Veneno v. United States
Case Overview
Quentin Veneno Jr., a tribal member convicted under federal law for crimes on tribal land, asked the Supreme Court to revisit a question the Court has been deferring for over a century: does Congress actually have the constitutional authority to criminalize conduct between Native Americans on Native land? The legal foundation for that power traces back to United States v. Kagama (1886), a decision rooted more in judicial assumptions about federal supremacy over tribes than in any identifiable constitutional text. The Court declined to take the case, but Justices Gorsuch and Thomas dissented — a signal that at least two members think Kagama is an open problem the Court will eventually have to face.
The Application
Quentin Veneno Jr., a tribal member convicted under federal law for crimes committed on tribal land, challenged the constitutional basis for that federal conviction by petitioning the Supreme Court to reconsider whether Kagama's framework actually provides valid constitutional authority for Congress to criminalize his conduct.
The Conclusion
The Supreme Court denied the petition for certiorari, declining to revisit Kagama; however, Justices Gorsuch and Thomas dissented from the denial, signaling that at least two justices view Kagama's constitutional foundation as an unresolved question the Court will likely face in the future.
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