Montaukett Recognition Fight Returns To Albany


The Montaukett | Sandi Brewster-walker

This month, the State Assembly unanimously passed—yes, even in these polarized times, it unanimously passed—a bill sponsored by Assemblyman Tommy John Schiavoni providing for reinstatement and acknowledgment of the Montaukett Indian Nation.

It now goes to the State Senate which, like the Assembly, has overwhelmingly passed the bill seven times. Yes, seven times. But Governor Kathy Hochul vetoed it four times. And her predecessor, Governor Andrew Cuomo, both Democrats, vetoed it three times.

“The people of the Montaukett Indian Nation are a rich part of the Long Island community,” declared a statement issued by Schiavoni’s office with passage of his 2026 measure on March 9. But, “After several attempts to advance legislation which would recognize and acknowledge the Montauketts, New York State has continued with the precedent set in 1910 to deny them their right of existence in the eyes of the state. Despite the 1910 Pharaoh v. Benson case, when the court declared them to be extinct while their leaders and 75 members of the nation sat in the courtroom, the Montaukett Indian Nation has continued to thrive and govern itself. The wrongful removal of their state recognition remains uncorrected.”

Schiavoni commented: “I am grateful to my colleagues for again unanimously voting to pass this measure.” He said he would be “following through on my pledge to continue to prioritize the reinstatement of state recognition of the Montaukett Indian Nation, which was wrongfully stripped of its rights to exist more than a century ago.”

Schiavoni, a Sag Harbor Democrat, took office in the Assembly in January 2025. The 2026 Montaukett recognition measure, and earlier bills, were sponsored in the State Senate by Senator Anthony Palumbo, a Republican from New Suffolk. It passed the Senate 50-to-1 in 2025.

In her veto message this past December of the 2025 measure, Hochul again pointed to the 1910 ruling in a case titled Pharaoh v. Benson. In it, State Supreme Court Justice Abel Blackmar, sitting in Riverhead, sided with the descendants of Arthur Benson, a developer, in awarding them Montaukett tribal lands. Hochul noted that “in my previous veto message,” in 2024, “I pledged to work with the Montaukett community regarding this issue. I take seriously the responsibility of determining whether to recognize a Native American tribe, which would be a sovereign nation. However, at this time there are still outstanding questions and issues concerning the Montauketts’ eligibility for recognition according to traditional criteria.” So, “I am constrained to veto this bill.”

Schiavoni succeeded Fred W. Thiele, Jr., a member of the State Assembly for nearly 30 years, who sponsored the earlier Montaukett measures in the Assembly.

After Hochul cited the Pharaoh v. Benson case in a veto of the 2023 bill, Thiele, a Sag Harbor Democrat, said he was shocked that the governor would reference the ruling in the Pharaoh v. Benson case, which involved “one of the most racist decisions in the history of New York jurisprudence. The prior vetoes were unfortunate, but the language in this one was stunning. To take the Benson case, which has language in it that would embarrass the Proud Boys, and hold that up as the justification for this veto is just crazy.”

“An error doesn’t become a mistake until you refuse to correct it,” Thiele said. “Instead of rejecting the noxious rationale of Benson, [Hochul’s] veto affirmed it. I am ashamed of our state government.”

The case was an effort by Montaukett Chief Wyandank Pharaoh to undo the taking of Montauk lands by Benson. Justice Blackmar rejected Pharaoh’s claims, asserting that the Montaukett tribe was “extinct” and its members lived “shiftless” lives as hunters, fishermen, and farmers. This was despite a 1906 memorandum filed in the case by C.F. Larrabee, then acting commissioner of Indian Affairs for the U.S. Department of the Interior, who wrote that the Montauketts were “an existing Indian tribe” and those attempting to annex the tribe’s land, including Benson, should be “forever” restrained.

The case was part of a larger picture. As Newsday reporter Mark Harrington noted in his article on the 2025 Hochul veto: “Newsday in a 1998 investigation found that the process by which developers and the Long Island Rail Road annexed Montaukett and Shinnecock Indian Nation lands over the past 200 years was rife with ‘deceit, lies and possible forgery.’”

In the bill vetoed in 2025 by Hochul—and in the current and prior measures—is a passage saying Blackmar’s “arbitrary ruling ignored earlier U.S. Supreme Court decisions defining Indian Nations according to criteria under which the Montaukett Indian Nation qualified as an existing sovereign tribe and giving Congress, rather than the courts, power to decide the status” of an Indian tribe.

What about an override of the governor’s veto by the State Legislature considering the extent of support for the Montaukett legislation? A two-thirds vote would be necessary.

However, as New York Focus reported last year, “it will be up to the Senate and Assembly whether to lock horns again over the bills Hochul rejected this year,” but “direct overrides…are unheard of in Albany.” New York Focus describes itself as “an independent nonprofit newsroom investigating power in the Empire State,” publishing “in-depth journalism that explains how the state really works.”

The Montaukett situation has attracted attention beyond Long Island. A New York Post article this past December after Hochul’s 2025 veto said it “had Democratic legislators and some Montaukett leaders fuming.” It quoted Sandra Brewer-Walker, executive director of the Montaukett Indian Nation, saying: “The governor just doesn’t get it—she lacks an understanding of Native American history and is upholding an illegal, racist ruling.”

Senator Palumbo, on the floor of the Senate, has decried the ruling in the Pharaoh v. Benson case, which he termed “likely racist,” and spoke of how the tribe “was recognized for years prior” to the case. He declared: “Now is the time to correct this injustice and provide the Montaukett Indian Nation with the status they deserve.”

The Montauketts were one of the original great tribes of Long Island—and are still here. A journalism student of mine was Peter Pharoah, a proud Montaukett. They thoroughly deserve restoration of their recognition.

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