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Sisters fight for treaty rights.


Carrie and Mary Dann Mary Dann (d. 22 April 2005) was a Native American activist.

A member of the Western Shoshone tribe, Mary Dann and her sister Carrie Dann had been active in the movement to recover millions of acres of land that originally belonged to the Shoshone tribe.
 say the U.S. government is trying to steal their land. And they are taking the government to court.

The Dann sisters are Western Shoshones who have waged a twenty-five-year battle with the federal government. They say the government is disregarding a treaty it made with the Shoshone nation, giving the tribe ownership of rugged terrain in northern Nevada's Humboldt River Humboldt River

River, northern Nevada, U.S. Rising in Elko county, it flows west and southwest for 290 mi (467 km) to Humboldt Lake (also called Humboldt Sink). Named by John C.
 Basin.

The Danns also claim ancestral rights. "This goes back to the time of our creation," says Carrie Dann. "We believe we were created and put here to take care of the land."

In 1863, the treaty of Ruby Valley Ruby Valley is a large basin located in south-central Elko and northern White Pine Counties, in the northeastern section of the state of Nevada in the western United States. From Secret Pass it runs south-southwest for approximately 60 miles (96 km) to Overland Pass.  acknowledged the Nevada Territory Nevada Territory was a historic, organized territory of the United States from March 2, 1861 until October 31, 1864, when it became Nevada, the 36th state. Prior to its designation as a territory, the area was part of western Utah Territory and was known as Washoe  as the property of the Western Shoshones but allowed the building of small U.S. settlements in the area.

The Bureau of Land Management points to a 1962 decision by the Indian Claims Commission. It ruled the Western Shoshones lost ownership of the land when white settlers flooded the area in the late 1800s. The commission offered the Western Shoshones $26 million--the 1872 value of the land--to compensate for the loss. But the money still sits in a trust. The tribe has never accepted payment.

The sisters live with their family on an 800-acre ranch near Crescent Valley. But their animals roam on federal property.

The Bureau of Land Management claims that the Dann family is trespassing and has failed to pay the government rent for grazing grazing,
n See irregular feeding.


grazing

1. actions of herbivorous animals eating growing pasture or cereal crop.

2. area of pasture or cereal crop to be used as standing feed. See also pasture.
 privileges. It has imposed hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines on the Danns. In 1992, the bureau confiscated con·fis·cate  
tr.v. con·fis·cat·ed, con·fis·cat·ing, con·fis·cates
1. To seize (private property) for the public treasury.

2. To seize by or as if by authority. See Synonyms at appropriate.

adj.
 430 of their horses.

Jo Simpson, a spokesperson for the Bureau of Land Management, says the government is treating the Dann family no differently than it does other ranchers, who must obtain permits before they can graze their animals on federal land. By circumventing the permit system, the Danns are hurting the five ranchers who legally use the land, she says.

"We are concerned about maintaining healthy and productive lands. Their continued trespass results in overgrazing overgrazing

see overstocking.
," says Simpson.

In February, the Bureau of Land Management filed a notice of unauthorized grazing use against the Danns and ordered them to pay an $852,000 fee. The Danns and the Western Shoshone National Council responded by filing for an injunction to stop the fine. The case has not yet been decided.

Jim Anaya, a lawyer for the Indian Law Indian law

Legal practices and institutions of India. Indian law draws on a number of sources, beginning with the customs of the ancient Vedas and later accretions of Hindu law, which largely concern social matters such as marriage and succession.
 Resource Center and counsel to the Danns, says the case is important to Native people everywhere.

"What is at stake is full and equal rights for indigenous people and their lands," says Anaya.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:On The Line; Shoshone activists Carrie and Mary Dann
Author:Preston, Mark D.
Publication:The Progressive
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Nov 1, 1998
Words:425
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