The Banishing Judge

Article Tools

The mythologies of many Native American tribes feature a character known to anthropologists as the trickster. He is both good and bad; a creator but also a mischief maker. Above all, he is duplicitous: joyously, energetically deceptive. Among the Tlingit people of western Alaska, the trickster figure is known as the Raven. At the moment, however, someone bearing a striking resemblance to him is roaming the Ketchikan area under another name.

Related Articles

Last Thursday marked the first day of what is without question the most widely publicized legal proceeding in Tlingit history. In the 750-person lumber and fishing town of Klawock, Alaska, 12 self-proclaimed tribal judges pondered the fate of two young criminals. The "tribal court" had the trappings of authenticity: the hall had been ritually purified with a "devil's club" branch, and some of the judges wore red and black ceremonial blankets and gestured with eagle and raven feathers. But there were abundant reasons for skepticism, both of the tribunal and the sentence it was likely to mete out. Not least of which was its presiding magistrate: one of the more creative cross-cultural jurists in recent legal history, Rudy James.

The saga began in August 1993, when Adrian Guthrie and Simon Roberts, both 17, and raised in Klawock, ordered a pizza in Everett, Washington. When Domino's Pizza deliveryman Timothy Whittlesey showed up, Guthrie distracted him and Roberts hit him repeatedly with a baseball bat, leaving him, his assailant now admits, "kinda in convulsions." A bystander saw the teens removing Whittlesey's beeper, $40 and the pizza. The two Tlingits pleaded guilty to first-degree robbery. Superior Court Judge James Allendoerfer was expected to assign prison terms of up to 5 1/2 years.

Enter Rudy James. The 58-year-old Klawock native had long ago moved to Washington and married the ex-wife of one of Allendoerfer's colleagues on the bench. At the behest of Roberts' grandfather, he presented himself as a Tlingit tribal judge and suggested an exotic deal. If Allendoerfer bound the boys over to their tribe, they would undergo a traditional Tlingit punishment: banishment on remote, uninhabited islands, while contemplating their sins and hewing logs with which to build Whittlesey a house.

The offer had its attractions. It was eminently multicultural; it addressed a well-founded Native American grievance regarding the law's treatment of Indian minors; and it dovetailed nicely with the public misgivings about the criminal justice system's inability to rehabilitate. By contrast, James offered up the Alaskan islands as a type of Rousseau's Eden where, he enthused, the boys' "attitudes can be affected by nature and nature's god. By beholding ((nature)) you become changed."

Allendoerfer bought it. Postponing official sentencing for 18 months, he accepted a $25,000 property bond from the boys' families and put them in James' custody. Then he went on vacation.

QUOTES OF THE DAY

Open quoteThe oil industry goes up there and industrializes what has been a pristine area...suddenly it becomes the new Houston.Close quote

  • FRANK O'DONNELL
  • president of the nonprofit group Clean Air Watch, protesting a plan to drill in the Arctic Circle. Experts determined the area could fulfill global demand for oil for three years