More woes for the Gabrielino-Tongva Tribe
One of California’s longest-suffering Indian bands is undergoing yet another leadership dispute. By Malcolm Maclachlan, Capitol Weekly
One of California’s longest-suffering Indian bands is undergoing yet another leadership dispute. The Gabrielino-Tongva Tribe of the Los Angeles Basin — which has already lived through a loss of federal recognition and a casino effort that has been stalled for years, as well as competing bands and multiple lawsuits — has now seen a split among its tribal council.
At least two members of the nine-member council have been in open revolt against the
tribe’s CEO, former state Sen. Richard Polanco, since last
year. Both have been suspended from the council since
May. According to tribal councilman Richard Alcala,
Polanco has been accuring a salary of $50,000 a month while doing little for the tribe, though he
has yet to be paid. Alcala also contends that Polanco
has interfered with the operation of the tribal council
and has maneuvered to keep a “puppet” leader as the tribe’s chairman.
Alcala’s sentiments were echoed by another councilmember,
John Aguirre, who resigned his post and his membership
in the tribe on June 28.
Aguirre said that he has had major issues with the
employment agreement that the tribe signed with Polanco.
This letter of intent would give Polanco 6 percent of casino profits, he said, while the tribe
itself would be last-in-line among all investors with little guarantee of their
43 percent cut. He also charged that Polanco was essentially
negotiating with himself, in a clear conflict of interest.
“While I’m not sure it’s illegal, it’s pretty unethical,” Aguirre said. Of the percentage of casino profits,
he added, “He has every right to try to negotiate that. If we’re stupid enough to give it to him, more power to him.”
Polanco declined to comment on the record, referring
calls to tribal chairwoman Virginia Carmelo, who dismissed
the allegations.
“The conflict has basically arisen from people who are
in a minority vote not being satisfied with being the
minority vote,” Carmelo said.
She said that Polanco’s employment agreement was approved by the tribes’ longtime attorney, Liz Aronson, who resigned at the
end of May because“she did not wish to deal with the conflict that was
ongoing among the council,” Carmelo said. His percentage of casino profits, she
said, is a mere 0.5 percent. She also said that the tribe was in the process
of renegotiating Polanco’s contract.
“It’s going to be something more in conformity to our economic
times,” she said.
In many ways, the Gabrielino-Tongvas typify many of the problems that have been
facing California Indian tribes since long before the
casino gaming era began almost a decade ago. Theirs
was one of 18 treaties lost by the federal government in 1905, leading to them losing their federal recognition
half a century ago—something the tribe has been trying to get back ever
since.
There were already up to four different factions claiming
to be the tribe when the largest group began working
with a Santa Monica-based attorney named Jonathan Stein in 2001. The goal was to regain federal recognition, then
parlay casino compact with the federal government.
After numerous disputes over strategy and control of
investment assets, the tribe split in two in late 2006, when Polanco
came in. A separate group, the Gabrielino-Tongva Tribe continues to
work with Stein. Both claim
to have the allegiance of the majority of the tribe’s 1,500-plus
members.
“He is our CEO and senior investor, for sure,” said Bernie Acuna, a tribal councilman with that group.
“We’re stronger than ever and we’re doing great. We have about 85 percent of the membership.”
Acuna added of the rival group, “I know they’re splitting up and having problems, which doesn’t’ surprise me.”
A trio of lawsuits between the two groups were consolidated
into one, with the Carmelo/Polanco group winning a $560,000 judgment last fall. The case is now on appeal.
Richard Alcala is the brother of Martin Alcala, a tribal
councilman who was one of Stein’s chief critics prior to his death in
February 2008. He said that in his view, Polanco is “Stein in a
different suit.”
“He’s trying to seize control of this nation,” Alcala said. “He
basically doesn’t have time for us, and whenever he does have time
for us it’s basically to screw us over.”
Alcala provided a copy of Polanco’s contract, which bars him from lobbying and calls
on Polanco to “devote no less than the majority of his time, attention
and energies to the business of the Nation.” Polanco is a registered lobbyist currently listing
only one client: Tres Es, Inc., a firm run by his daughter, Olivia
Polanco. Tres Es, in turn, has three lobbying clients,
including Ed Voice and the South Coast Air Quality
Management District.
Aguirre and Alcala also contend that other members
of the tribal council have yet to prove that they are
even Gabrielinos. Each provided documents from the
Department of the Interior showing their percentage
of Gabrielino blood. Alcala is one-half Gabrielino, while Aguirre is 1/16th,which is enough to qualify under current rules.
“I believe some of the council members who are leading
are not Gabrielino Indians, and they are signing contracts
for people who are,” Aguirre said.
Carmelo said that she and other council-members who allied with her
have similar proof “on file,” but this information is “not public.”
These and other disputes came to a head last August,
when both Aguirre and Alcala say they began more openly
questioning Carmelo and Polanco. They said they were
able to get enough votes to unseat Carmelo, but she
was reinstated when Polanco intervened. Both men say
they were purposefully excluded from a council meeting
that month where she was reinstated, which they say
was called with 70 minutes notice in Upland, hours away from their homes
in Orange County and San Diego, respectively.
Carmelo disputes this as well, saying she was never
unseated. She also said the pair were given the required
48 hour notice for the meeting in question.
“A minority of the tribal council, which ended up being
two members, tried to unsuccessfully unseat me from
being the chair five times,” she said.
Then there is the matter of a mysterious investor both
sides refer to only as “Mr. Red.” Aguirre and Alcala said that Mr. Red met with six
council members last September, with Carmelo not present.
He offered about $15 million, hoping to take over full funding of the recognition
and casino projects. Polanco, seeing him as a threat,
got the board to turn him down.
Carmelo again contested these claims, saying only “We did some initial talks. Nothing ever came of it.”
Both sides claim the allegiance of two other councilmembers,
Ron Castillo and Rick Mackin. Neither man could be
reached for comment by press time; emails to their tribal council addresses bounced,
while neither returned calls.
However, Alcala did provide a May 27 email from Mackin stating he did not recognize “the suspension of any council members.”
