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Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 1 of 20 Page ID#120 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN BRENDA TURUNEN, Plaintiff, v. KEITH CREAGH, DIRECTOR, MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES, and JAMIE CLOVER ADAMS, DIRECTOR, MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES. Defendants. FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT INTRODUCTION 1. Plaintiff filed the original COMPLAINT in this matter on April 4, 2013. On May 2, 2013 Defendants filed a Motion to Dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (Fed.R.Civ.P.). This FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT is filed pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a)(1)(B). 2. This FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT is essentially identical to the original COMPLAINT except for the following changes: (a) The caption above has been amended to remove the Michigan Department of Natural Resources (MDNR) and the Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (MDARD) as defendants. (b) Paragraphs 1 and 2 in this INTRODUCTION section are new. (c) Paragraph 4 in the JURISDICTION section (Paragraph 2 in the original COMPLAINT) has been amended to correct a clerical error and now alleges jurisdiction pursuant 28 USC 1331.

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 2 of 20 Page ID#121 (d) Paragraph 6 in the PARTIES section below (Paragraph 4 in the original COMPLAINT) has been amended to remove MDNR and MDARD as named defendants. (e) Paragraph 8 in the FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS section below is new. (f) Paragraph 13 in the FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS section below (Paragraph 10 in the original COMPLAINT) has been amended. (g) Paragraph 14 in the FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS section below is new. (h) Paragraph 17 in the FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS section below (Paragraph 13 in the original COMPLAINT) has been amended. (i) Paragraph 52 in the FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS section below (Paragraph 48 in the original COMPLAINT) has been amended. (j) Paragraph 65 in the FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS section below (Paragraph 61 in the original COMPLAINT) has been amended. (k) Paragraphs 66 and 69 below (Paragraphs 62 and 65 in the original COMPLAINT) have been amended to reflect changes in the paragraph numbers. 3. Plaintiff is a family farmer and a member of the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community (KBIC) residing and farming in the Western Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Plaintiff has been raising crops and livestock for the past 23 years on land located in the territory ceded to the United States of America via the 1842 Treaty between the United States and the Lake Superior Chippewa Indians, 7 Stat. 2

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 3 of 20 Page ID#122 591 (the 1842 Treaty). Plaintiff s farming operations are conducted pursuant to rights reserved in Article II of the 1842 Treaty and pursuant to a license from KBIC. Plaintiff s treaty-protected farming activities are being threatened by the policies and activities of Defendants which seek to destroy a certain agriindustry in the State of Michigan, so-called hunting estates. To achieve this questionable goal Defendants have sought to prohibit Plaintiff s pigs through an Invasive Species Order which literally can be applied to any pig in existence. Further, Defendants policies make no provision for Plaintiff s treaty-protected farming activities and Defendants seek to impose their regulatory schemes upon Plaintiff. Plaintiff invokes this Court s jurisdiction in order to protect her treaty reserved right to farm within the territory ceded to the United States by the 1842 Treaty. JURISDICTION AND VENUE 4. This case arises under the 1842 Treaty with the Chippewa, 7 Stat. 591, as well as the Indian commerce clause (Article I, Section 8, Clause 3) and the supremacy clause (Article VI, Clause 2) of the United State Constitution. This court has jurisdiction to consider Plaintiff s claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1331. Venue is appropriate pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1391(b). Plaintiff seeks a declaratory judgment pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 2201, as well as permanent injunctive relief pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65. 3

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 4 of 20 Page ID#123 PARTIES 5. Plaintiff is a member of the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community (KBIC), a federally recognized Indian tribe located in the Western Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Plaintiff lives and works on her family farm located in Baraga County Michigan, adjacent to the KBIC reservation. 6. (a) Defendant Keith Creagh is the Director of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources (MDNR), which is a Department of the State of Michigan obligated by Michigan law to manage and regulate natural resources located within the jurisdiction of the State of Michigan. See, e.g., MCL 299.1, et seq. and MCL 16.352, et seq.. Defendant Creagh is sued in that capacity. (b) Defendant Jamie Clover Adams is the Director of the Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (MDARD), which is a Department of the State of Michigan obligated by Michigan law, among other duties, to inspect and regulate animal industry and to foster direct trading between producers and consumers of agricultural products within the jurisdiction of the State of Michigan. See, e.g., MCL 285.1, et seq. and MCL 16.352, et seq.. Defendant Adams is sued in that capacity. FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS 7. All factual allegations contained in paragraphs 1-6 above are reasserted and incorporated herein by reference. 8. All references to the historical record contained in the 4

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 5 of 20 Page ID#124 following paragraphs are based upon documents and historical treatises from at least the following sources: (a) Annual Reports of the Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church (New York: Conference Office). (b) Blair, Emma Helen, 1911/1996: The Indian Tribes of the Upper Mississippi Valley and Region of the Great Lakes. University of Nebraska Press. (c) Broihahn, John H., and Matthew M. Thomas, 2009: Secluded but not Isolated: Late 19 th and Early 20 th Century Potawatomi Communities in the Highland Lake District, Vilas County Wisconsin. State Archaeology & Maritime Preservation Technical Report No. 07-0001. (Madison: Wisconsin Historical Society). (d) Carlson, Richard Allen, Jr., 2003: Whose Your People? : Cumulative Identity Among the Salyersville Indian Population of Kentucky s Appalachian and Midwest Muckfields, 1677-2000. Ph.D. Dissertation, Michigan State University (Ann Arbor: UMI Press-Proquest). (e) Cleland, Charles E., 1992: Rites of Conquest. (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press). 2001: The Place of the Pike (Gnoozhekaaning). A History of the Bay Mills Indian Community. (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press). (f) Cleland, Charles E. (with Bruce R. Greene, Marc Slonim, Nancy L. Cleland, Kathryn L. Tierney, Skip Durocher and Brian 5

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 6 of 20 Page ID#125 Pierson), 2012: Faith in Paper: The Ethnohistory and Litigation of Upper Great Lakes Indian Treaties. (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press). (g) Clifton, James A., George L. Cornell and James M. McClurken, 1986: The People of the Three Fires: The Ottawa, Potawatomi and Ojibway of Michigan. (The Michigan Indian Press, Grand Rapids, Michigan). (h) Collections of the Wisconsin State Historical Society (aka Wisconsin Historical Society). (i) Ely, Dairy of Edmund F. Ely. February-June 1836. (Dougherty Documents. Copy from Minnesota Historical Society, Records Division). (j) Kappler, Charles J., compiler. 1904: Indian Affairs: Laws and Treaties, Vol. 2. (Washington, D.C.: GPO). (k) Karamanski, Theodore J., 1989: Deep Woods Frontier: A History of Logging in Northern Michigan. (Detroit, Michigan: Wayne State University Press). (l) McClurken, James M., compiler, 2000: Fish in the Lakes, Wild Rice and Game in Abundance: Testimony on Behalf of Mille Lacs Ojibwe Hunting and Fishing Rights. (East Lansing: Michigan State University Press). (m) NA RG75, LR 1881-1907. Record Group 75. Letters Received by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1881-1907. Entry 91. (n) NAM M1 Series. National Archives Microfilm, Record Group 6

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 7 of 20 Page ID#126 75, Series M1, Records of the Michigan Superintendency, 1814-1851. 71 Rolls. (o) NAM M21 Series. National Archives Microfilm, record Group 75, Series M21, Office of Indian Affairs-Letters Sent, 1824-1881. 166 Rolls. (p) NAM M234 Series. National Archives Microfilm, Record Group 75, Series M234, Letters Received by the Office of Indian Affairs. (q) NAM T494. National Archives Microfilm, Record Group 75, Series T494, Documents Concerning the Negotiation of Ratified Indian Treaties. 1801-1869. (r) N.S. Documents recorded and abstrated in Calander of Documents for the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community (1988), by Nancy Cleland. (Williamston, Michigan: Aurora Associates). (s) Prucha, Francis Paul. 1990: Documents of United States Indian Policy, 2 nd Edition. (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press). 9. In the 1842 Treaty at LaPointe between the United States of America and the Lake Superior Chippewa Indians, October 4, 1842, 7 Stat. 591 (the 1842 Treaty ), the Indian signatories ceded large portions of the Western Upper Peninsula of Michigan as well as large portions of Northern Wisconsin to the United States of America. 10. Article II of the 1842 Treaty between the United States of 7

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 8 of 20 Page ID#127 America and the Lake Superior Chippewa Indians (the 1842 Treaty ), reserved to the Indian 1 signatories the right to hunt on the territory ceded to the United States by the 1842 Treaty (the Ceded Territory ), along with the other usual privileges of occupancy. 7 Stat. 591. Keweenaw Bay Indian Community v. Michigan, 784 F. Supp. 418, 421 (W.D. Mich. 1991). 11. This Court must give effect to the terms used in the 1842 Treaty as the Indian signatories would have understood them. Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa Indians, 562 U.S. 172, 196 (1999). 12. The 1842 Treaty must be liberally interpreted in favor of the Indians and any ambiguities in that Treaty must be resolved in their favor. Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa Indians, 562 U.S. 172, 200 (1999). 13. The historical record demonstrates that the original Indian signatories to the 1842 Treaty understood the phrase the other usual privileges of occupancy in Article II of the 1842 Treaty to include the right to commercially farm their lands within the Ceded Territory, including without limitation the right to engage in 1 Plaintiff understands that use of the term Indian may be considered pejorative by this Court and other readers. However, use of the term Indian is so thoroughly embedded in the statutes, regulations, court decisions and historical documents relevant to this case that use of the term Native American is awkward and potentially confusing. For that reason, unless the context demands otherwise, the term Indian shall be used throughout this document when referring to this continent s original inhabitants. 8

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 9 of 20 Page ID#128 animal husbandry. 14. The historical record demonstrates that the original Indian signatories to the 1842 Treaty considered farming a usufructuary right reserved pursuant to the phrase the other usual privileges of occupancy in Article II of the 1842 Treaty, similar to hunting, fishing and gathering. 15. Article II of the 1842 Treaty further stipulated that the laws of the United States shall be continued in force, in respect to their trade and inter course with the whites. 16. The historical record demonstrates that the original Indian signatories to the 1842 Treaty understood that continuing the laws of the United States in respect to their trade and intercourse with the whites to mean that their Article II farming activities would be governed by their own tribal laws or the laws of the United States of America, not by the laws of the State of Michigan. 17. The policy of the United States at the time of the 1842 Treaty was to encourage commercial farming, including animal husbandry activities, among American Indian people in general, and with the Indian signatories to the 1842 Treaty specifically. 18. The phrase the laws of the United States... in respect to their trade and intercourse with the whites found in Article 2 of the 1842 Treaty refers to the so-called Trade and Intercourse Acts which asserted exclusive federal authority over virtually all interactions between Indians and non-indians. 9

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 10 of 20 Page ID#129 19. The Trade and Intercourse Acts provided legal authority and funding for the President of the United States to furnish Indians with useful domestic animals and implements of husbandry. 20. In Article IV of the 1842 Treaty the United States pledges it will provide the Indian signatories with blacksmiths and farmers and creates an agricultural fund for the Indian signatories. Subsequent to the ratification of the 1842 Treaty the United States did in fact provide such agricultural assets to the Indian signatories. Keweenaw Bay Indian Community v. Michigan, 784 F. Supp. 418, 421 (W.D. Mich. 1991). 21. The historical record demonstrates that the United States considered commercial farming to be one of the usual privileges of occupancy reserved by Article 2 of the 1842 Treaty. See, e.g. Article V, Treaty of 1795 at Greenville: The Indian tribes who have a right to those lands, are to quietly enjoy them, hunting, planting and dwelling thereon. 7 Stat. 49. See also, Ottawa Tribe v. Logan, 577 F.3d 634, 638 (6 th Cir. 2009). 22. The historical record demonstrates that prior to the negotiation and execution of the 1842 Treaty the United States regularly provided pigs and other domestic animals to Indian people generally and to the Lake Superior Chippewa Indians specifically. See, e.g., Article III of the 1823 Treaty with the Florida Tribes of Indians, 7 Stat. 224, and Article IV of the 1825 Treaty with the Kansa, 7 Stat. 244. 10

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 11 of 20 Page ID#130 23. The current policy of the United States is to promote Indian self-determination and economic development. 24. The Keweenaw Bay Indian Community ( KBIC ) is a federally recognized Indian tribe organized pursuant to the provisions of the Indian reorganization Act of 1934, 25 U.S.C. 476, with a governing Tribal Council duly recognized by the Secretary of the United States Department of the Interior. 25. KBIC is the modern day successor in interest of the L Anse and Ontonagon Bands of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians. Keweenaw Bay Indian Community v. Naftaly, 452 F.3d 514, 516 (6 th Cir. 2006). Both the L Anse and Ontonagon Bands of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians were signatories to the 1842 Treaty. 26. The historical record demonstrates that subsequent to the negotiation and signing of the 1842 Treaty the United States regularly provided blacksmiths, farmers, grain and implements of agriculture, including implements of animal husbandry, to KBIC s predecessors in interest. 27. The historical record demonstrates that subsequent to the negotiation and signing of the 1842 Treaty the United States provided pigs and other domestic animals to KBIC s predecessors in interest. 28. KBIC licenses and regulates its members exercise of the offreservation rights reserved pursuant to the 1842 Treaty, including the right to farm within the Ceded Territory, to the exclusion of 11

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 12 of 20 Page ID#131 the State of Michigan. 29. Plaintiff has been engaged in farming activities on land located within the Ceded Territory for the past 23 years. During that time she has raised different varieties of crops, cattle and pigs. Plaintiff has been licensed by KBIC to engage in treatyfarming activities, including animal husbandry, within the Ceded Territory. 30. Plaintiff sells her farm products locally, statewide and beyond Michigan s borders. 31. Breeds of pig traditionally used in large, factory-style pork production facilities have had the hardiness bred out of them. They do not survive in the frigid winters of the Upper Peninsula without heavy infrastructure investments. 32. Commencing approximately 14 years ago Plaintiff and her spouse developed the Hogan Hog, a unique breed of pig carefully crossbred under her husbandry to maximize hardiness, growth and milk production and to minimize feed consumption. 33. Hogan Hogs are able to withstand the Upper Peninsula winters because they are much hardier than the breeds of pig used in factory-style pork-production facilities. The meat of the Hogan Hog is also tastier and healthier than factory produced pork. 34. The Hogan Hog has become a common law trademark that signifies an excellent breed of pig throughout the region and beyond state boundaries. 12

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 13 of 20 Page ID#132 35. Plaintiff has developed local, state and national markets for the Hogan Hog, including: (a) Direct sales to consumers who desire the tasty meat of the Hogan Hog. (b) Direct sales to people who use them as pets and/or as guard dogs because of their intelligence, friendly disposition towards humans and ability to keep predators such as coyotes, fishers, pine martins and even wolves at bay. (c) The outward resemblance of the Hogan Hog to the wild eurasian boar of North and Central Europe has helped Plaintiff successfully market the Hogan Hog to so-called hunting preserves where the pigs are allowed to roam within fenced open air areas until harvested by customers who pay a fee for a simulated hunting experience in a natural setting. 36. The Michigan Animal Industry Act defines feral swine as: Feral swine means swine which have lived their life or any part of their life as free roaming or not under the husbandry of humans. MCL 287.703(27). 37. Feral swine pose a significant threat to Plaintiff s farming operations. Feral swine can cause crop damage, damage to native plants and animals and may be exposed to diseases that can be passed to the animals under Plaintiff s husbandry. 38. The problems caused by feral swine are not dependant on the physical appearance of or the breed of the feral swine. Any pig 13

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 14 of 20 Page ID#133 which escapes and becomes feral can cause such problems. It is the state of being feral that causes problems, not the appearance or breed of pig. 39. Plaintiff supports efforts by tribal, state and federal agencies to eradicate feral swine. 40. Plaintiff does not possess and has never possessed feral swine. 41. The Hogan Hog is highly domesticated. On the rare occasions where a pig escapes from its pen it does not go far from its food source and quickly returns on its own or is easily lured back to the farm with food. 42. None of Plaintiff s Hogan Hogs, or other domestic livestock, have ever escaped from her farm into the wild and become feral. 43. There has never been an outbreak of pseudo-rabies, tuberculosis or any other disease among Hogan Hogs, or any other animals at Plaintiff s farm. 44. Plaintiff and her spouse have invested millions of dollars in the Hogan Hog, refitting and vertically integrating much of her farming operation to accommodate her unique breed of pig. 45. Plaintiff has always been in full compliance with all applicable KBIC and United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) requirements regarding her livestock and other farming operations. 46. Plaintiff s farm has been visited by representatives of both Defendants MDARD and MDNR. Both agencies were impressed and 14

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 15 of 20 Page ID#134 commented on the clean, efficient and safe design of Plaintiff s farm. 47. Dan Wyant, Director of the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality and former Director of the Michigan Department of Agriculture, commented during his visit that Plaintiff s farm operation was excellent and needed no regulation. 48. In 2003 the Michigan Legislature adopted the Invasive Species Act (ISA), MCL 324.41301, et seq.. The ISA prohibited the possession and release of certain fish species as well as genetically engineered non-native fish species and provided penalties for violations. 49. The ISA has been amended to add certain aquatic plants and insects and to revise definitions and penalties for violations. In 2009 the ISA was amended to remove one species, to add additional species including the first mammal species ever placed on the list and to delegate authority to the Defendants MDNR and MDARD to add new species to the list. 50. Pursuant to the delegated authority in the ISA, then-director of then-michigan Department of Natural Resources and Environment 2, issued Amendment 1, 2010 Invasive Species Order (ISO), which placed the following animals on the ISA prohibited species list: Wild 2 Executive Order 2011-1 abolished the Michigan Department of Natural Resources and Environment and transferred its responsibilities and authority to Defendant MDNR and to the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality. 15

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 16 of 20 Page ID#135 boar, wild hog, wild swine, feral pig, feral hog, feral swine, Old world swine, razorback, eurasian wild boar, Russian wild boar (Sus scrofa Linnaeus). 51. On April 27, 2006 the USDA Invasive Species Advisory Council approved an Invasive Species Definition Clarification and Guidance White Paper. Page three of that White Paper states: It is also essential to recognize that invasive species are not those under human control or domestication; that is, invasive species are not those that humans depend upon for economic security, maintaining a desirable quality of life, or survival. 52. The MDNR and MDARD, through the Defendants, have sought to impose the ISO on Plaintiff s 1842 Treaty-protected farming operations. 53. On December 13, 2011 the MDNR issued a declaratory ruling (DR) dictating how the MDNR will identify pigs prohibited by the ISO. The MDNR declaratory ruling rejects identification by genotype in favor of eight listed physical characteristics, and a ninth characteristic consisting of characteristics not currently known to the MDNR. 54. Four of the DR characteristics involve the coloration or patterns found on the animals fur and/or bristles. One involves underfur, one involves tail structure, one ear structure and one involves skeletal structure. These physical characteristics are all based upon the work of Dr. John Mayer, a nationally respected expert on feral pigs. 16

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 17 of 20 Page ID#136 55. Most of the DR characteristics have been acknowledged to be unreliable identification techniques by Dr. Mayer himself since they vary wildly according to age and gender of individual animals. 56. The Defendants have acknowledged that one of the DR characteristics, involving striped piglets, is utterly unreliable. 57. Two of the DR characteristics used to identify pigs prohibited by the ISO, involving tails and ears, can be found on virtually every pig on earth. 58. The DR characteristics allow the Defendants to place any animal within the provisions of the ISO. For example, Dr. Mayer examined video images of two Hogan Hogs and determined that they did not possess the DR characteristics. Digital photographs of the very same Hogan Hogs were shown to a MDNR biologist in Marquette, Michigan who arrived at the exact opposite conclusion and determined that these pigs did possess the DR characteristics. 59. On February 23, 2012 TV6 in Marquette, Michigan aired a television article about Plaintiff s farming operations. In response, a staff member of the MDNR asserted in the very next TV6 news report on the subject that pigs bearing the DR characteristics carried diseases such as toxo-plasmosis, trichinosis, brucillosis, pseudo rabies and tuberculosis. 60. The MDNR televised statements gave the general public the false impression that Plaintiff s pigs and other animals were infected with one or more of these diseases. 17

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 18 of 20 Page ID#137 61. Diseases such as toxo-plasmosis, trichinosis, brucillosis, pseudo rabies and tuberculosis affect all breeds of pig the same, regardless of their physical appearance. 62. The USDA has instituted a highly successful, nation-wide brucellosis and pseudo-rabies eradication program. 63. In her animal husbandry practices Plaintiff has always followed the USDA protocols for eradication of brucellosis, pseudorabies and other diseases. 64. Plaintiff s Hogan Hogs are no more likely to carry disease that any other breed of pig. 65. The MDARD has attempted to interfere with Plaintiff s right to engage in commerce regarding her 1842 Treaty-protected farming operations and the products thereof by: (a) First withholding, then imposing conditions on acquisition of ear tags necessary to ship Hogan Hogs from her farm in the Ceded-Territory to markets in Pennsylvania and New York. (b) By arbitrarily disapproving Certificates of Veterinary Inspection issued by her veterinarian for the animals shipped. (c) By engaging in a pattern of harassment targeted at Plaintiff s veterinarian in order to discourage him from working for Plaintiff. (d) Upon information and belief, by informing governmental officials in New York and Pennsylvania that Plaintiff s Hogan Hogs were an invasive species that carried disease. 18

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 19 of 20 Page ID#138 FIRST PRAYER FOR RELIEF 66. All factual allegations contained in paragraphs 1-65 above are reasserted and incorporated herein by reference. 67. Plaintiff seeks a declaration from this court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 2201 that her farming operations within the Ceded Territory are among the other usual privileges of occupancy reserved to the Indian signatories in Article II of the 1842 Treaty. 68. Plaintiff further seeks a declaration from this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 2201 that the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community and the United States of American possess exclusive regulatory authority over Plaintiff s 1842 Treaty-protected farming activities, and that the Defendants have no authority to impose Michigan laws or regulations on Plaintiff s farming operations conducted pursuant to the 1842 Treaty and the license from KBIC. SECOND PRAYER FOR RELIEF 69. All factual allegations contained in paragraphs 1-68 above are reasserted and incorporated herein by reference. 70. Plaintiff seeks a permanent injunction pursuant to Rule 65 Fed.R.Civ.P., enjoining Defendants from enforcing their ISO or any other State of Michigan laws or regulations upon Plaintiff s 1842 Treaty-protected farming operations. 71. Plaintiff further seeks a permanent injunction pursuant to Rule 65 Fed.R.Civ.P., enjoining Defendants from otherwise interfering with Plaintiff s ability to engage in commerce 19

Case 2:13-cv-00106-GJQ Doc #11 Filed 05/23/13 Page 20 of 20 Page ID#139 associated with her 1842 Treaty-protected farming operations and the products thereof. Respectfully submitted, Date: May 23, 2013 s/ Joseph P. O Leary Joseph P. O Leary (P43349) O LEARY LAW OFFICE 419 U.S. 41 North Baraga, MI 49908 (906) 353-1144 ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF 20