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Chapters
  • Published
    July 20, 2014

    Feds move in, Indian Township governor feels the heat

    "I'm the new Don Gellers," says Bobby Newell, referring to the tribe's one-time attorney, who was run out of the country on a minor marijuana charge.

  • Published
    July 20, 2014

    Disagreement over powers pollutes state, tribal relations

    Maine officials say the land claims settlement Act spells out and limits what the tribes oversees; the Passamaquoddy say those powers are in addition to their sovereign rights.

  • Published
    July 20, 2014

    The perils of placing trust ‘in the hands of the few’

    Resource mismanagement leads the Bureau of Indian Affairs to suspend Passamaquoddy timber sales in 1993. And that was only the beginning.

  • Published
    July 19, 2014

    As reservation’s rule of law erodes, abuses thrive

    In a sad irony, the Passamaquoddy are slipping into another legal breach, one made far wider by the actions of their own elected leaders.

  • Published
    July 18, 2014

    With no constitution, ‘a community … without rules’

    1986 to 1993 Story by Colin Woodard, Staff Writer Photos by Gabe Souza / Staff Photographer St. Ann Church, in the village of Peter Dana Point in Indian Township, stands under a gray sky recently. Repeated attempts to enact a tribal constitution – a document that would have provided a legal foundation for the Passamaquoddy […]

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  • Published
    July 17, 2014

    For some in tribe, no right to vote, nowhere to turn​

    September 1986 to June 1987 Story by Colin Woodard, Staff Writer Photos by Gabe Souza / Staff Photographer The Pleasant Point reservation is captured in the aperture of a pinhole camera. A legal challenge resulted after an unusual Passamaquoddy caucus initiative in 1986 left many members of the tribe stripped of their right to vote […]

  • Published
    July 16, 2014

    Land claims settlement bears a powerful curse

    1983 to 1986 Story by Colin Woodard, Staff Writer Photos by Gabe Souza / Staff Photographer A Passamaquoddy elder and a member of the joint tribal council sifts through stacks of petitions at Pleasant Point. in an unexpected development, an exception clause in the land claims settlement led to some uncertainty about which laws should […]

  • Published
    July 14, 2014

    The Indians’ trusted adviser capitalizes on his role

    After winning the Maine tribes' land claims case, attorney Tom Tureen becomes a celebrity in Indian country.

  • Published
    July 14, 2014

    Big question looms: ‘Where would we go from here?’

    1980 to 1982 Story by Colin Woodard, Staff Writer Photos by Gabe Souza / Staff Photographer This Indian heirloom, depicting a man at “the end of the trail,” was given to Victoria Boston, a Passamaquoddy, after her father died in 2006. The populations on the tribe’s two reservations grew sharply in the wake of the […]

  • Published
    July 13, 2014

    Bombshells, compromises greet an unfolding crisis

    1976 to 1980 Story by Colin Woodard, Staff Writer Photos by Gabe Souza / Staff Photographer A Passamaquoddy Indian pauses in contemplation at the edge of Long Lake on Peter Dana Point in Indian Township recently. Stakes were high for Maine’s tribes and the state alike in the developments that preceded the historic Indian land […]