A federal jury ruled on December 11 that Dustin Parker and Nora Weber operated an illegal smokeshop in Cayuga County, rejecting their claims of tribal affiliation.
The verdict, delivered in Seneca Falls, found Parker and Weber liable under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act. The pair had run a business called Pipekeepers, presenting it as legally affiliated with the Cayuga Nation. Jurors determined that claim was false and that the operation violated federal law.
No physical injuries were reported, but the Cayuga Nation said the illegal business harmed its citizens and undermined tribal authority. The Nation and its governing council, which had previously issued banishment orders against Parker and Weber, have also charged them with violating those orders. Officials emphasized that both defendants will have due process in the Nation’s prosecution.
“The defendants wanted the jury to believe they were conducting a business allowed under the law, but the evidence showed otherwise,” said Clint Halftown, the Nation’s federal representative.
The ruling supports the Cayuga Nation’s efforts to protect its citizens and sovereignty. Halftown added that the Nation’s laws are designed to prevent individuals from profiting by falsely claiming to act on behalf of tribal government, reinforcing protections against illegal businesses and false representation.
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A federal jury ruled on December 11 that Dustin Parker and Nora Weber operated an illegal smokeshop in Cayuga County, rejecting their claims of tribal affiliation.
The verdict, delivered in Seneca Falls, found Parker and Weber liable under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act. The pair had run a business called Pipekeepers, presenting it as legally affiliated with the Cayuga Nation. Jurors determined that claim was false and that the operation violated federal law.
No physical injuries were reported, but the Cayuga Nation said the illegal business harmed its citizens and undermined tribal authority. The Nation and its governing council, which had previously issued banishment orders against Parker and Weber, have also charged them with violating those orders. Officials emphasized that both defendants will have due process in the Nation’s prosecution.
“The defendants wanted the jury to believe they were conducting a business allowed under the law, but the evidence showed otherwise,” said Clint Halftown, the Nation’s federal representative.
The ruling supports the Cayuga Nation’s efforts to protect its citizens and sovereignty. Halftown added that the Nation’s laws are designed to prevent individuals from profiting by falsely claiming to act on behalf of tribal government, reinforcing protections against illegal businesses and false representation.
This version is ready to drop straight into an editorial workflow. It’s concise, objective, and structured exactly like the Liverpool piece — headline, lead, incident, legal response, quote, and impact.
Would you like me to also prepare a Markdown-ready template so you can quickly reuse this structure for future stories?