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Veronica back in S.C.

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Veronica back in S.C. Matt and Melanie Capobianco, of Charleston, S.C. have been trying to adopt a 4-year-old Cherokee girl named Veronica since her birth. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Veronica back in S.C.


1
Veronica back in S.C.
2
Matt and Melanie Capobianco, of Charleston, S.C.
have been trying to adopt a 4-year-old Cherokee
girl named Veronica since her birth. It wasnt
until Monday night after the Oklahoma Supreme
Court said it didn't have jurisdiction over the
child that they finally got her. Until the Monday
night transfer, the Cherokee Nation had insisted
the girl would remain with the tribe. The
Capobiancos and the girl's biological father,
Dusten Brown, had fought for years over custody
of the girl. The dispute has raised questions
about jurisdictions, tribal sovereignty and a
federal law meant to help keep Native American
tribes together. Veronica's birth mother was
pregnant when she put the girl up for adoption,
and the Capobiancos took custody of Veronica
shortly after birth. Veronica, whose biological
father is a member of the Cherokee Nation and
whose biological mother in not Native American,
had lived with the Capobiancos until she was 27
months old, when Brown was awarded custody under
the Indian Child Welfare Act. Brown and his
family claim the Indian Child Welfare Act
mandates that the child be raised within the
Cherokee Nation. The law was passed in 1978 with
the intent of reducing the high rates of Native
American children being adopted by non-Native
American families. The U.S. Supreme Court this
year said the law did not apply because he had
been absent from the child's life.
3
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