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Indian Arts and Crafts Act

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stringbead

Junior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? West Virginia


I'm looking for someone with experience prosecuting cases under the Indian Arts & Crafts Act. This is for research only, I'm writing a novel. I just would like to correspond with someone who has experience.
 


TheGeekess

Keeper of the Kraken
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? West Virginia


I'm looking for someone with experience prosecuting cases under the Indian Arts & Crafts Act. This is for research only, I'm writing a novel. I just would like to correspond with someone who has experience.

We don't do homework and we don't do research for hypotheticals. :cool:

YOU, on the other hand, didn't read the TOS.
The FreeAdvice Forums are intended to enable consumers to benefit from the experience of other consumers who have faced similar legal issues. FreeAdvice does NOT vouch for or warrant the accuracy, completeness or usefulness of any posting on the Forums or the identity or qualifications of any person asking questions or responding on the Forums.
(Emphasis added.)
 

quincy

Senior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? West Virginia


I'm looking for someone with experience prosecuting cases under the Indian Arts & Crafts Act. This is for research only, I'm writing a novel. I just would like to correspond with someone who has experience.

While everything TheGeekess has said is correct, and I am violating the forum's unwritten rules not to assist researchers or students or mess with hypotheticals, I have been interested in Indian art for years and don't mind providing you with some avenues to explore.

First, your West Virginia Democratic Representative, Nick Rahall II, sponsored a bill to amend the Indian Arts and Crafts Act. To my knowledge H.R. 1066 has not yet, nor is it likely to, leave committee, to which it was assigned in March of this year. If enacted, it would allow for others not currently recognized as a member of a federal or state tribe (ie, American Indian, Alaskan Native) to market their arts or crafts as authentic.

Contact with Rep. Rahall can perhaps lead you to individuals experienced in prosecuting cases under the Act (http://www.rahall.house.gov).

For criminal cases brought under the Act from 1990 to 2010, you can go to page 36 of the following pdf file. There will be information from those cases that can lead you to other individuals experienced in prosecuting crimes under the Act. See http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d11432.pdf.

Good luck with your novel.
 

cbg

I'm a Northern Girl
Don't have any suggestions but I just want to throw in my two cents about the unwritten rules being discussed here.

When it comes to homework, I am one of the most vocal of the objectors. I won't answer a question that even LOOKS like homework. The purpose of homework is not for someone else to do the research and the details or even point the student in the right direction. They are being graded on THEIR work and for someone else to supply them with answers or research direction is, in my view, cheating. I'm taking grad courses right now (well, not this minute; I'm not enrolled in the summer semester) and I would never dream of asking someone on an internet board for answers, or even to tell me where to find the answers. That's MY job. I'm supposed to turn in MY work. Not someone else's.

However, when it comes to someone writing a novel, I am less hard-nosed. I am also a writer, and I don't have a problem with asking research questions of those who already may know the answer. I'm not being graded on it and I'm not asking anyone else to do any of the writing for me. It's not the same as a homework question, whether the ability to find the answers is part of the grade. Any future publisher isn't going to care where I got the research questions answered as long as I got them right, but a high school teacher or college professor is going to care if a student didn't do their own work.

P.S. Among my husband's many sources of income is adjunct college professor, and he makes his students write a lot of research papers.

So others may feel differently, but while I will not answer any question that has any kind of "homework" feel about it (and I'll be pretty obnoxious about it, too :D) I don't mind in the least answering research questions for other novelists.
 

quincy

Senior Member
. . . . I would never dream of asking someone on an internet board for answers. . . .

I am of this bent even when it is not homework that is involved. Too many idiots post on internet boards. ;) :D

But I have no problem providing resources for others to use or making use of the resources provided by others. Part of research is knowing who to ask and where to look, and who to ask about where to look.

Librarians do this for students, too.
 

quincy

Senior Member
On what topic you are writing? i can suggest you refrence books for this.

stringbead has not returned to the forum since first posting at the beginning of last month but, based on content of the first post, s/he has expressed an interest in speaking with someone who had prosecuted cases under the Indian Arts and Crafts Act.

If you have reference books that you know deal with this subject, however, you can cite them in case s/he returns.
 
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