Generally no -- the sovereign status of Native Tribal lands usually only applies while the lands are held by the tribe -- occasionally, by an individual tribe member on behalf of the tribe.
So, if the lands were transferred to a non-tribal member, the special status for that parcel would be eliminated -- as has happened in many states around the country over the past several decades.
2007-09-21 06:19:44
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answer #1
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answered by coragryph 7
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lower than the Indian Citizenship of 1924. All Indians are US electorate. As for state taxes, in the adventure that they paintings for his or her tribal authorities, no; besides the undeniable fact that, in the adventure that they paintings off the reservation then certain. They pay all federal taxes nevertheless. As for exemptions, that relies upon on the tribe. they regularly have their own looking and fishing rights separate of all of us else. As for different guidelines, that relies upon. There might want to be exemptions accessible.
2016-10-20 02:22:13
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answer #2
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answered by rhona 4
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I think you need to have some Indian blood to buy reservation land, but I'm not 100% sure.
2007-09-21 05:59:57
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Nope. Gotta be an Indian. And they're not "exempt" from state laws, exactly...It's very,very complicated.
2007-09-21 05:59:43
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answer #4
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answered by gilliegrrrl 6
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No. I don't believe that, pursuant to treaties, "Indian territory" can be sold outside the tibe. My guess is that if it is so sold, the land would lose its "quasi-sovereign" status and revert to being goverened in the state in which it is located.
2007-09-21 05:59:25
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answer #5
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answered by Perdendosi 7
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Once you purchased the land, it would no longer belong to the tribe, it would belong to you, state laws would apply.
2007-09-21 05:59:13
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answer #6
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answered by trooper3316 7
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