User:Robert Gopher Descendant/sandbox

THE BEAR CLAW TRIBE CANNOT BE RECOGNIZED, SO WHY RUIN IT FOR THE REST?

There is a bogus Ahontoays Band descendant, Phyllis Parker, who filed for independent recognition under the Bear Claw Tribe, Inc., a claim from which she now hides from. In two court cases in the state of Montana, Phyllis Parker, Peggy Myers, Leona Gopher, Charles Walking Child and others are actively concealing a claim they generated in 1992 and moved Congress on their behalf to introduce legislation to obtain recognition separate from Robert Gopher's family, who are the TRUE OWNERS OF THE 13 STAR FLAG.

In court testimony, Phyllis Parker perjured herself by stating she was a descendant of the Ahontoays Band, even though her failed claim was already passed in Congress and she was ejected from the Court of Claims at the time the Ahontoays letter was filed in 1996. The U.S Court of Federal Claims dismissed Parker's claim in 1997-1997.

Sadly, Parker, Walking Child and Myers initiated the Bear Claw Claim to frustrate the work of Robert Gopher's family to hold non-treaty Crees of the Little Bear Band of Cree and the Louis Riel Metis descendants acocountable for their gross mismanagement of the Rocky Boy Indian Reservation. The Bear Claw claim was a deflection, a ruse, to shield Parker's, Myers, and Walking Child's Cree in laws from scrutiny, and in essence, delayed and frustrated the resolution of Chippewa treaty rights, sovereignty and self-government in Rocky Boy. Rather than succeed at their newly organized Bear Claw Tribe, the organization went down in the same year it was created. Parker, Myers and Walking Child never ensured the claim was legally sounc, and rushed the claim through the U.S. Congress to deflect the growing scrutiny in Rocky Boy and the awareness Robert Gopher's family was generating. The individuals Peggy, Pnyllis and Charles are agents of the Cree and Metis to further entrench Chippewa dispossession.

With respect to Ahontoays records, Robert Gopher filed the letter in 1996, while Parker's Congressionally approved claim was in the U.S Claims Court, and she cannot lawfully claim Ahontoays band affiliation without first undertaking the formal process the Office of Federal Acknowledgment provided for in May 2008 pursuant to FR 73 30146.