Next Week: Apache Stronghold back in federal court to protect Oak Flat Apaches ask district court to stop government’s imminent transfer of sacred site
Media Contact
Ryan Colby 202-349-7219 [email protected]
Additional Information
WASHINGTON – A coalition of Western Apaches, other Native peoples, and non-Native allies is headed back to federal district court next week to stop the U.S. government from handing over their sacred site at Oak Flat to a multinational mining giant for destruction. In Apache Stronghold v. United States, the federal government recently announced that as early as June 16, 2025, it will transfer Oak Flat to Resolution Copper, a Chinese-owned mining company that plans to turn the site into a massive mining crater, ending Apache religious practices forever (Watch this short video to learn more). Last week, Apache Stronghold filed an emergency appeal in the lower court to block the transfer while the Supreme Court considers the case. The Honorable Judge Steven P. Logan will hear the appeal on Wednesday, May 7, at a federal courthouse in Phoenix.
In the lead-up to the hearing, members of Apache Stronghold will embark on an over 80-mile run starting on Sunday, May 4, from Oak Flat to Phoenix.
What:
Oral Argument in Apache Stronghold v. United States
Who:
Luke Goodrich, vice president & senior counsel at Becket
When:
Wednesday, May 7, 2025, at 9:30 a.m. PT
Where:
Sandra Day O’Connor United States Courthouse
401 W. Washington St., 5th Floor, Courtroom 501
Phoenix, AZ 85003
Since time immemorial, Western Apaches and other Native peoples have gathered at Oak Flat, outside of present-day Superior, Arizona, for sacred religious ceremonies that cannot take place anywhere else. Known in Apache as Chi’chil Biłdagoteel, Oak Flat is listed in the National Register of Historic Places and has been protected from mining and other harmful practices for seventy years. These protections were targeted in December 2014 when a last-minute provision was slipped into a must-pass defense bill authorizing the transfer of Oak Flat to the Resolution Copper company. Resolution Copper now plans to turn the sacred site into a two-mile-wide and 1,100-foot-deep crater. The majority owner of Resolution Copper, Rio Tinto, sparked international outrage when it deliberately destroyed 46,000-year-old Indigenous rock shelters at one of Australia’s most significant cultural sites.
Apache Stronghold filed this lawsuit in January 2021 seeking to halt the proposed mine at Oak Flat. The mine is opposed by 21 of 22 federally recognized tribal nations in Arizona, by the National Congress of American Indians, and by a diverse coalition of religious denominations, civil rights organizations, and legal experts. Meanwhile, national polling indicates that 74% of Americans support protecting Oak Flat. The Ninth Circuit ruled 6-5 last year that the land transfer is not subject to federal laws protecting religious freedom. But five judges dissented, writing that the court “tragically err[ed]” by refusing to protect Oak Flat.
Apache Stronghold has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Supreme Court is expected to issue an order any day on whether it will hear Apache Stronghold’s appeal.
In addition to Becket, Apache Stronghold is represented by Erin Murphy of Clement & Murphy PLLC, Professor Stephanie Barclay of Georgetown Law School, and attorneys Michael V. Nixon and Clifford Levenson.
For more information or to arrange an interview, contact Ryan Colby at [email protected] or 202-349-7219.