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Oklahoma v. Castro-Huerta

No. 21-429 SCOTUS · Decided Decided SCOTUS
Cert Granted: Jan 21, 2022 Argued: Apr 27, 2022 Decided: Jun 29, 2022

Case Overview

The Supreme Court held 5-4 that Oklahoma and other states have concurrent jurisdiction to prosecute non-Indians who commit crimes against Indians within a reservation, even on a reservation recognized as Indian Country under McGirt v. Oklahoma. Justice Kavanaugh wrote for the majority, significantly limiting McGirt's practical impact on state criminal jurisdiction.


The Facts

Victor Manuel Castro-Huerta, a non-Indian, was convicted in Oklahoma state court of child neglect for failing to provide food to his five-year-old stepdaughter, who is Cherokee and was living on the Cherokee Nation reservation. After the Supreme Court's McGirt decision recognized the Cherokee reservation as Indian Country, Castro-Huerta argued that Oklahoma lacked jurisdiction over crimes against Indians within the reservation.

The Application

History

Although Worcester establishes that states lack jurisdiction in Indian Country, the Court interpreted this principle as protecting tribal sovereignty over tribal members and affairs, not as providing non-Indians with immunity from state prosecution for crimes committed on reservations. Applied to Castro-Huerta's case, his non-Indian status meant he remained subject to Oklahoma's jurisdiction even though he committed a crime (child neglect) against an Indian victim on the Cherokee reservation. The Court reasoned that only federal prosecution would be available for such crimes if states lacked concurrent jurisdiction over non-Indians, creating an impractical gap in law enforcement. Therefore, Oklahoma retained the authority to prosecute Castro-Huerta in state court despite the location and Indian victim involved.

The Conclusion

**The ruling significantly curtails McGirt's practical effect by confirming that state courts retain criminal jurisdiction over non-Indians who victimize Indians within reservations.** States need not rely solely on federal prosecution for reservation crimes committed by non-Indians, addressing a key concern raised by Oklahoma after McGirt.

CourtSupreme Court of the United States
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Cert GrantedJan 21, 2022
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SCOTUS TMR-fd09d7c0 Jul 13, 2026
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