The government said it would take "literally millions of manhours" the records were such a mess. She said the case was one of the most difficult challenges she ever faced but "brings a measure of justice for some of the most vulnerable people in this country"Cobell, who died in Great Falls in 2011, received a posthumous Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2016.


She'd just founded Fire in the Belly Productions to make "films that make a difference," and she'd found her story.Janko's documentary "100 Years: Woman’s Fight For Justice" is now available on Netflix and has been airing on PBS. Unlock Eloise and thousands of other movies and TV shows worldwide!



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She had five oil wells pumping on her land, but the wealth they produced overwhelmingly went to others.The judge in the case ordered the government to produce trust records for the five lead plaintiffs. Di Novi Pictures "Cobell filed, and won, the largest class action lawsuit ever brought against the federal government.
Just as she did, a rainbow appeared. The$3.4 billion settlement is compensating individual account holders, for land buy-back and for the Cobell Education Scholarship Fund.

Netflix uses cookies for personalization, to customize its online advertisements, and for other purposes. Copyright © Fandango. Shambles.Ruby Withrow, a Potawatomi Indian, searched for years for an answer to what happened with her family's land, where oil wells pumped 24/7 but her grandfather died penniless. Folders jammed seemingly randomly on shelves. If this title is available in the USA, Canada, UK, Netherlands, or Germany, but isn't available in your country, you can use get-american-netflix.com to watch it tonight! ""They basically told the Indian people you're all really stupid. All fluffy and lovely it also has Julie Andrews doing one of the worst "Cor Blimey" cockney accents ever seen on film.

If 40,000 people were cut off Social Security, there would be an uproar in Congress.” — Rep. Tom Udall (D-N.M)"100 Years: One Woman's Fight for Justice" documents the Elouise Cobell lawsuit.Elouise Cobell, Blackfeet Tribal community leader and activist for Native Americans, was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously. She died just before the first settlement checks were maile and was buried on her ranch on the Blackfeet Reservation. Ghost Ridge is where hundreds of Blackfeet who starved to death in the winter of 1884 are buried. The precocious six-year-old Manhattanite of Kay Thompson's beloved Eloise books gets into the holiday spirit while playing cupid in this made-for-TV comedy. By opting to have your ticket verified for this movie, you are allowing us to check the email address associated with your Rotten Tomatoes account against an email address associated with a Fandango ticket purchase for the same movie.Fandango



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