Mountain Rancheria in the foothills northeast of Fresno, Calif. It's a pot of gold for about 100 once impoverished Native Americans, a mixed group of Mono and Chukchansi Indians who have had family ties to the area for decades. The rancheria—a small reservation—was federally disbanded in 1959, then restored by court order in 1983. The tribe opened a bingo hall in 1988 and the full-scale Table Mountain Casino six years later. Annual revenue is estimated at more than $100 million, and while the tribe doesn't release figures, each enrolled member averages an estimated $350,000 a year. It may sound like an unmitigated success, but only about half of Table Mountain's Indians receive any money at all. The council of tribal leaders that controls the official rosters simply won't enroll many tribe members.

At the heart of the matter is a battle over gaming spoils that is pitting brother against brother, cousin against cousin, father against daughter. Tribal leaders have traditionally had wide leeway in admitting members. But now the stakes are higher. Entry can mean the difference between a life of poverty and one of unimagined wealth. But every new tribe member means a smaller cut of the casino profits for those already in. So Indian country abounds with tales of tribes disenrolling legitimate members, refusing to let them in or changing their status—all to deny them a share of the pot.

Kathy Lewis is one of those left out. Her grandfather was born and raised at Table Mountain and was the tribe's chief in the 1950s. Lewis spent part of her childhood on the rancheria, living in a shack. Later she and other family members, like many of their tribe, left to live in nearby towns or work or go to school. None of her immediate family owned property on the reservation when it was restored in 1983. The tribe is using that as an excuse to deny her membership, just as it has done with others.

The result is two Table Mountain tribes: an affluent one that lives on the rancheria and a poor one that lives outside it. Those who get casino checks own expensive houses, drive new cars and have no money worries. Those who don't, live in shacks, trailers or cramped apartments, drive old cars and are buried in debt. Lewis lives off the reservation in a two-room trailer with her daughter, her mother and occasionally one of her three brothers. She doesn't get a penny from the casino profits, and both the tribal council that controls it and ordinary members have turned their backs on her. "It's disheartening because they're supposed to be your relatives," she says. The final blow came last year, when the council finally admitted Lewis' father, son of the former chief. (Tribal members declined to talk to TIME.) Since then, Lewis says, her father has cut off all communication with her and her brothers, none of whom are members. "It's all because of greed, selfishness, setting them apart," she says.

Laura L. Wass, who heads the Fresno branch of the American Indian Movement, has been working with families trying to obtain tribe membership. She says the 1983 court order restoring the tribe declared that all those on tribal rolls in 1958 should have their status restored. The tribe's constitution holds similar criteria. But, says Wass, "they still will not let them in." The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) says it's up to the tribes to decide who is a member. So no one is enforcing the 1983 court ruling. Wass says the BIA's refusal to act has left many on the outside of the tribe with nowhere to turn.



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FROM THE DEC 16, 2002 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, DEC 8, 2002

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