Cherokee freedmen controversy
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A Cherokee Nation political advertisement (2007)
The Cherokee Freedmen Controversy is an ongoing political and tribal
dispute between the administration of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma and
descendants of the Cherokee Freedmen. After the American Civil War, the
Cherokee Freedmen were made citizens of the tribe in accordance with a
treaty made with the United States government in 1866. The Freedmen were
Cherokee citizens until the early 1980s when the Cherokee Nation's
administration stripped them of voting rights and citizenship for more than two
decades.
In March 2006, the Cherokee Nation's courts ruled that the descendants of
the Cherokee Freedmen were allowed to register and become enrolled
citizens of the Cherokee Nation. Principal Chief Chad "Corntassel" Smith, one
of the most vocal opponents of the Freedmen's citizenship, wanted an
election to amend the constitution. A petition for a vote to remove the
Freedmen descendants was circulated and Chief Smith held an emergency
election, rather than including the issue on the June 23, 2007 ballot. [1] The
Freedmen descendants were removed from the Cherokee Nation due to the
election, but they have continued to press for recognition.[2]
This issue concerns the continual membership of the descendants of the
Cherokee Freedmen within the Cherokee Nation.
Contents
[hide]
1 The Cherokee Freedmen
2 History
2.1 Slavery among the Cherokee
2.2 Treaty of 1866
2.3 Rolls
2.4 Loss of membership
2.5 Activism of the 1940s-2000s
3 Current issues
3.1 Reinstatement and loss of citizenship
3.2 BIA controversy and temporary reinstatement
3.3 Introduction of Bill H.R. 2824
4 Feelings on the controversy
5 See also
6 References
7 External links
[edit] The Cherokee Freedmen
"Freedmen" is one of the terms given to African slaves after slavery was
abolished in the United States. In this context, "Cherokee Freedmen" includes
African slaves and former slaves of the Cherokee Nation before and after the
Trail of Tears, and the offspring of the slaves, former slaves, and tribal
members. Some members of the Cherokee Nation claim there are an
estimated 2,800 members of the Cherokee Nation considered to be
Freedmen descendants.[3] However, the New York Times reports that there
are as many as 25,000 Cherokee Freedmen descendants.[4]
After they were granted citizenship and "all the rights of native Cherokees" by
the Treaty of 1866, the Cherokee Freedmen and their descendants remained
wholly accepted as a legitimate part of the Cherokee Nation for many
decades. Some have been active in the tribe, voted in elections, attended
Cherokee stomp dances, knew Cherokee traditions and folklore, and even
served in tribal council. One freedman councilor, Joseph "Stick" Ross, has
several companies and landmarks named after him including Stick Ross
Mountain in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. Leslie Ross, Stick's great-grandson, says
"He knew sign language and spoke Cherokee and Seminole. He was a
trapper and a farmer and a rancher. And he was sheriff at one time, too. He
was pretty renowned in Tahlequah."[5] The civic position for Freedmen
increased after the Dawes Commission in 1907, and in 1971 the Freedmen
participated in the first tribal elections for the office of principal chief since the
Curtis Act of 1908.[6] In spite of the historic connection, more recently some
Cherokee freedmen are ambivalent about their ties and no longer see being
Cherokee as part of their personal identity.[7]
[edit] History
[edit] Slavery among the Cherokee
In oral tradition, Cherokees saw slavery as the result of failure in warfare, and
as a temporary status pending adoption or release.[8] In colonial times, the
British took Cherokee slaves, but from the 1830s to 1860s, some Cherokee
began to hold a more British view,[9] and Cherokees held the greatest number
of slaves of any group in Indian Territory.[10] Slavery was a component of
Cherokee society even prior to European contact,[11] and in the early 1800s
some Cherokee plantation owners in the American south took slaves.[12] The
1809 Meigs Census counted 583 "Negro slaves" of Cherokee owners,[13]
while in 1835 that number was 1,592, with 7.4% of families owning slaves. [14]
Owning slaves was less common among full blood Cherokee.[15]
The nature of slavery in Cherokee society often mirrored that of white slave-
owning society. The law barred intermarriage of Cherokees and blacks,
whether slave or free. Blacks who aided slaves were punished with one
hundred lashes on the back. In Cherokee society, blacks were barred from
holding office, bearing arms, and owning property, and it was illegal to teach
blacks to read and write.[16][17] There were slave revolts, such as the Cherokee
Slave Revolt of 1842 in which 25 Cherokee slaves owned by Joseph Vann
rebelled and tried to escape to Mexico, but were captured. During the
American Civil War, the Cherokee Nation, represented by Chief John Ross,
was largely conflicted between the north and the south[18], and on June 25,
1863, two years before the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution, all slaves within the limits of the Cherokee Nation were
emancipated by an act of the Cherokee National Council.
[edit] Treaty of 1866
After the war, the factions of Cherokee who supported the Union and those
who supported the Confederacy continued to be at odds. Those supporting
the confederacy largely felt that the freedmen should be removed from
Cherokee Country, while others felt that they should be adopted into the tribe
[19]
. Federal officials pushed for equal status between tribal members and
freedmen, and on July 19, 1866, the Cherokee Nation signed a treaty with the
United States extending Cherokee citizenship to the freedmen and their
descendants (article 9). The treaty also set aside a large tract for freedmen to
settle if they desired (article 4) and granted self-determination within the
constraints of the greater Cherokee Nation (article 5). The Southern Cherokee
Nation was given the Canadian District "The Cherokee Nation having,
voluntarily, in February, eighteen hundred and sixty-three, by an act of the
national council, forever abolished slavery, hereby covenant and agree that
never hereafter shall either slavery or involuntary servitude exist in their
nation otherwise than in the punishment of crime, whereof the party shall
have been duly convicted, in accordance with laws applicable to all the
members of said tribe alike. They further agree that all freedmen who have
been liberated by voluntary act of their former owners or by law, as well as all
free colored persons who were in the country at the commencement of the
rebellion, and are now residents therein, or who may return within six months,
and their descendants, shall have all the rights of native Cherokees: Provided,
That owners of slaves so emancipated in the Cherokee Nation shall never
receive any compensation or pay for the slaves so emancipated." -Article 9 of
The Treaty Of 1866 [20]
Other tribes of the Five Civilized Tribes such as the Choctaw and Creek had
similar treaties made with the United States government concerning their
respective Freedmen.[21] The Cherokee Nation Constitution was amended in a
special convention on November 26, 1866.
"All native born Cherokees, all Indians, and whites legally members of the
Nation by adoption, and all freedmen who have been liberated by voluntary
act of their former owners or by law, as well as free colored persons who were
in the country at the commencement of the rebellion, and are now residents
therein, or who may return within six months from the 19th day of July, 1866,
and their descendants, who reside within the limits of the Cherokee Nation,
shall be taken and deemed to be, citizens of the Cherokee Nation."[22].
[edit] Rolls
Cherokee Freedmen Enrollment Notice
The 1866 treaty did not, however, lead to full acceptance of freedmen in the
Cherokee Nation. This resistance was largely due to economic factors. In
1880, a census was compiled in order to distribute per capita funds related to
recent land sales. In the same year, the Cherokee senate voted to deny
citizenship to freedmen who had failed to comply with the 1866 treaty by
returning to the Cherokee Nation within six months. However the 1880 census
did not even include those freedmen who had never left, claiming that the
treaty granted civil and political rights, but not the right to share in tribal
assets.[23] Cherokee Chief Dennis Wolf Bushyhead (1877-1887) opposed this
action, but was overridden by the Council. The federal government
intervened, passing a bill in 1888 mandating that adopted citizens of the
Cherokee nation share in tribal assets, and compiled what was known as the
Wallace Roll in 1889 to count those who were included (including 3,524
freedmen).[24] The freedmen won the claims court case that followed,
Whitmore v. Cherokee Nation and United States (30 Ct. Clms. 138(1895)).
The Cherokee had already distributed the funds, and the U.S. as co-
defendant in the case, was to pay the award. The Kern-Clifton roll completed
in 1896 listed 5,600 freedmen who received their portion of the funds in the
following decade.[25]
In the midst of all of this, the Dawes Act of 1887 was passed, which converted
tribal lands to individual ownership, which was to some degree an attempt at
assimilating the Indians. As a part of the act and subsequent bills, the Dawes
Commission required a roll which listed people in the Indian Territory under
the categories, freedmen, intermarried whites, and Indians by blood.
Freedmen were put on the Freedmen Roll regardless if the man or woman
had Cherokee blood or not. The Dawes Rolls of 1902 listed 41,798 citizens of
the Cherokee Nation, 4,924 of them freedmen. The 1908 Curtis Act
authorized the Dawes Commission to allot funds without the consent of tribal
government (both the Dawes and Curtis Acts are seen as great restrictions on
tribal sovereignty), and allowed the federal government to extract taxes from
white citizens living in the Indian territories. Allotments were distributed,
although there have been many claims of unfair treatment,[26] and as the
Cherokee Nation was officially dissolved and Oklahoma became a state
(1907), by and large the freedmen had self-determination. There were 1,659
freedmen listed on the Kern-Clifton roll were not included in the Dawes Roll[27]
who were not given Cherokee citizenship rights. Some have criticized
inconsistencies of the Dawes Rolls themselves. For instance, freedwoman
Gladys Lannagan in the testimony of members of the Cherokee Freedmen's
Association before the Indian Claims Commission on November 14, 1960
reported, "I was born in 1896 and my father died August 5, 1897. But he didn't
get my name on the roll. I have two brothers on the roll by blood--one on the
roll by blood and one other by Cherokee freedman children's allottees." She
stated that one of her grandparents was Cherokee and the other black. [28]
Other cases of black Cherokee with at least 1/4 of their grandparents being
full Cherokee not being listed as Cherokee by blood have been presented as
well.[29]
In 1924, Congress passed a jurisdictional act, which allowed the Cherokees
to file suit against the United States to recover the funds paid to freedmen
under the Kern-Clifton Rolls in 1894. The result of this suit held that the Kern-
Clifton Rolls were only valid for that one distribution, and were superseded by
later rolls. The Indian Claims Commission Act of 1946 again stirred interest in
the status of the 1,659 freedmen included in the Kern-Clifton but not the later
roll.
[edit] Loss of membership
In the 1970s incentives instituted by the United States government such as
free health care lured many descendants of Indians by blood Dawes enrollees
to join the Cherokee Nation. These were extended to the Freedmen as well.
However, as the makeup of the Cherokee Nation shifted, the sentiments of
those in power shifted as well. Efforts to block the Freedmen descendants
from the tribe started in 1983 when Ross O. Swimmer, Principal Chief Of The
Cherokee Nation at the time, passed an act stating that all Cherokee citizens
must have a Certificate Of Degree Of Indian Blood (CDIB) card in order to
vote. Since the Freedmen Rolls had no record of Indian blood like the other
Dawes Rolls, they were effectively removed from the tribal polls. The
controversy surrounding this was that the freedmen descendants were
supposedly voting for another chief candidate and not Swimmer. Although
they were Dawes enrollees, and had received funds from the nation resulting
from recent land sales, and had voted in 1979, they were turned away from
the polls and told that they did not have the right to vote. Another act was
passed years later by Swimmer’s successor, Chief Wilma P. Mankiller, stating
that all enrolled members of the Cherokee Nation must have a CDIB card.
This act cemented the Cherokee Freedmen descendants’ disenfranchisement
from the Cherokee Nation.
[edit] Activism of the 1940s-2000s
In the 1940s, the Cherokee Freedmen's Association was formed of over 100
freedmen descendants of freedmen on the Wallace, Kern-Clifton, and Dawes
Rolls. The group filed petition with the Indian Claims Commission in 1951,
which were denied in 1961, since the claims were individual in nature and
outside of the jurisdiction of the Indian Claims Commission. Appeals stretched
to 1971, but all were denied. The Cherokee Freedmen's Association was
faced with two issues. On one hand, the Dawes Rolls, a federally mandated
tally, were accepted as defining who were legally and politically Cherokee,
and on the other hand, the courts saw their claims as a tribal matter and
outside of their jurisdiction. [30].
On July 7, 1983, Reverend Roger H. Nero and five other original enrollees
were turned away from the polls. He along with others sent a complaint to the
civil rights division of the Department of Justice, and on June 18, 1984. The
freedmen descendants filed a class action suit against Principal Chief Ross
Swimmer, the tribal registrar, a tribal council member, the tribal election
committee, the United States, the Office of the President, the Department of
the Interior, the Office of the Secretary, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and three
BIA employees claiming discrimination on the basis of race. The suit sought
nearly $750 million and wanted the last election to be declared null and void.
That case and an appeal heard in 1989 both were resolved against the
freedmen on account of jurisdictional issues such the case should have been
made in the court of claims due to the amount asked in the lawsuit.
In 2001, Bernice Riggs, a Freedmen descendant, sued the tribal registrar Lela
Ummerteskee for citizenship in the case of “Riggs v. Ummerteskee”. It was
ruled by the Judicial Appeals Tribunal (Now The Cherokee Nation Supreme
Court) that Riggs did indeed have Cherokee blood, but was denied
membership because her Cherokee ancestors are Freedmen on the Dawes
Rolls.
Marilyn K. Vann, president of the Descendants Of Freedmen Of The Five
Civilized Tribes organization, and Freedmen descendants filed a case with
the United States Federal Court over the Cherokee Nation’s
disenfranchisement of the Freedmen. Efforts to dismiss the federal case or
move the case out of Washington by the Cherokee Nation have been denied
so far. The federal case is still ongoing.
[edit] Current issues
[edit] Reinstatement and loss of citizenship
On September 26, 2004, Lucy Allen, a Freedmen descendant, filed a lawsuit
with the Cherokee Nation Supreme Court over the acts that barred the
Freedmen descendants from tribal membership being unconstitutional in the
case of “Allen v. Cherokee Nation Tribal Council“. On March 7, 2006, the
Cherokee Nation Supreme Court ruled in Allen’s favor in a 2-1 decision that
the descendants of the Cherokee Freedmen are Cherokee and were allowed
to register to become enrolled citizens of the Cherokee Nation.[31] This was
based on the facts that the Freedmen were listed as members on the Dawes
Rolls and that the 1975 Cherokee Constitution stated no language that the
Freedmen were not members and no mention of a blood requirement for
membership in the tribe [32] This ruling overturns the previous ruling in “Riggs
v. Ummerteskee” and over 800 Freedmen descendants have enrolled in the
Cherokee Nation since the ruling was made[33] -- out of up to 45,000
potentially eligible people.[34]
Principal Chief Chad Smith stated his disapproval of the ruling days after it
was made and wanted the ruling overturned via constitutional referendum
petition or convention to amend the constitution to restrict tribal membership
[35]
. The Cherokee Tribal Council agreed with Smith, and on June 12, 2006,
voted to "exclude Freedmen from the tribe's rolls" in a 13-2 vote[36]. The
council denied a motion to have a special election by Novermber, 2006 over
the issue, but supporters of the special election, including John Ketcher,
former deputy chief of the Cherokee Nation, and Cherokee citizens siding with
Smith, circulated a petition for a vote to remove the Freedmen
descendants[37]. Chief Smith announced that the issue of the membership for
Cherokee Freedmen was being considered for a vote regarding proposed
amendments to the Cherokee Nation Constitution. Freedmen descendants
opposed the election, and one descendant, Vicki Baker, filed a protest in the
Cherokee Nation Supreme Court over the legality of the petition and
allegations of foul play involved in the petition drive [38]. Though the Cherokee
Supreme Court ruled against Baker, two justices in Cherokee Supreme Court,
Darrell Dowty and Stacy Leeds, filed two dissenting opinions against the
ruling. Justice Leeds wrote an eighteen-page dissenting opinion concerning
falsified information in the petition drive and fraud by Darren Buzzard and
Dwayne Barrett, two of the petition’s circulators. Leeds wrote, "In this initiative
petition process, there are numerous irregularities, clear violations of
Cherokee law, and it has been shown that some of the circulators perjured
their sworn affidavits. I cannot, in good conscience, join in the majority
opinion” [39]. Despite the dissent and the removal of 800 signatures from the
petition, the goal of 2,100 signatures was met.
On December 19, 2006, Federal Judge Henry H. Kennedy ruled that the
freedmen descendants could sue the Cherokee Nation for
disenfranchisement [40]. However Judge Kennedy ruled against the Freedmen
descendants’ motion to halt the upcoming election. After a few delays, the
tribe voted on March 3, 2007 whether to reject the 1866 treaty or to allow the
2006 decision to stand.[41]. Less than a year after the Cherokee Freedmen
descendants were reinstated in tribal court, they were once again removed
from the Cherokee Nation with a 77% (6,693) to 23% (2,040) margin out of
8,700 total votes cast by registered voters[42]. The Freedmen descendants
protested their ouster from the tribe with demonstrations at the BIA office in
Oklahoma and the Oklahoma state capital [43] [44]
Due to the election that resulted in the ousting of the Freedmen descendants,
the Cherokee Nation has come under considerable fire from various political
circles such as the Congressional Black Caucus and the National Congress
Of Black Women. On March 14, 2007, twenty-six members of the
Congressional Black Caucus sent a letter to Carl J. Artman, Assistant
Secretary for Indian Affairs, urging the Bureau Of Indian Affairs to investigate
the legality of the March 3rd election [45]. The election has also drawn focus to
potentially illegal constitutional issues, as the election took place under a
constitution that was not approved by the Secretary of Interior as
acknowledged during an April 2007 Cherokee Nation rules committee
meeting[citation needed].
[edit] BIA controversy and temporary reinstatement
On May 22, 2007, the Cherokee Nation received notice from the BIA that the
Cherokee Nation’s amendments to the 1975 Cherokee Nation Constitution
was rejected because it required BIA approval, which had not been obtained.
The BIA also stated concerns that the Cherokee Nation had excluded the
Cherokee Freedmen from voting for the 2003 (1999) Constitutional
amendments, since they had been improperly shorn of their rights of
citizenship years earlier and were not allowed to participate in the
constitutional approval. This is considered a violation of the 1970 Principal
Chiefs Act, which requires that all tribal members must vote. According to
Chief Smith, the 1975 Indian Self Determination Act overrides the 1970
Principal Chiefs Act and removing the Freedmen descendants was in
accordance to the former act. Smith also stated that the Cherokee Nation
Supreme Court ruled that Cherokee Nation could take away the approval
authority it had granted the federal government and that the Cherokee Nation
will abide by the Supreme Court’s decision. [46] [47]. However, the issue with
the amending removing federal approval was once again placed on the ballot
for the June 23, 2007 election. Cherokee voters approved of the amendment
again in a 2-1 margin, but the BIA still has to approve. A letter to Chief Smith
from Jeanette Hanna, director of the BIA's Eastern Oklahoma Regional Office,
stated that the regional office has recommended approval of the vote on
removal of Secretarial oversight.[48]
On May 15, 2007, Cherokee District Court Judge John Cripps signed an order
for the Cherokee Freedmen descendants to be temporarily reinstated as
citizens of the Cherokee Nation while appeals are pending in the Cherokee
Nation court system. This was due to an injunction filed by the Freedmen
descendants' court appointed attorney for their case in tribal court. The
Cherokee Nation’s Attorney General Diane Hammonds complied with the
court order. However, some have stated that this move was a reaction to the
Freedmen’s ongoing federal case and the BIA’s complaint that the freedmen
were not allowed to vote [49]. Marilyn Vann and six Freedmen descendants
filed a motion in federal court to halt the upcoming election, but Judge Henry
Kennedy denied the motion. On June 23rd, Chad Smith was reelected as
Principal Chief with 58.8% of the vote.
[edit] Introduction of Bill H.R. 2824
On June 21, 2007, US Rep. Diane Watson (D-California), one of the 25
Congressional Black Caucus members who signed a letter asking the BIA to
investigate the Freedmen situation, introduced H.R. 2824. This bill seeks to
sever the Cherokee Nation’s federal recognition, strip the Cherokee Nation of
their federal funding (estimated $300 million annually), and stop the Cherokee
Nation’s gaming operations if the tribe doesn’t honor the Treaty Of 1866. H.R.
2824 was co-signed by eleven Congress members and was referred to the
Committee Of Natural Resources and the Committee Of The Judiciary.
Chief Smith issued a statement saying that the introduction of this bill is “really
a misguided attempt to deliberately harm the Cherokee Nation in retaliation
for this fundamental principle that is shared by more than 500 other Indian
tribes”. The National Congress Of Native Americans (NCAI) have expressed
their disapproval of the bill. [50]
[edit] Feelings on the controversy
Cherokee Freedmen descendants feel that they have been gradually pushed
out of the Cherokee Nation, and that the process has left each generation
less aware of its rights and its history. Much of the geographic and
demographic information for the U.S. states, counties, and cities came from
the data on the site. The data is not totally accurate due to various polling
errors, but it is a very good estimate. See the Bureau's website for more
information. The data were used for the following topics: geographic areas
(total, land, and water), population and housing unit densities, demographic
spreads across race, age, sex, and income. The data are indexed by state,
county, and place FIPS codes. See also Race (United States Census) for a
list of the definition of race according to the U.S. Census Bureau. As of July
11, 2007, census data can be accessed here. Communities in this part of
northeastern Oklahoma are largely segregated.
Individual Cherokee and Freedmen have in the past been ignorant about the
issue all together. As Freedman activist Reverend Roger H. Nero said in
1984, "Over the years they [Cherokee Nation officials] have been eliminating
us [Freedmen] gradually. When the older ones die out, and the young ones
come on, they won't know their rights. If we can't get this suit, they will not be
able to get anything" [51]. And Circe Sturm (1998) reports that more recently,
many Freedmen he interviewed are vague in their remembrance of a
connection with the Cherokee, and are ambivalent about getting
recognized[52]. Recognized Cherokee, too, are often in the dark. Cara Cowan
Watts, a tribal council member who is against the freedmen being tribal
members, admitted that she didn’t know anything about the Freedmen or their
history before the case[53], while Chief Chad Smith admits that "a lot of
Cherokee don't know who the Freedmen are," saying that he himself didn't
know while growing up[54].
People who are against the Freedmen descendants being tribal members
support Chief Smith's stance that the Freedmen are not Cherokee citizens
based on their ancestors being on the Freedmen Roll of the Dawes Rolls and
not on the “By-Blood” Cherokee Roll. Other claims from Smith and likeminded
citizens include that the Freedmen and their descendants have not been
active in the tribe for 100 years, that the Freedmen were compensated for
slavery with their Dawes land allotments and not tribal membership, that they
were forced on the tribe due to the Treaty Of 1866, and the claim that they are
solely after or not entitled to the tribe's resources and Cherokee Nation's
federally funded programs [55]. People who are “Pro-Freedmen” feel that the
Freedmen descendants do have a rightful place in Cherokee society based
on the Cherokee Freedmen's long history in the tribe before and after the Five
Civilized Tribes' forced removal, Freedmen who have been active members of
the tribe, and documents such as the Treaty Of 1866, the 1894 Supreme
Court case of "Cherokee Nation vs. Journeycake" [4], and the 1975 Cherokee
Constitution. Some Cherokees by blood have also pushed to garner full
citizenship for Freedmen. David Allen Cornsilk, editor of the independent
newspaper the Cherokee Observer and founder of the Cherokee National
Party, was the lay advocate for the Lucy Allen case and sees the issue of
honoring the 1866 treaty as an issue of sovereignty. Other non-White
Cherokee have expressed solidarity with freedmen due to their similarities of
religion (Southern Baptist) and the sense of community (albeit African
American) found among freedmen [56].
Certain issues have risen from the controversy. One is the issue of blood.
Historians have mentioned that the Cherokee have included members without
Cherokee blood. The Shawnee and Delaware tribes, two non-Cherokee
tribes, are members of the Cherokee Nation by treaty. Another issue is the
issue of a tribe breaking a treaty which is protected by Article Six of the United
States Constitution. Dr. Daniel F. Littlefield Jr., director of the Sequoyah
Research Center at the University of Arkansas-Little Rock, stated that the
Treaty Of 1866 grants freedmen their rights as citizens and the case shouldn’t
be made into a racial issue [57]. In a June 2007 message to members of
United Keetoowah Band Of Cherokees, Principal Chief George Wickliffe
expressed his concern about the Cherokee Nation ignoring the Treaty Of
1866 and threatening government-to-government relationships [58]. Race is
another issue. Taylor Keen, a Cherokee Nation tribal council member, said
"Historically, citizenship in the Cherokee Nation has been an inclusive
process, It was only at the time of the Dawes Commission there was ever a
racial definition of what Cherokee meant. The fact that it was brought back up
today certainly tells me that there is a statute of racism" [59]. Cherokee Nation
citizen Darren Buzzard, one of the petition circulators, composed a letter to
Councilwoman Linda O’Leary that had many statements that were deemed
racist and bigoted. This letter was circulated on the Internet and it was quoted
in many articles on the Freedmen case[60] [61].