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Native American Press/Ojibwe
News
Court debunks myth that audits are trade secrets
April 4, 2003
It was gratifying to learn on Tuesday this week that the Minnesota
Court of Appeals threw out a Ramsey County District Court decision
which had found that Minnesota tribal casino audited financial statements
were trade secrets and therefore non-public under the Minnesota
Data Practices Act.
It was bad enough that the Minnesota Department of Public Safety,
Gambling Enforcement Division came up with this myth about 8 or
9 years ago to preclude me from obtaining the audits at that time.
For someone who has worked with and written about financial statements
for a long time, I found their definition of audits as trade
secrets to be absolutely ludicrous. I found it to be especially
absurd when a Ramsey County Court judge, in what I call the audit
lawsuit, not only bought this bull but also found that the
tribal casinos audited financial statement derive independent
economic value by remaining secret.
The St. Paul Pioneer Press, in their April 2nd article, called
me the big winner, but actually the public, both Native
and non-Native, are the big winners. Lets face it, this $3
billion-plus industry is only working for a very few people. So-called
Indian gaming does not benefit the state as a whole,
and it also does not benefit most Indian people.
After twelve years of Indian gaming, its time to re-assess
its value to the tribes, to Indian people, and to the state of Minnesota,
and to come up with a more equitable and more accountable
system.
Even non-profit corporations are legally required to file audited
financial statements and other business information with the Attorney
Generals Office, as are other state-sanctioned monopolies
like utility companies. All of this information is public information.
Audited financial statements are an important tool in maintaining
the integrity of our economic system. Some major corporations, such
as Enron, WorldCom, and others have colluded with auditors like
Arthur Anderson to cook the books, and have thereby
defrauded the public. This has caused great financial catastrophes
resulting in the bankruptcy of a number of companies because their
finances turned out to be illegal, illusory, and fraudulent, and
well as destroying the life savings and dreams of a lot of hard-working
people, and has had long-term detrimental effects on the stock market
and the rest of the economy.
Accurate financial information about the casinos is particularly
important on Indian reservations, because on many reservations the
casinos are nearly the entire economy. Therefore its imperative
that this information be readily available to tribal members, and,
because Indian gambling has a significant impact on the State, to
citizens of the state of Minnesota.
Recent publication of audits by Red Lake, White Earth, and to some
extent Leech Lake has not caused the sky to fall (like those at
Prairie Island, Mille Lacs and other tribal governments opposing
release of financial information have predicted). In fact, openness
with the audits has helped these reservations to begin resolving
long-festering financial problems. Its hard to justify tribal
attorneys hard-line position that their audits be secret.
Its always reassuring when the judicial system actually works
the way its supposed to.
The recent Court of Appeals decision exposes yet another myth,
with Indian tribal governments trying to hide from even their own
tribal members behind the shroud of tribal sovereignty.
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