In a nice touch, the Mashpee selectmen append a letter from the Mashpee Wampanoags promising not to build a casino in their town — signed by Glenn Marshall, who stepped down as tribal chairman last summer after it was revealed he'd lied about his military record and had been convicted of sexual assault. Not too credible.
The Times story also makes a point that the media don't bring up often enough — that the agreement signed by Middleborough selectmen with tribal leaders last summer legally prohibits the selectmen from acting in their town's best interests. As Vosk and Brennan write: “The agreement specifies that not only can Middleboro not oppose the application, it must work on behalf of the tribe to help it pass.” That boilerplate sentence should appear in every story about the casino proposal. Incredibly, it would be illegal for the Middleborough selectmen to stand up for their town the way the Mashpee selectmen have done.
It seems odd that the tribal leaders would word their application in a way that allows the Mashpee tail to wag the Middleborough dog. Perhaps they will drop the Mashpee part of their application. But if they don't, it sounds like this could delay the tribe's casino plans for years.
This also undermines one of Gov. Deval Patrick's arguments for his three-casino proposal — that a Native American-owned casino is inevitable, so the state might as well get in on the action. There's nothing inevitable about it, and there never has been.