Yesterday, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral arguments (video of full arguments) in Slockish v. U.S. Department of Transportation. The facts of the case involving land near Mount Hood in Oregon are described in appellants' opening brief (full text) in part as follows:
Plaintiffs are members of federally-recognized tribes who long practiced their faith at a small sacred site called Ana Kwna Nchi Nchi Patat, or the “Place of Big Big Trees.”.... In the 1980s, when the Government proposed widening a nearby highway, one of Plaintiffs’ leaders informed the Government of the site’s historic and religious significance, including the graves and stone altar. In response, the Government modified its project to protect the site. But in 2008, the Government widened the highway again to add a center turn lane. This time, it protected a nearby wetlands, but completely destroyed the sacred site—cutting down the old-growth trees, bulldozing the burial ground and stone altar, and covering the area under a massive earthen berm.
Becket Law issued a press release on the case. (See prior related posting.)