Court Opinion

ID: 6216692
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-09 14:01:12.0673+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:57:10.537588
License: Public Domain

In the United States Court of Federal Claims
                                       No. 06-896L
                                 Filed: February 8, 2022

  * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *                *
  THE       WESTERN        SHOSHONE            *
  IDENTIFIABLE GROUP, represented              *
  by the YOMBA SHOSHONE TRIBE,                 *
  a federally recognized Indian Tribe,         *
  et al.,                                      *
                      Plaintiffs,              *
               v.                              *
                                               *
  UNITED STATES,                               *
                                               *
                       Defendant.              *
                                               *
  * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *                *

      Kelli J. Keegan, Barnhouse Keegan Solimon & West LLP, Los Ranchos de
Albuquerque, NM, for plaintiffs. Of counsel were Randolph Barnhouse and Michelle
Miano, Barnhouse Keegan Solimon & West LLP, Los Ranchos de Albuquerque, NM, and
Steven D. Gordon, Holland & Knight, LLP, Washington, D.C.

       Joshua P. Wilson, Trial Attorney, Natural Resources Section, Environment
& Natural Resources Division, United States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.,
for defendant. With him were Peter K. Dykema, Natural Resources Section, Environment
& Natural Resources Division, and Todd S. Kim, Assistant Attorney General, Civil
Division, Department of Justice. Of counsel were Anthony P. Hoang, Natural Resources
Section, Environment & Natural Resources Division, United States Department of Justice,
Washington, D.C., Dondrae N. Maiden, Michael Bianco and Christopher King
Edelstein, Office of the Solicitor, United States Department of the Interior, Washington,
D.C., and Thomas Kearns and Rebecca Saltiel, Office of the Chief Counsel, United
States Department of the Treasury, Washington, D.C.

                                       OPINION

        In this Native American tribal trust fund case, three tribal plaintiffs and three
individual plaintiffs have sued defendant, the United States, for the mismanagement of
plaintiffs’ three tribal trust funds, received as a result of three separate cases before the
Indian Claims Commission (ICC) and its successors for the government’s taking of the
plaintiffs’ ancestral lands in Nevada and California without just compensation, over a
thirty-three-year period. Plaintiffs seek to recover $133,125,302.00 in damages for the
government’s mismanagement of the largest of the tribal trust funds, the 326-K Fund, and
$1,592,822.43 in damages for the government’s alleged mismanagement of the two
smaller tribal trust funds, the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds.1 The three tribal plaintiffs are
the Yomba Shoshone Tribe, Timbisha Shoshone Tribe, and the Duckwater Shoshone
Tribe, three of the federally recognized Western Shoshone Tribes and three of the
members of the Western Shoshone Identifiable Group. The three individual plaintiffs are
Maurice Frank-Churchill, an enrolled member of the Yomba Shoshone Tribe, Jerry Millet,
an enrolled member of the Duckwater Shoshone Tribe, and Virginia Sanchez, also an
enrolled member of the Duckwater Shoshone Tribe. Plaintiffs allege that defendant
“imprudently” invested their tribal trust funds in securities that were too short-term,
resulting in less than maximum returns. It is not disputed by the parties that defendant
was the trustee of the funds at issue, and was responsible for the administration,
management, and investment of the funds at issue from the time the funds were
appropriated for deposit in the trust accounts for the benefit of the Western Shoshone
Identifiable Group until the time the funds were distributed to plaintiffs.

         The complicated events leading up to this case, and this case, once filed, have a
long history. The case in this court was filed in 2006 and originally assigned to a Judge
other than the undersigned. On August 26, 2015, this case was transferred to the
undersigned after the original presiding Judge had issued two Opinions in this case, one
denying defendant’s motion to dismiss and one denying defendant’s motion for
reconsideration. See W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. v. United States, No. 06-896L, 2008
WL 9697144 (Fed. Cl. Oct. 31, 2008); see also W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. v. United
States, No. 06-896L, 2009 WL 9389765 (Fed. Cl. Nov. 24, 2009). After the issuance of
two Opinions, there were settlement discussions and settlement attempts before the case
was reassigned to the undersigned. Upon being assigned the above-captioned case in
2015, the undersigned pressed the parties to initiate and intensify efforts on pretrial
proceedings and to get ready for trial, earlier settlement efforts having failed. Thereafter,
the court held a five-day trial regarding liability in Washington, D.C. and, on June 13,
2019, issued an Opinion which addressed the issues of liability and whether the
government breached its fiduciary duty to plaintiffs when investing the tribal trust funds.
See generally W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States,
143 Fed. Cl. 545 (2019). After extensively and carefully reviewing the lengthy record in
this case, including the documents and expert reports in evidence, the trial testimony, and
the post-trial filings, the court found “that there were various times during the investment
periods at issue for both the 326-K Fund and for the 326-A Funds when the government’s
investment of all three tribal trust funds fell below the required standard of prudence.” See
id. at 658. After the court’s June 13, 2019 liability Opinion, the parties engaged in
extensive expert discovery on the issue of damages, and after expert discovery was
completed, and after a delay due to COVID related challenges, the court held a four-day
trial to address the issue of damages.

       The facts described below are a brief summary of important, pertinent events taken
from the extensive record before the court. By no means are the below facts an event-

1   As discussed below, alternatively, plaintiffs seek $113,830,811.00 in damages.
                                             2
by-event description of everything that happened over the thirty-three-year period at
issue. Some of the relevant facts from the court’s June 13, 2019 liability Opinion are
repeated below, and the court’s earlier Opinion on liability is incorporated into this
Opinion. Although the case was divided for purposes of liability and damages, in order to
promote efficiency and given the complexity of the legal and factual issues, the Opinions
still address the same, single case, and consider the same factual framework.

                                   FINDINGS OF FACT

Origin of Plaintiffs’ Tribal Trust Funds

         Plaintiffs are the beneficial owners of three tribal trust funds stemming from three
separate judgment awards. The first judgment occurred on August 15, 1977, when the
ICC awarded $26,145,189.89 to the Western Shoshone Identifiable Group in Docket 326-
K for the taking of ancestral land located in modern day Nevada and California. Unlike
the plaintiffs’ awards in its second case before the ICC, docket number 326-A-1,
discussed below, in which the plaintiffs were awarded a judgment, plus interest, based
on the record before the court and the parties’ revised joint stipulations of fact in the
above-captioned case, plaintiffs were not awarded any interest for the award of the
$26,145,189.89 in the 326-K Fund case. Both parties appealed the ICC’s August 15, 1977
award of $26,145,189.89, which was subsequently affirmed by the United States Court
of Claims2 on February 21, 1979. See Temoak Band of W. Shoshone Indians, Nevada v.
United States, 219 Ct. Cl. 346, 361, 593 F.2d 994, 1002, cert. denied, 444 U.S. 973
(1979). On December 19, 1979, the ICC’s award of $26,145,189.89 was deposited into a
tribal trust fund account in the United States Treasury under account number JA9334697.
The parties in the above-captioned case refer to this tribal trust fund as the “326-K Fund,”
and it is the largest of the three tribal trust funds at issue.

       The second judgment occurred on December 3, 1991, when the United States
Claims Court3 entered a judgment in Western Shoshone Identifiable Group v. United
States, Docket Number 326-A-1, in the amount of $823,752.64 in favor of the Western
Shoshone Identifiable Group. See Te-Moak Bands of Western Shoshone Indians of
Nevada, et al. v. United States, United States Claims Court, Docket No. 326-A-1,
Judgment (Dec. 3, 1991). The award of $823,752.64 was comprised of $815,209.67,
together with interest of $8,542.97. See id. On March 25, 1992, the second judgment
award of $823,752.64 was deposited into trust in the United States Treasury under

2The United States Court of Claims is the predecessor court to the United States Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit and the United States Court of Federal Claims, the court
on which the undersigned presides over the above-captioned case. See Alford v. United
States, 961 F.3d 1380, 1384 (Fed. Cir. 2020) (“Our predecessor court, the Court of
Claims . . . .”).
3 The United States Claims Court was renamed the United States Court of Federal Claims
in 1992. See Federal Courts Administration Act of 1992, Pub. L. No. 102-572, § 902, 106
Stat. 4506, 4516 (1992).
                                             3
 account number JA9087691. The parties refer to this tribal trust fund as the “326-A-1
 Fund.”

         The third judgment occurred a little more than three years later, on June 16, 1995,
 when the United States Court of Federal Claims entered a judgment in Docket Number
 326-A-3, in the amount of $29,396.60, in favor of the Western Shoshone Identifiable
 Group. See Te-Moak Bands of Western Shoshone Indians of Nevada, v. United States,
 United States Court of Federal Claims, Docket No. 326-A-3, Judgment (June 16, 1995).
 According to the final judgment entered on the 326-A-3 docket, which was introduced at
 trial as a joint exhibit, the 326-A-3 award did not appear to include interest. On September
 15, 1995, the award of $29,396.60 was deposited into trust in the United States Treasury
 under account number JA1009693. The parties refer to this tribal trust fund as the “326-
 A-3 Fund.” The account number and type, and the sources of the three funds are
 displayed below:

                ACCOUNT NO. & TYPE                                 SOURCE OF FUND

                                                     INITIAL AWARD OF $26,145,189.89 ON 12/19/1979,
JA9334697 WESTERN SHOSHONE JUDGMENT FUNDS
                                                     ICC DOCKET 326-K

                                                     INITIAL AWARD OF $823,752.64 ON 3/25/1992,
JA9087691 WESTERN SHOSHONE JOINT JUDGMENT FUNDS
                                                     ICC DOCKET 326-A-1

                                                     INTEREST CLAIM OF $29,369.60 ON 9/15/1995,
JA9087691 WESTERN SHOSHONE JOINT JUDGMENT FUNDS
                                                     ICC DOCKET 326-A-3

 Investment of Tribal Trust Funds

         The parties have stipulated that “Tribal Trust Funds” are tribal monies, including
 judgment awards, revenues, and other payments made to Indian tribes, which are
 required by law to be deposited in the United States Treasury and historically to be
 managed by the United States Department of the Interior. The parties also have stipulated
 to an abbreviated summary of the relevant history to the above-captioned case, some of
 which is described below. Some historical highlights for the purpose of providing context
 follow. In 1880, the Department of the Interior was authorized to deposit tribal trust funds
 in the United States Treasury to earn a simple interest rate of four percent per year
 whenever it determined that such a course of action was in the best interest of an Indian
 tribe. In 1918, the Department of the Interior was permitted to deposit tribal trust funds
 into any public-debt obligations of the United States and into any notes, bonds, or other
 obligations that were unconditionally guaranteed as to both principal and interest, when
 the Department of the Interior determined doing so was in the best interests of an Indian
 tribe. In 1938, Congress passed the Act of June 24, 1938, ch. 648, § 1, 52 Stat. 1037,
 currently contained at 25 U.S.C. § 162a (2018), the statute at issue regarding plaintiffs’
 allegations of breach of trust in the above-captioned case, which codified the authority of

                                              4
the Secretary of the Department of the Interior to invest tribal trust funds. 4 According to
Subsection (a) of 25 U.S.C. § 162a:

       The Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized in his discretion, and
       under such rules and regulations as he may prescribe, to withdraw from the
       United States Treasury and to deposit in banks to be selected by him the
       common or community funds of any Indian tribe which are, or may hereafter
       be, held in trust by the United States and on which the United States is not
       obligated by law to pay interest at higher rates than can be procured from
       the banks. The said Secretary is also authorized, under such rules and
       regulations as he may prescribe, to withdraw from the United States
       Treasury and to deposit in banks to be selected by him the funds held in
       trust by the United States for the benefit of individual Indians . . . .

25 U.S.C. § 162a(a).

       Subsection (a) of 25 U.S.C. § 162a further provides that:

       [T]he Secretary of the Interior, if he deems it advisable and for the best
       interest of the Indians, may invest the trust funds of any tribe or individual
       Indian in any public-debt obligations of the United States and in any bonds,
       notes, or other obligations which are unconditionally guaranteed as to both
       interest and principal by the United States.

25 U.S.C. § 162a(a). As both parties noted during the liability trial, Subsection (a) of 25
U.S.C. § 162a limits the government’s investment of tribal trust funds to fixed-income
securities backed by the full faith and credit of the United States, including bonds issued
by federal agencies, the United States Department of Treasury (Treasury securities),
mortgage-backed securities, and certificate of deposits (CDs). Moreover, both parties
agreed that Subsection (a) of 25 U.S.C. § 162a would not allow the government to invest
in stocks or foreign-issued bonds. The parties do not contest that the government
invested any of plaintiffs’ three tribal trust funds in investments prohibited by law, nor do
the parties contest that the government misappropriated any of the plaintiffs’ tribal trust
funds.

         Because Subsection (a) of 25 U.S.C. § 162a only allows the government to invest
tribal trust funds in government-backed securities, both parties agree that the government

4 The Secretary of the Interior has had and continues to have the authority pursuant to 25
U.S.C. § 161 (2018) and 25 U.S.C. § 161a (2018) to deposit tribal trust funds in the United
States Department of Treasury in lieu of investing tribal trust funds in securities allowed
under 25 U.S.C. § 162a. See 25 U.S.C. §§ 161, 161a. The plaintiffs in the above-
captioned case, however, do not allege that defendant breached a duty regarding the
investment of the three funds at issue in the United States Treasury pursuant to 25 U.S.C.
§ 161 or 25 U.S.C. § 161a, nor that defendant retained plaintiffs’ three tribal trust funds in
the United States Treasury instead of investing the funds.
                                              5
faces virtually no credit risk when investing tribal trust funds, i.e., a risk that the fixed-
income security5 issuer will default on the security. Both parties also agree that the
primary risk that the government faced when investing plaintiffs’ tribal trust funds was
“interest rate risk,” the risk that interest rates will change over the life of a fixed-income
security. As both parties agree, the risk that interest rates will fluctuate is greater for fixed-
income securities that have a longer-term maturity.6 At the liability trial, defendant’s
liability expert, Dr. Laura Starks, explained in her expert liability report, “if interest rates
increase, bond prices fall. That risk is greater for longer-maturity investments.” Similarly,
plaintiffs’ rebuttal expert, Dr. Michael Goldstein, explained in his rebuttal expert report
that, “longer-term investments” “[t]raditionally” experience higher-yields than shorter-term
investments to reflect the “interest rate risk that the holder is taking (i.e., when rates
change).” Thus, as the parties agree, if a bond-holder had to sell a bond prior to maturity,
and interest rates increased from the time the bond-holder purchased the bond, the bond-
holder will likely experience a loss on the principal of the bond because the bond’s value
has decreased. Conversely, if a bond-holder had to sell a bond before maturity, and
interest rates decreased since the time of purchase, the bond-holder would likely
experience a gain on the principal of the bond because the bond’s value has increased.
If the bond-holder holds the bond to maturity, any change in interest rates would not affect
the bond’s principal value. Interest rate risk, thus, becomes relevant when an investor

5 At the liability trial and the damages trial, and in their expert reports prepared for both
trials, both parties’ liability and damages experts referred interchangeably to “fixed-
income securities” and “bonds” when discussing general investment principals. Thus, as
with the June 13, 2019 liability Opinion, for purposes of this Opinion, this court
interchangeably shall refer to fixed-income securities and bonds, as used by the parties,
when summarizing the parties’ positions regarding general investment principals.
6  As explained at the liability trial, the definition of a “longer-term” security versus a
“shorter-term” security varies somewhat throughout the investment industry. According to
the testimony at the liability trial of plaintiffs’ expert, Mr. Kevin Nunes, “ultra-short-term”
securities have maturities of one year or less, “short-term” securities have maturities
between one and five years, “intermediate-term” securities have maturities greater than
five and less than ten years, and “long-term” securities have maturities between ten and
thirty years. Contrastingly, defendant’s expert, Dr. Laura Starks, testified at the liability
trial, “[p]eople define” the terms “short-term,” “intermediate term,” and “long term”
differently and that during her career, she has “actually seen these definitions change
over time.” According to Dr. Starks’ trial testimony, “short-term investments is -- typically,
to me, that would be a year or less, maybe a little over a year,” and whether securities
with a maturity of “two years” should be considered short-term would be “debatable.” Dr.
Starks testified at trial that “intermediate term” would be “primarily three to five years,”
and that “[t]here are others that extend intermediate to longer term.” Dr. Starks also
testified that “long term” would “typically” include securities with maturities of “ten years
or more.” Dr. Starks testified that securities with a maturity between five to ten years “don’t
have a real definition,” and that “[t]o me, it’s between what’s clearly intermediate and
what’s clearly long term.”
                                                6
decides to sell a bond before maturity. The interest rate risk facing the government when
investing plaintiffs’ three tribal trust funds will be discussed in more detail below.

        Subsection (d) of 25 U.S.C. § 162a, another provision of the statute relevant to
plaintiffs’ allegation of fund mismanagement, provides that:

       The Secretary’s proper discharge of the trust responsibilities of the United
       States shall include (but are not limited to) the following:

              (1) Providing adequate systems for accounting for and
              reporting trust fund balances.
              (2) Providing adequate controls over receipts and
              disbursements.
              (3) Providing periodic, timely reconciliations to assure the
              accuracy of accounts.
              (4) Determining accurate cash balances.
              (5) Preparing and supplying account holders with periodic
              statements of their account performance and with balances of
              their account which shall be available on a daily basis.
              (6) Establishing consistent, written policies and procedures for
              trust fund management and accounting.
              (7) Providing adequate staffing, supervision, and training for
              trust fund management and accounting.
              (8) Appropriately managing the natural resources located
              within the boundaries of Indian reservations and trust lands.

   25 U.S.C. § 162a(d).

The Department of the Interior’s Investment Policies and Procedures

        In 1966, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), the office within the Department of the
Interior which was delegated the task of investment tribal trust funds, began a formal
investment program and published an investment policy statement. The 1966 policy
statement, in pertinent part, stated that “[p]repatory to undertaking any investment
program with surplus trust funds, a tribe necessarily would have to make a careful
analysis of its current and future cash needs” to cover “at least two six-months periods.”
The 1966 policy statement also stated that “[e]ach Area Office is requested to review the
amount of tribal trust funds each tribe in the respective Areas has on deposit in the
Treasury,” and that “[w]herever it appears that the amount is in excess of foreseeable
cash needs of the tribe, discussions should be held with the tribal council and its wishes
regarding investment of the funds ascertained.” The 1966 policy statement also noted
that “[g]overnment-backed securities, while basically safe, can result in losses unless held
to maturity.”

      In 1973, Congress passed the Indian Tribal Judgment Funds Use and Distribution
Act, Pub. L. No. 93-134, 87 Stat. 466 (1973) (Use and Distribution Act of 1973), which

                                             7
established a process for distributing judgment awards to Indian tribes. Pursuant to the
Use and Distribution Act of 1973, the Secretary of Interior had 180 days from “after the
appropriation of funds to pay a judgment of the Indian Claims Commission or the Court
of Claims to any Indian tribe,” and to “prepare and submit to Congress a plan for the use
or distribution of such funds.” Use and Distribution Act of 1973, Section 2(A). When
preparing the distribution plan, the Secretary was required to consider any distribution
plan proposed by the tribes. See id. at Section 3(A)(1). The Secretary of Interior also was
required to hold a “hearing or record” with the tribes to obtain their input regarding the
distribution plan. See id. at Section 3(A)(2). The Secretary of Interior could request a 90-
day extension of the 180-day timeline for submitting a proposed plan for the distribution
of a judgment award to an Indian tribe, and such request was “subject to the approval of
both the Senate and the House of Representatives committees on Interior and Insular
Affairs.” See id. at Section 2(B). The Secretary of Interior’s plan submitted to Congress
would become effective after 60 days, absent Congressional disapproval of the plan.
Upon the plan becoming effective, the Use and Distribution Act of 1973 required that the
Secretary of Interior “take immediate action to implement the plan for the use or
distribution of such judgment funds.” See id. at Section 5(A). If the Secretary of Interior
did not submit a proposal within 180 days of the date of the appropriation of the particular
judgment award, and no 90-day extension was granted, then the Secretary of Interior
would have to submit proposed legislation to Congress in order for the funds to be used
or distributed.

        The Secretary of the Interior did not submit a distribution proposal within the
required 180 days for the three funds at issue, given the complexity of the distribution
issues, and no 90-day extension was granted. Thus, pursuant to the Use and Distribution
Act of 1973, Congress would be required to pass legislation authorizing the distribution
of the 326-K and 326-A Funds. As explained in more detail below, over the years, various
members of Congress introduced bills for distributing the three tribal trust funds at issue,
each of which did not pass. Distribution legislation was finally passed in 2004, and the
326-K Fund was fully distributed in 2012. The principal of the 326-A Funds was never to
be distributed and is currently held in trust as a permanent education trust fund, with the
interest of the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds to be used as educational grants for qualifying
members of the Western Shoshone tribes.

       In 1974, the BIA Acting Deputy Commissioner of Indian Affairs sent BIA’s updated
investment policy in a memorandum to the Area Directors of the BIA based in different
geographical regions in the United States and in charge of overseeing the investment of
various tribal accounts from tribes in their particular regions, which stated:

       Area and agency offices should work very closely with the tribes to
       determine the cash needs and ascertain if trust funds are available for
       investment. When a decision has been made that surplus funds are
       available for investment, arrangements should be made immediately with
       the Branch of Investments, Albuquerque, to invest the funds.

                                             8
The 1974 policy memorandum also stated:

       Investments can be made for a period of one day or for as much as 25 years
       or longer. Therefore, all funds except the funds for immediate needs can be
       invested to provide a greater income to the tribe. The maturity dates can be
       arranged to coincide with the needs for the funds. If requested, the funds
       are returned to the U.S. Treasury at maturity and are available immediately
       for expenditure through the normal procedures for the advance of funds to
       the tribe.

       It is the policy of the Bureau of Indian Affairs to maximize returns on all
       tribal, as well as individual, trust funds. This comports with the recent
       decision in Manchester Band of Pomo Indians v. United States, 363 F.
       Supp. 1238 (N.D. California 1973).

       Each Area Director has the responsibility for determining if surplus funds
       are available for investment purposes and notifying the Branch of
       Investments, Albuquerque, to take the necessary action to invest the funds.

(underline in original).

       Subsequently, the BIA included a policy statement as part of the BIA’s “REPORT
OF INVESTMENT OF INDIAN TRUST FUNDS FOR FISCAL YEARS 1986 and 1987,”
which was introduced as a joint exhibit at trial. (capitalization in original). The “REPORT”
contained two separate sections which discussed the BIA’s investment policy.
(capitalization in original). The first section, titled “AUTHORITY,” stated:

       Our basic authority is contained in 25 USC 162a [sic], which is specific for
       Tribal and individual trust funds, and PL 98-146 which authorizes the
       investment of collections from irrigation and power projects. The Bureau
       can invest in certificates of deposit with banks and savings and loans which
       are insured by FDIC [Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation] or FSLIC
       [Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation], or in banks which have
       pledged collateral securities guaranteed as to both principal and interest by
       the U.S. Government. Most of the purchased CD’s are for periods of less
       than 1 year, although 1, 2 and 3 year CD’s have been purchased on
       occasion. Investments can also be made through purchases of public debt
       obligations of the United States (Treasury issues) or other obligations which
       are guaranteed as to both principal and interest by the U.S. Government.

(capitalization and emphasis in original). The second section, titled “INVESTMENT
POLICIES AND INSTRUCTIONS,” stated:

       Although BIA is the Trustee for Indian funds, an ideal investment
       relationship is one in which Tribes participate fully by providing well thought-
       out investment policies and instructions based on realistic cash flow

                                              9
       projections which are based on complete tribal budgets. It is possible,
       through knowing the amounts required and when disbursements are
       necessary, to plan the timing of investment maturities to maximize interest
       rates and earnings and also have the funds available when needed.

(capitalization and emphasis in original). The parties agree that throughout the 1980s and
until the early 1990s, the BIA had a program in which it pooled approximately 70% to 80%
of tribal trust funds managed by the Department of the Interior into short-term jumbo CDs
in banks nationwide, which had a maturity of one year or less. Plaintiffs’ liability expert,
Mr. Nunes, testified at trial that during the 1980s, the BIA had a “blanket kind of approach
to all Indian funds that we saw,” which was to invest tribal trust funds in “very short term
and almost entirely in their CD program.” Defendant’s liability expert, Dr. Starks, similarly
testified at the liability trial that:

       [I]n the 1980s, the primary investments were into certificate of deposits, and
       the -- the Government had this unique CD program in which they pooled the
       money from a lot of different tribes and invested it in bank CDs all over the
       country, and because of the pooling, they were able to buy very large CDs.

        Dr. Starks further stated at the liability trial, the general maturities of the BIA’s CD
investments “were usually one year or less.” By pooling tribal trust funds, as Dr. Starks
testified at trial, the BIA was able to achieve higher returns while ensuring that the tribal
trust funds remained protected against any bank failures. Dr. Starks also testified at trial
that the returns on the CDs were generally comparable to two- to three-year Treasury
bonds.

        Also, in 1983, 1984, and 1989, the Department of the Interior consulted with
various private investment firms and received three investment proposals from outside
firms with recommendations on how to improve the Department of the Interior’s
investment of its tribal trust funds. BIA received (1) a joint proposal from the American
Indian National Bank (AINB) and Lehman Management Company (Lehman), (2) Security
Pacific National Bank (Security Pacific), and (3) PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC).7 None
of the firms proposed specific investment strategies for any particular tribal trust fund,
including the tribal trust funds at issue in the above-captioned case, but instead
recommended general investment strategies for tribes which had immediate cash flow
needs and for tribes which had longer-term investment horizons. The Department of the
Interior ultimately did not adopt those particular suggestions.

      PWC submitted the first, and most in-depth investment proposal, to the
government on December 24, 1983. According to PWC, it conducted “an in-depth review

7 The court notes that although the parties refer to the December 24, 1983 investment
proposal as the “PWC investment proposal,” at the time of the proposal, the company’s
name was “Price Waterhouse.” For consistency, and to follow the lead of the parties, the
court refers to the December 24, 1983 investment proposal as the PWC investment
proposal and refers to the company as PWC.
                                              10
of the management of Indian trust funds,” which consisted of the government’s various
tribal trust funds, “individual Indian monies” (IIM) accounts, “Indian Monies Proceeds of
Labor” accounts, “Contributions,” and the “Alaska Native Escrow Fund. Plaintiffs’ 326-K
Fund was one of various tribal trust funds the government held in trust during the 1980s.
PWC reviewed the BIA’s investment of “Indian trust funds” between 1976 and 1983. The
PWC proposal stated that “there is no evidence that outside money managers would have
improved on the investment performance during the period 1976-1983,” but that moving
forward, “we [PWC] recommend that the Bureau [of Indian Affairs] engage an outside
investment advisor.”

       PWC’s December 24, 1983 investment proposal stated:

       In assessing the overall performance of the funds in recent years, we have
       found that the BIA Branch of Investments has achieved excellent
       investment results relative to other managed portfolios operating under
       similar investment authorizations. These recent successes are primarily
       attributable to a strategy of investing in short-term assets in the face of
       volatile interest rates and to the discovery of federal subsidies implicit in the
       pricing of FDIC and FSLIC insured CD’s.

       However, as the volatility of interest rates declines, yields will begin to reflect
       the relative risks associated with the maturity and underlying credit
       characterizing security investments. Further, the subsidies associated with
       fdic and fslic securities are under consideration by bank regulators and may
       not be available in the future.

(capitalization in original). The PWC investment proposal also noted that the “[w]hile the
BIA investment strategy has worked well in the past, the unusual market conditions of the
recent past,” i.e., that the yield curve for bonds was inverted such that short-term
securities had out-performed longer-term securities for the “last decade,” 1973 to 1983,
“may not continue.” PWC also stated that “there is no guarantee that the current strategy
of investing primarily in highly liquid short-term assets will achieve the same investment
performance relative to other strategies if the capital markets return to traditional pricing
behavior,” which is what the BIA did and achieved for the 326-K Fund from its deposit into
the Treasury on December 19, 1979 until December 24, 1983, the date of the PWC’s
proposal. According to the PWC investment proposal, unlike the “unusual” inverted yield
curve between 1973 and 1983, “[u]nder the traditional yield curve,” meaning that longer-
term investments out-perform shorter-term investments, “investors who assume the risks
associated with long-term securities, are rewarded more than investors who place their
funds in shorter term issues.”

        Although PWC concluded that the BIA’s management of the Indian trust funds
between 1976 and 1983 was “excellent,” PWC noted that its “[m]easurement of actual
portfolio performance” of the Indian trust fund “was confounded by an absence of data”
and that PWC had to make various assumptions when analyzing the BIA’s investment
performance during this time. The PWC investment proposal noted that:

                                               11
       The current BIA accounting system does not produce periodic reports of
       total returns (interest accrued each period plus changes in market value)
       for the Indian trust fund portfolios. In order to analyze the performance of
       the portfolio, we estimated total portfolio returns based on published returns
       earned on the following generic categories of securities comprising the
       Indian trust fund portfolios:

              o Insured or collateralized Certificate of Deposit (6 months to
              maturity)
              o Treasury Securities (5 months to maturity)
              o U.S. Government Agency Securities (7.1 years to maturity)

The PWC investment proposal stated that “[t]he asset allocation among” the three generic
securities listed above for its analysis of the government’s investment of Indian trust funds
“was assumed to be the actual asset allocation for the IIM portfolio as of August 1983,” a
different type of account than the tribal trust funds at issue in this case.

        The PWC investment proposal also provided “numerous recommendations by
which the BIA can adjust to the changing investment environment and provide enhanced
services to the beneficiaries of the trust funds,” which included the recommendation that
BIA “[d]evelop and implement an ongoing process which will assist tribes and individuals
to formulate investment objectives.” The PWC investment proposal recommended to the
BIA a portfolio investment strategy of “passive diversification,” i.e., “[i]nvestment in
securities representing a variety of market sectors, and maturities where such
investments are held to maturity,” in order “to achieve the trust fund investment objectives
as the capital markets begin to reflect the more traditional risk/return relationships.” PWC
included five sample portfolios to illustrate that by using the passive diversification
strategy, “a portfolio of securities can be chosen that will perform better than any single
security in the portfolio.” PWC also explained in its investment report that of the five
sample portfolios, three were “dominant,” meaning that these three portfolios earned the
greatest return for the least risk. The first dominant portfolio was comprised of “10% T-
bills, 30% C.D.’s” and “30% Intermediates, 30% Long Term” and had an “Expected
Return” of 11.20%.8 The second dominant portfolio was comprised of “5% T-bills,” “50%
C.D.’s,” and “25% Intermediates, 20% Long Term,” and had an “Expected Return” of
“10.92%.” The third dominant portfolio was comprised of “20% T-bills, 40% C.D.’s” and
“40% Intermediates,” and had an “Expected Return” of “10.40%.”

      Of the non-dominant portfolios, the first was comprised of “22% T-bills, 70% C.D.’s”
and “8% Intermediates,” and had an “Expected Return” of “10.02%.” The second was
comprised of “22% T-bills, 70% C.D.’s” and “8% Intermediates,” and had an “Expected
Return” of “9.90%” The three dominant portfolios, which were expected to experience the

8The PWC investment proposal did not define what constitutes an “Intermediate” security
and what constitutes a “Long-term” security. The PWC investment proposal, however,
noted that “[t]wo-, three-, and five-year notes” were not considered “Long-term bonds.”
                                             12
highest rate of returns from PWC’s five sample portfolios, contained the highest
combination of long-term and intermediate-term securities.

        The PWC investment proposal also noted that because the five portfolios assumed
that a typical yield curve, i.e., when longer-term investments out-perform shorter-term
investments, “observed during the period of 1926-1973 would prevail, it is not surprising
that the dominant portfolios (earning the greatest return for least risk) contained a
substantially larger proportion of longer-term securities than we have observed in the BIA
portfolios.”

       AINB and Lehman submitted their joint investment proposal to the government on
October 30, 1984 and “jointly” proposed “to organize, manage, and administer a mutual
fund to serve as an alternative investment vehicle for the American Indian Tribal Trust
Funds.” Unlike PWC, AINB and Lehman did not present a review of the BIA’s past
investment of the Indian trust fund in its joint investment proposal, nor commented on
whether the BIA had obtained “excellent” investment results in the past. AINB and
Lehman proposed that the Department of the Interior’s tribal trust funds, depending on
the cash flow needs of a particular tribe, be invested in one of two portfolios. The first
proposed portfolio was a money market portfolio “invested in money market instruments
with maturities not exceeding one year.” The second proposed portfolio was “an
intermediate-term portfolio invested in obligations with maturities not to exceed five years.
Such maturities typically have higher yields than money market instruments.”

       Security Pacific discussed its investment recommendations with the government
during an investment meeting in San Diego, California from December 7-8, 1989, and its
recommendations were memorialized in a BIA memorandum dated January 17, 1990.
The BIA memorandum did not discuss whether Security Pacific had conducted a review
of the BIA’s past investment of the Indian trust fund in its investment proposal, nor did the
BIA memorandum comment on whether Security Pacific believed that the BIA’s
investment of the Indian trust fund was “excellent,” as PWC had concluded in its
investment proposal. Security Pacific recommended that the BIA pool together and invest
the largest twenty-five tribal trust funds as follows: 48% of the funds in short-term
securities, 38% of the funds in intermediate-term securities, and 14% of the funds in long-
term securities.9 Security Pacific recommended that the BIA pool together and invest the
remaining tribal trust funds as follows: 61% in short-term securities, 29% in intermediate-
term securities, and 10% in long-term securities.

       The BIA memorandum memorializing Security Pacific’s investment
recommendations did not state whether plaintiffs’ 326-K Fund was one of the tribal trust
funds considered by Security Pacific. According to the testimony of defendant’s damages
expert, Justin Mclean, at the liability trial, plaintiffs’ 326-K Fund would have been among
one of the largest twenty-five tribal trust funds pooled together and invested in Security
Pacific’s proposed portfolio. The 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds, the other two trust funds at

9 The Security Pacific proposal did not define what maturities would constitute a “short-
term” security, an “intermediate” security, or a “long-term” security.
                                             13
issue in this case, were not yet in existence at the time that Security Pacific made its
recommendations to the BIA.

        In 1990, the Office of Trust Funds Management was established within the BIA at
the Department of the Interior. The Office of Trust Funds Management consolidated the
accounting and investment functions managing and governing tribal trust funds. As both
parties’ liability experts testified during the liability trial in the above-captioned case, during
the early 1990s, the Department of the Interior transitioned from its program of pooling
together and investing tribal trust funds in short-term jumbo CDs to primarily investing
tribal trust funds into other securities with varying maturities, such as agency and
Treasury securities. Plaintiffs’ liability expert, Mr. Nunes, testified at the liability trial that
around the early 1990s, the BIA made “a wholesale transition away from the CD program,
which ultimately went away completely, and monies now were being invested in agency
securities, mortgage-backeds, callable bonds, and things like that.” Defendant’s liability
expert, Dr. Starks, testified at the liability trial that “[a]fter about [19]91,” the BIA made a
“programmatic” switch from investing tribal trust funds in jumbo CDs into “agency
securities in particular and a little bit longer term U.S. Treasuries.”

        The Department of the Interior’s shift from CDs was reflected in the October 1,
1992 edition of the Office of Trust Funds Management’s quarterly journal “TRUST,”
introduced at trial in the above-captioned by both parties as a joint exhibit. (capitalization
in original). According to the October 1, 1992 journal, the Branch of Investments Chief at
the Department of the Interior, Fred Kellerup, “got OTFM [Office of Trust Funds
Management] on the right road four years ago [in 1988] when the trust funds investment
portfolio began its transformation from CD’s to government securities.” Mr. Kellerup
provided the following advice to tribes in the October 1, 1992 journal: “Stay away from the
long bond. There’s no need for tribes to invest beyond 15 years. You’re too far out if
interest rates turn around. Shorten up on the maturity. Even if you have cash flow needs,
go for the three-to-seven year government securities. Avoid the one-year CDs.”
(emphasis in original).

        Also, during the early 1990s, Congress investigated BIA’s management and
investment of the Indian trust fund, comprised of tribal trust funds, such as the three tribal
trust funds at issue in the above-captioned case, and the IIM trust fund. The
Congressional Committee on Government Operations published the results of the
investigation in an April 1, 1992 report, titled “MISPLACED TRUST: THE BUREAU OF
INDIAN AFFAIRS’ MISMANAGEMENT OF THE INDIAN TRUST FUND,” (the 1992
Congressional Report) introduced at trial in the above-captioned case by both parties as
a joint exhibit. (capitalization in original). The 1992 Congressional Report explained that
the IIM trust fund is “a deposit fund, usually not voluntary, for individual participants and
tribes.” The Department of the Interior’s investment of the IIM trust fund is not at issue in
the above-captioned case. The 1992 Congressional Report also explained that as of April
1, 1992, “the BIA is responsible for managing and investing almost $2 billion in tribal and
individual Indian funds.”

                                                14
        The 1992 Congressional Report summarized the BIA’s duty to Indian tribes as a
“fiduciary duty to ‘maximize the trust income by prudent investment.’” (quoting Cheyenne-
Arapaho Tribes v. United States, 206 Ct. Cl. 340, 348, 512 F.2d 1390, 1394 (1975)
(Cheyenne-Arapaho)). The 1992 Congressional Report explained that “[t]his
responsibility requires the Government to stay well-informed about the rates of return and
investment opportunities and to intelligently choose from among authorized investment
opportunities to obtain the highest rate of return to make the trust funds productive.” The
1992 Congressional Report noted that “the Bureau’s fiduciary responsibilities are not
dissimilar to the duties performed by many private trustees” and that:

       To fulfill these important obligations it is necessary for the agency to fully
       understand both its fiduciary duties and the financial marketplace. Stated
       simply these fundamental assignments are: To accurately account to the
       beneficiary; to make accounts productive for the beneficiaries; and to
       maximize the trust income through prudent investment. To successfully
       perform these tasks, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, as any fiduciary, must
       conduct itself as a sophisticated investor, a smart shopper, and a highly
       diligent and resourceful manager.

        Upon review of the BIA’s investment of Indian trust fund, the 1992 Congressional
Report found that the BIA had “longstanding financial management problems in its
administration of the Indian trust fund,” primarily due to a failure to “accurately account
for trust fund moneys.” The 1992 Congressional Report explained that:

       Indeed, it [BIA] cannot even provide accountholders with meaningful
       periodic statements on their account balances. It cannot consistently and
       prudently invest trust funds and pay interest to accountholders. It does not
       have consistent written policies or procedures that cover all of its trust fund
       accounting practices. Under the management of the Bureau of Indian
       Affairs, the Indian trust fund is equivalent to a bank that doesn’t know how
       much money it has.

Notably, the plaintiffs in the above-captioned case do not at all allege that defendant
breached its fiduciary duty by failing to keep accurate records of the plaintiffs’ tribal trust
funds or that the defendant failed to provide plaintiffs with periodic account statements.
Plaintiffs, instead, argued that the defendant invested their three tribal trust funds in too
short-term securities, and, thus, did not maximize the investment return on their tribal trust
funds.

       Subsequently, Congress passed the American Indian Trust Fund Management
Reform Act, Pub. L. No. 103-412, 108 Stat. 4239 (1994) (1994 Trust Fund Management
Reform Act), which created the Office of the Special Trustee for American Indians (Office
of the Special Trustee) within the Department of the Interior, to be headed by the Special
Trustee. See 1994 Trust Fund Management Reform Act, codified at 25 U.S.C. § 4001 et
seq. According to the 1994 Trust Fund Management Reform Act, the Special Trustee was
to “ensure proper and efficient discharge of the Secretary’s trust responsibilities to Indian

                                              15
tribes and individual Indians.” 25 U.S.C. § 4043(a)(1) (1994). The 1994 Trust Fund
Management Reform Act also recognized that

       [t]he Special Trustee shall ensure that the Bureau [of Indian Affairs]
       establishes appropriate policies and procedures, and develops necessary
       systems, that will allow it-- (i) properly to account for and invest, as well as
       maximize, in a manner consistent with the statutory restrictions imposed on
       the Secretary’s investment options, the return on the investment of all trust
       fund monies . . . .

Id. at § 4043(b)(2)(B) (1994).

       The 1994 Trust Fund Management Reform Act also established a nine-member
Advisory Board to assist and advise the Special Trustee with implementation of the 1994
Trust Fund Management Reform Act. In 1996, the Office of the Special Trustee, a
separate office within the Department of the Interior, took over the responsibility of
managing tribal trust funds from the BIA. As the parties jointly stipulate, on September
11, 1996, the Special Trustee appointed the “OTFM Management Board” to establish an
operating policy to ensure that tribal trust funds were maintained in a proper and prudent
mix and maturity distribution, “represent sound extensions of credit, and are appropriate
assets with regard to legal requirements and needs of the Indian beneficiaries involved.”
(internal quotation marks omitted). The OTFM Management Board, as both parties jointly
stipulated to in the above-captioned case, became known in April 2005 as the Office of
the Special Trustee Investment Management Committee, and was sometimes referred to
as the “Portfolio Review Committee,” according to the testimony of defendant’s fact
witness, Mr. Robert Winter, at the liability trial.

        Mr. Winter also testified at the liability trial that the Portfolio Review Committee is
“a group of senior officials that are well versed in all of the management functions in OST
[Office of the Special Trustee], that meet with the investment group to review specifics
about investments for all tribal trust funds annually.” Mr. Winter also testified that he
became a member of the Portfolio Review Committee in 2001 and was still a member of
the committee at the time of liability trial in the above-captioned case. As Mr. Winter
explained, the Portfolio Review Committee would review the account objectives for each
tribal trust fund and whether the tribal trust fund was invested in accordance with the
agency’s policies. According to Mr. Winter’s testimony at the liability trial, if the Portfolio
Review Committee disagreed with a particular investment manager’s investment strategy
for a specific fund, the Portfolio Review Committee had the authority to direct the
investment manager to change the investment strategy. With regard to plaintiffs’ 326-K
Fund, Mr. Winter noted:

       You know, each year this account came up we made sure that we asked
       what further information do you have or, you know, certainly knowing
       amongst ourselves, we definitely got news of, you know, pending
       legislation, legislation that’s been introduced, you know, the possibilities of

                                              16
       that legislation passing. So this was definitely a time period[10] when there
       were bills being introduced which caused us to, you know, limit it to -- not
       limit it to, but to make those maturities around two years.

        On February 7, 1997, the Office of the Special Trustee sent a memorandum, which
was introduced by both parties in the above-captioned case as a joint trial exhibit, titled
“OTFM POLICY MEMORANDUM NO. POL97-002” to the Office of Trust Funds
Management Division’s Chiefs, Area Trust Accountants, and Agency Personnel, which
discussed the Office of the Special Trustee’s “Investment Policy” (1997 Office of the
Special Trustee Policy). (capitalization in original). The 1997 Office of the Special Trustee
Policy established “the criteria by which OTFM will manage the Tribal, Individual Indian
Monies, and Special Funds entrusted to it for investment.” Pursuant to the 1997 Office of
the Special Trustee Policy, the “investment activities of OTFM will be conducted to
achieve” three primary objectives. The first objective was “Quality” of the investment
portfolio, which included the “safety of principal, minimization of market risk and overall
risk diversification.” (capitalization and emphasis in original). The second objective was
having some “Liquidity” of investments, meaning that “an adequate percentage of the
portfolio should be maintained in liquid, short-term investments that could be converted
to cash, if necessary, in order to meet the tribal disbursement requirements.”
(capitalization and emphasis in original). The last objective was the “Rate of Return” of
the portfolio. (capitalization and emphasis in original). According to the 1997 Office of the
Special Trustee Policy,

       [o]f major importance in all of the OTFM managed portfolios is an
       acceptable rate of return over the long term without compromising the other
       stated objectives of quality and liquidity. The specific portfolios should be
       structured to achieve at least a market-average rate of return throughout
       economic cycles, taking into account the specific tribe’s risk constraints and
       the cash flow requirements dictated by its use and distribution plans and/or
       budget forecasts. Whenever possible, and consistent with risk limitations as
       defined herein and prudent investment principles, investment officers shall
       seek to augment returns above the market average rate of return.

       At the liability trial, defendant’s fact witness, Mr. Winter, explained his
understanding of the 1997 Office of the Special Trustee Policy’s Rate of Return objective
and his involvement in reviewing and updating the Office of the Special Trustee’s policies
throughout the late 2000s. Mr. Winter testified that he began working at the Office of the
Special Trustee in 1998 and that between “2007 and 2011,” he “headed up the Office of
Trust Services” which oversaw the “Office of Trust Funds Investments.” The Office of
Trust Funds Investments, according to Mr. Winter, is “essentially the investing shop at the
Office of the Special Trustee.” Mr. Winter also testified that during his time at the Office

10 According to Mr. Winter’s trial testimony at the liability trial, the “time period” referenced
was the early 2000s, when Mr. Winter joined the Portfolio Review Committee and when
Congress began, once again, to introduce bills for the distribution of plaintiffs’ three tribal
trust funds.
                                               17
of Trust Services, he was responsible for “developing investment policy and reviewing
and amending investment policy” for the Office of the Special Trustee, and also to “review
the past policies of the Office of the Special Trustee and even those of its predecessor,
the BIA.” Mr. Winter testified at the liability trial that his understanding of the Rate of
Return objective “simply refers to, in conjunction with ensuring the quality is there and
that the cash flows have been identified and that there will be adequate liquidity within the
portfolio, that we should structure the remainder of the portfolio in such a manner as to
achieve above-average market rates.” Mr. Winter also testified that in order to obtain
“above-average market rates,” as required by the Rate of Return objective contained
within the 1997 Office of the Special Trustee Policy, it was his understanding that “we
need to do adequate analysis of the cash flows in order to ensure that we obtain the
highest rates for the maturities that we select in order to maintain those proper flows.” At
the liability trial, Mr. Winter testified that the cash flow analysis differs with respect to
different tribal accounts. Mr. Winter testified that regarding a cash flow analysis for a
judgment fund, “where it’s 100 percent per capita payout,” like plaintiffs’ 326-K Fund at
issue in the above-captioned case, “then really all you need to know is the distribution
date.” When asked by defendant’s counsel at trial what the effect of an uncertain timeline
for the distribution of a particular judgment fund would have on the Office of the Special
Trustee’s cash flow analysis, Mr. Winter responded that, “[w]ell, we certainly try to obtain
the most accurate data we can about a particular distribution date if there’s not one
already stated, and, you know, we try to base our maturity schedule on the earliest
available date that that fund might be paid out.”

        The 1997 Office of the Special Trustee Policy also listed “ACCEPTABLE
PORTFOLIO INVESTMENTS AND PRACTICES,” which explained, among other
practices, the Office of the Special Trustee’s “‘Holding’ versus ‘Trading’” practice.
(capitalization and emphasis in original). According to the section of the 1997 Office of
the Special Trustee Policy discussing “Holding versus Trading,”

       OTFM intends to manage its Indian trust portfolios in a manner that protects
       the integrity of the primary function of the portfolio, which is to provide
       maximum income for the tribes while conforming to prescribed statutory
       limitations and prudent fiduciary investment principles.

       Because OTFM has a small number of investment managers responsible
       for the investment management of over 1450 separate portfolios, OTFM will
       purchase securities with the intent to hold each security until maturity, while
       realizing that sales can and may occur prior to maturity form some of the
       following reasons:

              1. When account review presents obvious opportunity for
                 portfolio enhancement from the reinvestment of sales
                 proceeds into comparable maturities thereby improving
                 yield or quality without adversely affecting overall quality,
                 mix or maturity of the investment portfolio.
              2. The need to improve or increase portfolio liquidity.

                                             18
              3. The need to invest the proceeds of a security maturing
                 within one year because of an interest-rate scenario that
                 would be detrimental to the performance of the portfolio if
                 held to maturity before investing, i.e., a rapidly falling
                 interest rate period.
              4. A reduced credit rating of the issuing Agency renders the
                 security to be of less than acceptable quality to remain in
                 the portfolio.

       The 1997 Office of the Special Trustee’s “Holding versus Trading” section also
noted that “[i]nfrequent investment portfolio restructuring carried out in conjunction with a
prudent overall risk-management plan that does not result in a pattern of gains being
taken and losses deferred will generally be viewed as an acceptable practice within the
context of an investment portfolio.” According to the trial testimony of defendant’s fact
witness at the liability trial, Mr. Winter, the 1997 Office of the Special Trustee’s “Holding
versus Trading” practice meant that,

       that we need to purchase securities with the intent and ability to hold to
       maturity; and that, secondly, we’re permitted infrequent investment
       restructuring if the market conditions present themselves as such, but we
       can’t be doing so by establishing a pattern of buying and selling, reaping
       gains and losses on any sort of frequency.

According to Mr. Winter, the 1997 Office of the Special Trustee Policy was the “first formal
policy adopted by the Office of the Special Trustee.” Mr. Winter testified at the liability trial
that the Office of the Special Trustee issued amendments to the 1997 Office of the Special
Trustee Policy in 1999, 2000, and 2005, but that these policy amendments, apart from
extending the maturity limits of certain government-backed securities from an “average
life” of ten to fifteen years, were not “material” changes to the 1997 Office of the Special
Trust Policy. Moreover, Mr. Winter testified that the 2005 policy amendment was the
policy in place up until the distribution of the 326-K Fund.

The Investment Market for Bonds from the Early 1950s to 2013

       At the liability trial, the parties agreed that between the early 1950s up until 1979,
the beginning of the period at issue in the above-captioned case, interest rates on bonds
steadily increased, and that there was an inverted “yield curve.” A “yield curve” displays
the relationship between a bond’s yield and maturity. An inverted yield curve occurs when
shorter-term securities are experiencing higher yields than longer-term securities. For
example, beginning around 1958, the 5-year Treasury bond achieved higher returns than
the 7-year Treasury bond or the 20-year Treasury bond, and such was the case until
1979.

      From December 1979 until 1981, the first three years of the period at issue in the
above-captioned case, interest rates on bonds continued to increase and the yield curve
remained inverted. As defendant’s liability expert, Dr. Starks, testified at the liability trial,

                                               19
the “peak of interest rates from between 1950 and 2012” occurred in September 1981.
Following the September 1981 interest rate peak until September 2013, the end of the
period at issue, the parties agreed that the interest rates generally decreased and that
bond prices steadily increased. The parties agreed that following the September 1981
interest rate peak, but for a few short-lived periods, the yield curve was upward sloping
until 2013, the end of the investment period at issue. An upward sloping yield curve means
that longer-term securities experience higher returns than shorter-term securities.

         The parties agree that, the despite the inverted yield curve between the 1950s and
1981, the yield curve for fixed-income securities is typically upward sloping. Plaintiffs’
liability expert report by Rocky Hill Advisors, Inc. (Rocky Hill Advisors) noted that a “2007
study of the past 80 years found that in 72 of those years (90% of the time) the yield curve
was upward sloping and that, on average over all of those years, long-term Treasury
bonds[11] tended to yield about 1-1/2% more than short-term Treasury bills.” Defendant
did not contest the validity of the 2007 study cited to by plaintiffs in their liability expert
report. Plaintiffs’ Rocky Hill Advisors’ liability expert report also noted:

       Generally, the longer the maturity of a fixed-income investment, the higher
       will be its coupon interest rate (the contract rate of interest) and potential
       return. This is because investors perceive higher risk the further out in time
       an investment extends, thus they demand higher returns to compensate for
       the additional risk. Although there are periods where this relationship inverts
       (that is, interest rates on shorter-term investments exceed those on longer-
       term investments), the frequency and duration of such events is de minimis
       when compared to the norm.

(footnote omitted). Defendant’s damages expert report, prepared by Dr. Gordon
Alexander, similarly noted that the yield curve is normally upward sloping, stating that
“[g]iven the fact that the yield curve is generally upward sloping, the practical result of this
observation would be to invest primarily in long maturities when monies are expected to
remain invested for longer periods.”

        Plaintiffs’ liability expert report by Rocky Hill Advisors provided a hypothetical
which illustrated that longer-term investments generally would have out-performed
shorter-term investments during the thirty-three-year period at issue in this case.
According to plaintiffs’ expert report by Rocky Hill Advisors, if an investor were to have
invested $1,000.00 in three separate portfolios beginning in December 1, 1979, the
starting month of the relevant time period in the above-captioned case, and have left that
$1,000.00 fully invested through September 30, 2013, the end date of the relevant period
in this case, the portfolio with the longest-term securities would have achieved the highest
rate return. The three portfolios from the hypothetical are as follows:

11Plaintiffs’ liability expert report did not define what maturities of Treasury securities
would be considered “long-term Treasury bonds.”
                                              20
       • Portfolio 1 in a short-term (i.e., an average maturity of about 3 years)
       basket of Treasury securities represented by the Barclays 1-5 Year U.S.
       Treasury Index;
       • Portfolio 2 in an intermediate-term (i.e., an average maturity of about 7.5
       years) basket of Treasury securities represented by the Barclays U.S.
       Treasury Index; and
       • Portfolio 3 in a long-term (i.e., an average maturity of 20+ years) basket of
       Treasury securities represented by the Barclays Long-Term U.S. Treasury
       Index.

According to the hypothetical, the $1,000.00 in Portfolio 1, the short-term portfolio, would
have grown to $10,154.94 by September 30, 2013. The $1,000.00 in Portfolio 2, the
intermediate-term portfolio, would have grown to $13,720.07 by September 30, 2013. The
$1,000.00 in Portfolio 3, the long-term portfolio, would have grown to $20,868.30 by
September 30, 2013.

        Defendant’s damages expert report by Dr. Alexander in advance of the liability trial
referred to a hypothetical similar to the hypothetical included in plaintiffs’ expert report by
Rocky Hill Advisors. Defendant’s damages expert report looked at three $1,000.00
portfolios from 1979 to 2013. The first portfolio was invested in 5-year Treasury bonds,
the second portfolio was invested in 7-year Treasury bonds, and the third portfolio was
invested in 20-year Treasury bonds. The $1,000.00 invested in 5-year Treasury bonds
grew the least, to approximately $14,000.00. The $1,000.00 invested in 7-year Treasury
bonds grew to approximately $15,500.00. The $1,000.00 invested in the 20-year Treasury
bonds grew the most, to approximately $21,000.00.

        Additionally, plaintiffs’ rebuttal expert witness at the liability trial, Dr. Goldstein,
illustrated in his rebuttal expert report that, with regard to the 326-K Fund, a “simple buy-
and-hold strategy that invested” plaintiffs’ 326-K Fund “in 10-year U.S. Treasuries,” from
1979, when the 326-K Fund was deposited into the United States Treasury, through 2004,
when Congress passed the distribution plan legislation for plaintiffs’ tribal trust funds, and
“then rolling [the 326-K Fund] into 1-year U.S. Treasuries,” from 2005 until 2013, the end
of the period at issue, the government would have experienced higher returns than what
it actually achieved. According to Dr. Goldstein’s calculations, “had the BIA simply
followed a mechanical strategy of investing in 10-year U.S. Treasuries, it would have
ended the period with an additional $72 million above what it did under its chosen
strategy.” Dr. Goldstein did the same exercise “with 20-year U.S. Treasuries” and “[u]nder
this simple strategy, the WSIG [Western Shoshone Identifiable Group] account would
have held an additional $179 million.” Dr. Goldstein noted in his report that “I stress that
these are not damages estimates, which I have not been asked to provide. The figures
are just a clear way to illustrate the benefits of locking in typically higher long-term rates
over the relevant period.”

                                              21
The Department of the Interior’s Investment of the 326-K Fund

         The period at issue regarding the government’s investment of the 326-K Fund was
from December 19, 1979, the date on which the ICC’s initial award payment of
$26,145.189.89 was deposited into the United States Treasury, until September 30, 2013,
the last date for which the Trust Account Database (TAD), the government’s electronic
account database, reported account information for the 326-K Fund. According to the
testimony of plaintiffs’ liability expert, Mr. Nunes, at the liability trial, the TAD is “a
compilation of several sub-databases that include information regarding the different
accounting systems the Government had and the coding that they used to identify, you
know, what a transaction was. It includes from 1972 -- from July 1, 1972, forward” a
“compendium of all the transactions that went through an account, and then there’s a lot
of descriptive and other data that’s in there as well.” Mr. Nunes also testified at the liability
trial that the government provided plaintiffs with access to the TAD for plaintiffs’ three
tribal trust funds for the period at issue, December 1979 through September 2013. Both
of the parties’ liability experts relied on the TAD when re-constructing the investment
performance of plaintiffs’ 326-K Fund between December 1979 and September 2013 in
their respective liability expert reports and damages expert reports. Both parties do not
contest the data reflected in the TAD for the 326-K, 326-A-1, and 326-A-3 Funds.

        The initial amount of the 326-K Fund, when deposited in the United States
Treasury on December 19, 1979, was $26,145,189.89. Before the first distribution
payment of the 326-K Fund was issued in 2011 to 3,187 individuals, the 326-K Fund
balance had grown to approximately $183,794,000.00. According to defendant’s opening
statement at trial, between December 1979 until the first distribution of the 326-K Fund in
2011, the 326-K Fund experienced an average annual return of 6.8%, the accuracy of
which plaintiffs did not contest. The final distribution payments of the 326-K Fund were
made on September 29, 2012 and October 2, 2012. As of September 2013, the last date
for which data was available regarding the government’s investment of the 326-K Fund,
a residual amount of approximately $36,000.00 remained in trust by the government.
Plaintiffs’ counsel explained at the closing argument for the liability phase of trial, that
plaintiffs are not seeking to recover the residual amount of $36,000.00 in the above-
captioned case. Plaintiffs’ counsel did not clarify why $36,000.00 remained in the
government’s account. Plaintiffs’ counsel at closing argument stated that a potential
reason for the residual amount left in trust with the government was because “maybe you
haven’t identified a recipient or there’s been some glitch, something like that.”

The Maturity Structure of the 326-K Fund

         In their liability expert reports, and at the liability trial, both parties discussed the
“average weighted maturity” of the 326-K Fund. According to the testimony of defendant’s
liability expert, Dr. Starks, at the liability trial, the “average weighted maturity” is based on
the maturity of all the securities in which the 326-K Fund was invested in at a given time.
Dr. Starks testified that the maturity is then viewed as a “weighted average” based on the
“value” that the securities “are in their portfolio, so that if you have an investment that’s
very short term and is, you know, 50 percent of the portfolio, then it’s going to be lower

                                               22
overall and vice versa.” Plaintiffs argued that the average weighted maturity of the 326-K
Fund throughout the thirty-three-year period at issue was too short- term, and, therefore,
the 326-K Fund was imprudently invested. Defendant argued to the contrary.

         At the liability trial, the parties discussed three different methods for analyzing the
average weighted maturity of the 326-K Fund. The first method calculated the average
weighted maturity of the 326-K Fund based on the securities’ stated years to maturity.
For example, a ten-year bond has a stated ten-year maturity. The second method
calculated the average weighted maturity of the 326-K Fund based on the securities’
“years to call,” which uses the call date of callable securities in which the government
invested the 326-K Fund. According to the testimony of plaintiffs’ liability expert, Mr.
Nunes, at the liability trial, a callable security is a security for which the issuer retains the
right to call the security back before maturity by a specific “call” date. Therefore, if an
issuer exercises its right call back a ten-year callable bond after five years following its
issuance, then the ten-year bond’s maturity would be five years. The parties’ liability
experts agreed in their respective expert reports that the government began to invest the
326-K Fund in callable securities beginning in the early 1990s. According to the testimony
of plaintiffs’ liability expert, Mr. Nunes, at the liability trial, approximately 85% of the
callable securities in which the 326-K Fund was invested were called back, which
defendant did not contest. Even though only approximately 85% of the callable securities
chosen by the government for the 326-K Fund were called back, both of the parties’
liability experts appear to use the call dates for all callable securities in which the
government invested the 326-K Fund when calculating the average weighted maturity
based on years to call.

       The third method discussed by the parties based the average weighted maturity of
the 326-K Fund on the call dates of the callable securities and made an adjustment for
the prepayment of mortgage-backed securities. Mortgage-backed securities, as
explained in plaintiffs’ rebuttal expert report by Dr. Goldstein,

       are asset backed securities backed by mortgages and include pass-through
       securities (such as those from GNMA [Government National Mortgage
       Association], FNMA [Federal National Mortgage Association], and FHLMC
       [Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation]) and Collateralized Mortgage
       Obligations (“CMOs”). Pass-through securities such as those from GNMA,
       FNMA, and FHLMC differ from normal bonds in that the principal value of
       the bond is amortized and thus paid off over time, rather than just at the
       time of maturity, so that each payment over the life of the mortgage-backed
       security contains some principal repayment. As such, the stated maturity of
       pass-through securities is not representative of the expected, or average,
       life of the investment. Some mortgage-backed securities, such as CMOs,
       are often also divided into tranches, each with a different level of risk. Higher
       tranches (such as tranche A) have their principal paid back first, whereas
       later tranches have to wait longer hence have a longer expected life.

                                               23
(footnotes omitted; capitalization in original). According to plaintiffs’ rebuttal expert report,
“in the 1990s,” the government invested the 326-K Fund “into mortgage backed securities
where the average or expected life is notably shorter than the stated maturity. As a result,
the actual weighted maturity of the fund,” even “after considering the impact of callable
bonds,” would be “overstated” if not adjusted for the pre-payment of various mortgage-
backed securities. Similar to plaintiffs’ rebuttal expert report regarding the government’s
use of mortgage-backed securities, defendant’s liability expert, Dr. Starks, testified at trial
that the government began investing in mortgage-backed securities during the early
1990s, and that, “what’s important about mortgage-backed securities is, especially in a
falling interest rate environment, people refinance their homes, and so -- so you -- you
usually don’t get the maturity you think you’re going to get because it can be paid off
early.”

        Although the parties discussed the pre-payment mortgage issue, neither party
presented at the liability trial, or, in their expert reports, an accurate, complete calculation
of the average weighted maturity of the 326-K Fund taking into account the pre-payment
issue. Defendant’s liability expert, Dr. Starks, presented at trial her attempt to account for
the pre-payment issue in defendant’s Demonstrative Exhibit 10,12 a line graph depicting
the 326-K Fund’s average weighted maturity based on (1) the stated maturity, (2) years
to call, and (3) years to call with an adjustment for the pre-payment issue. Dr. Starks,
however, admitted at trial that her attempt was not the most accurate because she “throws
out the mortgage-backed securities because of the prepayment issue” from her
calculations, and, thus, undercalculates the average weighted maturity of the 326-K Fund.
Plaintiffs did not present any calculation of the average weighted maturity of the 326-K
Fund which accounted for the pre-payment issue during the course of the liability trial.

        When analyzing the average weighted maturity of the 326-K Fund, the court will
rely on the average weighted maturity based on the years to call. This method, as both
parties agreed, more accurately depicts the maturity structure of the 326-K Fund than the
average weighted maturity based on the stated years of maturity. As plaintiffs’ counsel
noted at closing argument, “Dr. Starks [defendant’s liability expert] and Mr. Nunes
[plaintiffs’ liability expert] agree[]” that “the stated years to maturity was not as accurate
when you’re dealing with callable bonds, because it was more accurate to use the call
date.” Dr. Starks, defendant’s liability expert, testified at trial that only considering the
stated years to maturity of the 326-K Fund would make the 326-K Fund maturity structure
appear a “little too long,” because the government had invested in callable bonds that
were called back before maturity. Mr. Nunes, plaintiffs’ liability expert, similarly testified at
trial that relying only on the stated years to maturity when calculating the average
weighted maturity of the 326-K Fund, “actually makes the portfolio look like it has a longer
structure than it actually does” because “almost entirely” all of the government’s callable
bonds were called back. The court is aware that the average weighted maturity based

12Both parties’ counsel used various demonstrative exhibits throughout the liability trial,
which were all introduced and accepted into the trial record for the liability trial. The parties
similarly used demonstrative exhibits, some of which are referenced below, and which
were admitted into the trial record for the damages trial.
                                               24
only on years to call does not take into account the pre-payment of the mortgage-backed
securities. The record before the court, however, does not contain an accurate depiction
of the weighted average maturity, taking into account the pre-payment issue of mortgage-
backed-securities for the 326-K Fund, and the actual calculations to analyze the
performance of the 326-K Fund, taking into account the pre-payment issue, remain
somewhat elusive and speculative.

        According to both parties’ liability expert reports, which relied on the government’s
data from the TAD, beginning in December 1979 to approximately December 1991, the
average weighted maturity years to call of the 326-K Fund never exceeded two years,
and during most of this period, the average weighted maturity was one year or less.
Beginning in December 1991 until September 1993, the average weighted maturity years
to call increased, reaching a peak of a little less than ten years. Following this peak in
September 1993, until May 2002, the average weighted maturity years to call steadily
decreased, reaching a low of approximately less than one year in May 2002. Then, from
June 2002 until approximately early-2008, the average weighted maturity years to call
fluctuated between a less than one year and slightly more than two years. Beginning
around mid-2008 until December 2010, the average weighted maturity years to call
fluctuated, starting around two and a half years, increasing to almost three years, and
then dropping back down to approximately one year. Beginning in early-2011, when the
government began to distribute the 326-K Fund to qualifying members of Western
Shoshone tribes, the government effectively liquidated the 326-K Fund such that the
average weighted maturity years to call decreased to an all-time low of almost zero years
of maturity and flatlined at almost zero years of maturity until September 2013, the end of
the time period at issue.

        As a visual aid of the 326-K Fund’s average maturity structure throughout the thirty-
three-year period at issue, defendant’s Demonstrative Exhibit 10, which was introduced
at trial during defendant’s direct examination of defendant’s liability expert, Dr. Starks,
and used by plaintiffs’ counsel during their cross-examination of Dr. Starks, is displayed
below. Defendant’s Demonstrative Exhibit 10 is titled “Maturity of WSJF [Western
Shoshone Judgment Funds]13 portfolio varies over time” and contains three separate
lines. The top most line, which was colored gray, displays the average weighted maturity
of the 326-K Fund based on the stated years to maturity. The middle line, which was
colored a light blue, depicts the average weighted maturity of the 326-K Fund, based on
the call dates of the securities, and is the line which the court looks to in this Opinion. The
bottom line, which was colored dark blue, displays the average weighted maturity of the
326-K Fund, based on the call dates of the securities and which did not include any
mortgage-backed securities in order to account for the mortgage-backed security
prepayment issue. As previously discussed, defendant’s attempt to account for the pre-

13As the Western Shoshone Claims Distribution Act, Pub. L. No. 108-270, 118 Stat. 805
(2004) (the Claims Distribution Act of 2004), the act which created the distribution
mechanism for the three funds at issue, states, the “Western Shoshone Judgment Funds”
refers to the 326-K Fund. The “Western Shoshone Joint Judgment Funds” refers to the
326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds.
                                              25
payment issue in Demonstrative Exhibit 10 would distort the average weighted maturity
of the 326-K Fund and is not considered by this court. At the liability trial, plaintiffs did not
contest Demonstrative Exhibit 10’s representation of the average weighted maturity of the
326-K Fund based on the stated years to maturity, which was colored gray in
Demonstrative Exhibit 10, or the years to call, which was colored light blue in
Demonstrative Exhibit 10.14 In addition, both parties agree that the years to call, the
middle line, which was colored a light blue, is a more accurate indicator than the years to
maturity, the top line, which was colored gray.15

14At the liability trial, plaintiffs did contest Demonstrative Exhibit 10’s depiction of the
average weighted maturity of the 326-K Fund that was adjusted to account for the pre-
payment issue, which was colored dark blue.
15  Demonstrative Exhibit 10 displays only one line between December 1979 and
December 1991. This is because, as defendant’s liability expert, Dr. Starks, testified to at
trial, the 326-K Fund was not invested in any callable bond or mortgage-backed securities
during this time, and, therefore, the average weighted maturity of the fund was the same
whether one considered the years to maturity, the years to call, or whether there was any
adjustment made for the pre-payment of mortgages.
                                               26
27
The Types of Securities in which the Government Invested the 326-K Fund

        According to both parties’ liability expert reports, which relied on the government
data in the TAD, from 1979 to 1989, the government invested the 326-K Fund almost
solely in jumbo CDs, with a small portion of the 326-K Fund invested in agency, Treasury,
and “overnight” securities. According to the testimony of Mr. Winter, one of defendant’s
fact witnesses and director of Trust Operations at the Office of the Special Trustee at the
Department of the Interior, at the liability trial, overnight securities are highly “liquid” “one-
day” securities that are invested and redeemed “the very next day.” In the early 1990s,
although the government continued to invest a portion of the 326-K Fund in CDs, the
government began investing the 326-K Fund in a combination of agency securities,
Treasury securities, mortgage-backed securities, and overnight securities. Some of the
securities selected by the government beginning in 1991 were callable securities.
Notably, by June of 1995, the government was no longer investing any of the 326-K Fund
in CDs. From June 1995 until July 2011, the government invested the 326-K Fund in a
mixture of agency securities, Treasury securities, mortgage-backed securities, non-
government securities, and overnight securities. Beginning in August 2011, the
government invested the 326-K Fund solely in overnight securities.

The Department of the Interior’s Investment of the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds

         The investment period at issue for the 326-A-1 Fund was from March 25, 1992,
when the judgment award of $823,752.64 was deposited into the United States Treasury,
until September 30, 2013. The investment period at issue for the 326-A-3 Fund was from
September 15, 1995, when the judgment award of $29,396.60 was deposited into the
United States Treasury, until September 30, 2013, the last date for which the TAD, the
government’s electronic account database, reported account information for the 326-A
Funds. The government did not co-mingle the 326-A-1 Fund with the 326-A-3 Fund and
kept them in separate investment accounts. As discussed in more detail below, defendant
did not present any evidence at trial regarding the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds because,
according to defendant, plaintiffs do not have standing to assert a breach of trust with
regard to the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds. Throughout the liability trial and the damages
trial, plaintiffs referred to the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds together as the “326-A Funds.”
Therefore, as with the June 13, 2019 liability Opinion on liability issued by the court, for
purposes of this Opinion, the court will discuss the investment performance of the 326-A-
1 and 326-A-3 Funds together. By September 30, 2013, according to the TAD, the
balance of the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds had grown to a total of $2,022,891.50.

The Maturity Structure of the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds

       The only party to present evidence at the liability trial regarding the maturity
structure of the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds were plaintiffs, who based their maturity
calculations on data from the TAD. At trial, plaintiffs’ liability expert, Mr. Nunes, testified
that, as with the 326-K Fund, the government called back approximately 85% of the
callable bonds in which the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds were invested. As with the 326-
K Fund, Mr. Nunes also testified at trial that the average weighted maturity of the 326-A

                                               28
Funds, based on the years to call, more accurately displays the maturity structure of these
two funds than the average weighted maturity based on the stated years to maturity. For
purpose of this Opinion, when discussing the maturity structure of the 326-A-1 and 326-
A-3 Funds, the court, therefore, refers to the average weighted maturity years to call.16

       Between the deposit dates for the 326-A-1 Fund, which occurred on March 25,
1992, and the 326-A-3 Fund, which occurred on September 15, 1995, and August 1999,
the average weighted maturity years to call for the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds was
approximately three years or less. Then, around September 1999, the average weighted
maturity years to call for the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds spiked to approximately six
years. The 1999 spike in maturity was relatively short-lived. The average weighted
maturity years to call of the 326-A Funds fluctuated between five and seven years until
September of 2001, when the average weighted maturity years to call for both A Funds
decreased to less than one year. For the next eight years, from October 2001 to February
2009, the average weighted maturity years to call for both A Funds did not exceed three
years. Around March 2009, the average weighted maturity years to call for the 326-A-1
and 326-A-3 Funds spiked to a high of approximately ten years and then immediately
began to decrease, reaching an average weighted maturity years to call of five years by
August 2009. Between September 2009 to February 2012, the average weighted maturity
years to call for the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds fluctuated between approximately five
and eight years. Around February 2012, the average weighted maturity years to call for
the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds, increased to fourteen years and began to decrease
around December 2012, reaching an average weighted maturity years to call of eleven
years. The average weighted maturity years to call for the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds
remained at approximately eleven years until September 2013, the end of the time period
in question.

        As a visual aid of the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds’ maturity structure throughout
the twenty-one-year period at issue, plaintiffs’ Demonstrative Exhibit 14, introduced at
trial, and prepared and testified to by plaintiffs’ liability expert, Mr. Nunes, is displayed
below. Plaintiffs’ Demonstrative Exhibit 14 contains two separate lines. The top line of the
graph, which was colored blue, depicts the average weighted maturity based on the
stated years of maturity. The bottom line of the graph, which was colored red, displays
the average weighted maturity for the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds, taking into account
the call dates for the callable securities and is the line which the court looks to in this
Opinion. Defendant did not contest plaintiffs’ representation of the average weighted
maturity of the 326-A Funds contained in plaintiffs’ Demonstrative Exhibit 14.

16As with the 326-K Fund, the record before the court does not contain data regarding
the average weighted maturity of the 326-A Funds accounting for the pre-payment of
mortgage-backed securities.
                                             29
30
The Types of Securities in which the Government Invested the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3
Funds

       According to plaintiffs’ expert liability and damages report by Rocky Hill Advisors,
which relied on the TAD, beginning from August 1992, when the government began to
invest the 326-A-1 Fund, until March 1993, the government invested the entire 326-A-1
Fund in jumbo CDs. Around March 1993, the government began to diversify its
investment of the 326-A-1 Fund by decreasing its investment in jumbo CDs and
increasing its investment in agency securities. Then, from 1995, when the 326-A-3 Fund
was deposited into the United States Treasury, until 2011, the government invested both
the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds primarily in agency securities with a small portion of the
funds invested in overnight securities and Treasury securities. From 2012 until September
2013, the government invested the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds in a mix of agency
securities, mortgage-backed securities, and overnight securities.

The Distribution of the 326-K, 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds

       In 1973, even before the ICC entered its judgment in Docket 326-K, the BIA was
aware that the distribution of any potential judgment award to the plaintiffs would require
advance planning. According to a February 15, 1973 internal memorandum, the BIA
stated that:

       [A]lthough the Western Shoshone case as of October 11, 1972 has only
       reached the interlocutory stage, it is mandatory that planning begin now in
       terms of the identification of beneficiaries, the disposition of the funds and
       the dissemination of useful information to interested groups and individuals.
       We are aware that the award of $26,154,600, subject to allowable offsets,
       may be appealed by either or both parties, but we are in full agreement with
       the Agency and the Western Shoshone Claims Committee that early
       attention to this case is necessary if we hope to avoid the confusion and the
       very time consuming problems encountered with the rather similar Northern
       Paiute judgment.

Mr. Nunes, plaintiffs’ liability expert, testified at the liability trial that the distribution of the
Northern Paiute judgment, which was referenced by the BIA in its February 15, 1973
internal memorandum, had taken approximately sixteen years to execute.

        Shortly following the deposit of the 326-K Fund into the United States Treasury,
the BIA put together a research memorandum about the Western Shoshone. According
to the research memorandum, dated March 11, 1980, there was a significant element of
the Western Shoshone who, “[f]or many years,” opposed any monetary award in the
Western Shoshone Identifiable Group’s case on Docket No. 326-K, which was litigated
before the ICC regarding the Western Shoshone Identifiable Group’s claim for title to
aboriginal lands. This faction of Western Shoshone believed that their ancestral lands in
Nevada never were ceded over to the government or taken by the government. They,
therefore, believed that granting of the 326-K award “would deprive all Western Shoshone

                                                 31
of the land itself or at least jeopardize their claim to such land.” The March 11, 1980
research memorandum also recognized that “[t]he Western Shoshone entities were and
are extremely scattered,” and that “[i]t is not possible to describe the Western Shoshone
in terms of forming a tribe or group of organized tribes.” Nonetheless, the March 11, 1980
memorandum identified the following entities as the Western Shoshone beneficiaries of
the 326-K Fund located in Nevada:

       1. Temoak Bands of Western Shoshone Indians (Elko, Battle Mountain,
           South Fork and. Wells)
       2. Shoshone-Paiute Tribes of the Duck Valley Reservation
       3. Duckwater Shoshone Tribe of the Duckwater Reservation
       4. Yomba Shoshone Tribe of the Yomba Reservation
       5. Ely Indian Colony
       6. Reno-Sparks Indian Colony
       7. Paiute-Shoshone Tribe of the Fallen Reservation and Colony
       8. Fort McDermitt Pauite and Shoshone Tribes of the Fort McDermitt Indian
           Reservation
       9. Walker River Pauite Tribe of the Walker River Reservation
      10. Lovelock Paiute Tribe of the Lovelock Indian Colony

The March 11, 1980 memorandum also identified the following entities as the Western
Shoshone beneficiaries of the 326-K Fund located in California:

       1. Owens Valley Paiute-Shoshone Band of Indians (Bishop, Big Pine, Fort
          Independence and Lone Pine Reservations),
       2. Death Valley Timbi-Sha Shoshone Band.

        Despite the divisions of interests and different positions on their claims among the
Western Shoshone, the BIA attempted to work with the Western Shoshone to submit a
distribution plan to Congress for approval within the 180-day statutory timeline, as
required under the Use and Distribution Act of 1973. For example, on February 23, 1980,
representatives from the BIA and Western Shoshone individuals met in Elko, Nevada. At
the meeting, the “Western Shoshone Planning Committee” was officially formed to elicit
distribution proposals from the various tribal groups of the Western Shoshone. This
committee consisted of “about 10 [individuals]” from various tribal groups with the
possibility of an additional three individuals, two of whom would be from Californian
Shoshone tribal groups.

        The BIA’s willingness to move forward with a distribution plan, however, was
temporarily slowed down by the August 25, 1980 Order granting an injunction in United
States v. Dann, Civil No. R-74-60, Order (D. Nev. Aug. 25, 1980) before the United States
District Court for the District of Nevada. In United States v. Dann, the United States had
sued Mary Dann and Carrie Dann, two sisters, who were members of an autonomous
band of the Western Shoshone, for trespass, alleging that the sisters, in grazing livestock
without a permit from the United States, were acting in violation of regulations issued by
the Secretary of the Interior. The sisters denied that they were trespassing, affirmatively

                                            32
asserted their beneficial ownership of the land, and argued that their aboriginal title to the
land precluded the United States from requiring grazing permits. In United States v. Dann,
Judge Thompson found that the December 6, 1979 judgment in the ICC Docket 326-K
was the date that Western Shoshone’s title to the Nevada land was extinguished, as
opposed to July 1, 1872, the date to which both the Western Shoshone Identifiable Group
and the government had stipulated was the takings date of the Western Shoshone
Identifiable Group’s land before the ICC in Docket 326-K. Judge Thompson also enjoined
the Dann sisters from using the lands located in Nevada, which the sisters had alleged
belonged to them, as a basis to allow their livestock to graze upon, without first complying
with the requirements of the Taylor Grazing Act of 1934, Pub. L. 73-482. Steve Feraca, a
Tribal Services Specialist for the BIA, wrote in a memorandum to the Chief of the Division
of Tribal Government Services for the BIA, dated May 6, 1980:

       In view of the [April 1980 district court] Thompson decision which cites a
       new taking date, December 6, 1979, I said that I could not recommend that
       a proposal for the funds be prepared until legal advice was forthcoming from
       the Solicitor [of the Department of the Interior] and the Department of
       Justice.

       On May 23, 1980, BIA reviewed the April 25, 1980 Order issued in Dann and
decided to try to move forward with preparing a distribution plan. The BIA concluded that
the April 25, 1980 Dann Order “in no way affects the mandate of the 1973 Indian
Judgment Funds Act,” and that “[w]e appreciate that it is possible to meet the statutory
deadlines,” for submitting a distribution plan.

       On June 20, 1980, the then Department of the Interior, Acting Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Indian Affairs, Ralph Reeser, made a formal request to the United States
Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs for a 90-day extension of the 180-day period
to submit a distribution plan to Congress. According to Mr. Reeser’s letter, “the 180-day
period for the submittal of a Secretarial plan ended on June 16, 1980.”

        On July 26, 1980, the BIA held a public hearing for Western Shoshone members
to discuss a potential distribution plan for the 326-K Fund. According to an August 1, 1980
article published in the Native Nevadan, 85 individuals testified or submitted written
statements at the July 26, 1980 public hearing regarding the distribution plan for the 326-
K Fund. According to the article, the majority of the individuals who testified were opposed
to immediate distribution of the funds. The article stated:

       In Summary, the majority of people who testified wanted the award money
       to be placed in an interest-bearing account until such times as the title issue
       is legally resolved. Those who testified in favor of an immediate distribution
       favored a 100 percent per capita distribution, with the 1/4 degree eligibility
       requirement.

       William Robert McConkie, the BIA official leading the July 26, 1980 public hearing
wrote a memorandum for his files, dated August 3, 1980, regarding his experience at the

                                             33
public hearing. According to Mr. McConkie, there appeared to be disagreement among
those that testified regarding the distribution plan, but such disagreement was allegedly
staged by three lawyers representing certain Western Shoshone groups. Mr. McConkie
wrote:

      Eighty persons testified. The hearing was adjourned at 5:30 p.m. The three
      lawyers were quite disruptive during the proceedings. They each
      represented essentially the same group. The Planning Committee had no
      lawyer. It was the apparent purpose of the lawyers opposed to the
      distribution to prevent the hearing, or secondarily to control the hearing and
      have their people discuss the various Federal District Court suits which
      dealt with obtaining the land rather than the judgment from the Court of
      Claims. Mrs. Carrie Dan [sic] was escorted from the hall after about 6 or 7
      minutes testimony by herself. She refused to limit her remarks and I directed
      a tribal policeman to escort her into the lobby.

        On August 4, 1980, Congress denied BIA’s requested 90-day extension to submit
a distribution proposal for the 326-K Fund. Senator John Melcher, Chairman of the Select
Committee on Indian Affairs, wrote to Ralph Reeser, Department of the Interior, Acting
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs, on August 4, 1980, noting that “[a]s a
general rule, such extensions are routinely granted upon Departmental request. However,
there are several factors which weigh against granting the extension in this case,”
including that “a significant number of Western Shoshone people oppose acceptance of
the award at this time,” and that,

      [t]here is pending litigation in the case of U.S. v. Dann in the U.S. District
      Court for the district of Nevada in which title to certain land and the date of
      compensable taking are still in issue. The outcome of that case could clearly
      have a strong bearing on the course of action the Congress, the Department
      and the Western Shoshone people might wish to pursue.

(underline in original). Mr. Melcher concluded by noting that “I trust the Department will
submit appropriate legislation early in the 97th Congress.”

       Following Congress’s denial of the BIA’s request for a 90-day extension on August
4, 1980, the BIA worked with the Western Shoshone to get a draft distribution plan ready
to submit to Congress. Although the BIA continued to work with the Western Shoshone,
the BIA was aware that actually submitting a plan to distribute the 326-K Fund to
Congress would likely have to await the outcome of the Dann sisters’ appeal of the August
25, 1980 District Court Order in United States v. Dann, in which Judge Thompson
established a takings date of the Western Shoshone’s Nevada land as December 7, 1979.
See United States v. Dann, Civil No. R-74-60, Order.

      On December 30, 1980, Jay Suager, the Acting Director of the Office of Indian
Services at the BIA wrote to Senator Alan Cranston of California, stating:

                                            34
      [A] significant faction among the Western Shoshone people rejects the
      award and is seeking title to the land. In particular, this faction is supporting
      the continuance of litigation in United States v. Dann which pertains to
      Western Shoshone land title issues. Probably, all interested parties will
      have to await the outcome of the appeal in the Dann litigation.

      The Secretary of the Interior, pursuant to direction of the Act of October 19,
      1973, 87 Stat. 466, undertook, through the Commissioner of Indian Affairs,
      to prepare a plan for the distribution of the judgment funds within 180 days
      of the appropriation of those funds. Such plan was not completed. A request
      for a 90-day extension . . . was denied by the Senate Select Committee on
      Indian Affairs. Accordingly, under the 1973 Act authorizing legislation will
      be necessary before there may be any distribution of the judgment funds.
      That should present sufficient opportunity to address questions which may
      be raised by United States v. Dann.

       As of August 20, 1981, approximately one year after Congress denied the BIA’s
90-day extension, an internal government memorandum sent from Kenneth Payton, the
BIA Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs, to the BIA Phoenix Area Director,
stated:

      Primarily due to the status of the Dann litigation, in which some Western
      Shoshone people assert title to a vast portion of Nevada, the Senate Select
      Committee on Indian Affairs denied an extension of the date for the
      submittal of a Secretarial plan. The case is on appeal. If the plaintiffs’
      assertions are denied, we will then propose legislation. The existence of the
      Dann litigation, however, does not inhibit further discussion with the eligible
      Western Shoshone entities on the programing potential of these funds. On
      the contrary, such possibilities can be thoroughly examined and proposals
      developed during this time. This subject was considered at previous general
      Western Shoshone meetings and with the individual tribes prior to the
      Hearing of Record of July 26, 1980.

       On January 22, 1982, in an internal BIA memorandum sent from the BIA Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs to the BIA Phoenix Area Director, the BIA Deputy
Assistant Secretary stated that, “we should now begin working with the beneficiaries on
the development of the legislation which will be required in this instance.” The BIA Deputy
Assistant Secretary also stated in the January 22, 1982 memorandum:

      To be kept in mind during this process is the fact that the actual introduction
      of legislation may not be possible until the Dann litigation is completed.
      However, this should not preclude beginning the process of working with
      the tribes to clarify their desires with respect to programming and to initiate
      appropriate planning with them providing such technical assistance as
      requested and as resources permit.

                                             35
       The January 22, 1982 memorandum also amended the results of the BIA’s
research report, dated March 11, 1980, which had originally listed twelve beneficiary
groups for the 326-K Fund, reducing the number of beneficiaries of 326-K Fund to the
following four groups:

          1. Te-Moak Bands of Western Shoshone Indians (which includes the Elko,
             Battle Mountain, South Fork and Wells bands),
          2. Duckwater Shoshone Tribe of the Duckwater Reservation,
          3. Yomba Shoshone Tribe of the Yomba Reservation,
          4. Ely Indian Colony.

The January 22, 1982 memorandum also stated that the “remaining beneficiaries consist
of all other persons of Western Shoshone ancestry, in their individual capacity, who
otherwise meet the criteria detailed in the March 11, 1980, Results of Research Report.”

       On May 11, 1982, the BIA Phoenix Area Director held a meeting with leaders of
the Te-Moak Bands, Duckwater, Yomba, and Ely Indian Colony, the four identified
beneficiary groups of the 326-K Fund. Following the May 11, 1982 meeting, Thomas
Luebben, an attorney representing the Western Shoshone Identifiable Group, wrote to
the BIA Phoenix Area Office on May 25, 1982 “to confirm the understandings” reached
between the Phoenix Area Office and the Western Shoshone Tribal leaders, which
included, in relevant part, the leaders’ request for “[a] commitment from the BIA to not
begin compiling a descendancy roll in anticipation of distribution of the Western Shoshone
judgment.” Mr. Luebben’s May 25, 1982 letter also requested from the BIA:

       A commitment from the BIA that the Interior Department will not attempt to
       draft legislation to distribute the Western Shoshone judgment prior to an
       actual written agreement between representatives of the United States and
       a Western Shoshone negotiating team (including primarily representatives
       of Western Shoshone tribal governments) on an appropriate draft of
       proposed legislation to achieve an overall settlement of Western Shoshone
       land claims and provide for distribution of the judgment funds.

      On June 8, 1982, the BIA Phoenix Area Director responded to Mr. Luebben’s May
25, 1982 letter in writing, stating that with regard to the descendancy roll request, “[s]ince
we cannot develop any kind of roll for distribution purposes without an approved plan, we
have no problem agreeing to this.” With regard to the draft legislation request, the BIA
Phoenix Area Director responded:

       As far as draft legislation for the distribution of the Western Shoshone
       judgment, we can decide our course of action within the Area, however, we
       cannot make a commitment for the Central Office or the Department. We
       expect any legislation developed would have the direct input of the affected
       Tribes and individuals that have an interest in the award.

                                             36
       On May 19, 1983, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed
the August 25, 1980 District Court Order in United States v. Dann and remanded the case
back to the District Court for further proceedings regarding “factual issues of whether
aboriginal title had been preserved to the date of trial and whether the Danns are entitled
to share in it.” United States v. Dann, 706 F.2d 919, 923 (9th Cir. 1983) (“We reverse the
judgment granting the injunction and remand for further proceedings.”), rev’d, 470 U.S.
39 (1985).

       According to a July 28, 1983 internal BIA memorandum, “[s]ince the recent Federal
court decision regarding the Dann case is now widely known, the various entities that
have an interest in the Western Shoshone Land Claim have been actively pursuing their
individual interests.” The memorandum further stated:

       The entities we [the BIA] are aware of are: 1. Te-moak Tribe of Western
       Shoshone Indians. This groups appears to have a split as to what they want.
       . . . 2. Western Shoshone Sacred Lands Association. . . . Their main
       contention is that by the Treaty of Ruby Valley, [17] they never lost land title
       to their aboriginal lands. The Dann decision [by the Ninth Circuit] appears
       to support that premise. . . . 3. Tribal Chairmen Association. . . . I believe
       they support land plus money concept. 4. Great Basin Western Shoshone
       Descendants. . . . Their main interest is a per capita distribution and have
       not really been supportive of the additional land issue. . . . 5. Western
       Shoshone Land Federation. This is the newest entity to come upon the
       scene, and purportedly represent all of the above entities as a unified
       Shoshone group. Since I am not totally aware of what has been negotiated
       out among themselves with all of the already described interests, I am
       surmising that this group supports the per capita distribution, land return
       and tribal program concepts. It is my understanding that it will be through
       this group that negotiations with Federal officials to develop a
       comprehensive legislative package relative to the Western Shoshone Land
       Claim will be conducted.

17 On October 1, 1863, the United States entered into the Ruby Valley Treaty with the
“Western Bands of the Shoshone Nation of Indians,” which, according to the treaty, was
a “Treaty of Peace and Friendship” between the United States and the western bands of
Shoshone Indians. The Ruby Valley Treaty authorized non-Indians to cross the Shoshone
land located in Nevada on several already established traveled routes, such as train, mail,
and telegraph lines, without “molestation or injury” from the western bands of Shoshone
Indians. It also granted the United States the right to establish military posts in Shoshone
lands, and that such lands “may be explored and prospected for gold and silver, or other
minerals.” In exchange for the western bands of Shoshone Indians’ “inconvenience”
resulting from the use of the travel routes in their land by “white men,” the United States
agreed to compensate the western bands of the Shoshone Indians $5,000.00 per year
for twenty years, a total of $100,000.00.

                                             37
       Additionally, following the Ninth Circuit’s 1983 decision in United States v. Dann,
the BIA notified Congress that it could not submit proposed legislation at that time. The
Director of the Office of Indian Services at the BIA wrote to Congresswoman Barbara
Vucanovich, who was one of Nevada’s Congressional representatives at the time, noting:

       For some time we and the Congress have been awaiting a Court of Appeals
       decision in the Dann case, Carrie and Mary Dann having contended that
       the Western Shoshone still retain aboriginal title to the Nevada portion of
       the lands claimed. On May 19, 1983, the Court ruled that no evidence had
       been presented by the Government establishing that aboriginal title had
       been lost. We do not know whether this decision will be appealed to the
       Supreme Court.[18] Meanwhile, the Western Shoshone people are
       scheduling a series of general meetings in an effort to develop a proposal
       that would incorporate the distribution of the funds and the utilization of the
       subject lands. The situation has become, as a result of the decision,
       extremely confused and under the circumstances we are most reluctant to
       submit proposed legislation for only the monetary award.

18 The Dann case was appealed to the United States Supreme Court in 1985, which found
that the Western Shoshone peoples’ tribal title to their aboriginal land passed to the
government when the 326-K Fund was awarded to the Western Shoshones in the ICC
case, Docket No. 326-K, and placed into the United States Treasury in December 1979.
See United States v. Dann, 470 U.S. 39, 49-50 (1985). The Dann case returned to lower
courts for further proceedings regarding whether the Dann sisters had individual
aboriginal rights, as opposed to tribal rights, in the Nevada lands at issue. See id. at 50.
The Dann case was appealed once more to the United States Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit in 1989, which ruled that the Dann sisters had limited individual title rights,
“restricted” to the land that they or their lineal ancestors actually occupied prior to
November 26, 1934, the date that the federal government withdrew the Nevada lands in
question from entry and settlement by the public. See United States v. Dann, 873 F.2d
1189, 1199, 1200-01 (9th Cir. 1989). Following the 1989 Ninth Circuit appeal, the Dann
sisters pursued their land claim in the late 1990s before the Organization of American
States’ Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, an international tribunal, which
found, on December 27, 2002, in favor of the Dann sisters’ claim for title to their Nevada
lands, and made the “RECOMMENDATION[]” that the sisters be “[p]rovide[d]” with “an
effective remedy, which includes adopting the legislative or other measures necessary to
ensure respect for the Danns’ right to property.” See Mary Dann and Carrie Dann v.
United States, Case 11.140, Inter-Am. Comm’n H.R., Report No. 75/02, 47 (2002)
(capitalization in original). The United States government, however, did not adopt the
Inter-American Commission on Human Right’s December 27, 2002 recommendation. On
July 7, 2004, Congress passed the Claims Distribution Act of 2004, which provided for a
monetary per-capita distribution of the 326-K Fund to qualifying Western Shoshone
members, but did not provide the Dann sisters or any other Western Shoshone members
with title to their ancestral lands.
                                             38
       Undoubtedly, considerable time will have elapsed before the Western
       Shoshone people, the Secretary of the Interior and the Congress are able
       to reach agreement in this complex matter.

Also, on December 15, 1983, the Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs at the BIA wrote
Senator Mark Andrews, the Chairman of the United States Senate Select Committee on
Indian Affairs, noting that it was “premature and not in the best interest of either the tribes
or the government” to introduce proposed legislation. The Assistant Secretary for Indian
Affairs at the Department of the Interior also noted:

       Presently, groups of Western Shoshone have been discussing proposed
       legislation to secure both the monetary settlement and a portion of the lands
       in Nevada. A particularly difficult problem exists with respect to any land
       restoration approach due to the virtual absence of a successor tribe or tribes
       representative of all the recommended beneficiaries. Consequently,
       meaningful planning has not yet occurred.

       In November of 1984, the BIA began negotiations with the “Western Shoshone
National Council,” regarding potential distribution legislation for the 326-K Fund. The
Western Shoshone National Council was comprised of various Western Shoshone tribal
governments and political organizations and was designated by the Western Shoshone
as the entity to represent the Western Shoshone in negotiations with the United States.

       On May 20, 1985, the BIA received the Western Shoshone National Council’s
“PROPOSAL TO COMPLETE DATA GATHERING,” (Proposal) in which the Western
Shoshone National Council stated that they would need the next three years to prepare
for their negotiations with the BIA. (capitalization in original). The Proposal detailed the
various steps the Western Shoshone National Council would have to complete before
entering into negotiations. The steps included:

       [E]stablish a data base for their land and land use; organize for negotiations,
       determine general land control assignments, and determine general policy
       for joint areas; develop preliminary policy for land use and preliminary land
       development plans; and, enter into and complete negotiations with the
       Federal government and define terms that can be incorporated into a
       legislated agreement.

According to the “Work Schedule” included in the Proposal, the Western Shoshone
National Council stated that certain “Work Products,” such as “Historical Analysis,”
“Demographic Description of Population,” “Resources Inventory,” and “Land Interests,”
would be completed between one to three years, and that these work products would be
“needed for negotiations and development of agreement terms.” (capitalization in
original).

      According to the BIA, by mid-1986, whatever negotiations had taken place
between the government and the Western Shoshone National Council came to a virtual

                                              39
standstill. On June 30, 1986, the BIA sent the Western Shoshone National Council a
letter, stating that, “[a]fter over two years of negotiations, I am truly sorry that our
respective positions remain so far apart. . . . [T]he Department does not recognize any
valid legal claim to Western Shoshone tribal ancestral lands,” and “the Department
believes further negotiations at this time would be futile.” As of July 27, 1986, as
evidenced by a memorandum from the Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs to the
Phoenix Area Office, negotiations between the government and the Western Shoshone
National Council were “not proceeding,” and the government “consider[ed] the
negotiations to have been suspended indefinitely.”

         In light of the standstill in negotiations, on October 28, 1986, Senator Paul Laxalt,
Senator Chic Hecht, Congresswoman Vucanovich, and then Congressman Harry Reid,
of the Nevada Congressional delegation, wrote to the Secretary of Interior and noted that,
“[i]f the Shoshones do have a viable claim to private lands (approximately two million
acres), the Nevada Congressional delegation is concerned that the Shoshone land rights
question be resolved as quickly as possible without disruption of private titles.” The
Nevada Congressional delegation recognized that organizing a distribution for the 326-K
Fund had been complicated, stating that,

       [t]he extent of continuing Western Shoshone land rights has been a
       frustrating problem for the Western Shoshone Indians, private parties, and
       governmental agencies for many years now. Although four negotiating
       sessions between Western Shoshone National Council delegates and the
       Department of the Interior have taken place over the last year, little progress
       has been made toward a comprehensive solution.

The Nevada Congressional delegation’s October 28, 1986 communication also noted
that,

       the United States Claims Court and the Senate Select Committee on Indian
       Affairs agree that a comprehensive legislative solution will be necessary.
       The present situation only promises to get worse. Once again, we urge the
       Department to meet with the Western Shoshone National Council to find a
       common basis for moving forward. While we realize that financial demands
       upon the Department are heavy, we urge you to consider resolution of the
       Shoshone controversy a priority, and to assist the Shoshones with
       necessary funding.

        As of mid-1987, Congress did not believe a final resolution to the Western
Shoshone judgment claim was “immediate.” According to a May 29, 1987 letter from
Senator Daniel Inouye, Chairman of the United States Senate Select Committee on
Indian Affairs to Senator Hecht and Senator Reid, it appears that the Western Shoshone
National Council requested a Congressional hearing to discuss the Western Shoshone
judgment claims. Senator Inouye stated in his letter that “I do not believe that a hearing
will lead to any immediate solution to this problem,” but, that such a hearing could at least
establish “a basis for a fair resolution of this matter.”

                                             40
       There also was disagreement within the government as to how to proceed with
negotiations with the Western Shoshone National Council. The Chairman and Vice-
Chairman of the United States Senate Select Indian Committee on Indian Affairs believed
that future negotiations were dependent on the Western Shoshone National Council
receiving sufficient funding for their requested “study to develop an inventory of the
aboriginal lands and other natural resources which were the subject of the 1863 Treaty
of Ruby Valley and the judgment of the Indian Claims Commission in Docket No. 326-K.”
According to a July 28, 1987 letter from the Chairman and Vice-Chairman of the United
States Senate Select Indian Committee on Indian Affairs to the Assistant Secretary of
Indian Affairs with the Bureau of Indian Affairs at the Department of the Interior, “[t]he
project that the Western Shoshone National Council now proposes would appear to be
essential in order to establish a frame-work for future negotiations,” and “we strongly urge
that the Bureau of Indian Affairs join with ANA [Administration for Native Americans] to
assure sufficient funds are made available to complete this project in a timely fashion.”
The Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs with the Bureau of Indian Affairs, however,
disagreed with the Chairman and Vice-Chairman, and responded to the letter on August
12, 1987, stating:

       [T]he Western Shoshone have been compensated in the ‘usual practice’ for
       the loss of their aboriginal title and there is no further legal claim against the
       United States. Consequently, we do not perceive a need to survey their
       entire historical use area as that matter was addressed at length in the
       [Indian Claims] Commission and Court of Claims proceedings.

(brackets added).

        As of August 1988, negotiations with the Western Shoshone National Council were
still suspended, with no known date for re-opening negotiations. According to an August
3, 1988 BIA Phoenix Area briefing paper prepared for the Secretary of Interior,
“negotiations have been suspended indefinitely” and “subsequent communication had not
changed the situation.”

        Despite the lack of negotiations between the government and the Western
Shoshone National Council, on September 28, 1989, Congresswoman Vucanovich
proposed H.R. 3384, a distribution plan of the 326-K Fund. The Western Shoshone tribal
governments strongly objected to the introduction of the bill. The Te-Moak Tribe of
Western Shoshone Indians were “extremely angry” that H.R. 3384 was introduced without
“consultation with the Western Shoshone National Council and without the approval of
any of the nine Western Shoshone tribal governments.” H.R. 3384 also was opposed by
the staff at the Department of the Interior. According to an October 13, 1989 document
from the BIA Acting Phoenix Area Director to the Assistant Secretary of the Interior
commenting on H.R. 3384, “we [Phoenix Area Office] strongly recommend the proposal
be opposed by the Department.” According to the April 26, 1990 statement of Walter R.
Mills, Deputy to the Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs with the Bureau of Indian Affairs
at the Department of the Interior, before the United States House of Representatives’

                                              41
Congressional Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, Mr. Mills indicated, on behalf of
the Department of the Interior, “[w]e strongly oppose enactment of H.R. 3384” for several
reasons. For example, according to Mr. Mills, “[t]he timeframes cited in the bill for
publication of regulations, the time allotted for applications to enroll, and the time cited for
the preparation of the Final Judgment Roll, are unrealistically short.” According to H.R.
3384, as introduced, the Secretary of Interior had one hundred and twenty days from the
enactment of the Act to complete a proposed judgment roll, sixty days from the disposition
of appeals from individuals denied inclusion on the judgment roll to publish the final
judgment roll, and sixty days from publication of the final roll to distribute the 326-K Fund
on a per capita basis. The bill was not passed.

       Thereafter, the Department of the Interior sent a letter, dated November 14, 1990,
to the Western Shoshone National Council, stating:

       Our understanding is that the Nevada Congressional delegation and the
       Senate Select Committee are willing to act on the distribution of the funds
       in Docket 326-K and develop a settlement of outstanding land issues as
       they relate to Western Shoshone lands. Neither the Department of the
       Interior nor the Bureau of Indian Affairs have any immediate solutions to
       these exceedingly complex issues. However, when a new Congress
       convenes in January we certainly will be available to work with the Congress
       in developing a resolution of these issues.

(capitalization in original).

       On November 22, 1991, Congresswoman Vucanovich introduced a second bill,
H.R. 3897, to distribute the 326-K Fund. Denis Homer, the acting BIA director of Tribal
Services testified before Congress on behalf of the Department of the Interior, and stated
that the Department had concerns about the “tight timeframes specified in the legislation
[H.R. 3897] in which the Secretary is to fulfill certain administrative responsibilities,”
similar to the concerns the Department of the Interior had with H.R. 3384. Mr. Homer
stated that “[s]ome of these timeframes would be impossible to meet.” Mr. Homer
explained:

       While the process of updating the tribal rolls may be completed in a
       relatively short period of time, the overall technical process of bringing the
       supplemental rolls into final form could take far longer than the timeframes
       allotted in the bill. lf the supplemental roll is considered a lineal descendancy
       roll, regulations necessary for its implementation will require considerable
       time to formulate, approve, and publish. The 90-day timeframe in section 5
       to develop regulations to implement the provisions of the legislation and the
       11-month period to publish the final judgment roll provided in section 2(c)
       do not provide adequate time to prepare a lineal descendancy roll in light of
       Administrative Procedures Act requirements.

                                              42
        In 1992, H.R. 3897 was not voted out of committee. According to a June 19, 1992
letter from Congressman George Miller, Chairman of the United States House of
Representatives Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, to Congresswoman
Vucanovich regarding H.R. 3897,

       [i]n reviewing the record, there still appears to be a wide diversity of opinions
       and suggested approaches regarding the distribution of the Docket
       Funds[19] and resolution of other issues.

       While I believe we are closer to a resolution of this issue than we were in
       the 101st Congress, the Committee will not consider the measure until there
       is more of a consensus among the tribal governments.

(capitalization in original).

       By mid-1992, the government was attempting to re-open negotiations with the
Western Shoshone. According to a July 27, 1992 letter from the Department of the Interior
to the Chairman of the United States Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs, the
Department of the Interior was contacting individuals to participate in an interagency
negotiating team to assist the Chairman “in the development of a legislative solution to
the claims of the Western Shoshone tribal governments against the United States.”
According to a June 22, 1992 letter from the Chairman of the United States Senate Select
Committee on Indian Affairs to the Department of the Interior, “[i]t appears that there is a
consensus growing among leaders of Shoshone tribal governments and other interested
parties toward a comprehensive solution to the Western Shoshone claims.” By June of
1993, the government was still working towards opening negotiations with the Western
Shoshone. According to a June 6, 1993 letter from Secretary of the Interior, Bill Babbitt,
to Senator Inouye, “we will be contacting representatives of the Western Shoshone Bands
for preliminary discussions in the near future.”

       Also, during this time, certain governmental actors were not in favor of a 100% per
capita distribution of the funds, as was proposed in prior bills which had not been passed
by Congress. According to a January 7, 1994 letter from Congressman William
Richardson, Chairman of the United States House of Representatives Subcommittee of
Native American Affairs, which was part of the United States House of Representatives
Committee on Natural Resources, to Secretary of the Interior Babbitt, “[t]he
Subcommittee on Native American Affairs generally would frown on any plan that does
not include provisions for tribal economic development and long range economic
planning.” Further, Congressman Richardson stated that, “I feel it is of paramount

19The 326-A-1 Fund were deposited into the United States Treasury for investment by
the government on March 25, 1992. At the time that Congressman Miller wrote the June
19, 1992 letter, the Department of Interior was holding in trust the 326-K Fund and the
326-A-1 Fund. The 326-A-3 Fund, the third and last of the tribal trust funds at issue in this
case, was not deposited into the United States Treasury to be held in trust by the
Department of Interior until September 15, 1995.
                                              43
importance that the docket funds of the Western Shoshone should not merely be divided
up on a per capita basis and distributed.” He also stated that “[i]n hearings before this
Committee, Members have commented that the Western Shoshone should be provided
with some land base.” (capitalization in original). On September 15, 1995, the 326-A-3
Funds, the last of plaintiffs’ three tribal trust funds, were deposited into the United States
Treasury for investment by the government.

       In early 1997, consensus among the Te-Moak Bands of Western Shoshone
Indians, one of the four Western Shoshone tribes recognized by the BIA as a beneficiary
of the 326-K Fund in the BIA’s January 22, 1982 amended research report, began to
emerge. The Te-Moak Bands of Western Shoshone Indians was comprised of the Elko,
Battle Mountain, South Fork, and Wells bands. The other three Western Shoshone tribes
recognized by the BIA as beneficiaries of the 326-K Fund in the January 22, 1982
amended research report were the Duckwater Shoshone Tribe, the Yomba Shoshone
Tribe, and the Ely Indian Colony. According to a March 3, 1997 internal BIA
memorandum, the Te-Moak Tribal Council, the governing group for the Te-Moak Bands
of Western Shoshone Indians, was planning to “pursue 100% distribution to 1/4 degree
of Docket 326-K.” The March 3, 1997 BIA memorandum also noted that the Te-Moak
Tribal Council would pursue “a separate or companion proposal to seek restoration of
land in Western Shoshone country,” and that both proposals, “could run concurrently and
not necessarily have to be tied together.” The March 3, 1997 BIA memorandum also
discussed a March 1, 1997 meeting between the BIA and two hundred members of
Western Shoshone tribes. According to the March 3, 1997 BIA memorandum, after the
March 1, 1997 meeting was over, “several people came up to tell us [the BIA] that they
support the proposed Te-Moak plan but did not want to stand up in front of the audience
and express themselves.”

        Also, according to a March 7, 1997 internal BIA memorandum from the
Superintendent of the Eastern Nevada Agency to the Phoenix Area Director, other
Western Shoshone tribes, apart from the Te-Moak Bands of Western Shoshone Indians,
would potentially be introducing to the BIA their own version of a potential distribution plan
for the 326-K Fund. According to the March 7, 1997 internal BIA memorandum:

       The Te-Moak Tribe will be sending a copy of their plan to the other three
       tribes named in the results of research. The purpose is to try and get the
       four proposed plans submitted about the same time so resolution could be
       achieved quickly. Duckwater has already presented their plan to the federal
       negotiating team. Ely will be supporting the Te-Moak Plan. We do not know
       what Yomba will do, rumors are they will parallel the Duckwater plan.

(capitalization in original). Despite the Te-Moak Tribal Council’s emerging consensus in
favor of a distribution plan for the 326-K Fund, the BIA was not optimistic that distribution
plan legislation would be passed by Congress for the 326-K Fund in the near-term. On
May 15, 1998, Donna Peterson, BIA Branch Chief of the Tribal Government Services sent
a memorandum to the BIA Phoenix Area Director, stating that the BIA did “not anticipate
a final distribution plan being presented to Congress by the end of this year.” Ms. Peterson

                                             44
also noted that, “we do anticipate the development of a payment roll will be a tremendous
and expensive task once the distribution plan is approved. Both the Eastern and Western
Nevada Agencies have been very cognizant of this fact and are working along with the
tribes in maintaining current tribal rolls.” (capitalization in original).

       Beginning in 1998, support from various Western Shoshone tribes in favor of a
monetary distribution of the 326-K Fund and the setting aside of the 326-A-1 and 326-A-
3 Funds as educational trust funds began to increase. In 1998, the BIA attended two
public hearings held by the Western Shoshone Steering Committee, a “group of individual
Western Shoshones that have organized to try and prepare a distribution plan,” for a vote
of approval a draft distribution proposal, in which the 326-K Fund would be fully distributed
on a 100% per capita basis and the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds would be placed into a
permanent education trust fund. The vote at the two meetings was that 1230 Western
Shoshones were in favor of the draft proposal, while 53 were against the proposal.

       On December 1, 1998, the BIA Phoenix Area Director wrote to the Deputy
Commissioner for Indian Affairs at the BIA, noting that “an overwhelming majority of adult
Western Shoshones favor distribution.” In addition, according to a 1999 letter from Elko
Band representatives to Bruce Babbitt, the Secretary of Interior at that time, the Elko Band
representatives, co-chairmen of the Western Shoshone Claims Steering Committee, the
committee that voted in favor of a distribution plan at two public hearings in 1998, noted
that “at this point we feel it is both reasonable and prudent to move forward,” and “we
would be most appreciative of the Department of Interior’s assistance in promoting the
‘Western Shoshone Claims Distribution Act’[20] as the ‘Act’ enters and progresses through
the congressional process.” The Elko Band representatives further stated that they are
the “largest number (approx. 1500) of Western Shoshone enrollees,” and, therefore,
wrote to the Secretary “on behalf of the ‘majority’ of Western Shoshone people.”
(emphasis in original). Also, between February and March of 1999, the Fallon Paiute
Shoshone Tribe, “the second largest band of Shoshones in the state of Nevada,”
numbering approximately 601 eligible Western Shoshone beneficiaries of the 326-K
docket, the Elko Band Council, the “largest Band of Western Shoshone in the State of
Nevada,” and the Western Shoshone of the Duck Valley Reservation, numbering
“approximately 400 direct descendants of eligible Western Shoshone who are possible
beneficiaries of Docket 326-K,” each passed resolutions in favor of Congress passing the
Western Shoshone Claims Distribution Act.

        By June 7, 1999, the BIA was drafting proposed legislation as requested by various
groups of Western Shoshone. According to a June 7, 1999 email from Daisy West, a BIA
Tribal Relations Officer, to Pat Gerard, whose specific employment position is not
identified in the email, but who appears to be another BIA employee, Ms. West was

20 The “Western Shoshone Claims Distribution Act,” was the act that the Western
Shoshones voted in favor of during the two public hearings in 1998 and which proposed
to distribute the 326-K Fund on a 100% per capita basis to individuals of ¼ Western
Shoshone blood.
                                             45
“working on the draft legislation for the Western Shoshone Judgment Funds” and
requested from Pat Gerard the “current balances” of plaintiffs’ three tribal trust funds.

        During the early 2000s, Senator Reid, Senator John Ensign, and Congressman
James Gibbons, members of the Nevada Congressional delegation, introduced
legislation for the distribution of plaintiffs’ three tribal trust funds. On May 9, 2000, the
Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs with the Bureau of Indian Affairs at the Department
of the Interior submitted proposed draft legislation to “‘authorize the Use and Distribution
of the Western Shoshone Judgment Funds in Docket Nos. 326-K, 326-A-1 and 326-A-3’”
to the Speaker of the House. (capitalization in original). The Assistant Secretary stated in
the letter to the Speaker of the House:

       Although the governing bodies of three of the four successor tribes, due to
       the dynamics of tribal politics, have changed their position, or been silent
       until recently concerning the legislative proposal for the use of these funds,
       the individual Western Shoshone have been anxious for quite some time to
       have these funds distributed.

The Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs with the Bureau of Indian Affairs at the
Department of the Interior also stated:

       We are confident that the Western Shoshone want these funds distributed
       as quickly as possible. We also believe that the best interests of the
       Western Shoshone will not be served by providing additional time for
       successor tribes to reach a consensus on the division and distribution of the
       land claims funds in Docket 326-K.

       On June 27, 2000, Senator Reid introduced S. 2795, Western Shoshone Claims
Distribution Act, which, however, did not pass during the 106th Congress. On September
6, 2001, Congressman Gibbons introduced H.R. 2851, Western Shoshone Claims
Distribution Act in the United States House of Representatives Committee on Natural
Resources, which, however, also did not pass. On November 14, 2002, Senator Reid
tried again and introduced S. 958, Western Shoshone Claims Distribution Act, which was
passed by the United States Senate, but later died before the United States House of
Representatives Committee on Natural Resources.

        On April 29, 2003, the BIA Office of Trust Funds Management met to discuss the
investment performance of plaintiffs’ three tribal trust funds at issue in the above-
captioned case. The meeting was memorialized in a one-page document, dated April 29,
2003, which stated, in part, “[a]s the securities mature, reinvest the principal and interest
not to exceed two year [sic]. The tribes at some point in the future may settle and distribute
the funds.” The above document also stated under the “Comments” section:

       The four successor Western Shoshone Tribes eligible to share in this award
       include Te-Moak, Ely, Duckwater, and Yomba. Also tribes with a significant
       number of tribal members of Western Shoshone descent eligible to share

                                             46
       in the distribution are Duck Valley, Fallon and Fort McDermitt. The proposed
       use of Docket 326-K is 100% per capita distribution, however, at least one
       of the successor tribes still opposes acceptance of the award for land sale.
       The proposed use of Dockets 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 are principal restriction
       [sic] of the award, with income to be used for educational grants and other
       forms of educational assistance to tribal members and descendants.

      In 2003, Congressman Gibbons of Nevada introduced H.R. 884 in the United
States House of Representatives. Also, in 2003, Senator Reid and Senator Ensign of
Nevada introduced S. 618 in the United States Senate. Congress passed both H.R. 884
and S. 618, which were almost identical bills, were reconciled, and became law on July
7, 2004, when President George W. Bush signed the Claims Distribution Act of 2004.
According to the Claims Distribution Act of 2004, the 326-K Fund was to be paid out on a
100% per capita distribution, whereas the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds were to be used
as education trust funds, from which individuals selected by the Western Shoshone
Educational Committee would receive educational grants. The principals of the 326-A-1
and 326-A-3 Funds were to be held in perpetual trust and the interest of those funds
would be distributed to selected individuals meeting certain eligibility criteria.

       On May 19, 2005, the BIA published a proposed rule regarding the process for
individuals to enroll in the judgment roll, as required under the Claims Distribution Act of
2004. See Preparation of Rolls of Indians, 72 Fed. Reg. 9,836 (Mar. 5, 2007) (to be
codified at 25 C.F.R. pt. 61). The comment period for the proposed rule was open for 162
days, from May 19, 2005 to October 28, 2005. Id. Copies of the proposed rule were mailed
to approximately 2,300 individuals and the BIA held two public meetings for the purpose
of discussing the proposal. Id. The first meeting was held on August 20, 2005 in Elko,
Nevada, which approximately 500 individuals attended. Id. The second meeting was held
one week later, on August 27, 2005, in Reno, Nevada, which approximately 600
individuals attended. Id. The BIA also received written comments from 36 individuals
regarding the proposed rule. Id.

       On October 25, 2005, the Office of Trust Funds Management at the BIA met again
to discuss the 326-K, 326-A-1, and 326-A-3 Funds, and documented the meeting, noting,
“JA.9087.691 Funds [326-A Funds] are invested in short, intermediate and long
securities. JA.9334.697 Receipt of award: as the securities mature, reinvest the principal
and interest not to exceed 2008 [i.e., not to exceed a maturity of three years]. Settlement
of docket 326-K is in the horizon.” (capitalization in original).

       On February 12, 2007, approximately two and a half years after the enactment of
the Claims Distribution Act of 2004, Daisy West, BIA Chief, Division of Tribal Government
Services, wrote an email to Robert Craff, BIA Regional Trust Administrator within the
Western and Navajo Office of the Special Trustee for American Indians, and one of
defendant’s fact witness at trial, stating:

       The final enrollment regulations are with Mike Olsen for his signature. Once
       the regulations are signed they will be published in the Federal Register and

                                            47
       become effective 30 days after the date of publication. The first distribution
       of funds will be in approximately 2 to 3 years when the application period
       closes. At that time we will make a partial per capita to approximately 2,500
       individuals. . . . The balance of Docket 326-K funds will be distributed in 6
       to 10 years.

        On March 5, 2007, a little less than three years after the Claims Distribution Act of
2004 was enacted, the BIA published the final rule that established the process for
enrolling in the judgment roll. The final rule establishing the judgment roll enrollment
process was codified at 25 C.F.R. § 61.4(k) (2007). See Preparation of Rolls of Indians,
72 Fed. Reg. 9,836 (Mar. 5, 2007) (to be codified at 25 C.F.R. pt. 61).

       According to 25 C.F.R. § 61.4(k),

       (1) Under section 3(b)(1) of the Act of July 7, 2004, Pub. L. 108–270, 118
       Stat. 805, the Secretary will prepare a roll of all individuals who meet the
       eligibility criteria established under the Act and who file timely applications
       prior to a date that will be established by a notice published in the Federal
       Register. The roll will be used as the basis for distributing the judgment
       funds awarded by the Indian Claims Commission to the Western Shoshone
       Identifiable Group of Indians in Docket No. 326–K. To be eligible a person
       must:

              (i) Have at least ¼ degree of Western Shoshone blood;
              (ii) Be living on July 7, 2004;
              (iii) Be a citizen of the United States; and
              (iv) Not be certified by the Secretary to be eligible to receive a per
              capita payment from any other judgment fund based on an aboriginal
              land claim awarded by the Indian Claims Commission, the United
              States Claims Court, or the United States Court of Federal Claims,
              that was appropriated on or before July 7, 2004.

       (2) Indian census rolls prepared by the Agents or Superintendents at
       Carson or Western Shoshone Agencies between the years of 1885 and
       1940, and other documents acceptable to the Secretary will be used in
       establishing proof of eligibility of an individual to:

              (i) Be listed on the judgment roll; and
              (ii) Receive a per capita payment under the Western Shoshone
              Claims Distribution Act.

       (3) Application forms for enrollment must be mailed to Tribal Government
       Services, BIA–Western Shoshone, Post Office Box 3838, Phoenix, Arizona
       85030–3838.

                                             48
       (4) The application period will remain open until further notice.

25 C.F.R. § 61.4(k). An individual who was denied eligibility for enrollment in the judgment
roll could appeal the decision pursuant to the administrative appeal process set forth in
25 C.F.R. § 62. See 25 C.F.R. § 62.4 (2007) (“A person who is the subject of an adverse
enrollment action may file or have filed on his/her behalf an appeal.”).

       On April 5, 2007, the BIA began to send applications to individuals to enroll in the
judgment roll. By October 5, 2007, ninety days after the BIA began to send out
applications, the BIA had received 5,265 applications. Approximately two years later,
according to the BIA’s September 30, 2009 progress report, BIA had received 2,819 more
applications, for a total of 8,084 applications received as of September 2009. The
progress report also stated that as of September 2009, 341 applications were reviewed
and determined to be ineligible. The BIA also stated in that same update that “[t]he final
deadline [for receiving applications] will be published in the Federal Register.”

        On October 19, 2009, the BIA was in the process of establishing the Educational
Committee pursuant to section 4(a) of the Claims Distribution Act of 2004. The
Educational Committee was the group of Western Shoshone tribal leaders who would
select the winning individuals of educational grants to be paid from the interest earned on
the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds. According to the BIA’s October 19, 2009 update, “[f]ive
of the six groups have identified their representative and are providing the documentation
to confirm the appointments.” The update also stated that, “[o]nce the Educational
Committee is established, it will begin to develop the rules and procedures for approval
by the Secretary.”

         On May 20, 2010, the BIA published the deadline for receiving applications for
eligibility in the Federal Register. The notice stated that “[a]pplications must be received
by close of business (5 p.m. Mountain Time) August 2, 2010.” Deadline for Submission
of Applications To Be Included on the Roll of Western Shoshone Identifiable Group of
Indians for Judgment Fund Distribution, 75 Fed. Reg. 28,280 (May 20, 2010). The BIA
also had sent by mail notice to potential applicants of the deadline for receiving
applications. Some individuals, however, did not receive notice by mail, and, therefore
the BIA extended the deadline for submitting applications for these individuals to
December 31, 2010.

        According to a November 30, 2010 BIA progress report, introduced by both parties
as a joint exhibit at trial in the above-captioned case, the BIA had received 9,108
applications. Of these applications, 4,023 were determined eligible, 2,201 were
determined ineligible, and 2,576 were pending review. The BIA also stated that 308
appeals had been filed and that it had “begun the quality control review process for the
proposed partial payment targeted for February 2011.” On March 6, 2011, the first partial
distributions of the 326-K Fund were made to 3,187 individuals. The partial payment to
each individual was $22,013.00. On September 28, 2012, the BIA completed the final
judgment roll for the 326-K Fund, which contained a total of 5,415 individuals. Final
distributions from the 326-K Fund were made to eligible recipients via direct deposit to

                                            49
individuals’ bank accounts on September 29, 2012, and via check on October 2, 2012.
The individuals who received an initial partial payment, received a second payment of
$13,124.93, for a total of $35,137.93. The individuals who did not receive an initial partial
payment received a one-time, final payment of $35,137.93.

History after the Case was filed in the United States Court of Federal Claims

       On December 26, 2006, plaintiff Yomba Shoshone Tribe, one of the Western
Shoshone tribes recognized by the Department of the Interior as a member of the Western
Shoshone Identifiable Group, filed a complaint in the United States Court of Federal
Claims against the United States, resulting in the above-captioned case. The complaint
alleged that the government’s “mismanagement of Plaintiff’s trust funds and other trust
assets in Defendants’ custody and control,” caused plaintiff Yomba Shoshone Tribe
“damages not sounding in tort.” Since the filing of the complaint, more plaintiffs have
joined the case and plaintiffs have narrowed the time frame at issue in this case, seeking
damages from December 1979, when the 326-K Fund was deposited into the United
States Treasury, until September 2013, the last month for which there is available data of
the government’s investment of the three tribal trust funds at issue. On that same day,
the case was assigned to Judge Edward Damich. On February 22, 2007, Judge Damich
ordered a stay of the proceedings in light of ongoing settlement discussions between the
parties. On March 12, 2008, the complaint was amended adding individual plaintiffs
Maurice Frank-Churchill, Jerry Millet, and Virginia Sanchez, on behalf of the Western
Shoshone Identifiable Group.

        On March 28, 2008, defendant filed a motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ amended
complaint, arguing that plaintiff Yomba Shoshone Tribe cannot state a claim for relief that
would entitle it to money damages for “inadequate interest earnings to the tribe,” because
“[t]he Tribe has no right to any part of the distribution or interest that was earned during
the time the funds reside[d] in Government accounts.” (emphasis in original). Defendant
argued that according to the Claims Distribution Act of 2004, “Congress expressly
contemplated and directed that the entire fund [the 326-K Fund] be distributed per capita”
on an individualized basis and not to any tribe. (emphasis in original). Defendant also
argued that the Claims Distribution Act of 2004 similarly required that any interest earned
on the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds be distributed not to any tribe but to “individual
Shoshone members” for “the specific purpose of education-related assistance.”
Defendant argued that, in the alternative, all of the other Western Shoshone tribes were
necessary parties under Rule 19(a) of the Rules for United States Court of Federal Claims
(RCFC) (2008) and indispensable parties under RCFC 19(b), requiring dismissal,
pursuant to RCFC 12(b)(7) (2008) and RCFC 19, for failure to join all of the other Western
Shoshone tribes as necessary parties.

      On June 25, 2008, the complaint was amended for a second time, before Judge
Damich ruled on defendant’s March 28, 2008 motion to dismiss, adding tribal plaintiffs
Timbisha Shoshone Tribe and the Duckwater Shoshone Tribe, two additional Western
Shoshone Tribes recognized by the Department of the Interior as members of the
Western Shoshone Identifiable Group, bringing the total number of plaintiffs to six. The

                                             50
six plaintiffs, according to the June 25, 2008 amended complaint, were (1) tribal plaintiff
Yomba Shoshone Tribe, (2) tribal plaintiff Timbisha Shoshone Tribe, (3) tribal plaintiff
Duckwater Shoshone Tribe, (4) individual plaintiff Maurice Frank-Churchill, (5) individual
plaintiff Jerry Millet, and (6) individual plaintiff Virginia Sanchez, the current six plaintiffs
at issue in the above-captioned case.

       On October 31, 2008, Judge Damich issued an unpublished Opinion denying
defendant’s motion to dismiss, the first of two Opinions he issued in this case. Judge
Damich rejected defendant’s March 28, 2008 argument that tribal plaintiff Yomba
Shoshone Tribe 21 had no right to the distribution of the three tribal funds at issue because
the funds were to be distributed on an individualized basis, not a tribal basis. Judge
Damich found that “all three Tribal Plaintiffs—Yomba, Timbisha, and Duckwater
(collectively ‘the Tribes’)—are federally-recognized tribes with interests in the tribal trust
funds of the Western Shoshone Identifiable Group to which the Tribal Plaintiffs belong.”
W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. v. United States, 2008 WL 9697144, at *1. Judge Damich
explained that:

       As owners of tribal trust funds, the Tribes have the right to pursue their
       breach of trust claims against the Government for mismanagement of the
       tribal trust funds. The pro rata distribution mechanism in the Distribution Act
       is irrelevant because the Distribution Act does not divest the Tribes of any
       ownership interest in the trust funds and because the Tribes are not, in this
       case, challenging the distribution mechanism set forth in the Distribution
       Act.

Id. Judge Damich then stated that defendant “failed to show that the other Western
Shoshone tribes are necessary parties, because, under 28 U.S.C. § 1505 (2006), any
tribe may represent the Western Shoshone without joinder,” and that defendant

       failed to show that either complete relief could not be granted to the Western
       Shoshone in the absence of all the Western Shoshone tribes or that any of
       the parties to the litigation are subject to a substantial risk of incurring
       double, multiple, or otherwise inconsistent obligations by reason of the
       Tribes’ interest.

Id.

     On August 7, 2009, defendant filed its motion for reconsideration of Judge
Damich’s Opinion denying its motion to dismiss. Defendant repeated its allegation that

21 At the time that defendant filed its motion to dismiss, tribal plaintiff Yomba Shoshone
Tribe was the only tribal plaintiff involved in this case. As previously discussed, following
the filing of defendant’s motion to dismiss and before Judge Damich issued his Opinion
on defendant’s motion to dismiss, the plaintiffs amended their complaint for a second
time, adding two additional tribal plaintiffs, the Timbisha Shoshone Tribe and the
Duckwater Shoshone Tribe.
                                               51
the tribal plaintiffs were not the beneficial owners of the 326-K, 326-A-1 and 326-A-3
Funds and that the beneficial owners were “individuals” who qualified to receive a pro-
rata share of the 326-K Fund and an educational grant of the 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds
under the Claims Distribution Act of 2004. Defendant also argued that the tribal plaintiffs
failed to establish the requisite money-mandating duty owed to them in order to sustain
their breach of trust claims.

       On November 24, 2009, Judge Damich denied defendant’s motion for
reconsideration in an unpublished Opinion. See W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. v. United
States, 2009 WL 9389765, at *11. The court stated once again that the tribal plaintiffs are
the beneficial owners of the 326-K, 326-A-1 and 326-A-3 Funds. See id. at *6. The court
also explained that “insofar as the Tribal Plaintiffs are members of, and assert that they
are representatives of, the Western Shoshone Identifiable Group and are advancing its
claims under the Indian Tucker Act,” there was “no basis” for “Defendant’s argument that
the Tribal Plaintiffs do not have a money-mandating basis for jurisdiction in this Court or
otherwise lack standing to bring this action on behalf of the Western Shoshone Identifiable
Group.” Id. at *10.

       Judge Damich extended discovery in the case until May 11, 2012. Then, on June
7, 2012, the case was stayed, including expert discovery, pending the parties’ then
current settlement negotiations. Judge Damich subsequently lifted the stay on April 21,
2014, and the parties continued with expert discovery. On August 26, 2015, this case was
re-assigned to the undersigned, who set the case on a course to trial.

        For the liability trial, the parties submitted several pre-trial filings, including a joint
exhibit list of 433 joint exhibits, and various demonstrative exhibits. The court held a five-
day trial in Washington, D.C. Plaintiffs did not offer any fact witnesses at trial, but offered
two experts: Mr. Kevin Nunes, of Rocky Hill Advisors, as an expert on liability and
damages, and, Dr. Michael Goldstein, as a rebuttal expert to defendant’s liability expert
and defendant’s damages expert. For the liability trial plaintiffs also submitted as joint
exhibits an expert report addressing both liability and damages, co-authored by Mr.
Nunes and Peter Ferriero of Rocky Hill Advisors, and a rebuttal expert report, also co-
authored by Mr. Nunes and Mr. Ferriero. Plaintiffs’ expert report stated that the
“government breached its duty to invest prudently to maximize return” on the 326-K and
326-A Funds “through its failure to properly align the maturity capacity of WSIG’s
[Western Shoshone Identifiable Group’s] funds with the maturity structures of WSIG’s
investment portfolios.”

        According to the damages portion of plaintiffs’ expert report by Rocky Hill Advisors,
plaintiffs suffered $216,386,589.83 in damages due to the government’s mismanagement
of the 326-K Fund and $1,592,822.43 in damages due to the government’s
mismanagement of the 326-A Funds. The damages portion of plaintiffs’ expert report
stated that it employed the Barclays United States Treasury Index, a “passive benchmark”
index, “to compute the returns that reasonably should have been obtained through
prudent investment of WSIG’s trust funds.” The damages portion of plaintiffs’ expert report
based its damages model on its opinion that the 326-K Fund had an investment horizon

                                                52
of about fifteen years from 1980 to 2004, that it shortened to about seven and a half years
after the passage of Claims Distribution Act of 2004, and that it became very short-term
at the start of 2011, once the enrollment process for the judgment award was nearly
complete.

        For the liability trial, plaintiffs also submitted the rebuttal expert report of Dr.
Goldstein, which responded to the expert reports of the government’s liability expert, Dr.
Starks, and the government’s damages report, prepared by defendant’s expert, Dr.
Gordon J. Alexander. Dr. Goldstein’s report disagreed with defendant’s liability expert
report by Dr. Starks, which concluded that the government did not breach a fiduciary duty.
According to Dr. Goldstein’s report, the BIA “knew” that distribution process for plaintiffs’
three tribal trust funds at issue “would take a long time,” and, thus, a “prudent portfolio”
for plaintiffs’ three tribal trust funds “would have held more long-term investments.” Dr.
Goldstein’s report also disagreed with the government’s damages expert report submitted
by Dr. Alexander, which argued that plaintiffs’ damages request is “driven by
unprecedented and unexpected drops in interest rates,” and is “flawed and misleading”
because plaintiffs’ damages included the unexpected “capital gains,” the gains earned on
a bond from the unexpected decrease in interest rates. According to Dr. Goldstein, the
decrease in interest rates during the investment period at issue in the above-captioned
case, 1979-2013, “were not unexpected in the early 1980s,” based on “yield curve data”
and “contemporaneous discussions by the Federal Reserve.” In addition, Dr. Goldstein
argued that “it is important to recognize that there is no economic principle that asserts
one must strip out the impact of unexpected interest rate movements when calculating
damages.”

         At the liability trial, defendant offered two fact witnesses: Mr. Robert Winter, the
then-current Director of Trust Operations within the Office of Special Trustee for American
Indians, Department of the Interior, and Mr. Robert Craff, the Regional Fiduciary Trust
Administrator for the Eastern Oklahoma and Southern Plains Region at the Department
of the Interior, Office of the Special Trustee. Defendant also offered two experts at the
liability trial: Dr. Starks, as an expert on liability, and Mr. Justin Mclean,22 as an expert on
damages.

       Defendant submitted as two separate exhibits at the liability trial the expert report
and a supplemental expert report prepared by Dr. Starks regarding the government’s
alleged liability, but only in regard to the 326-K Fund. Dr. Starks’ expert report argued that
the “government acted prudently” when it invested the 326-K Fund during the entire
investment period at issue. Dr. Starks stated in her liability expert report:

22  At the liability trial, Dr. Alexander was originally scheduled to testify regarding the
government’s alleged damages. He was the author of the government’s expert reports
regarding damages. Dr. Alexander, however, became unavailable to testify at the liability
trial due to illness and, thus, Mr. Mclean became a substitute testifying expert. Mr. Mclean
had assisted Dr. Alexander in preparing the expert and supplemental reports, and as
stated at the liability trial, Mr. Mclean fully endorsed the opinions expressed in Dr.
Alexander’s expert and supplemental reports.
                                              53
      While it is my opinion that the Government would not have acted
      imprudently had it maintained the WSIG funds in shorter-term investments
      (due to the continued uncertainty, and unclear timeline of eventual
      disbursements), I also believe that moving the funds into securities with a
      somewhat longer WADTM [weighted average days to maturity] at this stage
      of the period [beginning around 1993] was within the range of prudence.
      Indeed, such a move could be seen as more desirable at this time (i.e.,
      relative to the beginning of the period) – both from an information
      perspective and also based on the available investment.

(emphasis in original). For the “balance of the period at issue,” i.e., mid 1990s to 2013,
Dr. Starks stated in her liability expert report:

      [I]t may have been optimal for the Government to target a slightly longer
      WADTM if it had reason to believe that a significant portion of the
      distributions would not be occurring at the front end of the anticipated
      distribution window. I have not seen evidence indicating that the
      Government had this understanding or the ability to forecast it based on the
      information at hand.

(emphasis in original) (footnote omitted). Dr. Starks concluded that “the investments
made by the Government for the WSIG portfolio were prudent given the totality of
information available to the Government a priori, and that the Government fulfilled its
fiduciary duty by making independent investment decisions to maximize return given
prudent investments.” (emphasis in original). Dr. Starks also indicated in her report that
“only hindsight suggests a portion of the WSIG’s trust funds could have safely been
invested longer-term.”

        Defendant also submitted as two separate joint exhibits at the liability trial the
expert report and supplemental expert report by Dr. Alexander, regarding the
government’s alleged damages in the above-captioned case. Dr. Alexander’s report
stated that the plaintiffs’ damages calculations for the 326-K Fund of approximately $216
million “is due to historical circumstances present during the damages period that were,
in part, unique and unknowable ex ante.” (emphasis in original). According to Dr.
Alexander’s expert report:

      [T]he major driver of the damages [in the damages portion of plaintiffs’
      expert report by Rocky Hill Advisors] is the unprecedented decline in
      interest rates over a period of three decades. That decline caused longer-
      term bonds to increase in value and earn returns in excess of their yields.
      Rocky Hill’s Investment Model [created by Mr. Nunes and Mr. Ferriero]
      would not necessarily have produced better earnings if interest rates had
      moved differently or circumstances had differed for the WSJF.

                                           54
Dr. Alexander also proposed twelve alternative damages models that are “based on the
assumption that the BIA should have used a ‘but-for’ portfolio different from what it
actually chose, but more reasonable than that suggested by RHA [Rocky Hill Advisors].”
The highest amount of damages proposed by Dr. Alexander’s alternative models was
$34,589,957.00. The lowest amount was zero dollars.

        At the liability trial, the parties’ liability experts each presented their analyses of the
investment horizon for the 326-K Fund during the thirty-three-year period at issue.
Plaintiffs’ liability expert, Mr. Nunes, presented an analysis of the investment horizon for
the 326-K Fund divided into roughly ten-year increments, and during direct-examination,
Mr. Nunes first discussed the evidence regarding the government’s investment of the 326-
K Fund from “‘79, when the funds were awarded,” and “all through this time period,”
referring to the 1980s. Mr. Nunes then discussed the government’s investment of the 326-
K Fund during the “1990s.” Mr. Nunes then testified about the “2000s” up until distribution
legislation was passed in July 2004. Following the enactment of distribution legislation in
July 2004, Mr. Nunes discussed the government’s investment of the 326-K Fund from
mid-2004 “up until 2011,” when the first distribution of the 326-K Fund occurred. Mr.
Nunes then discussed the final years of the thirty-three-year period at issue, which,
according to Mr. Nunes, began in 2011, with the first partial distribution made to qualifying
Western Shoshone members, and ended in September 2013.

        Similar to Mr. Nunes, at the liability trial, Dr. Starks, defendant’s liability expert,
presented an analysis of the investment horizon for the 326-K Fund by dividing the thirty-
three-year period into sub-periods which did not specifically identify a start or end date.
Dr. Starks first discussed the government’s investment of the 326-K Fund during the
“1980s,” and up through “1991,” when Congresswoman Vucanovich attempted for the
second time to pass distribution legislation for the 326-K Fund. Dr. Starks then discussed
the government’s investment of the 326-K Fund during the “mid-1990s,” which
defendant’s counsel tried to clarify during Dr. Starks’ direct examination as “about ’92 and
on for the next few years.” Dr. Starks then discussed the government’s investment of the
326-K Fund between 2000 and 2004. The next time period discussed by Dr. Starks at
trial was between 2004 and a “point in 2010,” although the exact date was not identified,
when the government, according to Dr. Starks, began to shorten the 326-K Fund for
distribution. The final time period discussed by Dr. Starks at trial was from “2011,” when
the distribution of the 326-K Fund began, until September 2013, the end of the investment
period at issue.

The Court’s June 13, 2019 Liability Opinion

       Regarding the liability Opinion issued by the court, the following statement was
included:

       The issue in the above-captioned case is whether the government prudently
       invested plaintiffs’ three tribal trust funds. Neither the statute, the applicable
       regulations, nor the Department of the Interior’s policies introduced at trial,
       however, attempt to offer a definition or examples of a “prudent” investment,

                                                55
recognizing, of course, that the particular factual circumstances and market
conditions at the time of the investment decision change what can be
considered a prudent investment at any given time. For example, 25 C.F.R.
§ 115.809, promulgated in 2001 following the creation of the Office of the
Special Trustee, the office within the Department of the Interior which took
over the responsibility of investing tribal trust funds from the BIA in 1996,
consistent with the statute, states that the government must prudently invest
tribal trust funds, but does not give further guidance. See 25 C.F.R. §
115.809 (“Tribes may recommend certain investments to OTFM, but the
recommendations must be in accordance with the statutory requirements
set forth in 25 U.S.C. §§ 161a and 162a. The OTFM will make the final
investment decision based on prudent investment practices.”).

In addition, as the trial record indicates, the Department of the Interior
issued various policies regarding the investment of tribal trust funds over
the investment period in question, but the policies did not give much
direction on which investment practices and investments might be
considered prudent or imprudent. Beginning with the first investment policy
issued by the BIA in 1966, the BIA noted that “[e]ach Area Office is
requested to review the amount of tribal trust funds each tribe in the
respective Areas has on deposit in the Treasury,” and that “[w]herever it
appears that the amount is in excess of foreseeable cash needs of the tribe,
discussions should be held with the tribal council and its wishes regarding
investment of the funds ascertained.” The 1966 policy statement also noted
that “[g]overnment-backed securities, while basically safe, can result in
losses unless held to maturity.” The 1966 policy, however, did not discuss
which types of investments were considered prudent for tribal trust funds.

         The next policy issued by the BIA was in a 1974 internal BIA
memorandum, which indicated that the BIA should “maximize returns on all
tribal, as well as individual, trust funds.” The 1974 policy memorandum also
noted that “[e]ach Area Director has the responsibility for determining if
surplus funds are available for investment purposes and notifying the
Branch of Investments, Albuquerque, to take the necessary action to invest
the funds.” The 1974 policy memorandum, however, did not explain under
what circumstances the government’s investment of a tribal trust fund might
satisfy the government’s goal to maximize returns or what constituted
prudent investment of tribal trust funds.

        The government also issued a further policy statement within its
report of its investments for tribal trust funds for fiscal years 1986 and 1987.
The report recognized that the government has the authority to invest tribal
trust funds pursuant to 25 U.S.C. § 162a and that the BIA should, “through
knowing the amounts required and when disbursements are necessary,”
“plan the timing of investment maturities to maximize interest rates and
earnings and also have the funds available when needed.” The report for

                                      56
       1986 and 1987, however, like past BIA investment policies, did not provide
       more specific guidance as to when the government’s investment of tribal
       trust funds might satisfy the duty of prudence.

       Next, the trial record includes a 1997 internal policy memorandum released
       by the Office of the Special Trustee, the office which took over the BIA’s
       investment of tribal trust funds in the 1996. The 1997 policy was updated
       with policy amendments by the Office of the Special Trustee in 1999, 2000,
       and 2005, and took its final form for the purposes of this case in 2005. The
       2005 policy was the policy in place up through the disbursement of the tribal
       trust funds at issue. According to the 2005 policy, an acceptable investment
       practice was to “purchase securities with the intent to hold each security
       until maturity,” i.e., a buy and hold strategy, as opposed to frequent trading
       of securities. The 2005 policy also indicated that unacceptable portfolio
       investments and practices included investing in any “corporate stock,” the
       purchase of “commercial mutual funds,” and “overtrading, adjusted trades
       or bond swapping.” In sum, the Department of the Interior’s investment
       policies issued throughout the years acknowledged the Department’s role
       as the trustee and investor of tribal trust funds and attempted to provide
       broad guidance to government officials as to what investment practices
       were prohibited by agency policy, what investment practices were
       encouraged, and offered general investment goals, including to maximize
       investment returns. Given the fluctuating market conditions and changing
       events regarding the timing of distribution for plaintiffs’ tribal trust funds,
       including the required actions the BIA would need to take in order pay-out
       the 326-K Fund, however, specific, formulaic guidance as to what practices
       constituted a “prudent” investment practice would have been very difficult
       to establish by the Department of the Interior or any other governmental
       body.

W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed. Cl.
at 622-23.

       Following the liability trial in the above captioned case and after a careful review
of the record, including the testimony, expert reports, and exhibits before the court, the
court divided its analysis of whether the government breached its fiduciary duty for the
326-K Fund over the approximately thirty-three-year investment period at issue into three
major sub-periods, December 1979 to November 1992, December 1992 to June 2004,
and July 2004 to September 2013. At times, the court further divided the three periods
into even smaller sub-periods in order to account for identifiable shifts in the government’s
investment approach for the 326-K Fund.23

23As explained in the June 13, 2019 liability Opinion: “Daily, weekly, monthly, or even
yearly analysis of the investment horizon for government’s investment of the 326-K Fund
was not undertaken by any of the experts and would have proven an expensive and
                                             57
        Initially, the court determined after the liability trial that the evidence before the
court indicates that defendant could have, and should have, become aware that the 326-
K Fund had a longer-term investment horizon between August 4, 1980 and November
1992, and, thus, should have at least partially invested the 326-K Fund in longer-term
securities. Defendant, however, consistently invested the 326-K Fund in short-term
securities between August 4, 1980 and November 1992, which prevented the fund from
obtaining higher returns and, therefore, breached the agency’s fiduciary duty to prudently
invest the 326-K Fund during that time.

       The court explained:

       Beginning in December 1992, the government significantly increased the
       average weighted maturity years to call of the 326-K Fund, reaching a peak
       of a little less than ten years by September 1993. Following the September
       1993 peak, the maturity structure of the 326-K Fund steadily declined to
       about an average weighted maturity years to call of a little less than five
       years by March 1997. Also, by March 1997, the 326-K Fund was no longer
       invested in any CDs, and instead invested in a mixture of agency, Treasury,
       and mortgage-backed securities. At trial, plaintiffs acknowledged that the
       government invested the 326-K Fund in longer-term securities between
       December 1992 and March 1997 than it had previously done during the
       1980s and early 1990s. Plaintiffs’ liability expert, Mr. Nunes, however,
       testified at trial that government should have invested the 326-K Fund in
       even longer-term investments than those selected by the government, with
       an average weighted maturity of approximately fifteen years, due to the
       uncertainty surrounding when distribution plan legislation would be enacted
       by Congress and the time intensive process of compiling descendancy rolls
       and distributing the monies to qualifying Western Shoshone members.
       Defendant’s liability expert, Dr. Starks, however, testified at trial that the
       government’s investment of the 326-K Fund during this time, the “mid-
       1990s,” was within a range of prudence.

W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed. Cl.
at 639. Additionally, the court determined:

       Although the government could have possibly invested the 326-K Fund in
       more longer-term securities following the approximate ten-year peak of the
       average weighted maturity years to call in September 1993, the
       government’s decision to decrease the 326-K Fund to an approximate
       average weighted maturity years to call of a little less than five years by
       March 1997, is arguably within the range of prudence. As discussed above,
       both parties’ experts agreed that there is a range of investments that an

unwieldly task due to the lengthy investment period at issue in this case.” W. Shoshone
Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed. Cl. at 628.
                                             58
      investor may select and still maintain a prudent portfolio. The record does
      not indicate that getting distribution legislation for the 326-K Fund passed
      through Congress or that getting the money distributed to plaintiffs would
      necessarily take longer than five to ten years, despite plaintiffs’ argument to
      the contrary. In addition, the government’s investment of the 326-K Fund
      between December 1992 and March 1997 stands in stark contrast to the
      government’s far less prudent investment of the 326-K Fund during the
      1980s and early 1990s. As previously discussed, during the 1980s and early
      1990s, the government employed a stagnant investment approach of
      investing the 326-K Fund in ultra-short-term CDs with an average weighted
      maturity years to call of approximately two years or less. Between
      December 1992 and March 1997, however, the government diversified the
      types of securities in which the 326-K Fund was invested, and also invested
      the fund in significantly longer-term securities, with an average weighted
      maturity years to call ranging from approximately five to ten years. As
      previously noted, “reasonably sound diversification” of a portfolio is part of
      a trustee’s duty to prudently invest. See Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 90
      cmt. e(1).

      Also, the government’s investment of the 326-K Fund between December
      1992 and March 1997 was in line with Mr. Kellerup’s[24] October 1992
      guidance provided in the Office of Trust Funds Management quarterly
      journal “TRUST,” which announced to the public that the government should
      invest tribal trust funds in government bonds ranging from three to seven
      years. (capitalization in original). Furthermore, when pushed at trial on
      cross-examination, plaintiffs’ liability expert, Mr. Nunes, conceded that the
      government’s lengthening of the maturity structure of the 326-K Fund in late
      1992 and early 1993 was “reasonable.” When specifically asked whether
      the “portfolio they [defendant] had built at this period in time was a
      reasonable portfolio,” Mr. Nunes testified at trial that “‘reasonable’ is
      accurate.” Thus, the government’s decision to maintain the 326-K Fund in
      an intermediate-term portfolio between December 1992 and March 1997,
      with an average weighted maturity years to call ranging between
      approximately five to ten years does not appear to violate the range of
      prudence so as to be too short-term.

      As stated previously, the court recognizes that there is no scientific or
      formulaic way to decide a correct range of prudence. The record before the
      court, with its many gaps, and the expert reports and testimony of the
      experts in roughly ten-year blocks, as well as the trial testimony of
      defendant’s fact witnesses, leaves many unanswered questions. The
      burden of proof, however, rests on plaintiffs to prove their claim that
      defendant imprudently invested the 326-K Fund between December 1992

24As indicated above, Fred Kellerup was the Branch of Investments Chief at the
Department of the Interior.
                                            59
       and March 1997 in too short-term securities, which the plaintiffs have not
       done for this time period, and, in fact, plaintiff’s liability expert, Mr. Nunes,
       conceded at trial that the government’s investment of the 326-K Fund during
       part of this time period was “reasonable.”

W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed. Cl.
at 640-41 (capitalization in original; brackets in original). The court next found the
government did breach its fiduciary duty to prudently invest the 326-K Fund during the
next three timeframes the court considered, spanning April 1997 to September 2006. For
the remaining two timeframes spanning October 2006 to September 2013, the court found
a breach of the fiduciary duty to prudently invest the 326-K Fund occurred.

       Regarding the 326-A Funds, the court found a breach by the government of the
fiduciary duty to prudently invest between March 1992 and January 2012, spanning three
timeframes. The court, however, found the government did not breach its fiduciary duty
between February 2012 to September 2013.

         Therefore, as noted above, on June 13, 2019, after careful review the lengthy
record in this case, including the documents and expert reports in evidence, the liability
trial testimony, and the post-trial filings, the court concluded that there were “various times
during the investment periods at issue for both the 326-K Fund and for the 326-A Funds
when the government's investment of all three tribal trust funds fell below the required
standard of prudence.” W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v.
United States, 143 Fed. Cl. at 658. To summarize, in the liability Opinion the court found:

                                   For the 326-K Fund:

   1. Between December 19, 1979 and August 3, 1980, the government did not
      breach its fiduciary duty. During this time, the BIA was actively working
      towards getting a distribution plan passed within the statutory 180-day
      period required under the Use and Distribution Act of 1973, and, therefore,
      reasonably maintained the 326-K Fund in short-term securities in the event
      that a distribution plan could be negotiated with the Western Shoshone
      tribes and timely considered by and accepted by Congress.

   2. Between August 4, 1980 and November 1992, the government breached
      its fiduciary duty when Congress did not act on the BIA’s request for an
      extension to submit a distribution plan for the 326-K Fund and no distribution
      legislation was forthcoming. During this twelve-year period, the government
      invested the 326-K Fund primarily in short-term CDs with an average
      weighted maturity years to call of approximately two years or less, even
      though the government knew or should have known during that time that
      there was a low probability that distribution legislation could be passed in
      the near-term. The short-term nature of the 326-K Fund portfolio, therefore,
      was not prudently aligned with the fund’s longer-term investment horizon.

                                              60
3. Between December 1992 and March 1997, the government did not breach
   its fiduciary duty. During this time, when the enactment of distribution
   legislation for the 326-K Fund still remained unlikely to occur in the near-
   term, the government began to shift the 326-K Fund into different types of
   securities, including agency and Treasury bonds, and to decrease its
   reliance on short-term CDs. The government also lengthened the maturity
   structure of the 326-K Fund into longer-term securities, with an average
   weighted maturity years to call ranging from approximately five to ten years.
   Therefore, the government’s lengthening of the maturity structure of the
   326-K Fund portfolio during this time was within the range of prudence,
   given the longer-term investment horizon of the fund.

4. Between April 1997 and December 1997, the government, however,
   breached its fiduciary duty when the government shortened the maturity of
   326-K Fund into securities with an average weighted maturity years to call
   ranging from three years to approximately three years and eight months.
   During this time, although there was emerging consensus for a distribution
   plan among the Te-moak Tribal Council, which represented one of the four
   beneficiary tribes of the 326-K Fund, the BIA was awaiting approval of a
   distribution plan from the remaining three Western Shoshone beneficiary
   tribes, and, thus, the enactment of distribution legislation for the 326-K Fund
   likely was not imminent. Further, even with distribution legislation enacted,
   the BIA would still need additional time to organize for and pay-out the 326-
   K Fund to qualifying Western Shoshone members. Therefore, the
   government’s decrease of the maturity structure of the 326-K Fund during
   this time did not prudently corresponded with the investment horizon of the
   326-K Fund, which was not likely to be distributed in the nearer-term.

5. Between January 1998 and April 2002, the government continued to breach
   its fiduciary duty by placing the 326-K Fund in even shorter-term securities
   with an average weighted maturity years to call ranging from approximately
   one to two and a half years. The government then continued to breach its
   fiduciary duty between May 2002 and June 2004, when the average
   weighted maturity years to call of the 326-K Fund dropped still further to
   approximately ten months or less. Although the likelihood for distribution
   legislation to be passed was increasing during the late-1990s and early
   2000s, even after distribution legislation was enacted, the government
   would still have to distribute the 326-K Fund monies to qualifying Western
   Shoshone members, which probably would not get accomplished within two
   and a half years and was even less likely to be completed within ten months
   or less. Therefore, from January 1998 to June 2004, the government
   imprudently invested the 326-K Fund by continually and steadily decreasing
   the maturity structure of the 326-K Fund, resulting in an ultra-short-term
   portfolio, which did not align with the fund’s investment horizon.

                                         61
      6. Between July 2004 to September 2006,[25] the government breached its
         fiduciary duty by continuing to maintain the 326-K Fund in short-term
         portfolio with an average weighted maturity years to call ranging from
         approximately six months to one year. Although Congress passed the
         Claims Distribution Act of 2004 on July 7, 2004, the government still had to
         develop its plan to distribute payment of the 326-K Fund to Western
         Shoshone members, which would have likely taken longer than six months
         to one year to accomplish at that time.

      7. Between October 2006 and December 2010, the government did not breach
         its fiduciary duty. During this time, the average weighted maturity years to
         call of the 326-K Fund ranged from approximately one year and seven
         months to a little less than three years.[26] The record indicates that
         distribution legislation for the 326-K Fund had been enacted in July 2004
         and that government officials reasonably believed that a pay-out of the 326-
         K Fund would occur within a couple of years and invested the 326-K Fund
         in accordance with such information. Therefore, the government’s decision
         to place the 326-K Fund in shorter-term securities during this time prudently
         corresponded with the shortening investment horizon of the fund.

25   In a footnote, the court noted:

         [T]here was a brief five-month period between January 2005 and May 2005
         that the average weighted maturity years to call hovered around
         approximately one year and eight months before dropping back down to an
         average weighted maturity years to call of approximately one year in June
         2005, where it remained until September 2006, the end of this sub-period.
         This slight increase in the maturity structure of the 326-K Fund between
         January 2005 and May 2005, however, was still too short-term and too
         short-lived to be considered prudent.

W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed. Cl.
at 658 n.52.
26   In a footnote, the court noted:

         [T]he government’s investment of the 326-K Fund in a portfolio with an
         average weighted maturity years to call of approximately one year and
         seven months lasted during a brief two-month period in 2007, which was
         immediately followed by the government’s decision to increase the average
         weighted maturity years to call of the 326-K Fund to two years or more for
         the next, approximately, two and half years.

W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed. Cl.
at 658 n.53.

                                              62
      8. Between January 2011 to September 2013, the government did not breach
         its fiduciary duty, nor did plaintiffs appear to argue that the government’s
         investment of the 326-K Fund was imprudent. During this time, the
         government began the distribution of the 326-K Fund monies to qualifying
         Western Shoshone members and, therefore, transitioned the entire fund
         into ultra-short-term overnight securities in order to liquidate the fund for
         distribution. Thus, the government’s placement of the 326-K Fund in ultra-
         liquid securities during this time was prudent.

                                     For the 326-A Funds:

      1. Between March 1992 and August 1995, the government breached its
         fiduciary duty to prudently invest the 326-A-1 Fund, and also between
         September 1995 and November 1998 to prudently invest both the 326-A-1
         and 326-A-3 Funds, by placing both of these funds in short-term securities
         with an average weighted maturity years to call of approximately two years
         or less. During this time, it was unlikely that distribution legislation for the
         326-A Funds was going to pass in the near-term, and, therefore, the
         government knew or should have known that the investment horizon for the
         326-A Funds should have been longer than two years.

      2. Between December 1998 and June 2004, the government also breached
         its fiduciary duty by primarily investing the 326-A Funds in short-term
         securities with an average weighted maturity years to call of approximately
         two years or less.[27] During this time, the government became aware that
         various members of the Western Shoshone tribes were supportive or
         becoming supportive of placing the 326-A Funds into a permanent
         education trust fund, the principal of which was not to be invaded. The

27   In a footnote, the court explained:

         The government increased the maturity structure of the 326-A Funds for a
         brief period between mid-1999 and mid-2001 to an average weighted
         maturity years to call of approximately five to seven years. This increase,
         however, was still too short-term given the fact that the principal of the A
         Funds were likely not to be invaded, but were to be set-aside as permanent
         education trust funds. Also, this increase in maturity was short-lived. The
         government proceeded to decrease the average weighted maturity years to
         call of the A Funds to approximately eight months by late 2001, and the
         average weighted maturity years to call never exceed three years for the
         next, approximately, eight years.

W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed. Cl.
at 658 n.54.

                                               63
         government even acknowledged in its 2003 internal investment report for
         the 326-A Funds that these funds likely would be set-aside as permanent
         education trust funds. Therefore, the government should have begun to
         transition the 326-A Funds into longer-term securities because the principal
         of the funds was not intended to be distributed.

      3. Between July 2004 and January 2012, the government breached its
         fiduciary duty by maintaining the 326-A Funds in shorter-term securities
         even though the government had certainty that the principal of the 326-A
         Funds was not to be invaded as of July 7, 2004, when distribution legislation
         for the A Funds was passed. Between July 2004 and February 2009, the
         average weighted maturity years to call for the A Funds was approximately
         two and a half years or less. From April 2009 to January 2012,[28] the
         average weighted maturity years to call ranged between approximately five
         years to a little over eight years, which was still too short-term, given the
         fact that the principal of the 326-A Funds was not to be invaded. The
         government, therefore, imprudently maintained the 326-A Funds in too
         short-term securities even though the 326-A Funds had a long-term
         investment horizon between July 2004 and January 2012.

      4. Between February 2012 to September 2013, the government did not breach
         its fiduciary duty when it lengthened the maturity structure of the 326-A
         Funds into investments with an average weighted maturity years to call of
         eleven to fourteen years. Plaintiffs’ liability expert, Mr. Nunes,
         acknowledged at trial that the government began to finally shift the 326-A
         Funds into longer-term securities during this time and testified that this shift
         was “good news.” Therefore, in light of the fact that the 326-A Funds’
         principal was not to be invaded and was to be perpetually held in trust, the
         government’s decision to lengthen the maturity structure of the 326-A Funds
         during this time was prudent and consistent with the long-term nature of the
         funds.

28   In a footnote, the court explained:

         In March 2009, the average weighted maturity years to call of the A Funds
         spiked to ten years, but then, without any apparent reason, rapidly
         decreased back down to approximately eight years in April 2009 and
         hovered between eight to five years for the next approximately three years.
         The government’s random and short-lived one-month increase of the
         maturity of the 326-A Funds in March 2009 is not sufficient to make the
         government’s investment of the 326-A Funds between July 2004 and
         January 2012 prudent.

W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed. Cl.
at 658 n.55.

                                               64
W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed. Cl.
at 658 (emphasis and capitalization in original).

Proceedings after the Liability Opinion was issued

        After the court issued the June 13, 2019 liability Opinion, the court held a hearing
with the parties to discuss how to proceed on the remaining damages issues. At the
hearing, the court set a schedule for expert discovery and explained that “the parties are
free to use their existing experts for expert discovery, expert reports and depositions, but
may use additional experts to help assist the court in reaching a decision on damages.”
The court continued: “Regardless of the experts selected, the expert reports shall be
responsive to the decision on liability issued by the court on June 13, 2019.”

        After expert discovery closed, the court set a damages trial schedule. For the
damages trial, the parties submitted several pre-trial filings, including a joint exhibit list,
and various demonstrative exhibits. The court held a four-day trial on the sole issue of
damages. Plaintiffs offered one expert witness, Mr. Kevin Nunes, of Rocky Hill Advisors,
who had testified at the liability trial. For the damages trial, plaintiffs also submitted as
joint exhibits an expert report addressing damages, authored by Mr. Nunes of Rocky Hill
Advisors, and a rebuttal expert report, also authored by Mr. Nunes.

         Defendant offered two expert witnesses at the damages trial, Dr. Laura Starks,
who had testified at the liability trial, and Dr. Francis Longstaff, a “professor of finance at
UCLA, Anderson School of Management.” At the damages trial, Dr. Longstaff was
qualified “as an expert in financial economics, including the subdisciplines of investments
and risk management.” For the damages trial, defendant also submitted as joint exhibits
an expert report addressing damages authored by Dr. Starks and an expert report
addressing damages, authored by Dr. Longstaff. Defendant also submitted rebuttal expert
reports by both Dr. Starks and Dr. Longstaff, and Dr. Starks filed a surrebuttal declaration.
Neither party offered any fact witnesses at the damages trial. The expert reports prepared
for the damages phase of the trial arrived at different calculations of damages than the
expert reports prepared for in advance of the liability trial, as the experts for both parties
prepared their damages models consistent with the court’s findings in the June 13, 2019
liability Opinion.

      Plaintiffs have noted that “[t]here was a potential issue about how to calculate the
growth of accrued damages during the non-breach periods,” but explained:

       The experts agreed that the growth rate for the non-breach periods should
       be based on the Government’s actual investment performance. Initially,
       they used different methods to measure this growth rate but RHA [Rocky
       Hill Advisors] accepted Dr. Starks’ approach, which simply divides the
       ending balance by the starting balance to calculate the growth rate. Thus,
       all of the damages calculations presented at trial use the same growth rate

                                              65
         for the non-breach periods. The divergence between the damages figures
         presented by RHA and Dr. Starks are attributable to the different ways in
         which they calculate damages during the breach periods.[29]

Consistent with Mr. Nunes’ expert report and his testimony at the damages trial, plaintiffs
argue that “RHA determined the appropriate maturity structure of the 326-K Fund for the
initial breach period (August 1980 – November 1992) by using the same maturity structure
that the Court found to be appropriate during the following non-breach period (December
1992 – March 1997),” and contend that “[b]ased on the Court’s findings, RHA concluded
that a maturity structure in this 5-10 year ‘range of prudence’ would also have been
appropriate for the earlier breach period.” Plaintiffs also argue “[f]or the next two breach
periods, from April 1997 – June 2004, RHA took a similar approach, keyed to the Court’s
finding that a maturity structure in the range between 5-10 years was prudent during 1992-
1997. RHA reasoned that this same range remained prudent during the following
periods.” Plaintiffs also claimed that “[f]or the final breach period, from July 2004 to
September 2006, a shorter maturity structure was needed because the Distribution Act
had now been enacted. To establish this new maturity structure, RHA relied on the Court’s
finding that the Government had invested the 326-K Fund prudently during the following
period, October 2006 – December 2010, when the average maturity was 2.97 years.”
Regarding the 326-A Funds, plaintiffs argued

         [t]he first breach period for the 326-A Funds was from March 1992 –
         November 1998. To determine the appropriate maturity structure, RHA
         started from the Court’s finding that the 326-A Funds had the same
         investment horizon as the 326-K Fund during this period. . . in a portfolio
         whose maturity ranged between 5-10 years. Thus, RHA reasoned that a
         maturity structure in that same range would also have been prudent for the
         326-A Funds during this period.

Plaintiffs indicated that for the second breach period with respect to the 326-A Funds,
December 1998 to June 2004, “RHA transitioned the 326-A Funds over the first six
months of 1999 to a long-term portfolio, reflecting the unlimited investment horizon for
these funds.” Plaintiffs noted that for the final breach period with respect to the 326-A
Funds, from July 2004 to January 2012, “RHA continued to use the same long-term
maturity structure for these funds.”

29   Plaintiffs’ counsel noted at the closing argument:

         And so as we sit here today, the differences between the experts’
         calculations relate solely to how they determined damages during the
         breach periods, how that, being brought forward during the nonbreach
         periods, has some impact, because there was obviously an increase there,
         but the methodology for the nonbreach periods is exactly the same.

                                              66
       Regarding Mr. Nunes’ methodology, plaintiffs argue “[i]nstead of making a
subjective decision about exactly how the Docket 326 Funds should have been invested
by the Government, RHA used benchmarks which reflect the market-average rate of
return for a diversified portfolio with the appropriate maturity structure. This approach is
neutral and objective.” (emphasis in original). Plaintiffs noted that “[t]o develop these
market-average benchmarks, RHA used the Barclays U.S. Treasury indexes,” and “RHA
used transition periods in its investment model when significant changes were made to
the maturity structure of the Docket 326 Funds.”

           Plaintiffs were critical of Dr. Starks’ expert report and testimony at the damages
trial.30   Plaintiffs argue that

           the investment horizons that Dr. Starks uses are inappropriate because they
           are based on her new opinions rather than the Court’s findings and because
           her new opinions lack credibility. Further, her contention that constructing a
           damages model also requires selecting an appropriate investment
           methodology (strategy) is incorrect. And the particular methodology she
           selects is not plausible.

           In sum, plaintiffs stated:

           RHA offered two alternative calculations of damages, depending on
           whether the legal presumption in Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs
           Reservation of Or. v. United States, 248 F.3d 1365, 1371 (Fed. Cir. 2001)
           (Warm Springs) is applied to select the maturity structure of the “but for”
           damages model. RHA calculated damages of $133,125,302 if the Warm
           Springs presumption is used, and $113,830,811 if it is not used.

(emphasis in original; footnote omitted).31 As discussed in greater detail below, the United
States Court of Appeals for Federal Circuit in Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs
Reservation of Oregon v. United States, 248 F.3d 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (Warm Springs)
held: “Where several alternative investment strategies would have been equally plausible,
the court should presume that the funds would have been used in the most profitable of
these.” Warm Springs, 248 F.3d at 1371.

30Regarding Dr. Longstaff, plaintiffs argue that “Dr. Longstaff did not offer an opinion on
the amount of damages in this case. His role was simply to criticize RHA’s damages
computations.”
31 Plaintiffs also indicate that “[t]here is no basis in the evidence for awarding WSIG
[plaintiffs] less than the amount of damages that Dr. Starks opines is due, or more than
the amount of damages that RHA opines is due.”
                                                67
       By contrast, defendant argues:

       In accordance with the Court’s opinion, Dr. Starks selected alternative
       prudent investments that were longer-term in character, and reflect an
       investment time horizon consistent with the investments the Court found
       prudent during the non-breach periods. Dr. Starks also selected a buy-and-
       hold alternative investment strategy consistent with the Interior
       Department’s policies and practices, which require Interior to balance
       investment returns against the risk of capital losses and prohibit frequent
       trading. The portfolio she proposes is based on a buy-and-hold ladder of
       bonds with a broad range of maturities. This approach mitigates interest
       rate risk, while also taking advantage of higher-yielding longer-term bonds.
       Dr. Starks’s model also offers Interior flexibility to adapt its portfolio —
       replacing maturing bonds with longer or shorter-term bonds as the
       circumstances warrant.

Defendant explains:

       Dr. Starks calculated the additional income that Interior would have earned
       using her proposed alternative investment portfolio for each breach period.
       She then compared the investment income generated during each breach
       period to the actual balance of the Fund at the end of that breach period.
       For non-breach periods, Dr. Starks applied the actual growth rate of the
       Fund during those periods to the but-for portfolio balance resulting from the
       breach periods.

(emphasis in original). In sum, defendant argues “Dr. Starks’s calculations present a fair
approximation of damages grounded in a prudent and achievable investment strategy
that Interior could have executed in the real world, in accordance with its policies and
practices and in light of contemporaneous facts.”

        Defendant is critical of plaintiffs’ damages model, arguing that “[i]n contrast to Dr.
Starks’s reasonable and realistic calculation of damages, Plaintiffs have presented the
Court with a damages estimate that contradicts the Court’s Liability Opinion, ignores
Interior Department policy, relies upon hindsight, and fails to acknowledge the risks
inherent in the active trading approach that would have been required to achieve the
investment gains Plaintiffs seek.” Defendant also argues “Mr. Nunes’ model lacks
credibility because it was designed to inflate damages.”

         Ultimately, defendant contends that, consistent with the court’s findings during the
liability phase of trial, “the Court should award damages of no more than $73,816,515 for
the breaches of trust associated with the Interior Department’s management of the Docket
326-K Fund, and damages of $987,920 for the breaches of trust associated with the
Interior Department’s management of the Docket 326-A-1 and Docket 326-A-3 Funds.”
(emphasis in original).

                                             68
                                       DISCUSSION

        As determined in the court’s June 13, 2019 liability Opinion, and as noted above,
the government breached its fiduciary duty to prudently invest the 326-K Fund for the
plaintiffs between August 4, 1980 and November 1992, and again between April 1997
and September 2006. Additionally, the government breached its fiduciary duty to
prudently invest the 326-A-1 Fund for the plaintiffs between December 1998 and January
2012. See W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States,
143 Fed. Cl. at 658-61. Therefore, with breach established, the court must determine the
proper measure of damages.

        “[O]nce the beneficiary has shown a breach of the trustee’s duty,” the “risk of
uncertainty as to the amount of the loss” falls on the government. See Warm Springs, 248
F.3d at 1371; see also Bear v. United States, 147 Fed. Cl. 54, 87 (2020). “‘The
ascertainment of damages is not an exact science,’ the Federal Circuit has warned, and
‘where responsibility for damages is clear, it is not essential that the amount thereof be
ascertainable with absolute exactness or mathematical precision.’” Jicarilla Apache
Nation v. United States, 112 Fed. Cl. 274, 304-05 (2013) (Jicarilla III) (quoting Bluebonnet
Sav. Bank, F.S.B. v. United States, 266 F.3d 1348, 1355 (Fed. Cir. 2001)).32 As a Judge
of this court recognized, the Federal Circuit’s decision in Warm Springs, under certain
circumstances, allows for “inferences” to be “drawn” as to the amount of damages to be

32As noted in the court’s June 13, 2019 liability Opinion, there are three separate, relevant
Jicarilla decisions, all stemming from the same Native American breach of trust case
regarding allegations of mismanagement of tribal trust funds pursuant to 25 U.S.C. §
162a, the statute at issue in the above-captioned case. In United States v. Jicarilla Apache
Nation, 564 U.S. 162 (2011) (Jicarilla I), the United States Supreme Court was tasked
with determining whether the common-law “fiduciary” exception to the attorney-client
privilege, which prevents a trustee from withholding from trust beneficiaries attorney-client
communications relating to the administration of the trust, applies to 25 U.S.C. § 162a.
See Jicarilla I, 564 U.S. at 170. The Supreme Court held that the common-law fiduciary
exception to the attorney-client privilege did not apply within the context of 25 U.S.C. §
162a and reversed and remanded the case back to the United States Court of Federal
Claims. See Jicarilla I, 564 U.S. at 165-66, 186. In United States v. Jicarilla Apache
Nation, 100 Fed. Cl. 726 (2011) (Jicarilla II), following the Supreme Court’s remand in
Jicarilla I, the Court of Federal Claims held that the court had jurisdiction over the tribe’s
breach of trust claim pursuant to the Indian Tucker Act, and that the Department of Interior
had a fiduciary duty to “‘maximize the trust income by prudent investment,’” pursuant to
25 U.S.C. § 162a. See Jicarilla II, 100 Fed. Cl. at 738-39 (quoting Cheyenne-Arapaho,
206 Ct. Cl. at 348, 512 F.2d at 1394). In Jicarilla III, cited above, the United States Court
of Federal Claims found that the government had breached its fiduciary duty to invest the
plaintiff’s funds due to the “BIA’s heavy reliance on short-term investments” for “nearly
two decades,” which “reduced the yield on Jicarilla’s portfolios by failing to take
appropriate advantage of the higher yields on longer-term investments.” Jicarilla III, 112
Fed. Cl. at 290-92.

                                             69
awarded in the beneficiaries’ favor, once liability has been established. Osage Tribe of
Indians of Okla. v. United States, 97 Fed. Cl. 542, 544 (2011) (quoting Osage Tribe of
Indians of Okla. v. United States, 93 Fed. Cl. 1, 22 (2010) (citing Warm Springs, 248 F.3d
at 1371)).

         Even if a potential inference is appropriate, however, a beneficiary will only be
“‘entitled to a reasonable estimate of the damages it is due.’” Osage Tribe of Indians of
Okla. v. United States, 97 Fed. Cl. at 544 (quoting Osage Tribe of Indians of Okla. v.
United States, 96 Fed. Cl. 390, 409 (2010)); see also Warm Springs, 248 F.3d at 137
(noting that plaintiffs only are entitled to the amount of damages that would place them
“in the position in which [they] would have been absent a breach”); Jicarilla III, 112 Fed.
Cl. at 304 (“Courts determine the amount of damages for such a breach by attempting to
put the beneficiary in the position in which it would have been absent the breach.”).
Defendant, as the trustee, always has the opportunity to disprove plaintiffs’ alleged
damages amount. See Warm Springs, 248 F.3d at 1371 (“The burden of proving that the
funds would have earned less than the amount is on the fiduciaries found to be in breach
of their duty.” (quoting Donovan v. Bierwirth, 754 F.2d 1049, 1056 (2d Cir. 1985)); see
also Bear v. United States, 147 Fed. Cl. at 87. While “approximations certainly are
appropriate,” damages “awards may not be speculative.” Jicarilla III, 112 Fed. Cl. at 307
n.52 (citing Franconia Assocs. v. United States, 61 Fed. Cl. 718, 746 (2004) (“[C]are must
be taken lest the calculation of damages become a quixotic quest for delusive precision
or worse, an insurmountable barrier to any recovery.”)). Furthermore, as indicated by the
Federal Circuit in Warm Springs, it would be inappropriate to apply an inference when
“the issue of damages” is based entirely on “unguided speculation.” Warm Springs, 248
F.3d at 1372.

        As in the liability trial, in the damages phase of this case, plaintiffs rely heavily on
the decision in Jicarilla III. Despite some similarities between Jicarilla III and the facts of
this case, as this court noted during the liability phase of trial, the specifics presented for
review in the case currently before the court are different from Jicarilla case, and,
moreover, Jicarilla III is not binding on this court.33 As discussed in greater detail below,
the procedural posture and approach the Judge took in Jicarilla III differs from the above
captioned case. In addition, the model presented by Rocky Hill Advisors to the court in
Jicarilla III differs from the model assembled by plaintiffs in this case.

33This court is only bound by precedent from the United States Supreme Court, the United
States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and its predecessor, the United States
Court of Claims. See Dellew Corp. v. United States, 855 F.3d 1375, 1382 (Fed. Cir. 2017)
(noting that “the Court of Federal Claims must follow relevant decisions of the Supreme
Court and the Federal Circuit”); see also Coltec Indus., Inc. v. United States, 454 F.3d
1340, 1353 (Fed. Cir.) (“There can be no question that the Court of Federal Claims is
required to follow the precedent of the Supreme Court, our court, and our predecessor
court, the Court of Claims.”), reh’g denied (Fed. Cir. 2006), cert. denied (2007).

                                              70
       Moreover, the plaintiff in Jicarilla III raised, and prevailed on, claims that are not
before this court in the above captioned case. In Jicarilla III, the Judge of the United States
Court of Federal Claims determined that the government was responsible for the
unauthorized disbursement of the Jicarilla Tribe's trust funds. See Jicarilla III, 112 Fed.
Cl. at 303. Additionally, the Judge found the government’s failure to timely process
deposits of oil and gas royalties “amounted to a breach of trust that entitles the Nation to
damages.” Id. at 304. As evidenced by the lengthy recitation of facts above, neither the
unauthorized disbursement of the plaintiffs’ trust funds, nor the failure to timely process
deposits of oil and gas royalties are at issue in the case currently before the court.

       The comments to the Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 100 has indicated

       Determining amount of loss. If a breach of trust causes a loss, including any
       failure to realize income, capital gain, or appreciation that would have
       resulted from proper administration of the trust, the trustee is subject to
       surcharge for the amount necessary to compensate fully for the breach.
       Occasionally a situation arises that offers an essentially objective means of
       ascertaining the loss for which a trustee is liable. . . .

       Illustrative of more difficult “loss” determinations is the determination of the
       recovery from a trustee for imprudent or otherwise improper investments.
       The recovery in such a case ordinarily would be the difference between (1)
       the value of those investments and their income and other product at the
       time of surcharge and (2) the amount of funds expended in making the
       improper investments, increased (or decreased) by a projected amount of
       total return (or negative total return) that would have accrued to the trust
       and its beneficiaries if the funds had been properly invested. (A return
       projection for “properly invested” funds should reflect the standards of
       prudent investment in § 90(a), and should not rely on hindsight (cf. § 77,
       Comment a) in selecting a benchmark (below) for hypothetical
       performance.).

Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 100 (emphasis in original).

        The court acknowledges that there is no scientific method or modeling that can be
applied to calculate damages in the current, above captioned case as is reflected in the
models proposed by both the plaintiffs and the defendant. The parties and their respective
experts have been tested to reconstruct what the investment strategy of the government
should have been dating back to the 1970s and continuing until 2013. After the parties’
reconstruction, which differ greatly between the parties, and is the subject of this court’s
decision, the parties next applied a calculation of damages based on their models.
Assumptions and projections are inherent to any model that could have been developed
in the above captioned case given the limitations on investment by the government during
the investment period in the above captioned case, as well as the fluctuating interest rates
and evolving market conditions. Noting the limitations of any model that could have been
presented to the court in the above captioned case, and based on the information

                                              71
provided to the court, the court considers each of the parties’ models prepared for the
damages trial.

Plaintiffs’ Damages Model

         As indicated above, plaintiffs did not call any fact witnesses for its case at the
damages trial, but plaintiffs did call one expert witness, Kevin Nunes of Rocky Hill
Advisors. Mr. Nunes had prepared expert reports for plaintiffs in advance of both the
liability trial and damages trial, and testified at both the liability and damages phases of
trial. In his expert reports for the damages portion of the trial, Mr. Nunes noted that, in
light of the court’s liability decision he “utilized the returns of the Government’s extant
investment portfolios for those periods in which the Court found no breach of trust,” and
additionally, “utilized investment horizons and matured structures consistent with the
Court's analysis for those periods which the Court didn't find a breach.” At the damages
trial, Mr. Nunes admitted there was an error in his calculations for his original expert report
on damages.34 Mr. Nunes had the following exchange on cross-examination with counsel
for the United States:

       Q. What you had done in your original report was you had inadvertently
       imposed damages for a period in which the Court found the Government
       was not in breach.

       A. By applying the manner in which returns of a portfolio are typically
       calculated in the investment world, yes. That did end up resulting in a larger
       growth rate in the non-breach period than was realized by the Government.

       Q. And the net result of that mistake was to increase your damage
       calculation between 45 and 50 million dollars in both Scenario A and
       Scenario B.

       A. That’s correct, yes, in round numbers.

        In creating his model for the damages trial, plaintiffs’ expert Mr. Nunes explained
that he had relied on the court’s determination that “the government’s decision to maintain
the 326-K Fund in an intermediate-term portfolio between December 1992 and March
1997, with an average weighted maturity years to call ranging between approximately five
to ten years does not appear to violate the range of prudence so as to be too short-term,”
see W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed.
Cl. at 640, and determined “that a maturity structure in this 5-10 year ‘range of prudence’
would also have been appropriate for the earlier breach period.” Therefore, Mr. Nunes
concluded in his damages expert report:

34 As discussed in greater detail below, Dr. Starks first identified the error in Mr. Nunes’
original expert report.
                                              72
      The investment horizon of the 326-K Fund during the 12-year period from
      August 5, 1980 through November 1992 was at least as long as the horizon
      during the subsequent 4.3 years. Thus, prudent investment during the
      earlier period required a maturity structure at least as long as during the
      later period, or somewhere in the range between five to ten years.

At the damages trial, Mr. Nunes testified that

      logic says that if in a subsequent period, the immediate subsequent period,
      the Court had found the Government to be prudent, then the portfolio in the
      period preceding that would have to be -- would be at least as long as the
      period following it. So that’s the lesson of how the later period informed us
      on the period prior to that[.]

On direct examination, Mr. Nunes responded to the following questions proposed by
plaintiff’s counsel:

      Q. So with respect to this five- to ten-year range, you testified that you
      looked to see if there was any specific point within that range that was
      consistently used by the Government during this nonbreach period. Is that
      correct?

      A. That's correct.

      Q. And did you see anything in the record that would indicate one specific
      point in that five- to ten-year range was more likely than another specific
      point?

      A. None whatsoever. It was a period where almost overnight -- it certainly
      happened rather quickly -- the Government lengthened the portfolio to about
      11 years, and then it immediately began to shorten somewhat substantially
      through roughly four years of this nonbreach period, shedding about 6 1/2
      or so years of weighted average maturity in a roughly four-year period, as
      well -- so no clear pattern there whatsoever except that the Government
      was reverting back to its old ways. The other thing we looked at was the
      types of -- when we had done our analytics and reported this in our first
      report, we also provided a lot of transactional information so we could look
      at purchases and sales and things like that. So we took a look also at
      purchase activity to see if there was any kind of a pattern there, and it was
      absolutely nothing. It roams all over the map. So clearly, to us, there is no
      consistency, again, in spite of the fact that they had found that this was a
      period where the Government was operating prudently.

Plaintiffs’ counsel followed up with Mr. Nunes about the five to ten year range and the
government’s investing strategy, asking

                                            73
      [Q.] [T]he five- to ten-year maturity structure that Rocky Hill determined was
      applicable during this breach period, how did you decide within that range
      what particular structure within the five- to ten-year range to use?

      A. Again, as I described before, since there was no pattern in the way in
      which the Government was, again, using the baseline, if you will, the first –
      the nonbreach period, there was no consistent pattern in the data that we
      could tease out that would reflect that the Government had any plan
      whatsoever, and so we are then using the five to ten bounds as the range
      of prudence and applying the Warm Springs presumption. We determined
      that for these two periods, as well as how we used it in the first period, that
      the ten-year targeted term structure used in the Warm Springs presumption
      would be prudent. And, of course, then we looked at the actual investment
      of the funds from the first nonbreach period, the 7.86-year maturity or term
      structure, and we used that to inform us for our Alternative B calculations.

Specifically, regarding the government’s investing strategy for the 325-K Fund, counsel
for plaintiffs asked Mr. Nunes:

      Q. Did the Government ever use a particular methodology in investing the
      326K funds?

      A. Not that we can discern -- well, let me retract that. Certainly in its very
      infancy, the methodology that the Government employed across 75, 85
      percent of native trust funds was the CD program, and, of course, the 326-
      K was no exception to that, but once that program was wound down and
      sort of conventional investing of the portfolio was happening, we could not
      discern any pattern, any strategy throughout the entire life of these funds.

        At the damages trial, Mr. Nunes discussed his decision to create two different
damages calculations and the ranges for the two calculations, first with what the parties
refer to as the Warm Springs presumption:35

      [Q.] on the Warm Springs presumption, what maturity structure within this
      five- to ten-year range did Rocky Hill apply for the ‘80 to ‘92 breach period?

      A. The ten-year.

      Q. And under the Warm Springs presumption, why was ten years the
      maturity structure chosen?

35As discussed in greater detail below, plaintiffs base the “Warm Springs presumption”
on the language of the Federal Circuit’s decision in Warm Springs, in which the Federal
Circuit indicated, “[w]here several alternative investment strategies would have been
equally plausible, the court should presume that the funds would have been used in the
most profitable of these.” Warm Springs, 248 F.3d at 1371.
                                            74
       A. Again, when -- as we had been advised on Warm Springs, when there
       are several alternative, equally plausible scenarios, the courts have found
       in favor of the Plaintiffs for a profitable, generally speaking -- and this is a
       generalization, I will admit -- but when interest rates are -- irregardless of
       level, but normalized, meaning longer rates are higher than shorter rates,
       more often than not, as long as the maturity picture is in alignment, the
       longer will outperform the shorter. And so in this particular case, the ten-
       year, you know, meets -- sort of matches the Warm Springs presumption as
       we understand it.

       Q. Now, did Rocky Hill also prepare an alternative calculation in the event
       the Court finds the Warm Springs presumption inapplicable?

       A. We did.

       Q. And how did you go about doing that?

       A. Well, again, using the subsequent period to inform us on the period
       where they were not in breach, we looked at simply what was the average
       of the term structure over that roughly four years and three or four months,
       and it turns out that is 7.86 years’ maturity, and so we used that for our
       alternative B calculations.

        Plaintiffs reasoned that “[f]or the next two breach periods, from April 1997 – June
2004, RHA took a similar approach, keyed to the Court’s finding that a maturity structure
in the range between 5-10 years was prudent during 1992-1997. RHA reasoned that this
same range remained prudent during the following periods.” Mr. Nunes expert report
reflected, therefore, that “there was no development prior to July 2004 that required any
shortening of the maturity structure of the 326-K portfolio to mitigate the interest rate risk.”
At the damages trial, Mr. Nunes testified, regarding this time frame:

       There’s several things that are kind of going on here, so I will kind of work
       through our analysis and thought processes as we looked at this. It’s a
       period that ultimately ends with the distribution legislation, but for this length
       of time from ‘97 to ‘04, It’s largely a continuation of all the things that we had
       read and analyzed and explained in our original work that suggested that
       the funds were of a long-term nature. There is still a lack of consensus.
       There is still at least a reckoning of the period or the early parts of the period.
       There is still a faction of Western Shoshone that wanted land back. This
       was a period where, as I recall, at least Senator Reid had presented maybe
       two or three distribution plans to Congress that had been rejected. So,
       although, as the Court points out in its decision, there was a building of a
       consensus, there -- this period of time for us, as we understand it, is really
       a continuation of all of the stuff that had been going on prior to this period.
       So that's kind of part one.

                                               75
      The second thing that we see -- and it’s also described in the Court’s
      decision -- is that this is an ever-larger pool of funds that has a very sort of
      a complex distribution facing it, a lot of different tribal entities, and that this
      was going to be a very difficult distribution, and folks in the Government
      were also -- understood that the task of developing roles was going to be a
      tremendous one. I think there was one thing I read that they called it
      tremendous and highly expensive, they anticipated. So -- as well -- and this
      I know was discussed at [the liability] trial by Dr. Goldstein. We have
      experience and the Government has significant experience with the length
      of time it takes for distributions that are highly complex and involve a
      significant amount of funds, that they can sometimes take literally decades,
      but in the end what we relied on was the Court’s opinion that references a
      minimum of at least 2 1/2 years. That was a reasonable expectation of how
      long it would take for the development of -- in a “post-distribution plan having
      been accepted” environment, how long it would take, at minimum, to effect
      the distribution of these funds. So we have those two things informing us
      about sort of the conditions on the ground.

      For the final breach period for the 326-K Fund, from July 2004 to September 2006,
Mr. Nunes determined that

      a shorter maturity structure was needed because the Distribution Act had
      now been enacted. To establish this new maturity structure, RHA relied on
      the Court’s finding that the Government had invested the 326-K Fund
      prudently during the following period, October 2006 – December 2010,
      when the average maturity was 2.97 years. Once again, RHA reasoned that
      the investment horizon of the Fund was at least as long during the earlier
      breach period as during the non-breach period that followed. Therefore, it
      used 2.97 years as the maturity structure for the breach period.

On direct examination, plaintiffs’ counsel and Mr. Nunes had the following exchange:

      Q. I want to ask you about subperiod 6 in your chart [included below], which
      is July 2004 to September 2006. Now, this is the last breach period for the
      K funds, correct?

      A. That’s correct.

      Q. How did you determine what maturity structure to apply for this breach
      period?

      A. So we now know that the distribution legislation has passed, and, again,
      this is a restructuring moment, and so we recognize, of course, that the
      portfolio needs to be shortened. Similarly to the earlier period, in the next
      adjacent subperiod, the October of ‘06 to December of 2010, the Court had

                                              76
                            found that the Government was not in breach. Now, this is a period that is
                            later than the period that we're talking about here. During that period, we
                            looked at the actual investment of the funds in that nonbreach period and
                            saw that the average term structure was 2.97 years, and so, again, applying
                            the same logic for the period -- the logic being the later period had a term
                            structure deemed to be prudent of 2.97 years -- then logic indicates and it’s
                            reasonable to assume that the period prior to that -- so further back in time
                            -- would have a prudent term structure at least as long, and so we went with
                            the 2.97 from the next nonbreach period.

                            Q. The July 2004 to September 2006 period?

                            A. For the July 2004 to September 2006, using the term structure of the
                            October ‘06 to December 2010.

             Plaintiffs provided, on a cumulative, period-by-period basis, two damages calculations for
             the 325-K Fund, one if the Warm Springs presumption is applied, and another one if the
             Warm Springs presumption is not applied, which was referenced in plaintiffs’ counsel’s
             questions of Mr. Nunes. First, Mr. Nunes’ cumulative damages calculations with the Warm
                                                                                                                                                                      326-K Alternative A
                                                                                                                                                Model Calculated                               Difference
Gov't in                                                                                                                                                                  Balance per
                       Period                          Sub-Period                               Citation to RHA Model Calculated               Balance - Period End                           (Cumulative
Breach?                                                                                                                                                                   Statement
                                                                                                            Amount[36]                                Date                                     Damages)
  No                                    Sub-period 1: 12/1979 to 8/4/1980                                      N/A                                     N/A                   N/A                   N/A
           Period 1: December 1979 to
  Yes      November 1992                Sub-period 2: 8/5/1980 to 11/1992       JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-    $ 111,846,793.00        $ 79,012,301.00      $ 32,834,492.00
                                                                                Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”

                                                                                JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-
  No                                    Sub-period 3: 12/1992 to 03/1997                                                                        $ 138,690,023.00        $ 99,701,405.00      $ 38,988,618.00
           Period 2: December 1992 to                                           Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”
           June 2004

                                                                                JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-
  Yes                                   Sub-period 4: 04/1997 to 12/1997                                                                        $ 154,675,356.00       $ 104,314,686.00      $ 50,360,670.00
                                                                                Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”

  Yes                                   Sub-period 5: 01/1998 to 06/2004        JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-    $ 230,305,882.00       $ 145,440,296.00      $ 84,865,586.00
                                                                                Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”

                                                                                JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-
  Yes                                   Sub-period 6: 07/2004 to 09/2006                                                                        $ 247,682,272.00       $ 155,739,419.00      $ 91,942,853.00
           Period 3: July 2004 to                                               Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”
           September 2013

  No                                    Sub-periods 7 & 8: 10/2006 to 09/2013   JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-    $ 113,847,294.00          $ 36,707.00       $ 113,810,587.00
                                                                                Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”

                                                                                JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-
                                                                                Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”
                                                 Balance at 6/30/2020                                                                          $ 130,588,757.00              N/A            $ 130,588,757.00

             Springs presumption, is depicted below:

             36   The court removed from the chart the references to other spreadsheets.
                                                                                                77
                                                                                                                                                                  326-K Alternative B
                                                                                                                                               Model Calculated                               Difference
Gov't in                                                                                                                                                                  Balance per
                       Period                            Sub-                                Citation to RHA Model Calculated                 Balance - Period End                           (Cumulative
Breach?                                                                                                                                                                   Statement
                                                        Period                                            Amount                                     Date                                     Damages)
  No                                    Sub-period 1: 12/1979 to 8/4/1980                                    N                                        N/A                     N/A                  N/A
           Period 1: December 1979 to                                                                        /
           November 1992                                                                                     A

  Yes                                   Sub-period 2: 8/5/1980 to 11/1992      JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-    $ 108,643,569.00          $ 79,012,301.00    $ 29,631,268.00
                                                                               Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”

                                                                               JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-
  No                                    Sub-period 3: 12/1992 to 03/1997                                                                       $ 134,718,026.00          $ 99,701,405.00    $ 35,016,621.00
           Period 2: December 1992 to                                          Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”
           June 2004

                                                                               JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-
  Yes                                   Sub-period 4: 04/1997 to 12/1997                                                                       $ 148,450,258.00         $ 104,314,686.00    $ 44,135,572.00
                                                                               Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”

  Yes                                   Sub-period 5: 01/1998 to 06/2004       JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-    $ 218,499,659.00         $ 145,440,296.00    $ 73,059,363.00
                                                                               Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”

                                                                               JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-
  Yes                                   Sub-period 6: 07/2004 to 09/2006                                                                       $ 234,019,604.00         $ 155,739,419.00    $ 78,280,185.00
           Period 3: July 2004 to                                              Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”
           September 2013

  No                                    Sub-periods 7 & 8: 10/2006 to 09/2013 JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-443-      $ 97,178,838.00            $ 36,707.00      $ 97,142,131.00
                                                                              Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”

                                                                               JX-443, WSIG-TRIAL-10825, located electronically at “JX-
                                                                               443- Rocky Hill Data", "June 29-2020 Production”
                                                 Balance at 6/30/2020                                                                         $ 111,463,006.00                N/A          $ 111,463,006.00
                                                                               .

             (all capitalization and emphasis in original).

             Next, Mr. Nunes’ cumulative damages calculations without the Warm Springs
             presumption, is depicted next as:

             (all capitalization and emphasis in original).

                    For the 326-A Funds and the first breach period from March 1992 to November
             1998, to determine the appropriate maturity structure, “Mr. Nunes started from the Court’s
             finding that the 326-A Funds had the same investment horizon as the 326-K Fund during
             this period.” Plaintiffs explain:

                            This means that a maturity structure that was prudent for one fund would
                            also have been prudent for the other. The Court found that the Government
                            had prudently invested the 326-K Fund during most of this period in a
                            portfolio whose maturity ranged between 5-10 years. Thus, RHA reasoned
                            that a maturity structure in that same range would also have been prudent
                            for the 326-A Funds during this period.

             For the second breach period, between December 1998 and June 2004, Mr. Nunes’
             model “transitioned the 326-A Funds over the first six months of 1999 to a long-term

                                                                                                    78
portfolio, reflecting the unlimited investment horizon for these funds,” relying on the court’s
earlier finding, described above, that

       [b]etween December 1998 and June 2004, the government also breached
       its fiduciary duty by primarily investing the 326-A Funds in short-term
       securities with an average weighted maturity years to call of approximately
       two years or less. During this time, the government became aware that
       various members of the Western Shoshone tribes were supportive or
       becoming supportive of placing the 326-A Funds into a permanent
       education trust fund, the principal of which was not to be invaded. The
       government even acknowledged in its 2003 internal investment report for
       the 326-A Funds that these funds likely would be set-aside as permanent
       education trust funds. Therefore, the government should have begun to
       transition the 326-A Funds into longer-term securities because the principal
       of the funds was not intended to be distributed.

       According to plaintiffs’ post-trial brief, for the last breach period between July 2004
to January 2012, in order to try and reach a damages conclusion, Mr. Nunes “continued
to use the same long-term maturity structure for these funds.” At the damages trial, Mr.
Nunes and plaintiffs’ counsel discussed Mr. Nunes evaluation of the 326-A Funds:

       [Q.] [F]or the A funds, how did you determine what maturity structure to
       apply for the first breach period, which is labeled subperiod 1, March 1992
       to November 1998?

       A. Well, this -- for this period of time, it predates the moment of the -- when
       the conversation around converting the 326A funds into a permanent
       education fund, and so at this point we see that there’s no difference --
       although in a different account, of course, and a much lesser amount -- that
       there is no real difference between these funds than there are from the K
       funds, because they have not been designated for anything yet. And so
       looking at the K funds to inform us about the A funds, the -- almost the
       entirety of this period aligns with the -- for the K funds the first nonbreach
       period found by the Court, and as we’ve explained, that’s the -- the Warm
       Springs presumption, ten years, with the non-Warm Springs, 7.86 years.
       And so -- seeing no difference in the funds, we used the same term
       structure, and we recognized the Government did not coordinate the
       investment of these funds, but the nature of the funds and the investment
       horizon to us were in alignment.

       Q. Now, for subperiod 2, which is December 1998 to June 2004, what did
       Rocky Hill determine for the maturity structure for this breach period?

       A. In the Court’s decision, it was noted that by this point, December -- the
       start of this period, the Government essentially knew that these were going
       to be earmarked for permanent funds, although officially they became

                                              79
       permanent funds when the Distribution Act was passed, but the Court’s
       decision makes it very clear that the Government knew this at that point,
       and it would be like any other permanent fund where you are never allowed
       to invade the principal, and at that point you almost have an instant
       investment horizon. And so we began -- we transitioned over six months the
       funds into a long-term -- a true long-term structure.

       Q. Now, for the next subperiod, July 2004 to January 2012, what approach
       did Rocky Hill take with respect to maturity structure?

       A. So once the Distribution Act was passed, it made it final that these were
       going to be -- that these now were permanent funds, and so we just
       continued to use the long-term term structure.

          After establishing the parameters of the model and the maturity structure, Mr.
Nunes determined the rate of return for a portfolio with the maturity structure he identified.
When asked by plaintiffs’ counsel: “How many possible strategies could have been used
to invest the WSIG funds?” Mr. Nunes responded: “I hesitate to say infinite, but certainly
there could be hundreds of different portfolios, you know, and a portfolio, by definition, is
the result of a strategy, and there could have been hundreds of different variations, all --
all still properly aligned, you know, with the investment horizon of the funds.”

       Mr. Nunes, in his rebuttal expert report, concluded

      the Government’s investment methodology was essentially ad hoc, with no
      apparent consistency, both during the 1992-1997 period when the court
      found it prudently invested the 326-K Fund and during the periods when it
      imprudently invested the 326-K and 326-A Funds. The Government’s ad
      hoc, inconsistent methodology is highlighted by the disparity between its
      investment of the 326-K Fund and its investment of the 326-A Funds in the
      period before December 1998.

        Upon reaching this conclusion, Mr. Nunes decided to use a benchmarks, which
plaintiffs argue “provide a neutral and objective measure of market average returns,” and
which reflects “the market-average rate of return for a diversified portfolio with the
appropriate maturity structure. This approach is neutral and objective.” (emphasis in
original). During his direct testimony, in response to plaintiffs’ counsel’s question,
“regarding your use of recorded benchmarks to establish the rates of return, why is that
the approach that Rocky Hill takes to determine rates of return for purposes of damages?”
Mr. Nunes explained:

       Well, it’s a couple of reasons. They're passive and rules-based, and so
       there’s no – we’re not using a portfolio that somebody else is managing and
       claiming that that is, you know, what the Government should have attained.
       We are strategy- and portfolio-agnostic, and we want to be strategy- and
       portfolio-agnostic because we recognize that to achieve a certain term

                                             80
      structure of a portfolio, it could be done any number of ways, and so the
      indexes are plain vanilla in that regard, and they provide us, again, with a
      sort of baseline. It’s the market average performance based on the rules of
      the index, without any subjectivity whatsoever, and so, you know, we’ve
      always considered that to be, let’s say, the lowest common denominator,
      but we take our -- we take our lead from the investment world itself. Indices,
      benchmarks are an invaluable measurement tool, because if your portfolio
      gets 4 percent in a given quarter and mine gets 4 1/2, I may feel pretty good
      about having beat you, but if both of our returns are substandard and what
      we both should have gotten was 7, the only way you know that is to have a
      measurement tool, and that’s what the index is, because it’s just reporting,
      if you will, the market average performance for whatever market it is trying
      to define.

Mr. Nunes’ expert report for the damages phase of trial reflected that the benchmarks set
are “passive and unbiased measures of the returns that could be achieved through
prudent investment, regardless of the particular investment methodology that was
employed.” (emphasis in original).

       Plaintiffs argue that “RHA’s approach assumes that prudent investment in a correct
maturity structure would have achieved results that match the market-average
performance. No more and no less,” and further allege that

      RHA’s benchmark approach to calculating damages does not specify how
      the funds should have been invested during the period at issue. It does not
      specify an active or a passive investment strategy. It does not specify what
      securities should have been purchased or how long they should have been
      held. Instead, its benchmarks reflect the market-average investment return
      for a diversified portfolio with the appropriate maturity structure. RHA’s
      benchmark approach assumes that prudent investment in a correct maturity
      structure would have achieved results that match the market-average
      performance.

(emphasis in original). At the damages trial, Mr. Nunes explained the benchmarks used
by plaintiffs’ model:

      [Q.] [W]hat indices did Rocky Hill use?

      A. We used a family of indices from Barclays. It’s the U.S. -- not the whole
      family, but pieces of their U.S. Treasury Index family, and we used those
      primarily because way back when we were researching the various
      Barclays indices, they were the only ones that at all times we felt confident
      were fully compliant with U.S. -- 25 USC 162, which governs the types of
      securities that the United States is allowed to invest Indian funds in.

                                           81
       Q. So how does Rocky Hill develop a benchmark for a particular maturity
       structure using the Barclays indices?

       A. So what the Barclays indices are a -- so each one of them has their own
       set of rules, and they describe a piece of the Treasury index. In the broadest
       sense, the Barclays U.S. Treasury is all treasuries with maturities from 1 to
       30 years, so that’s almost the whole Treasury market without the T-bills.
       Other indices strip that down, but regardless of which index we're talking
       about -- and we did these three of them, which we can explain in a moment
       -- what these indices do is provide an objective, neutral measure of market
       average performance.

Mr. Nunes and plaintiffs’ counsel later continued this line of questioning, with plaintiffs’
counsel asking Mr. Nunes:

       [Q.] Why -- first of all, what do the indices include and what is the reason
       that the decision was made to use certain Barclays Indices?

       A. So way back when we first started doing this work and became aware of
       the USC -- 25 USC 162, where it very specifically defines what are allowable
       investments that BIA may purchase for investing Native American funds,
       that provided us with sort of the marching order of what we had to be careful
       not to be in violation of in anything that we would present in a model. And
       so we knew that we would use indices as the neutral and objective way to
       measure market average performance, but we had to look at what indices
       included, and in the case of then Lehman Brothers, we looked at -- they
       have a gazillion different indices, the U.S. Aggregate and subindices below
       it and some below that, and it’s a really complicated grouping of indices, but
       in all of the indices that we looked at that also incorporated agencies,
       through taking a pretty deep dive, we found that they could include agency
       securities that we could not tie back to the constructs of 25 USC 162. But
       the Treasury indices were always clean, and so we ended up using
       Treasury indices because at least we could never be challenged on having
       unauthorized securities in the index that we’re using.

       As reflected in Mr. Nunes’ expert report, Rocky Hill Advisors used three Barclays
indices to develop the benchmarks for its revised damages calculations:

       • the Barclays U.S. Treasury (UST) index, which includes all Treasury notes/
       bonds with maturities between 1-30 years.
       • the Barclays Long-Term U.S. Treasury (LT UST) index, which includes all
       Treasury notes/bonds with maturities between 10-30 years.
       • the Barclays 1-5 Year U.S. Treasury (1-5 UST) index, which includes all
       Treasury notes with maturities between 1-5 years.

                                            82
Based on the Barclays indexes used by Mr. Nunes to develop the benchmarks, at the
damages trial, Mr. Nunes explained on direct testimony with plaintiffs’ counsel:

      [Q.] Now, based on the Court’s liability decision, as you testified earlier, you
      established maturity structures of ten years or, alternatively, 7.86 years and
      then 2.97 years, for the various breach periods. How did you create
      benchmarks for those maturities from the various Barclays indices?

      A. Each one of the indices that Barclays produces has a host of data points
      that they provide, and, of course, the weighted average maturity is one of
      them. So at any given point in time, we can see what the term structure of
      the index is, and so using -- to marry up the term structure of our model to
      the investment horizon of the funds as they changed based on the Court’s
      decision, we used allocations between three of the Barclays indices to
      achieve the term structure targets that we were looking for.

      Q. And how did you determine what proportion of each of the three indices
      to use as a benchmark for these specific maturity structures?

      A. Well, in addition to proper alignment of term structure with investment
      horizon, one of the other basic tenets of prudent investment management
      is diversification, and so the most broadly diversified index that Barclays
      produces in the Treasury sector is the 1 to 30 year Treasury, and so that is
      always the starting point for us where we need to do allocations, because
      we always want to maintain the broadest amount of diversity --
      diversification as possible to make sure that we’re remaining in a prudent
      portfolio. And so just using round numbers, if, for example, if the Barclays
      UST [United States Treasury] for a given timeline, on average, was seven
      years to maturity and we were looking for a target maturity of eight, we
      would take out some of the Barclays UST, the shorter one, and we would
      plug in a little bit of the longer one, which is the Barclays Long-Term, so that
      the weighted average of the -- based on the allocations was as close as we
      could get to that target 8 percent -- eight-year term structure. Conversely, if
      we’re looking for a shorter term structure than the Barclays UST is, by
      allocating, we would swap out some of the Barclays UST and bring in the
      shorter index, again, such that we could attain the targeted maturity that
      made sense based on the nature of the funds.

       In his testimony at the damages trial, Mr. Nunes explained how plaintiffs’ expert
blend indices together to reach a specific maturity structure:

      [O]ne of the key concepts of prudent investment, of course, is
      diversification. This actually sort of anecdotally supports that argument. So
      we always, where we can -- so if the UST is not a -- so, for example, in our
      roll-forward period, we used the 1-5, so the UST is not even part of the mix,
      but wherever the UST is a viable part of any kind of an allocation, we will

                                            83
       always attempt to stay in the highest allocation percentage of the UST
       because it is clearly, of the indices we use, the broadest and most diverse,
       and anecdotally, in that it returns a better number than most of her other
       scenarios, supports the fact that diversification matters. And so we
       concentrate on being the most diverse in our model constructs as we
       possibly can be.

       Q. And so, then, when you needed maturity -- needed to meet a maturity
       structure, how did you then blend in either a shorter index or a longer index?
       Did you run a hundred different scenarios or how did you blend in either a
       longer or shorter index?

       A. So the answer to did we run a hundred scenarios is, God, no. So we
       would start with the -- you know, obviously we know what 100 percent of
       the UST would return in terms of an average maturity, and so we would look
       at it and say, okay, let’s just -- I think this is the example I used in my
       testimony -- let's just say that the UST at a point in time we’re looking at has
       a term structure of eight years, and we need to be at ten years. We would
       simply begin sort of ratably -- and that’s a bit of a guess at first, how much
       of the UST do I need to take out and how much of the UST Long do I need
       to bring in to maintain maximum diversification and still hit the ten-year
       targeted structure. And so, you know, it may have gone something like this.
       Okay, let’s see what happens if I do 10 percent of an allocation --
       reallocation from UST to long-term of 10 percent. What's that look like?
       That’s 9.7, all right. So maybe we’ve got to shave it a little bit or add a little
       bit. So it's a little bit trial and error, but it’s once we get to the targeted
       maturity that we need to be at at the maximum amount of diversification,
       that's the allocation.

Plaintiffs explain in their brief that “[w]hen RHA combines two Barclays indexes to develop
a benchmark, it starts with the Barclays UST, which is the broadest-based and most
diversified because it includes all maturities from 1-30 years. Then RHA adds in as much
of the longer or shorter index as necessary to achieve the desired weighted average
maturity.” (citation omitted). In the above captioned case, plaintiffs’ post-trial brief and Mr.
Nunes’ expert report for the damages phase of trial reflects that various benchmarks are
composed as:

Benchmark             Period                             Composition
10-year               1980-1992             86.05% Barclays UST; 13.95% Barclays LT

7.86-year             1980-1992             97.90% Barclays UST; 2.10% Barclays 1-5 UST

10-year               Apr. – Dec. 1997      88.35% Barclays UST; 11.65% Barclays LT

7.86-year             Apr. – Dec. 1997      90.20% Barclays UST; 9.80% Barclays 1-5 UST

                                              84
10-year               1998-2004              91.60% Barclays UST; 8.40% Barclays LT

7.86-year             1998-2004              81.25% Barclays UST; 18.75% Barclays 1-5 UST

2.97-year             2004-2006              6.75% Barclays UST; 93.25% Barclays 1-5 UST

As plaintiffs indicate in their post-trial briefs, the expert report

       used transition periods in its investment model when significant changes
       were made to the maturity structure of the Docket 326 Funds. It used a
       transition period of one-year in 1980-1981 to shift the 326-K Fund from cash
       equivalents into a diversified portfolio with a weighted average maturity of
       either 10 years or 7.86 years. It used a transition period of six months in
       1999 to shift the 326-A Funds into a long-term portfolio. And it used a
       transition period of six months in 2004 to shorten the maturity structure of
       the 326-K Fund (from either 10 years or 7.86 years) to a weighted average
       maturity of 2.97 years.

(footnotes omitted). On direct testimony, plaintiffs’ counsel and Mr. Nunes discussed the
purpose of the transition periods:

       Q. Now, did Rocky Hill also include a transition period as of August 1980 in
       order to transition the fund from short-term into these maturity structures
       that you've just discussed?

       A. We did.

       Q. And what was the reason to include this transition period?

       A. Well, as I pointed out at trial, there is not --well, there isn’t an investment
       manager in the world, nor would there be a client in the world, that would
       want a portfolio of approximately $28 million that is for all intents and
       purposes in cash. Even though some of it was in very short-term CDs, it
       would be absolutely imprudent to convert that in another portfolio and
       essentially overnight. I mean, an example we used at trial, it’s done
       rhetorically, through the Government and its witnesses, that if any of them
       had hit -- at that point we were talking about the original 26 million -- if any
       of them had hit a $26 million net lottery jackpot, would any of them show up
       the next morning at their investment manager’s office, ask them to have a
       fully structured portfolio, seven or eight or ten years, by 4:00 the next -- the
       same business day? And, of course, it was a rhetorical question because I
       know the answer. It would just never be done. So you have to -- to be
       prudent, you need to have -- when you’re doing something significant, like
       building a portfolio of this size out of cash or cash equivalents, you must do
       it over some length of time and not just like flipping a light switch and all of
       a sudden the portfolio is built.

                                               85
Later during the damages trial, plaintiffs’ counsel and Mr. Nunes revisited the transition
periods with the following exchange on direct examination:

       Q. Now, I know you’ve – you’ve provided testimony on this earlier, but,
       again, why does Rocky Hill include transition periods?

       A. Well, no prudent investment approach is ever going to flip a switch and
       go from zero to a hundred with a portfolio overnight. You know, again, I
       use the example, which one of the experts that the Government uses would
       take $26 million to their investment advisor and say, hey, can you have my
       portfolio built by 4:00? I've got a tee time at 5:00. It just doesn’t work that
       way, and they would not want that, and honestly I think it’s disingenuous
       for them to say that that's the way this should be calculated. Now, it’s a
       great story because interest rates are rising. That's not our fault that the
       funds were awarded in 1979, late in ‘79, at or near the cyclical high in
       interest rates that the world had never seen before, but nevertheless, that’s
       when they were awarded. And one year later, when the Court says the first
       breach period happens, the discipline is the discipline. Regardless of
       where interest rates are and what direction they’re heading, you are not
       going to convert an entire portfolio from nothing to something overnight. So
       there has to be a transition period of some length.

        Finally, regarding the calculation of damages based on plaintiffs’ model, Mr. Nunes
testified on direct examination:

       So at any given point in time, the real term structure of the portfolio is
       somewhere in between, and, yeah, we do know that -- I don’t remember the
       exact number, but around 83, 84, 85 percent of the Government’s callables
       did get called, not always on the first call date but fairly close to it. And so
       from a liability standpoint -- and we agree with the Court’s decision -- the
       proper bound to use is the lower one because that's much closer to the real
       term structure of the portfolio. So, in other words, the portfolio was even
       shorter than one might think it was based on maturity structure, but -- so,
       you know, that informs the liability decision. In calculating damages, though,
       if because the real maturity structure is somewhere above that lower bound,
       if we were to use a term structure based on the weighted average years to
       the call for the purpose of calculating damages, then we would be
       understating damages somewhat. Conversely, by using the weighted
       average years to maturity, which is what we did for the purpose of
       calculating damages, we recognized someone could make the argument
       we’re overstating damages, but, again, as we understand trust law and as
       we understand Western Shoshone, where there is any ambiguity or doubts
       regarding potential investment earnings, that they’re resolved against the
       trustee. So in the -- the choice, I guess, between understating damages or
       overstating damages, we felt that the guidance was clear and that we

                                             86
       should use weighted average years to maturity with a purpose of calculating
       damages, even though weighted average year to call was used for the
       purpose of calculating -- for determining liability.

Defendant’s Damages Model

       Similar to plaintiffs, defendant did not call any fact witnesses at the damages trial.
Instead, defendant called two experts, Dr. Starks and Dr. Longstaff. Although both Dr.
Starks and Dr. Longstaff submitted expert reports and rebuttal expert reports for the
damages trial, only Dr. Starks created a damages model for the court to evaluate, and
offered testimony about her approach.37

       Defendant contends that “Dr. Starks’s calculations present a fair approximation of
damages grounded in a prudent and achievable investment strategy that Interior could
have executed in the real world, in accordance with its policies and practices and in light
of contemporaneous facts.”38 In the post-trial briefing, defendant explains:

       Dr. Starks selected alternative prudent investments that were longer-term
       in character, and reflect an investment time horizon consistent with the
       investments the Court found prudent during the non-breach periods. Dr.
       Starks also selected a buy-and-hold alternative investment strategy
       consistent with the Interior Department’s policies and practices, which
       require Interior to balance investment returns against the risk of capital
       losses and prohibit frequent trading. The portfolio she proposes is based on

37As noted above, regarding Dr. Longstaff, plaintiffs argue that “Dr. Longstaff did not offer
an opinion on the amount of damages in this case.”
38 At trial, defendant’s counsel asked: “Dr. Starks, what types of data did you use to
calculate damages?” Dr. Starks responded:

       A. I used data on Treasury securities from the Center for Research Security
       Price, CRSP, which is maintained by the University of Chicago, Booth
       School of Business.

       Q. And what types of information does that data set contain?

       A. It has information on Treasury prices. It has information on Treasury
       issues. It has information on prices, information on the bid price, the ask
       price, the maturity of the Treasury bonds. It has detailed information on
       Treasury bonds.

       Q. What time period did you look at for those data?

       A. From 1980 to 2013.

                                             87
       a buy-and-hold ladder of bonds with a broad range of maturities. This
       approach mitigates interest rate risk, while also taking advantage of higher-
       yielding longer-term bonds. Dr. Starks’s model also offers Interior flexibility
       to adapt its portfolio — replacing maturing bonds with longer or shorter-term
       bonds as the circumstances warrant.

Defendant continues:

       Dr. Starks’ calculated the additional income that Interior would have earned
       using her proposed alternative investment portfolio for each breach period.
       She then compared the investment income generated during each breach
       period to the actual balance of the Fund at the end of that breach period.
       For non-breach periods, Dr. Starks applied the actual growth rate of the
       Fund during those periods to the but-for portfolio balance resulting from the
       breach periods. So, for example, for the Docket 326-K Fund for the breach
       period August 1980 to November 1992, Dr. Starks calculated that her
       proposed alternative investment portfolio would have generated an
       additional $21,382,643. Dr. Starks effectively added that additional
       investment income to the balance of the Fund in December 1992, and
       assumed that it would have grown at the actual rate that the Fund grew
       during the December 1992 to March 1997 prudent period, growing the
       damages amount from $21,382,643 to $26,505,699 by April 1997. Dr.
       Starks’s total calculations of damages therefore included not only the
       amounts of income Interior would have earned for the Funds during the
       breach periods, but also additional income that would have been earned on
       breach period damages during non-breach periods if Interior had invested
       prudently during the breach periods.

(emphasis in original; internal citation and footnote omitted).

      At the damages trial, defendant’s counsel asked Dr. Starks on direct examination
about the relationship between the actual average maturity of the 326-K Fund and the
buy-and-hold policy. Dr. Starks indicated:

       [A.] Well, I think what you’re seeing here is the effects on maturity of a buy-
       and-hold policy, because -- because once purchased -- or in the eighties,
       longer term CDs were purchased, and then they come down. Longer term
       securities are purchased and then it -- as time goes by, they go down, and
       then they're purchased again.

       Q. Does the shape of the maturity structure of the 326-K fund over the
       period reflect a buy-and-hold strategy?

       A. It does to me, yes.

                                             88
       Q. And is it your opinion, based on your review of the record in this case
       and the record of the Government’s investments in this case, that the
       Government, indeed, followed a buy-and-hold strategy at all times in its
       management of this fund?

       A. It appears that they -- that they were consistently following a buy-and-
       hold strategy.

Dr. Starks also used a chart as a demonstrative, which was admitted into evidence at the
damages trial, to illustrate the actual average maturity of the 326-K Fund:

         The court notes the similarities between this and the chart that Dr. Starks prepared
as Demonstrative Exhibit 10 at the liability trial, and included above in the findings of fact.
The above chart, however, does not include the representation of WSJF Years to Call
with mortgage-backed securities which was included in Demonstrative Exhibit 10 at the
liability trial.

      To describe her model, Dr. Starks and defendant’s counsel had the following
discussion on direct examination at the damages trial:

       Q. What types of information did you consider in conducting your damages
       analysis?

                                              89
      A. I looked at the Court’s [liability] opinion. I looked at a number of
      documents in this case with regard to the Government. I looked at -- I also
      looked at a number of documents and research studies that I would use in
      my field and also considered other kinds of information to come up with
      what kind of model I thought would be appropriate for this.

      Q. Okay. And, generally speaking, how did you go about calculating
      damages?

      A. I -- just from the general perspective, I constructed a but-for ladder
      portfolio, and then I took the difference between the performance on that
      ladder portfolio over the time period and the actual performance, and the
      difference was -- were my damages.

      Q. All right. Now, Dr. Starks, did you -- did you attempt to create a but-for
      portfolio that you felt was plausible?

      A. Yes. That was very important, that it be plausible.

      Q. What considerations did you -- did you make to suggest that your
      investment selections were plausible?

      A. Well, again, I looked at the Court’s [liability] opinion, I looked at what the
      Government could have done given their objectives, their policies, and their
      practices, and I also considered, given a buy-and-hold model, what would
      be the most logical buy-and-hold model to use to calculate damages.

      Q. What were the Government’s investment objectives?

      A. To earn an acceptable return while preserving tribal capital and taking
      into account the needs of the tribes.

As indicated in Dr. Starks’ expert report prepared for the damages phase of trial:

      The BIA’s investment decisions were constrained by a set of specific
      investment objectives guiding its management of the tribal trust funds.
      These objectives, which were specified by BIA policy, reflect the Bureau’s
      practice with respect to managing the tradeoff between risk and return
      inherent in financial markets. In particular, the BIA’s investment objectives
      reflect the Government’s priority of earning an acceptable rate of return on
      the trust funds at issue while simultaneously mitigating the risk of loss,
      preserving capital, and having funds available for timely distribution when
      needed.

(footnotes omitted). At the damages trial, defendant’s counsel asked Dr. Starks on direct
examination:

                                             90
Q. [W]hat were the Government’s investment constraints?

A. As I’ve talked about before, one was this holding-versus-trading policy,
the buy-and-hold policy that existed, and the other was the concern, the
scrutiny that was given to bonds that were longer term.

Q. Now, are buy-and-hold strategies risk-free?

A. No, they’re not. Buy-and-hold strategies -- again, you know, if we’re just
looking at treasuries, we don’t really need to worry about the quality, don’t
have to worry as much about the liquidity risk, but we still have interest rate
risk, and we have reinvestment risk. And so a buy-and-hold strategy, as I
said earlier, you don’t have the effects of interest rate risk while you are
holding that bond because you’re going to get back the principal since it’s a
government bond.

Q. Now, are there other types of risk beyond interest rate risk -- you say
buy-and-hold strategies account for interest rate risk. Are there other kinds
of risk that the Government might face in executing a buy-and-hold
strategy?

A. One particular reinvestment rate risk. So you have the reinvestment rate
risk when you’re reinvesting the coupons, that you might not receive the
same return that you were receiving on the bond when you bought it, and
then you also -- when you -- when that bond matures, you have to reinvest
those proceeds in another bond.

Q. Are there some -- are some buy-and-hold strategies better than others
at managing reinvestment risk?

A. Yes. The ladder strategy -- the ladder portfolio is very useful for mitigating
reinvestment risk.

Q. All right. Let’s look at Demonstrative 60, please, and I'd just like for you
to describe to the Court what a ladder strategy is.

A. It’s -- a ladder strategy is that you set up your portfolio as if it’s a ladder,
so in this case this would be a ten-year ladder portfolio. You take one-tenth
of the principal that you have to invest and you put it in that top rung in the
ladder, and then you take another one-tenth and you put it in – I’m sorry, I
should have been more clear. The top rung of the ladder is a bond with a
maturity of ten years. Then you take one-tenth and put it in the second rung
of the ladder, in effect a bond that has a maturity of nine years, and so forth.
You do this for -- you put one-tenth in bonds of different maturities for each
year all the way down to one year left of maturity.

                                        91
      Q. How does a ladder strategy operate to mitigate reinvestment risk?

      A. Because when you are reinvesting either the coupons or you’re
      reinvesting the principal, because you have the bonds maturing at different
      points in time, you’re reinvesting at different interest rates if interest rates
      are changing, so you are mitigating that reinvestment risk.

Dr. Starks expanded on the benefits of the ladder approach during her direct examination,
indicating

      a ladder portfolio conforms to the buy-and-hold policy. It mitigates interest
      rate risk because you’re holding the bonds to maturity. It mitigates
      reinvestment risk from those maturing securities, as I had talked about
      earlier, and -- and I think this is also important -- the average time to maturity
      and the duration of the portfolio remains stable over time, and so you have
      -- you have this stability in the risk of this portfolio over time. I would also
      say that ladder portfolios are particularly used with – they’ve been used a
      lot with government securities. They’ve been used a lot with pension funds,
      with endowments, with foundations. It's a very common thing.

       In response to defendant’s counsel’s question: “Did you use a ladder strategy for
your but-for portfolios for the 326-K fund and the 326-A funds?” Dr. Starks responded:
“Yes, I did.” Regarding her modeling, during direct examination, defendant’s counsel and
Dr. Starks had the following exchange:

      [Q.] [W]hat did you look at it in terms of plausibility when selecting an
      investment horizon for your portfolio?

      A. When selecting the investment horizon, I thought about the concern that
      the Government had -- and like I said earlier, that I saw throughout -- of
      being careful with the long-term bonds, and so I also thought about the
      degree of uncertainty there was and the amount of interest rate there was
      during the time period, particularly the early time period. And so I decided
      that ten years would be the appropriate ladder in terms of -- so the bonds
      ranged from ten years to one year in maturity.

      Q. What is your understanding of the Court’s findings [in the liability Opinion]
      as it relates to a prudent investment horizon?

      A. I looked at the time period between 199 --December 1992 and March
      1997, which is the time period that the Court found that the Government
      had invested prudently, and I looked at that time period, and as we looked
      at earlier, most of the months had maturities, weighted years to call, less
      than six years, and, in fact, less than 5.5 years, and so I took that time period

                                             92
         and looked at what was most plausible in terms of the weighted average
         years to call for this portfolio

         Q. Now, Mr. Nunes testified that he based his investment horizons and
         maturity structures consistent -- in a way that's consistent with the Court’s
         analysis for the periods in which the Court found no breach. Is that what you
         did, too?

         A. Well, I would say that I took into account what the weighted average
         years to call really looked like in that period, because they took the high
         points, but I don’t think you can base an investment strategy just on one
         month or two months when it was higher, because then it was going down.
         And so I took into account, in terms of plausibility, the frequency of the
         weighted average years to call, the months that had the different – I’m not
         being very articulate with this -- the months that had five years versus six
         years, seven years, eight years, and 9.7.[39]

         Q. And, Dr. Starks, did you attempt to select an investment horizon that was
         consistent with the way in which the Government most frequently invested
         in that ‘92 to ‘97 period?

         A. Yes, I did.

         Q. Now -- and, I’m sorry, what was the investment horizon that you selected
         for your but-for portfolio?

         A. I selected five years. So, again, with an average of five years, the average
         portfolio would be a ten-year ladder.

         Q. Does that mean –

39   As closing argument in the damages trial, defendant’s counsel argued

         the evidence actually is that although the weighted average years to call --
         and that’s the metric the Court used in its liability opinion for reasons it
         stated in that opinion -- but the facts are that the weighted average years to
         call of the portfolio during the prudent period, it did range between 4.7 years
         and 9.7 years, which in shorthand we have said, you know, we have kind of
         estimated about five to ten years, but, in fact, 80 percent of the time, those
         investments were in a portfolio that had a weighted average years to call of
         7 1/2 years or less. So that information we know from the prudent period
         that can be brought to bear on what a reasonable alternative portfolio should
         be in this case and, you know, what information we can look to to damages
         during the breach periods.

                                               93
       A. They have bonds from ten years in maturity down to one year in maturity.

       Q. And is that true for every -- every point in time during the breach periods,
       the ladder would hold bonds between -- ranging in maturities from 1 to 10
       years?

       A. Well, in the -- in -- when -- in 2004, when the Claims Distribution Act
       passed, I lowered -- I started reinvesting the one-year bond. Instead of
       reinvesting in another ten-year bond, I reinvested in a one-year bond, so
       the maturity started going down. I would also say that for the 326-A fund,
       when it became clear that the Government was going to be investing this
       money for the long term, I moved -- I put those funds from a ten-year ladder
       into a 28-year ladder, with an average maturity of 14 years, which was
       consistent with the Court’s [liability] opinion about the 2012, 2013 period.

       Q. All right. What -- which government policies inform your selection of five
       years for the average portfolio maturity?

       A. Well, the trading versus holding as well as -- or I should say the holding-
       versus-trading policy, as well as the practice and policy of not -- of not going
       long term unless there was a particular reason for doing it.

       Q. What aspects of finance theory inform your selection of five years as the
       average portfolio maturity?

       A. Interest rate risk is also an important component of my decision because
       the longer term bonds -- and we’ve talked about them -- they have much
       higher interest rates, and given the uncertainty during the 1980s, I felt that
       interest rate was also an important consideration.

       On direct examination with Dr. Starks, defendant’s counsel asked “how does the
investment time horizon change over time in your portfolio for the 326-K fund?” Dr. Starks
answered: “The 326-K fund is -- I had a ten-year ladder until -- for the 1980 to 1992 period,
and then – and then in the April 1997, I go back to a ten-year ladder, and until 2004, it
stays with a ten-year ladder, and then it starts reducing in maturity.” Dr. Starks continued:

       So starting in August 1980, I invest everything, and like I said, I put one-
       tenth in each -- in bonds of each of these different maturities that are shown
       on the left-hand side. So it starts out with the ten-year ladder, has one-tenth
       in each of these bonds, and then a year later, when the one-year bond
       matures, that gets reinvested into a new ten-year bond. And then if you . . .
       look across time, you can see how these bonds mature. So the ten-year
       bond becomes a nine-year bond, becomes an eight-year bond, a seven-
       year bond, and a six-year bond, and each year as you reinvest, you're
       getting a new ten-year bond as the one-year bond is maturing.

                                             94
      Q. And when you transition in 2004 to a shorter investment time horizon
      based on the passage of the Distribution Act . . . how does the model
      perform that shortening of portfolio maturity.

      A. Instead of buying a -- so in 2004, instead of buying a another ten-year
      bond, as you’re continuing the ladder, you buy an additional one-year bond,
      and then you do that again in 2005. So you’re shortening the maturity. That's
      one thing a ladder can do, it gives you flexibility to be able to shorten
      maturity.

      For the 326-A Funds, Dr. Starks testified,

      for 2004, I had a ten-year ladder, and then -- and then I moved the money
      into -- when it became clear from the Claims Distribution Act that it would -
      - it would be long term -- and, again, I used the Court’s saying that the 11-
      to 14-year yield to call during the -- during the 2012-2013 period was
      prudent for the 326-A funds, I used that and I moved into a 28-year ladder,
      which has an average maturity of 14 years for the A funds. And I do this in
      two different ways. I do it in 2004, because that’s when the Government
      knew for sure, but I also included in my rebuttal report calculations in case
      it would be useful for the Court if it -- if it’s decided that the Government
      should have known this in 1998, and I -- because in the decision it said this
      became probable that it would become permanent, and so I moved it -- for
      my secondary calculations, I changed it from -- from going in 2004 to a 28-
      year ladder to going to the 28-year ladder in 1998.

      After explaining the methodology of her model at the damages trial, Dr. Starks also
provided a calculation of damages owed plaintiffs. As defendant explains:

      With respect to the 326-K Fund, Dr. Starks started with the balance of the
      Fund at the beginning of the first breach period on August 4, 1980 and
      calculated the amount of additional income that Interior could have earned
      using a ten-year ladder portfolio between August 1980 and November 1992,
      instead of investing in the CD program the Court found imprudent. This
      calculation resulted in additional investment income of $21,382,643 over
      and above the income that Interior actually earned during the period. Dr.
      Starks then assumed that, in a but-for world, this additional $21,382,643
      would have been part of the 326-K Fund during the December 1992 to
      March 1997 non-breach period, and calculated the amount of additional
      income that the 326-K Fund would have earned during that period — using
      the rate of actual growth for the 326-K Fund during that period. This
      calculation resulted in $5,123,056 in additional income during the
      December 1992 to March 1997 non-breach period. Dr. Starks then carried
      forward the balance of her calculations to determine how much additional
      income Interior would have earned had it invested the 326-K Fund in a one-
      to-ten-year ladder portfolio from April 1997 through June 2004. That

                                           95
      calculation resulted in additional investment income of $29,507,915. Dr.
      Starks then calculated the additional investment income that would have
      been earned between July 2004 and September 2006 if Interior had
      continued a ladder portfolio approach, but had begun replacing retiring
      bonds with one-year bonds to shorten the overall portfolio maturity in 2005
      and 2006. That calculation resulted in additional investment income of
      $4,684,779. Finally, Dr. Starks calculated the amount of additional
      investment income that the 326-K would have earned during the
      non-breach period from October 2006 through September 2013
      when the 326-K Fund was fully distributed to its beneficiaries. As
      she did for the damages during the October 1992 to March 1997
      non-breach period, Dr. Starks assumed the balance of the Fund
      would have included the additional investment income earned
      during the previous breach periods and that the Fund would have
      grown at the same rate it actually grew from October 2006 to
      September 2013. That calculation resulted in additional
      investment income of $13,118,123. In total, Dr. Starks calculated
      that a prudent portfolio throughout the life of the 326-K Fund
      would have resulted in investment income of $262,606,465
      million, instead of the $188,789,950 million that Interior actually
      earned over the life of the Fund. Thus, Dr. Starks calculated
      damages of $73,816,515 — the difference between what Interior
      actually earned and what a prudent investment approach would
      have earned over the life of the 326-K Fund.

(emphasis in original; internal citations omitted). Dr. Starks also used a chart
as a demonstrative, which was admitted into evidence, which the court
reproduces below:

                                          96
For the 326-A Funds, defendant explains in the post-trial briefing:

Dr. Starks’s calculations of damages for the 326-A Funds follow the same
methodology. Dr. Starks began with the actual balances of the 326-A-1
Fund at its inception in 1992 and the 326-A-3 Fund at its inception in 1995,
and determined the additional investment income these combined Funds
would have earned, had they been invested in accordance with Dr. Starks’s
one-to-ten year ladder approach from March 1992 to November 1998. That
calculation resulted in additional investment income of $165,782. Dr. Starks
then carried forward the balance of the Funds as of December 1998 and
calculated how much additional investment income the 326-A Funds would
have earned between December 1998 and January 2012, had Interior
invested the Funds in accordance the twenty-eight year ladder portfolio Dr.
Starks adopted in her analysis. That calculation resulted in additional
investment income of $1,010,314. Dr. Starks then took the balance of the
326-A Funds at the end of January 2012, and calculated the growth of the
Funds at the same rate the Funds actually grew from February 2012 to the
September 2013 end date of Plaintiffs’ claims. The final calculation of
damages totaled $987,920.

                                     97
(emphasis in original; internal citations omitted). Dr. Starks also used the same
demonstrative chart for the 326-A Funds which the court reproduces below:

       Dr. Starks, in addition to testifying on direct examination about her model and her
calculations of damages, offered a number of challenges to Mr. Nunes’ modeling, both in
her expert reports and her testimony at the damages trial. As noted above, the Mr. Nunes
admitted there was an error in his calculations for his original expert report on damages,
which was identified by Dr. Starks. Dr. Starks, in her rebuttal expert report for the
damages trial, noted:

      The RHA Damages Report purports to “utilize the returns of the 326-K Fund
      portfolio as it was constructed by the Government in calculating how the
      Fund should have grown” during the period from the start of December 1992
      through the end of March 1997, when the Court found the Government was
      not in breach of its trust responsibilities. This should be a straightforward
      exercise: all one needs to do is divide the March 1997 amount by the
      December 1992 amount. But RHA does this incorrectly.

(emphasis in original; footnotes omitted). As indicated in her expert rebuttal report, once
the error is corrected, “ultimately RHA’s damages for the 326-K Fund by $47.7 million for
RHA’s 10-year model, which is 26.8 percent of the total estimated damages, and by $45.0
million for RHA’s 7.86-year model, which is 28.8 percent of the total estimated damages
using that model.” (footnote omitted).

                                            98
      As indicated in Dr. Starks’ rebuttal expert report:

      RHA manipulates the damages it calculates by selecting an arbitrary
      transition period that avoids realizing market declines in the original period.
      Throughout its analysis, RHA employs “transition” periods for the Funds at
      various points in time “to adjust the maturity structure of the portfolio” to the
      benchmark structure selected by RHA for its analyses. That is, RHA makes
      the assumption that the counterfactual portfolio changes would have taken
      some months to implement. The first transition period in RHA’s models for
      the 326-K Fund begins at the start of the investment period in August 1980
      and occurs over twelve months, with 8.33 percent of value of the total 326-
      K portfolio transitioning every month from the assets actually held at that
      time to RHA’s synthetic index. The second transition in RHA’s models for
      the 326-K Fund begins in July 2004 and occurs over six months (not 12
      months, as RHA assumed for the first transition period), with 16.67 percent
      of the value of the total 326-K portfolio transitioning every month to a
      maturity structure of 2.97 years. RHA also includes a transition period in its
      analysis of the 326-A-1/A-3 Funds; in that case it is assumed that the new
      investment strategy would take six months to implement.

      RHA’s transition periods are problematic for several reasons. First, the use
      of the transition periods does not comport with the Court’s [Liability] Opinion
      as to the timing of the damages periods. The Court found, for example, that
      the 326-K Fund was imprudently managed starting in August 1980, not one
      year later, when RHA’s transition period for the 326-K Fund concludes.
      Second, setting aside for now my disagreement about the need for a
      transition period, RHA does not explain why the timing of the transition it
      selected does not match the maturity schedules of the securities actually
      held in the 326-K Fund as of the start of the relevant period. . . . Third, RHA’s
      transition periods also are arbitrary. . . . Finally, RHA appears to have
      improperly implemented the six-month transition period it claims to have
      applied to the 326-A-1/A-3 Funds over the course of the first six months of
      1999.

(footnotes omitted). At the damages trial, Dr. Starks responded to defendant’s counsel’s
question during direct examination, what “would have happened if the Government had
immediately executed Mr. Nunes’ investment strategy from day one instead of just
keeping the Government’s portfolio in CDs and cash?” by explaining:

      So as of August 4th, 1980, the fund was about $28 million, and it would
      have immediately started losing money, and within just the first couple of
      months, it would have lost about a million dollars, and it -- as you can see,
      it still stayed where it was -- where it was in a loss from the 28 million
      throughout the entire transition period, had they not had a transition period.
      So the bottom line shows a ten-year model without any transition period.

                                             99
       Q. All right. And what impact does this 2. – would this $2.6 million loss in
       the very beginning of the breach period in 1980, what impact would that
       have had over the course of Mr. Nunes’ damages model if he had employed
       it from the start?

       A. If he did not have this transition period, then -- then because this $2
       million would have accumulated, it would have resulted in damages being
       lowered by about $36 million.

       Q. All right. And have you put together a demonstrative that demonstrates
       your effort to quantify the impact of the loss shielding transition period or
       loss shielding transition periods that Mr. Nunes uses in his model?

       A. Yes. If you look at -- if you look at slide 42, it shows for the ten-year
       model, the transition period, if you took it away or corrected for it, it would -
       - it would have lowered damages by 36.7 million; and for the 7.86-year
       model, it would have lowered damages by 30 million.[40]

Plaintiffs respond that “RHA properly uses transition periods,” and “Dr. Starks’ contention
that transition periods are unwarranted is belied by her own damages model.”

       At the damages trial, Dr. Starks also questioned the logistics of plaintiffs’ model,
explaining in an exchange with defendant’s counsel:

       [A.] Selecting the Barclays Index, in my opinion, is a choice of investment
       strategy; selecting the -- which indices to combine with which weights is an
       investment strategy decision.

       Q. Now, could the Government have simply invested in Barclays Indices?

40 At the damages trial, Dr. Starks was also critical of building a portfolio slowly with
Treasury securities, noting “I haven’t seen where, with Treasury securities, somebody
waits a year to -- to invest slowly over time with this idea of, oh, I have reinvestment risk.
What I see is portfolio managers that are trying to get in as quickly as possible, and they
will even take used futures in order to be fully invested.” Defendant’s second expert, Dr.
Longstaff, similarly commented at the damages trial, that “the Treasury bond market is
incredibly liquid, even back in the 1980 era, you know, it was – daily trading volume was
in the billions, and it’s so liquid that it's very -- you know, very easy, straightforward, low-
cost to put on large positions and do those within minutes, literally,” and, therefore, “the
idea that, you know, that a portfolio that’s on the magnitude of a hundred million or 26
million, that it might take 18 months to transition it into a portfolio is just kind of astonishing.
That’s just not consistent with the realities. In liquid markets, you could turn those kind of
portfolios around literally in days, weeks at the worst.”
                                               100
      A. No, not back in -- in the beginning. It would have required investing in a
      very large number of different bonds, and you need to -- again, as the
      composition is changing, because the Treasury is constantly issuing new
      bonds and other bonds are maturing, as this -- as you have these changes,
      the Government would have had to have been changing the index.

      Just to explain a little bit more about it, a bond index is very different from a
      stock index. The S&P 500 isn’t as difficult because you -- and let’s just act
      as if the 500 stocks don't change. You invest in the 500 stocks. As the prices
      go up or down, your index naturally goes up or down, and you don’t have to
      be selling or buying new shares because you have your portfolio
      constructed of the S&P 500. So it’s – it’s not that difficult. A bond index, as
      I said, is much more difficult because you have bonds that are maturing,
      you have new bonds that are consistently coming in, and so your -- your --
      and this index is market valuated. So you have to be reproportioning every
      bond in the index. Mr. Nunes gave an example with just two bonds and how
      it wouldn’t be that much or he made a comment it wouldn’t be that much,
      but you have hundreds of bond securities. If you want to emulate that index,
      you would have to be buying some, selling some, and to make sure that
      you're keeping up with the market value as new bonds are being issued by
      the Treasury.

       After hearing testimony at the damages trial from Dr. Starks, court heard testimony
from Dr. Longstaff. As explained by Dr. Longstaff on his direct testimony, prompted by a
question from defendant’s counsel:

      [Q.] have you conducted any analysis in this case to demonstrate the fallacy
      of reaching for yield as it applies to investing in Treasury securities?

      A. Yes. I conducted kind of a simulation exercise to try to illustrate the point
      that if you invest in a longer term bond, you don’t necessarily get higher
      returns than investing in shorter maturity bonds. And I’ll try to, kind of in a
      bit of a pedantic way, just use a simple simulation exercise to kind of
      illustrate this concept in as simple way as I can.

      Q. So if you could just describe these three simulated strategies that you
      looked at.

      A. Okay. Well, what we would do as a simple simulation exercise, we are
      going to imagine that we were standing back there at August of 1980,
      looking at the term structure that existed in the market at that date, and we
      are going to basically explore just what would happen if I had invested $1
      in each of three different strategies.

      In the first strategy, we are going to basically simulate what would happen
      if I bought a one-year zero-coupon bond and then, you know, a year later it

                                            101
      matures, and roll it over into a new one-year bond, and we do that each
      year for ten years and keep track of what happens to the value of that
      portfolio over ten years.

      In the second strategy -- so that’s the rollover strategy, the first one. The
      second one is we are going to conduct that same exercise but this time we
      are going to assume that you start off in 1980 and you buy a ten-year zero-
      coupon bond, and we hold that bond to maturity. So we have a buy-and-
      hold strategy here, and we hold that bond to maturity for ten years.

      And then the third variation on this, we are going to simulate what happens
      if we follow kind of a targeted maturity strategy. The idea here is that at the
      beginning of the ten-year period, we buy a ten-year zero-coupon bond, but
      this time we hold it for a year, and then we go into the market, sell it at
      whatever its new price is, reinvest the proceeds into a brand new ten-year
      bond, and we just keep doing that every year. So you’re kind of zig-zagging
      between the, you know, ten-year maturity, nine-year, back and forth, kind
      of in a targeted maturity, similar, as I understand, to kind of the -- well, the
      Rocky Hill approach here.

Defendant’s counsel then asked Dr. Longstaff to further describe his analysis:

      A. Yes. What we do is -- again, as I mentioned, we go back, looked at the
      term structure that existed in 1980, August 1980, used kind of a simple
      model to generate paths of the interest rate over time, and just modeled
      what the value of each of these three strategies would have been at each
      point in time, each year over the next ten years, and we kind of then take a
      look at the over a million simulations and kind of try to get some
      understanding of what the range of possibilities are.

      Q. All right. Turning to your Demonstrative Number 7, would you describe
      for the Court the results of your simulation with respect to strategy number
      1?

      A. Yes. So there are way too many to show on one piece of paper, so we
      first break out the first, I think, hundred, and it shows here what happens if
      you invest $1 in Strategy 1, just rolling over a one-year zero-coupon bond
      each year for ten years, start off with $1, and, you know, depending on
      whether -- you know, if rates go up, the strategy will do better, and if rates
      go down, it will do less well, and just keep track over time what some of the
      possibilities are. This is just one of a hundred paths that we’re looking at,
      but you’ll see that over time the value tends to grow, but there is risk about
      what the value of the portfolio will be at any point in time, and that's true
      even over ten years. We don’t know what’s going to happen. It depends on
      reinvestment rates, and you can see that there's a wide range of
      possibilities. I think, very significantly, the fact that because of its nature,

                                           102
       rollover strategy, we never end up in a situation, for example, where we will
       have a principal loss. The value of the portfolio will always be greater than
       one. The strategy, even though we don’t know exactly what the outcome
       will be, we do know it has the nice feature that it's not going to produce any
       capital losses. This would be important if, for example, there was
       uncertainty about the investment horizon. It might take us ten years, but
       what if it's only three or five or something happens? It shows that there will
       be some randomness in the value of the portfolio, but we would never have
       a principal loss with this strategy.

       Q. Thank you. Let's turn to Demonstrative Number 8, and could you
       describe for the Court the results of your simulation with respect to Strategy
       2?

       A. Okay. Just a reminder to the Court, what we’re doing here is we're
       starting off with buying a ten-year zero-coupon bond, and we're buying and
       holding that -- buying and holding it for ten years. And as you can see, there
       are situations here where, after one year, let's say if interest rates go up,
       the value of that bond could actually go down. It could actually have a
       principal loss. Vice versa, the rates could go down and the bond price could
       go up, but there’s, you know, considerable risk about the value of that
       portfolio after one year. Going forward, even out to five years, there's a --
       there is a substantial probability that if you had to liquidate that portfolio
       early or, you know, had to pull the plug on the strategy after five years, you
       could actually do that where you have lost money and have less than one
       dollar. That occurs approximately about 8.7 percent. Now, because of the
       strategy, because in ten years the bond is going to mature, and you are
       assuming that there's no default risk, the bond will then actually convert to
       a value of 2.69, guaranteed. So with this strategy, over -- if you hold it for
       ten years, there’s no risk. Now, there is risk, however, if you have to liquidate
       at an earlier point, but this strategy then, after we get past the about six- or
       seven-year point, it’s sufficiently short term that we wouldn’t have losses if
       we had to liquidate in, let's say, year eight or year nine. But it does illustrate
       that this portfolio has a very different risk and return characteristics and that
       a longer maturity bond doesn't necessarily guarantee that you will have
       more returns than a shorter maturity bond.

After Dr. Longstaff outlined the three strategies in his analysis, defendant’s counsel asked
Dr. Longstaff to compare the three strategies “in terms of risk and return.” Dr. Longstaff
explained:

       Just keeping track of what is the probability of having a principal loss, which
       is one metric of maybe underperformance, and that's a dramatic measure
       of underperformance, but we can see, for example, that Strategy 1 will
       never lose principal. It's of a short-term nature. It does well when rates go
       up. The other strategies do poorly when rates go up, a kind of the opposite

                                             103
      type of risk there. With Strategy 2, we can see that in the first year, if you
      have to liquidate after one year, suddenly there's like a 36 percent chance
      you would be under water, where you would actually have lost money over
      the first year. As you go farther into the future, that probability declines, and
      by the time you get to about seven years, then the chances of having a
      principal loss are pretty much gone. So that has a little more risk than
      Strategy 1 in that sense. Strategy 3, again, which is much more like a
      targeted maturity strategy like Rocky Hill, you can see that that strategy has
      a positive probability of loss over all investment horizons. It's more
      pronounced at the beginning because of the way that the term structures
      evolve. It starts out with about a 36 percent chance of a principal loss after
      one year, but it's still substantial after seven, eight, nine, ten years.

      Q. And let’s turn to your Demonstrative Number 11. What did the simulation
      tell you about the expected magnitude of a loss when a principal loss did
      occur?

      A. Yes, this was kind of interesting. It’s not just that the loss can happen.
      It's that the loss could actually, when it does happen, could be very, very
      severe. This demonstrates -- of course, Strategy 1 never has a loss. There’s
      no graph on this chart for Strategy 1. But for Strategy 2, if you had to, let’s
      say, liquidate after one year, after one year, Strategy 2 -- remember, this
      can happen with a 36 percent chance -- if there is a loss, the average loss
      is somewhere between 15 and 20 percent. That means that you’ve lost
      almost 20 percent of the initial funds. That's a severe, severe shortfall.
      Strategy number 2 I think after about two years is probably the worst
      scenario, about 20 percent, starts coming down, but the losses, when they
      can occur, on average could be very severe losses, in the range of 5, 10,
      20 percent. Things are even more dramatic for the third strategy, because
      when you do -- when the loss does occur, it’s on average a very bad loss.
      Even after three, four, five years, some of those losses are on the order of
      20, 25 percent. Even going out to ten years, if there’s a loss, it, on average,
      would be somewhere between 15 to 20 percent. These are significant --
      significant from the perspective of managing funds. This would be a huge
      hit to the value of the portfolio. People who were expecting positive returns
      could end up in scenarios where they have actually lost money and have
      less than they initially started with.

       With regard to the demonstrative exhibit 11, created by Dr. Longstaff, and
referenced above, the demonstrative shows:

                                            104
Therefore, defendant argues,

      the two buy-and-hold strategies performed similarly to or even offered
      higher expected returns than Strategy 3 depending on how long the portfolio
      is maintained but exposed the portfolio to a substantially lower risk of
      losses, and a much lower risk of significant losses. Dr. Longstaff’s
      simulation demonstrates that, at least by comparison to the type of frequent
      trading strategy Plaintiffs’ expert Mr. Nunes advocates, Dr. Starks’s buy-
      and-hold ladder portfolio both mitigates risk and ensures competitive
      returns on investment.

      During his direct examination, Dr. Longstaff was asked the following questions by
defendant’s counsel about Mr. Nunes’ model:

      [Q.] Now, as a part of your assignment, did you prepare a damages
      calculation in response to Rocky Hill's damages calculation?

      A. Yes. I was asked to do kind of a sensitivity analysis, and so, yes, I did
      that analysis.

      Q. All right. Let’s turn to Demonstrative 15, and, Dr. Longstaff, could you
      describe for the Court sort of how you set up your sensitivity analysis, what
      you took from Rocky Hill’s approach, and then how you sort of modified it
      to perform your sensitivity analysis.

                                          105
A. Yes. What I wanted to do is basically use their framework, their modeling
approach, their infrastructure, architecture, and preserve as much of that as
possible to be consistent with this period and what they were doing, but I
wanted to sort of get at the issue of how much are they relying on these two
assumptions, as I had mentioned, the assumption that everything in the five-
to ten-year range was equally plausible and that you would reliably do better
by always picking the longest maturity in available range. So I wanted to
relax those two assumptions just to because their damages estimate
change when you just change those two assumptions. I'm trying to keep
everything else as much the same as possible.

Q. And how did you go about doing that?

A. So, again, what I wanted to do is adopt their assumptions, so what we
preserved -- as you know, they're focusing only on Treasury bonds, not the
agencies or the CDs. We're doing the same thing. They used an index-
based approach. I think they have three different indexes. We said let's do
the same thing. Let's just pick three indexes, just parallel what they're doing,
picked three indexes. So that was the approach. We are going to use the
same periods over which, you know, they're doing their analysis and try to
keep everything the same, other than kind of maybe relaxing those two
objectionable assumptions.

Q. Are you -- just to clarify -- and at the top here for the Court -- are you
testifying that the sensitivity analysis -- excuse me, that the sensitivity
analysis that you performed is your affirmative damages opinion?

A. No, no. This is – we’re simply evaluating the impact of those assumptions
made by Rocky Hill on their damages estimates. It’s in no way an
independent, stand-alone damages estimate. I’m just simply taking their
framework and testing the sensitivity of their damage estimates to be what
I view as their cornerstone or foundational assumptions that underlies their
investment strategy.

Q. All right. Let’s talk about the mechanics of how you correct Rocky Hill’s
damages’ approach in your exercise.

A. Yes. You know, this demonstrative -- the key things we wanted to focus
on is we wanted to avoid this possibility of hindsight bias. We don’t know
ahead of time what’s going to happen. And so we wanted to use an
approach, you know, within their context that is basing portfolio construction
on the information that is known at the time. Furthermore, it's important to
recognize that, as we've seen in some of these demonstratives, that the risk
and return characteristics of different bonds change over time. This was a
dramatic periods where rates are going up, they’re very volatile, and they're

                                     106
       lower in different periods. It's important to sort of reflect that circumstances,
       the economics of the markets, can be changing.

       In response to Dr. Longstaff’s critiques, plaintiffs argue that “Dr. Longstaff used
financial theory to criticize RHA’s conclusion that no particular maturity structure in the
range of 5-10 years was more plausible than another,” and contend that “Dr. Longstaff
either misapprehends or ignores what RHA actually did. He criticizes RHA’s approach
based on theoretical analyses about how a maturity structure should be chosen on an ex
ante basis.” (emphasis in original).

        Moreover, although noting that Dr. Longstaff did not create a model for damages
in the above captioned case, plaintiffs and Mr. Nunes were still critical of Dr. Longstaff’s
role in the case.41 Plaintiffs argue that Dr. Longstaff’s “critiques are utterly irrelevant
because RHA did not purport to select its 10-year and 7.86-year maturity structures on
an ex ante basis; to the contrary, it explicitly relied on hindsight.” (emphasis in original).
Plaintiffs conclude by alleging “Dr. Longstaff criticizes RHA’s choices of maturity structure
based on academic exercises that have no relation to RHA’s evidence-based
determination. Moreover, Dr. Longstaff bases his criticism on an alternative investment
model that is unrealistic and imprudent. Accordingly, his testimony is irrelevant to the
issues before the Court.” On direct examination, Mr. Nunes and plaintiffs’ counsel
discussed Dr. Longstaff approach:

       [Q.] I want to ask you about Dr. Longstaff's financial theory that he offers
       regarding choosing an optimal maturity structure within that five- to ten-year
       range. What is your response to Dr. Longstaff's use of this financial theory
       for choosing this optimal maturity?

       A. I mean, for starters, it -- I think it disregards the Court’s decision and
       instead -- I don’t know what the proper term is -- it kind of runs this million
       iteration mostly like game theory or something that reminded me of -- oh, I

41In defendant’s post-trial reply brief, defendant responded to the criticism of Dr. Longstaff
by indicating

       it is noteworthy that Plaintiffs’ Reply Brief studiously avoids any discussion
       of Dr. Longstaff’s testimony, which among other things, supports Dr.
       Starks’s selection of a one-to-ten year bond ladder portfolio with a 5-year
       weighted average maturity. The sensitivity analysis that Dr. Longstaff
       prepared and presented at trial showed that, viewing each investment
       contemporaneously and without the benefit of hindsight, and accounting for
       the risk-return tradeoff, a portfolio with a weighted average years-to-
       maturity of 5.7 years would have been optimal for the 1980-1992 and 1997-
       2004 breach periods.

(internal reference omitted; capitalization in original).

                                             107
       can't think of the right term, but in any event, it's -- it's a simulation of a
       bunch of iterations that tries to -- and then purports to come up with some
       optimal structure.

        In addition to the criticism of Dr. Longstaff, plaintiffs were critical of Dr. Starks and
her model. Plaintiffs criticized Dr. Starks changing her model from the liability phase of
the trial to the damages phase of the trial. Furthermore, plaintiffs argued that Dr. Starks
did not properly articulated her reasons for making the adjustments. Plaintiffs point to the
following exchange on cross-examination between Dr. Longstaff and plaintiffs’ counsel at
the damages trial:

       [Q.] Dr. Starks, when you formulated your opinion that you're now giving
       about five years being the appropriate structure, you knew that the Court
       had said that from 1992 to 1997, five to ten years was the appropriate range,
       and you had also opined that the Government was appropriate within that
       range, correct?

       A. I had -- I think as I’ve said, I had said that -- I had given my opinion that
       as they changed their maturities – there’s a range of prudence, and as they
       changed their maturities over that time period, I thought that they had been
       investing prudently.

       Q. All right. Now, knowing all of that, you now say that in your opinion five
       years was the appropriate investment horizon or maturity structure for the
       period from 1980 to 1992, correct?

       A. I believe that five years -- given, again, the Court’s opinion, given the
       Government's policies, practices, and investment objectives, given the
       conditions at the time, and given the financial and economic theory -- that
       five years was the most plausible portfolio -- maturity.

       Q. During the liability trial, you testified that you weren't clear on whether
       five years would have been a prudent maturity structure during the 1980s,
       didn't you?

       A. I -- I may have. I said that there was a range of prudence. There's a lot
       of interest rate uncertainty. I may have said I wasn’t clear on the five years.

       Q. Well, then, my question becomes, Dr. Starks, when is it that you became
       clear on the five years?

       A. Well, in order to -- I haven’t changed my opinion, but in order to meet
       with the decision that the Court has made, I had to -- I had to consider a
       wider range of prudence. But I hadn’t said that five years wasn’t prudent,
       only that –

                                              108
      Q. So you –

      A. -- the only thing I said was that 15 years wasn't prudent over that time
      period.

      Q. I asked you whether five years would be prudent, and you said you
      weren’t clear on that, didn’t you?

      A. I did, but I didn’t say it wasn’t prudent.

      Q. So you reached the opinion that it was prudent after you knew the Court’s
      decision that a range between five to ten years was prudent between 1992
      and 1997. You took the Court’s decision into account, did you?

      A. I took the Court’s decision into account. I also took into account, again,
      the government constraints, the government policies, practices, and the
      financial conditions at the time, and the other -- and the other -- what was
      going on with the tribe at the time.

      Q. Now -- and on that basis, you chose the maturity that was at the low end
      of the range that the Court had said in its opinion was prudent, right?

      A. I chose -- it wasn’t the most conservative portfolio, but it was a
      conservative portfolio, again, as I testified yesterday, because of the great
      deal of uncertainty in both interest rates as well as in what was going to
      happen with these funds -- the tribal funds.

      Q. My question didn’t go to the portfolio, Doctor; it went to the maturity
      structure. You chose the maturity structure at the bottom end of the range
      that the Court had said was prudent from 1992 to 1997, right?

      A. And when you – I’m very confusing -- confused by your having corrected
      me on this, because the maturity structure is embedded in the portfolio, so
      I think my answer is the same.

Additionally, plaintiffs argue that “Dr. Starks’ damages model is not credible because its
maturity structure is based solely on her own ipse dixit opinions, and it produces a return
far below the market-average returns calculated by RHA. It is not plausible because the
Government never used her proposed investment methodology (bond ladders) to invest
the Docket 326 Funds.” (emphasis in original). Responding to plaintiffs’ contentions
regarding Dr. Starks, defendant argues “Dr. Starks’s plausible and substantial damages
estimate is supported by the evidence, complies with this Court’s Liability Opinion, and
offers the only reasonable basis for a damages award in this case.”

                                             109
       As described above, Mr. Nunes, in his expert report, concluded

       the Government’s investment methodology was essentially ad hoc, with no
       apparent consistency, both during the 1992-1997 period when the court
       found it prudently invested the 326-K Fund and during the periods when it
       imprudently invested the 326-K and 326-A Funds. The Government’s ad
       hoc, inconsistent methodology is highlighted by the disparity between its
       investment of the 326-K Fund and its investment of the 326-A Funds in the
       period before December 1998.

Upon reaching this conclusion, Mr. Nunes decided to use benchmarks, which plaintiffs
argue, “provide a neutral and objective measure of market average returns,” and which
“reflect the market-average rate of return for a diversified portfolio with the appropriate
maturity structure. This approach is neutral and objective.” (emphasis in original). In
addition, in their post-trial briefs, plaintiffs argue that “the evidence does not indicate that
the Government would have used a particular investment methodology or strategy had it
invested the Docket 326 Funds prudently. The Government’s investment policies do not
mandate any particular investment methodology.” Citing to the court’s June 13, 2019
liability Opinion, plaintiffs claim the Department of the Interior “policies ‘give very limited
guidance and set almost no rules regarding what would or would not be a prudent
investment of tribal trust funds.’ Nor did the Government follow any consistent investment
methodology in practice.” (quoting W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone
Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed. Cl. at 624).

         In the June 13, 2019 liability Opinion, and as described above, the court explained
that the Department of the Interior issued various policies regarding the investment of
tribal trust funds over the investment period in question, but the policies did not give much
direction on which investment practices and investments might be considered prudent or
imprudent. Beginning with the first investment policy issued by the BIA in 1966, the BIA
noted that “[e]ach Area Office is requested to review the amount of tribal trust funds each
tribe in the respective Areas has on deposit in the Treasury,” and that “[w]herever it
appears that the amount is in excess of foreseeable cash needs of the tribe, discussions
should be held with the tribal council and its wishes regarding investment of the funds
ascertained.” The 1966 policy statement also noted that “[g]overnment-backed securities,
while basically safe, can result in losses unless held to maturity.” The 1966 policy,
however, did not discuss which types of investments were considered prudent for tribal
trust funds. As indicated in the June 13, 2019 liability Opinion:

       The next policy issued by the BIA was in a 1974 internal BIA memorandum,
       which indicated that the BIA should “maximize returns on all tribal, as well
       as individual, trust funds.” The 1974 policy memorandum also noted that
       “[e]ach Area Director has the responsibility for determining if surplus funds
       are available for investment purposes and notifying the Branch of
       Investments, Albuquerque, to take the necessary action to invest the funds.”
       The 1974 policy memorandum, however, did not explain under what
       circumstances the government’s investment of a tribal trust fund might

                                             110
       satisfy the government’s goal to maximize returns or what constituted
       prudent investment of tribal trust funds.

       The government also issued a further policy statement within its report of
       its investments for tribal trust funds for fiscal years 1986 and 1987. The
       report recognized that the government has the authority to invest tribal trust
       funds pursuant to 25 U.S.C. § 162a and that the BIA should, “through
       knowing the amounts required and when disbursements are necessary,”
       “plan the timing of investment maturities to maximize interest rates and
       earnings and also have the funds available when needed.” The report for
       1986 and 1987, however, like past BIA investment policies, did not provide
       more specific guidance as to when the government’s investment of tribal
       trust funds might satisfy the duty of prudence.

       Next, the trial record includes a 1997 internal policy memorandum released
       by the Office of the Special Trustee, the office which took over the BIA’s
       investment of tribal trust funds in the 1996. The 1997 policy was updated
       with policy amendments by the Office of the Special Trustee in 1999, 2000,
       and 2005, and took its final form for the purposes of this case in 2005. The
       2005 policy was the policy in place up through the disbursement of the tribal
       trust funds at issue. According to the 2005 policy, an acceptable investment
       practice was to “purchase securities with the intent to hold each security
       until maturity,” i.e., a buy and hold strategy, as opposed to frequent trading
       of securities. The 2005 policy also indicated that unacceptable portfolio
       investments and practices included investing in any “corporate stock,” the
       purchase of “commercial mutual funds,” and “overtrading, adjusted trades
       or bond swapping.” In sum, the Department of the Interior’s investment
       policies issued throughout the years acknowledged the Department’s role
       as the trustee and investor of tribal trust funds and attempted to provide
       broad guidance to government officials as to what investment practices
       were prohibited by agency policy, what investment practices were
       encouraged, and offered general investment goals, including to maximize
       investment returns.

W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed. Cl.
at 622-23. The court noted, however,

       [g]iven the fluctuating market conditions and changing events regarding the
       timing of distribution for plaintiffs’ tribal trust funds, including the required
       actions the BIA would need to take in order pay-out the 326-K Fund,
       however, specific, formulaic guidance as to what practices constituted a
       “prudent” investment practice would have been very difficult to establish by
       the Department of the Interior or any other governmental body.

Id. at 623.

                                             111
       In addition, as described above, in 1997 the Office of the Special Trustee adopted
the 1997 Office of the Special Trustee Policy. The 1997 Office of the Special Trustee
Policy also listed “ACCEPTABLE PORTFOLIO INVESTMENTS AND PRACTICES,”
which explained, among other practices, the Office of the Special Trustee’s “‘Holding’
versus ‘Trading’” practice. (capitalization and emphasis in original). According to the
section of the 1997 Office of the Special Trustee Policy discussing “Holding versus
Trading,”

       OTFM intends to manage its Indian trust portfolios in a manner that protects
       the integrity of the primary function of the portfolio, which is to provide
       maximum income for the tribes while conforming to prescribed statutory
       limitations and prudent fiduciary investment principles.

       Because OTFM has a small number of investment managers responsible
       for the investment management of over 1450 separate portfolios, OTFM will
       purchase securities with the intent to hold each security until maturity, while
       realizing that sales can and may occur prior to maturity form some of the
       following reasons:

       1. When account review presents obvious opportunity for portfolio
          enhancement from the reinvestment of sales proceeds into
          comparable maturities thereby improving yield or quality without
          adversely affecting overall quality, mix or maturity of the
          investment portfolio.
             2. The need to improve or increase portfolio liquidity.
             3. The need to invest the proceeds of a security maturing
                within one year because of an interest-rate scenario that
                would be detrimental to the performance of the portfolio if
                held to maturity before investing, i.e., a rapidly falling
                interest rate period.
             4. A reduced credit rating of the issuing Agency renders the
                security to be of less than acceptable quality to remain in
                the portfolio.

       The 1997 Office of the Special Trustee’s “Holding versus Trading” section also
noted that “[i]nfrequent investment portfolio restructuring carried out in conjunction with a
prudent overall risk-management plan that does not result in a pattern of gains being
taken and losses deferred will generally be viewed as an acceptable practice within the
context of an investment portfolio.” According to the testimony of defendant’s fact witness,
Mr. Winter, at the liability trial, the 1997 Office of the Special Trustee’s “Holding versus
Trading” practice meant that,

       that we need to purchase securities with the intent and ability to hold to
       maturity; and that, secondly, we’re permitted infrequent investment
       restructuring if the market conditions present themselves as such, but we

                                            112
         can’t be doing so by establishing a pattern of buying and selling, reaping
         gains and losses on any sort of frequency.

Mr. Winter also testified at the liability trial that the 1997 Office of the Special Trustee
Policy was the “first formal policy adopted by the Office of the Special Trustee.” Mr. Winter
further testified at liability trial that the Office of the Special Trustee issued amendments
to the 1997 Office of the Special Trustee Policy in 1999, 2000, and 2005, but that these
policy amendments, apart from extending the maturity limits of certain government-
backed securities from an “average life” of ten to fifteen years, were not “material”
changes to the 1997 Office of the Special Trust Policy. Moreover, Mr. Winter testified that
the 2005 policy amendment was the policy in place up until the distribution of the 326-K
Fund. Mr. Winter further testified at the liability trial that the 1966 policy, the 1974 policy
and the 1986 and 1987 report were consistent with the 1997 Office of the Special Trust
Policy, and the later 2005 policy to “purchase securities with the intent to hold each
security until maturity,” i.e., a buy and hold strategy, as opposed to frequent trading of
securities.42

42   At the liability trial, Mr. Winter and defendant’s counsel had the following exchange:

         Q. So let me point you to paragraph four, Mr. Winter, and it states here in
         paragraph four, “Preparatory to undertaking any investment program with
         surplus trust funds, a tribe necessarily would have to make a careful
         analysis of its current and future cash needs.” My question to you, Mr.
         Winter, is, is there a corollary between this statement here in the 1966 policy
         and the Office of the Special Trustee policies we were just discussing?

         A. Yes, there is.

         Q. Okay. What is that?

         A. Well, this -- the corollary is to our current -- in the policies we were just
         reviewing, to the objective of liquidity.

         Q. Okay. And what do you mean by that?

         A. Meaning that we have to identify the cash flow needs of the tribe in order
         to adequately invest in maturities suitable to the needs of the tribe in order
         to discern the most advantageous rates for those maturities.

The questioning between defendant’s counsel and Mr. Winter continued:

         [Q.] Is this a statement of policy by the Bureau of Indian Affairs in and
         around 1974?

         A. Yes, it is.

                                              113
        As noted in the findings of facts above, during the early 1990s, the Department of
the Interior transitioned from its program of pooling together and investing tribal trust
funds in short-term jumbo CDs to primarily investing tribal trust funds into other securities
with varying maturities, such as agency and Treasury securities. Mr. Nunes testified at
the liability trial that around the early 1990s, the BIA made “a wholesale transition away
from the CD program, which ultimately went away completely, and monies now were
being invested in agency securities, mortgage-backeds, callable bonds, and things like
that.” Defendant’s liability expert, Dr. Starks, testified at the liability trial that after about
1991, the BIA made a “programmatic” switch from investing tribal trust funds in jumbo
CDs into “agency securities in particular and a little bit longer term U.S. Treasuries.” Dr.
Starks discussed the change in type of securities held by the government at the liability
trial noting that

       [A.] Well, I think what you’re seeing here is the effects on maturity of a buy-
       and-hold policy, because -- because once purchased -- or in the eighties,
       longer term CDs were purchased, and then they come down. Longer term
       securities are purchased and then it -- as time goes by, they go down, and
       then they're purchased again.

       Q. All right. Turn with me, please, to the second page of this document at
       Bates page 259, and, in particular, I want to draw your attention to the
       second paragraph that appears on that page, and, in particular, just let me
       read the first few lines. “Investments can be made for a period of one day
       or for as much as 25 years or longer. Therefore, all funds except the funds
       for immediate needs can be invested to provide a greater income to the
       tribe. The maturity dates can be arranged to coincide with the needs for the
       funds.” Do you see that, Mr. Winter?

       A. Yes.

       Q. Okay. And, again, without belaboring it, does this statement of policy in
       1974 have a relationship/corollary to statements of policy that we were
       discussing with respect to those policies of the Office of the Special
       Trustee?

       A. Yes, it definitely relates directly to the liquidity, the rate of return, and the
       holding versus trading aspects.

Finally, in response to defendant’s counsel question “this document is in the form of a
‘Report of Investment of Indian Trust Funds for the Fiscal Years 1986 and 1987’ . . . is
there a corollary between this statement of policy and those that appear in the Office of
the Special Trustee formal policies we were discussing earlier?” Mr. Winter testified: “Yes,
it definitely does. The corollary would be to the liquidity aspect and the rate of return
objective.”

                                              114
       Q. Does the shape of the maturity structure of the 326-K fund over the
       period reflect a buy-and-hold strategy?

       A. It does to me, yes.

       Q. And is it your opinion, based on your review of the record in this case
       and the record of the Government's investments in this case, that the
       Government, indeed, followed a buy-and-hold strategy at all times in its
       management of this fund?

       A. It appears that they -- that they were consistently following a buy-and-
       hold strategy.

The demonstrative chart prepared by Dr. Starks, included above, shows that the
government generally followed a buy-and-hold strategy during the time periods at issue
in the above captioned case. This approach adopted by the government is consistent with
the approach adopted by Dr. Starks in constructing her model for this case. Although the
plaintiffs and Mr. Nunes repeatedly claim the government’s “investment methodology was
essentially ad hoc, with no apparent consistency,” the court disagrees. Nor does the court
agree with plaintiffs contention that the government did not follow “any consistent
investment methodology in practice.” Although the court concluded that, at times, the
government did not prudently invest the tribal trust funds, the court did not reach this
decision because it found that the government did not have a consistent investment
strategy or that it was operating in an ad hoc fashion. Rather the court found the
government was in breach because the government was investing the tribal trust funds
in shorter term securities with an average weighted maturity years to call that did not align
with the investment horizon of the funds.

       On cross-examination with defendant’s counsel, Mr. Nunes discussed the
consistency of the buy-and-hold approach by the government.

       [Q.] [I]n looking at BIA’s investment practices, you discerned no patterns
       whatsoever that would guide you in deciding where, within this five- to ten-
       year range, you should set your benchmark. Have I -- have I characterized
       your opinion correctly?

       A. Close. I would -- we could not discern anything in this time period that
       indicated the BIA had any kind of a consistent investment approach.

       Q. Okay. Now, they did have a consistent investment approach in that their
       policy that they wrote and adhered to was a buy-and-hold policy, right?

       A. In the -- it does state that in the policy, but that was not a consistent
       practice, as we know from the data.

                                            115
Q. Okay. But, in fact, you looked at this and you found that in 85 percent of
the time or more, BIA adhered to a hold until maturity policy, right?

A. Based on the number of sales that we saw in the data, assuming they
were properly classified, that’s approximately correct, yes.

Q. Okay. And, in fact, you did an analysis of this subject and you found that
between 1997 and 2011, there were only 60 instances in which BIA sold
WSIG securities before maturity, right?

A. I think in the broader timeline, it’s 74, but I think that's right for the
narrower timeline.

Q. And the broader timeline is what? Help me here.

A. Life of the fund, but really insignificant until the CD -- you don’t buy and
sell -- well, you buy them, but you don’t sell them.

Q. So by the life of the fund, you're talking about 1980 until 2013?

A. Yes, but from a practical standpoint it’s not until the CD program is wound
down, so really the first sale in advance of maturities, probably ‘92-ish, but
don’t hold me to it. Again, I would have to look at the data.

Q. Okay. So the time period you’re talking about is, since it’s post-CD
period, is 1992 to 2013?

A. It’s something like that.

Q. Okay. And you’re telling me that in that period, 1992 to 2013, you found
that there were approximately 74 instances in which BIA sold the WSIG
security before maturity?

A. I think that’s right, correct.

Q. Okay. In 20 years? 30 years? No, 20 years?

A. Well, really up until -- and that doesn’t include any activity around the
liquidation of the fund to do the disbursement, so say through 2010.

Q. Sure. Well, that wouldn’t -- including the liquidation for the disbursement
period would skew the numbers, wouldn’t it?

A. It would.

Q. Especially for this analysis?

                                     116
A. Right.

Q. So 74 instances where the security was sold before maturity between
1992 and 2013?

A. 2010.

Q. That’s what you found?

A. 2010.

Q. Out of how many hundreds of -- how many securities did BIA hold on
behalf of Western Shoshone between 1992 and 2010?

A. Oh, I don’t know. Over the life of the – you know, as they rolled in and
out? I don’t know. A fair number.

Q. Several hundred, right?

A. That’s reasonable.

Q. So 85 percent or more of the securities that WSIG that BIA purchased
on behalf of the Western Shoshone were held until maturity.

A. Again, roughly, or to the call. . . .

Q. Do you recall Dr. Goldstein’s testifying as an expert on behalf of Plaintiffs
in this case at the liability phase?

A. I do.

Q. Do you recall him testifying in the case that the Government actually did
adhere to a buy-and-hold policy and they didn't turn over the bond portfolio
regularly?

A. Well, as I said in my deposition, there is no such thing as a little bit
pregnant. If you’re buy and hold, you’re buy and hold. If you’re only 85
percent or 72 percent or 91 percent buy and hold, you’re not buy and hold.
...

Q. But in your opinion, adhering to a buy-and-hold policy 85 percent of the
time is not adhering to a buy-and-hold policy?

A. Well, it doesn’t -- it means you're adhering to a buy-and-hold concept 85
percent of the time.

                                           117
The court disagrees with Mr. Nunes’ conclusion about the buy-and-hold approach
adopted by the government over the thirty three year timeframe. Therefore, the court
disagrees with plaintiffs’ conclusion that “the evidence does not support the use of any
particular investment strategy to calculate damages because the Government never
consistently followed a particular strategy when it did prudently invest the Docket 326
Funds. Since the Government’s actual investment practices do not provide a template for
measuring damages, it is necessary to turn elsewhere.” The court believes the trial
exhibits and testimony from the liability phase of the trial as well as the trial exhibits and
testimony from the damages phase of the trial demonstrated when the government
invested the tribal funds, it did so consistent with the government’s policy objections and
statutory requirements.

      Even if the court agreed with plaintiffs’ conclusion that the government had not
provided a template to calculate damages, the court would not necessarily follow the
model created by plaintiffs’ expert Mr. Nunes. In defendant’s post trial brief, defendant
argues that Mr. Nunes’ model is

       not realistic. Mr. Nunes’s damages model does not fairly measure income
       that could have been earned by investing in a manner consistent with sound
       principles of finance and real-world constraints, including the Interior
       Department’s statutory obligations, policies and practices. Plaintiffs
       continue to repeat that Mr. Nunes’s model is based on “objective, verifiable
       data” and “market averages” but ignore that Mr. Nunes’s synthetic indices
       reflect subjective decisionmaking in almost every way, and mimic an
       inappropriate and risky investment strategy that the Interior Department
       simply could not execute in the real world. Plaintiffs’ mantra that its proffered
       “benchmarks” do not reflect specific investment strategies defies reality,
       and Plaintiffs do not explain how the Interior Department could have
       possibly achieved the investment gains measured by Barclay’s indices
       without undertaking the kinds of portfolio management that Barclay’s uses
       to generate its results.

       Although Mr. Nunes suggested that this model would be “strategy- and portfolio-
agnostic, and we want to be strategy- and portfolio-agnostic because we recognize that
to achieve a certain term structure of a portfolio, it could be done any number of ways,
and so the indexes are plain vanilla in that regard, and they provide us, again, with a sort
of baseline. It’s the market average performance based on the rules of the index,” the
defendant argues “plaintiffs’ bond index approach is not ‘neutral’ but instead reflects a
specific and risky investment strategy.” Dr. Longstaff’s analysis of Mr. Nunes approach
likened it to a “targeted maturity strategy like Rocky Hill, you can see that that strategy
has a positive probability of loss over all investment horizons. It's more pronounced at the
beginning because of the way that the term structures evolve. It starts out with about a
36 percent chance of a principal loss after one year, but it's still substantial after seven,
eight, nine, ten years.”

                                             118
       Furthermore, in Dr. Starks’ expert report prepared for the damages phase of trial,
Dr. Starks indicated that

       investment strategies involving regularly trading securities prior to their
       maturities would be inconsistent with the Government’s objective of
       preserving capital and holding-versus-trading policies and general practice.
       In addition, from a financial economics perspective, strategies involving
       regularly trading securities prior to their maturities generally offer no obvious
       ex ante comparative benefit, and involve additional costs and risks.

(emphasis in original; footnotes omitted).

       In addition, plaintiffs explain in the post-trial briefing, “[w]hen RHA combines two
Barclays indexes to develop a benchmark, it starts with the Barclays UST, which is the
broadest-based and most diversified because it includes all maturities from 1-30 years.
Then RHA adds in as much of the longer or shorter index as necessary to achieve the
desired weighted average maturity.” (citation omitted). As noted above, Mr. Nunes’ expert
report prepared for the damages phase of trial reflects that various benchmarks are
composed as follows:

Benchmark            Period                             Composition
10-year              1980-1992             86.05% Barclays UST; 13.95% Barclays LT

7.86-year            1980-1992             97.90% Barclays UST; 2.10% Barclays 1-5 UST

10-year              Apr. – Dec. 1997      88.35% Barclays UST; 11.65% Barclays LT

7.86-year            Apr. – Dec. 1997      90.20% Barclays UST; 9.80% Barclays 1-5 UST

10-year              1998-2004             91.60% Barclays UST; 8.40% Barclays LT

7.86-year            1998-2004             81.25% Barclays UST; 18.75% Barclays 1-5 UST

2.97-year            2004-2006             6.75% Barclays UST; 93.25% Barclays 1-5 UST

Defendant argues that

       the bond indices that Plaintiffs’ expert Mr. Nunes adopts to calculate
       damages are not standard off-the-shelf Barclays indices but instead reflect
       Mr. Nunes’s own curated data, mixed and matched to create a “market
       measure” that Mr. Nunes has crafted to maximize Plaintiffs’ damages
       claims. Thus, rather than presenting the Court with a “neutral” benchmark,
       Plaintiffs have calculated damages based on a specific investment strategy,
       and one that is not only far less plausible than the one offered by Dr. Starks,
       but is also inconsistent with Interior’s practices and policies.

                                             119
As noted above, Mr. Nunes testified on redirect with plaintiffs’ counsel about his approach:

       [O]ne of the key concepts of prudent investment, of course, is
       diversification. This actually sort of anecdotally supports that argument. So
       we always, where we can -- so if the UST is not a -- so, for example, in our
       roll-forward period, we used the 1-5, so the UST is not even part of the mix,
       but wherever the UST is a viable part of any kind of an allocation, we will
       always attempt to stay in the highest allocation percentage of the UST
       because it is clearly, of the indices we use, the broadest and most diverse,
       and anecdotally, in that it returns a better number than most of her other
       scenarios, supports the fact that diversification matters. And so we
       concentrate on being the most diverse in our model constructs as we
       possibly can be.

       Q. And so, then, when you needed maturity -- needed to meet a maturity
       structure, how did you then blend in either a shorter index or a longer index?
       Did you run a hundred different scenarios or how did you blend in either a
       longer or shorter index?

       A. So the answer to did we run a hundred scenarios is, God, no. So we
       would start with the -- you know, obviously we know what 100 percent of
       the UST would return in terms of an average maturity, and so we would look
       at it and say, okay, let's just -- I think this is the example I used in my
       testimony – let’s just say that the UST at a point in time we're looking at has
       a term structure of eight years, and we need to be at ten years. We would
       simply begin sort of ratably – and that’s a bit of a guess at first, how much
       of the UST do I need to take out and how much of the UST Long do I need
       to bring in to maintain maximum diversification and still hit the ten-year
       targeted structure. And so, you know, it may have gone something like this.
       Okay, let’s see what happens if I do 10 percent of an allocation --
       reallocation from UST to long-term of 10 percent. What’s that look like?
       That’s 9.7, all right. So maybe we’ve got to shave it a little bit or add a little
       bit. So it’s a little bit trial and error, but it’s once we get to the targeted
       maturity that we need to be at at the maximum amount of diversification,
       that’s the allocation.

       Despite Mr. Nunes’ testimony that his aim was “[t]o determine what the earnings
rate should be if the Government had properly aligned the term structure of the portfolio
with the investor horizon, we simply use market average returns for a plain vanilla,
nonsubjective, nonhuman intervention index that says here’s what the market did,” it
appears from the above testimony, and from Mr. Nunes’ expert reports, that the model
was designed to achieve an outcome. Regarding Mr. Nunes’ approach, defendant’s
counsel and Dr. Starks had the following exchange at the damages trial:

       Q. Now, did you analyze whether it was possible to construct other
       investment benchmarks with the same maturity horizon, the ten-year

                                             120
horizon or 7.86-year horizon that Rocky Hill targets, and use these same
indices, but that lead to different returns by weighting the industries
differently?

A. Yes. If you use different proportions of the indices, you can come up with
different damages estimates.

Q. All right. Let's turn now to Demonstrative 19. What did your analysis of
the different ways in which you could weight the Barclays Indices to create
an index, what did your analysis of that process show in terms of the
different returns that might be generated if you weighed things a little
differently?

A. Well, if you weighted them differently -- so the far right bar shows Rocky
Hill’s weights, which, as I said before, was 86.05 percent UST and 13.95
percent UST Long. Much of their period, that was the weights that were
used. But if you go all the way to the left and you had 62.3 percent in the
UST 1-5 Index and 37.7 percent in the UST Long Index, you would have
again had an average target ten-year maturity over the time period, but the
damages would have been substantially less, 169.5 million rather than their
177.6 million. The middle one shows if you used all three indices how you
could have weighted them again to come up with a target maturity that was
-- that was an average over the time period of ten years, and it would have
been 173.8 million.

Q. All right. So -- and I just want to pare that down a little more specifically
as to each bar. So the bar on the far right of this demonstrative, which is
labeled RHA’s weights, Rocky Hill’s weights, Dr. Starks, is that the
combination of the UST Long, UST Treasury Index, and UST Long Index -
- or UST 1-5 Index that Mr. Nunes used to create his benchmark?

A. It's a com -- out of those three indices, it’s a combination of two of the
indices with zero percent and the UST 1 -5.

Q. And was that a choice that Mr. Nunes made in putting together his index?

A. Yes, it was.

Q. Okay. And that -- am I reading this demonstrative correctly that that
resulted in 177.6 million in damages?

A. Yes.

Q. Okay. But there were -- there were other ways -- were there other ways
to put together these three bond indices that would also reach a ten-year
weighted average maturity target for the benchmark?

                                     121
       A. I think there are limitless ways that you could have combined those --
       those indices.

       In addition, defendant suggests “[t]o replicate the performance of Mr. Nunes’s bond
indices the Interior Department would have to buy and sell huge volumes of bonds and
realize gains and losses from those transactions.” Defendant continues:

       Mr. Nunes’s synthetic indices, which reflect combinations of different
       Barclays indices, must rebalance each month to reflect the changes in each
       of the Barclays indices it contains. In practical terms this means that any
       investor trying to emulate the performance of the Barclays indices, or Mr.
       Nunes’s synthetic indices, would have to buy and sell bonds each month to
       match the index.

Plaintiffs note that defendant argued

       “[i]n practical terms this means that any investor trying to emulate the
       performance of the Barclays indices, would have to buy and sell bonds each
       month to match the index.” This statement is true but it is irrelevant and
       misleading. RHA does not propose to emulate the Barclays indexes, like an
       index mutual fund would do. Instead, it uses the Barclays indexes as a
       measure of the market-average performance of a diverse portfolio of
       Treasury bonds with a particular maturity structure.

(emphasis in original). The court finds this argument to be a distinction without a
difference. The court is unclear how the government would have been able to replicate
the return on investment achieved by the Barclays indexes without adopting an approach
of frequent buying and selling securities. Nor is it clear from Mr. Nunes’ model or his
testimony at the damages trial how the government was to achieve such a rate of return
if the government was operating under the general restrictions of a buy-and-hold
approach to the investments held in trust for the plaintiffs.

        Plaintiffs also cite to the Jicarilla III decision dozens of times in their post-trial
submissions, as well as numerous references by Mr. Nunes at the damages trial. One
reason for the numerous references of the Jicarilla III opinion was that the Judge in
Jicarilla III accepted the Barclay’s index approach developed by Rocky Hill Advisors to
calculate damages. See generally Jicarilla III, 112 Fed. Cl. 274. In a succinct decision,
the Judge in Jicarilla III explained,

       plaintiff seeks to calculate damages by using a market index as a
       benchmark for determining the performance of a properly invested portfolio.
       Plaintiff's Rocky Hill investment model uses, for this purpose, a Barclay’s
       index of U.S. Treasury instruments, specifically the Barclays UST, which is
       part of the Barclays U.S. Government Index. That index captures all public
       obligations of the U.S. Treasury with a remaining maturity of at least one

                                            122
year, and includes Treasury obligations with maturities ranging from one to
30 years. Under this index, the allocation as between short-, medium-, and
long-term bonds at any point reflects market forces (i.e., all relevant
obligations outstanding) rather than any judgment by plaintiff's experts or
others regarding what that mix should have been. Put another way, the
Barclays UST is a passive, mechanical representation of market
performance for a defined debt instrument market. In measuring
performance, the Barclays index also includes, on a quarterly basis, the
gains and losses on the bonds being tracked, thereby providing for the
further accretion of principal.

In selecting this index, the Rocky Hill experts carefully considered the
maturity structure of the Barclays UST to make sure that it aligned with what
would have been a prudent investment of Jicarilla’s funds. They ascertained
that the Barclays UST had an aggregate average maturity that grew from
3.8 years to 9.1 years over the period in question, but observed that during
this entire period, approximately 60 percent of the index was comprised of
maturities ranging between one and five years, with an average maturity for
this component of less than 2.5 years. In their view, the maturity structure
of the Barclays UST aligned well with the maturity capacity of the funds in
the Nation's trust accounts. They viewed their choice of the Barclays UST
as somewhat conservative, as it was based neither upon the notion that
there would be active management of the tribal trust funds nor upon any
assumption that the funds would have been invested so as to generate an
extraordinary performance that beat the market. In their view, the use of this
index was also consistent with Jicarilla’s demonstrated liquidity needs—a
view that this court has confirmed in concluding that the BIA's short-term
investment practices constituted a breach of trust.

In challenging plaintiff’s investment model, defendant reiterates many of the
claims that this court has already rejected. Echoing assertions made by its
experts (or vice-versa), defendant’s banner claim thus is that the short-term
investment strategy employed by the BIA was prudent and particularly
attuned to the Nation's liquidity needs. Based on the evidence discussed
above, however, the court has rejected both prongs of this claim. And these
arguments are no more persuasive the second time around, in this
damages context, even if they now take on a somewhat different cast. As
such, based upon the strength of its liability findings, the court cannot
remotely accept Dr. Alexander's damages model, which, in relying upon
those rejected propositions, produces damages of at most approximately
$50,000.

That said, in talking about damages, defendant takes a somewhat different
tack regarding liquidity. It claims that even if a significant portion of the
portfolio should be treated as having been invested in longer-term
securities, some portion of the portfolio needed to be kept in short-term

                                     123
       instruments, to provide some opportunity for the Nation to make withdrawals
       without having to liquidate investments. Based on this proposition,
       defendant claims that, at most, plaintiff is entitled to the damages
       associated with a hypothetical used by plaintiff’s witness, Dr. Goldstein, who
       examined the performance of a portfolio invested eighty percent in five-year
       Treasury notes and twenty percent in three-month CDs—the approach that,
       in the chart above, the court references as “Defendant (High).” But, there
       are several major flaws with this claim.

       First, defendant’s claim hinges on an unproven proposition, namely, that the
       Nation’s trust funds needed to maintain a certain balance of cash or cash
       equivalents in order to meet periodic withdrawal needs. The record simply
       does not support this factual claim. While the record suggests that the BIA
       often invested in very short-term obligations, there is no evidence that this
       was necessary to meet the Nation’s true liquidity needs. Even assuming
       arguendo that there was a periodic need for the BIA to have cash on hand,
       there is no reason to believe that the BIA could not have produced that cash
       by selling longer-term securities—that, for example, the U.S. debt
       instruments in the Barclays UST were any less marketable or liquid than the
       three-month CDs used in Dr. Goldstein’s hypothetical portfolio. To the
       extent that the sale of such instruments might have produced gain or loss,
       this was accounted for in the Barclays UST, which presumed that there
       would be periodic sales of the instruments in that index. Lastly, plaintiff was,
       in the court's view, entitled to assume in its model that the special debt
       certificates made available by the Treasury to the BIA—which offered the
       BIA the ability to shift in and out of investments without transaction costs or
       penalties—still would have been available if the BIA had employed an
       investment strategy using maturities like those in the Barclays UST. For all
       these reasons, the court credits the testimony of plaintiff's experts that a
       portfolio patterned after the Barclays UST represented a reasonable proxy
       for how the trust funds in question should have been invested. And, on that
       basis, the court concludes that the model proposed by plaintiff provides a
       reasonable and appropriate basis for calculating the damages owed here.

Jicarilla III, 112 Fed. Cl. at 307–10 (emphasis in original; footnotes omitted). As noted in
both the June 13, 2019 liability Opinion and this Opinion, Jicarilla III is not binding on this
court, and, although there are some similarities between the two cases, the facts in both
cases are different. Moreover, as noted above, the plaintiff in Jicarilla III raised, and
prevailed on, claims that are not before this court in the above captioned case. In Jicarilla
III, the Judge of the United States Court of Federal Claims determined that the
government was responsible for the unauthorized disbursement of the Jicarilla Tribe’s
trust funds and, further, that the government failed to timely process deposits of oil and
gas royalties. See id. at 303-304.

                                             124
         Most significantly, in the above captioned case, and which was not true in Jicarilla
III, the court found that there were periods of time in which the government did not breach
its fiduciary duty. The court determined:

       Between December 1992 and March 1997, the government did not breach
       its fiduciary duty. During this time, when the enactment of distribution
       legislation for the 326-K Fund still remained unlikely to occur in the near-
       term, the government began to shift the 326-K Fund into different types of
       securities, including agency and Treasury bonds, and to decrease its
       reliance on short-term CDs. The government also lengthened the maturity
       structure of the 326-K Fund into longer-term securities, with an average
       weighted maturity years to call ranging from approximately five to ten years.
       Therefore, the government’s lengthening of the maturity structure of the
       326-K Fund portfolio during this time was within the range of prudence,
       given the longer-term investment horizon of the fund.

                                             ...

       Between October 2006 and December 2010, the government did not breach
       its fiduciary duty. During this time, the average weighted maturity years to
       call of the 326-K Fund ranged from approximately one year and seven
       months to a little less than three years. The record indicates that distribution
       legislation for the 326-K Fund had been enacted in July 2004 and that
       government officials reasonably believed that a pay-out of the 326-K Fund
       would occur within a couple of years and invested the 326-K Fund in
       accordance with such information. Therefore, the government’s decision to
       place the 326-K Fund in shorter-term securities during this time prudently
       corresponded with the shortening investment horizon of the fund.

       Between January 2011 to September 2013, the government did not breach
       its fiduciary duty, nor did plaintiffs appear to argue that the government’s
       investment of the 326-K Fund was imprudent. During this time, the
       government began the distribution of the 326-K Fund monies to qualifying
       Western Shoshone members and, therefore, transitioned the entire fund
       into ultra-short-term overnight securities in order to liquidate the fund for
       distribution. Thus, the government’s placement of the 326-K Fund in ultra-
       liquid securities during this time was prudent.

W. Shoshone Identifiable Grp. by Yomba Shoshone Tribe v. United States, 143 Fed. Cl.
at 658–60 (footnote omitted). For the 326-A Funds, the court also concluded:

       Between February 2012 to September 2013, the government did not breach
       its fiduciary duty when it lengthened the maturity structure of the 326-A
       Funds into investments with an average weighted maturity years to call of
       eleven to fourteen years. Plaintiffs’ liability expert, Mr. Nunes,
       acknowledged at trial that the government began to finally shift the 326-A

                                            125
       Funds into longer-term securities during this time and testified that this shift
       was “good news.” Therefore, in light of the fact that the 326-A Funds’
       principal was not to be invaded and was to be perpetually held in trust, the
       government’s decision to lengthen the maturity structure of the 326-A Funds
       during this time was prudent and consistent with the long-term nature of the
       funds.

Id. at 661.

       In addition, as noted in the June 13, 2019 liability Opinion

       Beginning in December 1992, the government significantly increased the
       average weighted maturity years to call of the 326-K Fund, reaching a peak
       of a little less than ten years by September 1993. Following the September
       1993 peak, the maturity structure of the 326-K Fund steadily declined to
       about an average weighted maturity years to call of a little less than five
       years by March 1997. Also, by March 1997, the 326-K Fund was no longer
       invested in any CDs, and instead invested in a mixture of agency, Treasury,
       and mortgage-backed securities. At trial, plaintiffs acknowledged that the
       government invested the 326-K Fund in longer-term securities between
       December 1992 and March 1997 than it had previously done during the
       1980s and early 1990s. Plaintiffs’ liability expert, Mr. Nunes, however,
       testified at trial that government should have invested the 326-K Fund in
       even longer-term investments than those selected by the government, with
       an average weighted maturity of approximately fifteen years, due to the
       uncertainty surrounding when distribution plan legislation would be enacted
       by Congress and the time intensive process of compiling descendancy rolls
       and distributing the monies to qualifying Western Shoshone members.
       Defendant’s liability expert, Dr. Starks, however, testified at trial that the
       government’s investment of the 326-K Fund during this time, the “mid-
       1990s,” was within a range of prudence.

Id. at 639. Moreover, as noted by defendant,

       in Jicarilla, where the Court accepted a “benchmark” approach, the UST
       Index “benchmark” came much closer to representing an objective “market
       measure” for Treasuries than does the synthetic portfolio Mr. Nunes created
       for the damages trial in this case. The UST Index, used all by itself, and
       without Mr. Nunes’s ad hoc “transition periods” and ad hoc conglomeration
       of multiple indexes, at least represents the entire universe of outstanding
       Treasury bonds and notes (excluding “T-bills” with maturities under one
       year). Thus, when Judge Allegra looked to Mr. Nunes’s model as a
       benchmark, he was at least evaluating Interior’s investment performance
       against a “market” that Mr. Nunes had not manipulated through subjective
       decision-making for purposes of calculating damages.

                                            126
(emphasis in original). Furthermore, defendant argues “Mr. Nunes did not use the ‘market
measure’ here that he proffered in Jicarilla, and had he done so, his damages estimate
would likely have resulted in tens of millions less in damages.” The different model used
by Mr. Nunes in the above captioned case, including the blending of the indices, as well
as the different posture of the two cases, does not compel this court to agree with the
Jicarilla III Judge that the benchmark approach by Mr. Nunes is the proper measure for
damages in this case.

         Although the court has not found plaintiffs’ model to be plausible, it does not follow
that the court must adopt defendant’s model. As noted above, Dr. Starks’ model uses a
buy-and-hold ladder portfolio. The court finds this approach is consistent with the
approach previously used by the government. Plaintiffs argue, however, that Dr. Starks
“investment methodology (bond ladders) is completely implausible because the
Government never invested the Docket 326 Funds in that manner.” The court notes that
at trial defendant identified a number of examples of tribal trust funds that appeared to
use a ladder approach, and discussed them with Mr. Nunes. Defendant’s counsel first
asked,

       in this policy – BIA policy document, do you see there’s a description of how
       a laddered portfolio is designed and how it can be designed -- structured so
       as to anticipate future interest rates?

       A. I do.

       Q. And there are specific instructions about how to design and implement a
       laddered portfolio?

       A. That appears to be what's there, correct. . . .

       Q. What we were looking at before was Section 5.1 of this 2004 instruction
       -- appears to be an instruction manual . . . and do you see how in this sort
       of recipe for an initial presentation to a Tribe, that under lettered number (i),
       lettered item (i) it’s said that they should go over and describe a laddered
       portfolio strategy? Do you see that?

       A. I do, I do.

       Q. And on the next page . . . they also describe how in a followup meeting
       with the Tribe when discussing their investments, again, lettered item (i),
       they should go over again a laddered portfolio strategy. Do you see that?

       A. I do.

       Q. You’ll agree with me it does not appear that BIA was a stranger to
       laddered portfolios?

                                             127
A. Ah, I never said that they were, only that we've never seen them actually
do it. . . .

[Q.] Now, this is a July 1997 document involving the investment of the funds
of the Jicarrilla [sic] Apache Tribe. Do you see that?

A. I do.

Q. Now, Jicarilla, that's a tribe you had a lot of involvement in, isn’t it?

A. We testified on behalf of Jicarilla. I’ve never actually been involved with
the tribe in that regard.

Q. But you were involved in studying their portfolio and their investments,
yes?

A. That’s correct, but this is the water rights settlement fund, which we never
looked at.

Q. You never looked at this, okay. Do you see how under investment
objective it says, “Per tribal instruction these funds are invested in a six
month ladder with monthly rungs.” Do you see that?

A. I do.

Q. So would you agree with me that it appears in this case that BIA used
the laddered portfolio for trust funds -- for tribal funds held in trust?

A. Well, they’re saying that that’s what they’ve constructed, yeah, but, again,
it’s a water rights settlement fund, was not part of the case, so we've never
seen this.

Q. You've never analyzed that particular fund?

A. No. . . .

Q. Okay. And this one appears to have to do with management of funds of
the Pueblo Laguna. Do you see that?

A. I do.

Q. Okay. And under the investment approach, it says that the approach is
going to be to ladder the account to ten years by purchasing both bullets
and callable bonds. Do you see that?

                                      128
       A. I do see that, yes.

       Q. This looks like another example where BIA used a laddered approach to
       a Tribal Trust Fund claim, right?

       A. Well, I am going to state this again. They’re saying they do. The proof in
       the pudding would be to analyze the portfolio and see if they actually did
       construct --

       Q. Do you have any reason to believe they didn’t invest the Pueblo Laguna's
       funds in a ladder?

       A. I can’t answer that without seeing the portfolio, and that’s a Tribe I’ve
       never worked with their data.

It appears from the exhibits introduced by defendant at both the liability trial and the
damages trial, that the government had adopted in the past a ladder approach to
securities for the investment of tribal trust funds. Even if the government, as it relates to
the investment strategy for the 326-K Fund and the 326-A Funds did not specifically
identify the investment approach as “laddered,” the buy-and-hold method, which Dr.
Starks used to create her ladder portfolio analysis, appears consistent with the general
buy-and-hold approach taken by the government. Moreover, as defendant notes,
“Plaintiffs’ argument, if accepted, completely rules out Plaintiffs’ own damages
calculations, which are premised upon a frequent trading strategy that Interior not only
never used in managing the Funds, but which is forbidden by Interior’s policies and cannot
be used for any tribal fund under Interior’s management.” (emphasis in original).

        As noted above, plaintiffs also contend that “Dr. Starks’ damages model is not
credible because its maturity structure is based solely on her own ipse dixit opinion, which
is at odds with the evidence.” Although plaintiffs argue that Dr. Starks’ model is without
evidence, the court found her expert reports as well as her expert testimony at the
damages trial, and at the liability trial, to be well thought out and supported. As quoted
above, Dr. Starks was able to articulate her methodology and the basis for her opinions
and conclusions. The court found Dr. Starks’ testimony to be credible and supportable by
the documents in the record before the court at the liability trial, and the court again finds
Dr. Starks’ testimony at the damages trial credible and supported by her expert reports
and exhibits introduced at the damages trial. Again, in arguing that “Dr. Starks’ investment
horizons are ipse dixits that lack credibility,” plaintiffs challenge the basis for Dr. Starks
opinion that “the appropriate pre-Distribution Act investment horizon for the 326-K Fund
was five years.” (emphasis in original). Plaintiffs also indicate that “[s]he uses this
investment horizon for the periods from August 1980 until November 1992, and from April
1997 until June 2004.” The court notes that for the interim period, December 1992 to
March 1997, the timeframe the court determined in the June 13, 2019 liability Opinion to
have been prudently invested, Dr. Starks’ expert report reflects the government “invested
the Docket 326-K Fund in a portfolio of securities reflecting a weighted average years-to-
call ranging from 4.7 years to 9.7 years.” Moreover, as explained in defendant’s post-trial

                                            129
reply brief, “[t]he portfolio during this prudent period never reflected a weighted average
years-to-call of 10 years, and exceeded 7.5 years only 20% of the time. For the vast
majority of this prudent period (80% of the time), Interior’s investments reflected a
weighted average-years-to-call of 7.5 years or less, and about half the time (49% of the
period) reflected a weighted average years-to-call of 6 years or less.” (emphasis in
original). Dr. Starks’ testimony at the damages trial is consistent with her conclusions in
her expert report, and as she explained to defendant’s counsel on direct examination that

       weighted average years to call is the better measure, because this
       difference here shows there were callable bonds in this portfolio, but then I
       also looked at the number or the percentage of months that had five years,
       5 1/2 years, six years, so forth, in terms of the weighted average years to
       call.

       Q. All right. Let’s look at Demonstrative 30. What’s shown here on
       Demonstrative 30, Dr. Starks?

       A. Demonstrative 30 shows the frequency in months of the different
       maturities between 4.7 years and ten years. And so, for example, the -- the
       less than five years was 19 percent of the month, and only 2 percent was
       between 9 1/2 and ten years. And as the chart shows, 80 percent of the
       months have holdings with the weighted average years to call under 7 1/2
       years, and, in fact, if you look at the first three bars, which shows the
       percentage of the months under six years, it is almost 50 percent.

The use of the investment horizon consistent with the non-breach period by Dr. Starks
appears to the court to be reasonable.

       Further, the court is puzzled by plaintiffs’ criticism of Dr. Starks’ decision to adjust
her models between the liability trial and the damages trial. Plaintiffs specifically identified
Dr. Starks’ testimony on cross-examination that: “I haven’t changed my opinion, but in
order to meet with the decision that the Court has made, I had to -- I had to consider a
wider range of prudence.” The court notes that the parties and their experts were
specifically instructed to “be responsive to the decision on liability issued by the court on
June 13, 2019.” Moreover, Mr. Nunes’ expert report for the damages trial states:

       Based on the this decision, [the court’s Liability Opinion] we have revised
       our investment models to recalculate damages for the 326-K Fund and the
       326-A Fund. Our revisions to the models (1) utilize the returns of the
       Government’s extant investment portfolios for those periods in which the
       Court found no breach of trust, and (2) utilize investment horizons and
       maturity structures consistent with the court’s analysis for those periods
       which the Court did find a breach.

Although the experts may have disagreed with some of the conclusions in the court’s
June 13, 2019 liability Opinion, the experts were specifically instructed to tailor their expert

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reports for the damages trial phase, and, therefore, their testimony at the damages trial,
to the framework established by the court. As indicated in the following exchange on direct
examination between Mr. Nunes and plaintiffs’ counsel at the damages trial:

      Q. Mr. Nunes, after the Court issued its liability opinion in June of 2019, was
      Rocky Hill Advisors asked to perform additional expert services for this
      case?

      A. Yes, we were.

      Q. And what was the scope of work that Rocky Hill was asked to perform?

      A. Based on the Court’s decision on liability, we were asked to recalculate
      the damages that we had presented in the liability phase of the trial.

      Q. And what was the first step that Rocky Hill took to begin this second
      phase of work?

      A. Essentially, you know, reading the Court’s decision to gain an
      understanding of where the Court had found the Government to either be in
      breach or not in breach and to understand -- I'll call it the moving parts to
      the Court's decision.

Mr. Nunes additionally testified at the damages trial: “I mean, as much as I love my own
opinions, once the Court rendered its decision, my opinion was no longer applicable.” The
court does not take issue with the revisions to Dr. Starks’ expert reports in light of the
court’s rulings after the liability phase of trial.

        Plaintiffs also allege that Dr. Starks made a mistake in alleging that Mr. Nunes
miscalculated his returns by incorrectly converting the Barclay indices. At the damages
trial, Dr. Starks addressed her claim with defendant’s counsel:

      Q. Explain to the Court what you mean by your statement that Rocky Hill
      has improperly – improperly stated the frequency of reinvestment in its
      model.

      A. So Rocky Hill has said that their reinvestment of earnings occurs
      quarterly; however, Barclays in the index reinvested monthly. . . . I’m not
      critiquing what Barclays does. Barclays is very good at transforming a
      monthly interest rate to a quarterly interest rate to an annual interest rate.
      My critique is that Rocky Hill said that they were reinvesting quarterly when,
      in fact, in their model, they are reinvesting monthly. So this difference
      between what they said they were doing and what they did in their
      spreadsheet is what I’m calling improper reinvestment frequency, because
      it doesn’t align with what they said they were doing.

                                           131
       Q. All right. So let's look at Demonstrative 49. What did Rocky Hill say in its
       expert report -- these are excerpts from -- I should say, these are excerpts
       from Rocky Hill’s report, JX420, and this is their liability phase report. What
       did they say about how the model reinvests returns?

       A. Well, twice in this they said they were reinvesting the returns quarterly to
       align with the quarterly reset of the indices, and then at another point they
       said the investment earnings are reinvested quarterly.

       Q. Okay. But what does their model actually do?

       A. It actually reinvests monthly.

       Q. And how do you know that?

       A. Because I asked the people at Analysis Group to look at the model and
       see what they -- what they did, and I also know that the Barclays Index
       reinvests monthly.

       Q. Let's look at Demonstrative 50. What does this indicate about how the
       Barclays model reinvests the interest income and gains that its model
       produces every month?

       A. So they specifically say, for indices that rebalanced less frequently, cash
       is still reinvested pro rata at the end of each month, and cumulative returns
       over periods longer than one month still reflect monthly compounding.

       In response to her testimony, plaintiffs allege,

       Dr. Starks was wrong. A review of RHA’s model demonstrates that there is
       no compounding of earnings within a quarter. Instead, the model reinvests
       earnings quarterly in accord with the Barclays data it is using – it applies the
       same earnings rate for each day of a quarter to the balance in the account
       at the beginning of the quarter. At the end of the quarter, those daily
       earnings are totaled up and added to the beginning balance to become the
       new balance for the next quarter.

Plaintiffs continue:

       [t]he Government’s entire damages case rests upon Dr. Starks. In its brief,
       the Government extols Dr. Starks and asks the Court to credit her
       testimony, and to discredit RHA based on her testimony. Yet it turns out that
       Dr. Starks made a multi-million dollar error in her testimony and a serious
       false accusation against RHA. A mistake of this magnitude seriously
       undercuts her reliability and credibility, and hence the Government’s
       position.

                                            132
In response, defendant argues “Plaintiffs’ unfounded accusations appear to arise from
Plaintiffs’ own failure to understand the contradictions in Mr. Nunes’s testimony, as
explained by Dr. Starks.” Defendant claims

      Mr. Nunes’s expert reports and testimony raise the question Dr. Starks
      identified in her rebuttal report: because the Nunes damages model
      employs Barclays index data, does his model reflect the monthly
      compounding that the Barclays indexes incorporate into their returns? Mr.
      Nunes has repeatedly insisted that his model reinvests quarterly, not
      monthly. But Dr. Starks has demonstrated that Mr. Nunes’s opinion on this
      point is, at a minimum, confused. The source of that confusion is the fact
      that Mr. Nunes’s model incorporates the returns calculated by the Barclays
      U.S. Treasury indexes, and the Barclays indexes reinvest earnings monthly.

(emphasis in original). The cross-examination testimony of Mr. Nunes demonstrates that
the parties are discussing two separate issues, which caused confusion. In discussing
the mechanics of Mr. Nunes’ model, defendant’s counsel asked Mr. Nunes on cross-
examination:

      Q. So it’s the -- the cash is invested at the -- the cash income is reinvested
      every month, and as a result, in the following month starts to make money
      on its own.

      A. That’s right.

      Q. Okay. Now, if instead the Barclays index reinvested the cash not monthly
      but quarterly, the actual revenue reflected in the index would be significantly
      less, would it not?

      A. No, because the quarterly calculation is the return for the quarter. It’s a
      data point. There’s nothing –

      Q. Okay, I think you’re answering a different question than the one I asked.

      A. Okay.

      Q. And if I’m wrong about that, you can correct me, but my question isn’t
      about the fact that you can report the earnings on a monthly or quarterly or
      annual basis. My question is how does the -- as a matter of mechanics, how
      does the Barclays model actually reask invest [reinvest] the income, the
      dollars coming in? And as I understand it, it reask invests [reinvests43]

43Although the trial transcript from the damages trial repeatedly refers to “reask invest”
and “reask invests” from the context of the cross-examination by defendant’s counsel of
Mr. Nunes, it appears the testimony was “reinvest” and “reinvests.”
                                           133
dollars at the end of each month. So money coming in in January is invested
and deployed, actively deployed, at the end of January and starting in
February.

A. Yes. What it means is for February you’re deploying more cash, but it’s
across the same index allocation once the index resets.

Q. Fair enough. But that cash is used, in effect, to buy more Treasury bills,
treasuries, so that cash is now earning its own coupon payment.

A. Correct.

Q. Now, if instead what Barclays did or what your model did was invest that
cash not at the end of each month but at the end of each quarter, meaning
the actual earnings would be significantly reduced, would they not?

A. I mean, as you’re describing it, it would likely have an impact, but you’re
bastardizing the Barclays index.

Q. I’m describing something that the Barclays index doesn’t do.

A. That is correct.

Q. Is that your point?

A. Yes, correct.

Q. And my point is that -- well, your model, the mechanics of your model
operates just as the Barclays index does; namely, it invests and actively
deploys cash earned on a month-by-month basis, not on a quarter-by-
quarter basis.

A. No.

Q. I’m wrong about that?

A. How our model does it?

Q. Yeah.

A. No. Our model reask invests [reinvests] each quarter’s earnings at the
end of the quarter in the same cadence as the Barclays index quarterly
return data point resets.

Q. Okay, but I’m not -- I think we’re talking about different things again. I’m
not talking about data points. I’m talking about how the cash earnings -- at

                                     134
what point the cash earnings are actually invested, okay, in treasuries, and
my understanding is that in Barclays, the cash earnings are invested into
new treasuries at the end of each month.

A. In the construction of the index.

Q. Okay. And then your -- your model does the same thing. It invests that
cash on a monthly basis.

A. No.

Q. It doesn't? Your model invests it on a quarterly basis?

A. We use a data point that Barclays calculates and that we showed in
validation that says this is the return of the index for the quarter, so meaning
that in the quarter, the market average return of the index was -- pick a
number, 5 percent. In our model -- and we validated that when we show
how a monthly index produces the same result as the quarterly index
produces the same result as an annual index -- again, all of those are data
points that Rocky Hill is not calculating or in Dr. Starks’ parlance converting.
We take that 5 percent, and that becomes the model market average
earning rate for the quarter, no reinvestment month to month. At the end of
the quarter, whatever the quarter’s earnings are based on that quarterly
data point, they get reinvested such that day one of quarter two includes the
prior quarter’s principal balance plus the prior quarter's earnings based on
the quarterly market average earnings rate.

Q. Okay. So your model reask invests [reinvests] the cash earnings on a
quarterly basis.

A. Correct.

Q. Now, there would -- and my point is I think a simple one, which is that
reinvesting the cash on a quarterly basis versus a monthly basis is going to
have an effect on the actual returns.

A. In our model if we were to do it?

Q. No, just in the abstract. If Barclays reask invests [reinvests] the cash on
a monthly basis or a quarterly basis, that's going to make it different as to
what the returns will be.

A. No. We showed you in the data validation, it doesn’t make a difference,
because the data points that they're providing are clean data points for the
frequency period in which they're providing them.

                                       135
       The court agrees with the defendant regarding the alleged “mistake” by Dr. Starks,
and does not find Dr, Starks made a mistake labeling Mr. Nunes’ model as reinvesting
monthly given the Barclays index monthly reinvesting and monthly rebalancing. The court
believes it was a fair criticism for Dr. Starks to identify, even if the confusion stems from
the phrasing used by Mr. Nunes, and for defendant’s counsel to address with Mr. Nunes
on cross-examination.

        The court, however, does take issue with a mistake made by Mr. Nunes. As noted
above, on cross-examination with defendant’s counsel Mr. Nunes admitted there was an
error in his calculations in his original expert report on damages, a mistake which was
discovered by Dr. Starks. At the damages trial, Mr. Nunes had the following exchange
with counsel for the United States:

       [Q.] [A] few minutes ago, you said that -- you acknowledged that Dr. Starks
       was right, and that was begrudgingly, and in the deposition you said you
       accepted the truth of what she said reluctantly. Why were you reluctant or
       begrudging in accepting that she had it right?

       A. Because I hate giving up possible money, but, you know, you do what
       you have to do when it’s right.

       Q. What you had done in your original report was you had inadvertently
       imposed damages for a period in which the Court found the Government
       was not in breach.

       A. By applying the manner in which returns of a portfolio are typically
       calculated in the investment world, yes. That did end up resulting in a larger
       growth rate in the non-breach period than was realized by the Government.

       Q. And the net result of that mistake was to increase your damage
       calculation between 45 and 50 million dollars in both Scenario A and
       Scenario B.

       A. That’s correct, yes, in round numbers.[44]

In addition to what appears to be a clear error, examining the expert reports of all the
experts, the court finds that Dr. Starks was a more credible and a more supported expert
witness than Mr. Nunes, and offered to the court a more plausible model of damages.

44 Plaintiffs complain that the “Government harps throughout its brief on a ‘$50 million
error’ made by RHA in originally calculating the growth of the Docket 326 Funds during
the non-breach periods, which RHA corrected well before the trial,” and note “Mr. Nunes
addressed this issue forthrightly during his trial testimony and it played no role in the
damages figures that RHA presented to the Court.” (footnote omitted).

                                            136
        The court notes that, in addition to questioning the methodology and credibility of
Dr. Starks, in their post-trial reply brief, plaintiffs also alleged, “[t]he government breached
its duty of candor to the Court,” arguing “[t]he Government’s advocacy in its brief simply
cannot be squared with its duty of candor to this Court.” After citing to the Model Rules of
Professional Conduct,45 plaintiffs stated,

       the Government has a duty to candidly and accurately present the facts to
       this Court. While it is free to present those facts in the light most favorable
       to it and to argue the most favorable inferences from those facts, it cannot
       mislead the Court about those facts or permit one of its witnesses to do so,
       whether deliberately or inadvertently. Rather, the Government, like
       plaintiff’s counsel, has a paramount, affirmative duty of candor to the Court
       that requires it to correct the record to ensure that this case is decided on
       its merits. Accordingly, the Government was required to correct Dr. Starks’
       erroneous testimony. It is not sufficient for the Government to stay silent
       and simply not respond to WSIG’s attack on this aspect of Dr. Starks’
       testimony, without acknowledging this major chink in her armor. However
       reluctant the Government may be to undermine the credibility of its star
       witness, it has no choice. The Court has a paramount need to be accurately
       apprised of the material facts, as well as which factual issues are
       legitimately disputed and must be resolved by it. The Government owes an
       accounting to this Court for this breach of its duty of candor.

Defendant responds that “Dr. Starks’s critique is accurate, there is no ‘error’ for the United
States to ‘acknowledge,’” and, therefore, there is “no merit in Plaintiffs’ contention that the
United States has breached a duty of candor to the Court.” Defendant also argues that
“[t]hese unfounded accusations are contradicted by the trial record.” Having found that
that Dr. Starks did not make the error plaintiffs allege, the court agrees with defendant
there the government has not breached a duty of candor to this court. Although the
American court system is based on an adversarial relationship between the parties, the
unnecessary allegations of breaching the duty of candor made by the plaintiffs have no
place in the above captioned case.

45In addition to citing the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, plaintiffs, quoting from a
decision by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit note:

       “While Rule 3.3 articulates the duty of candor to the tribunal as a necessary
       protection of the decision-making process, and Rule 3.4 articulates an
       analogous duty to opposing lawyers, neither of these rules nor the entire
       Code of Professional Responsibility displaces the broader general duty of
       candor and good faith required to protect the integrity of the entire judicial
       process.”

(quoting United States v. Shaffer Equip. Co., 11 F.3d 450, 457 (4th Cir. 1993)).
                                             137
     Although finding defendant offered a plausible model for the calculation of
damages, the court remains cognizant of the Federal Circuit statement in Warm Springs:

       “Where several alternative investment strategies would have been equally
       plausible, the court should presume that the funds would have been used
       in the most profitable of these. The burden of providing that the funds would
       have earned less than that amount is on the fiduciaries found to be in breach
       of their duty. Any doubt or ambiguity should be resolved against them.”

Warm Springs, 248 F.3d at 1371 (quoting Donovan v. Bierwirth, 754 F.2d at 1056); see
also Jicarilla III, 112 Fed. Cl. at 310. Additionally, as noted above, plaintiffs prepared
different measures of damages based on whether the “Warm Springs presumption is
used.” In Mr. Nunes’ expert reports, Mr. Nunes selected the longest possible profitable
maturity structure and applied that term to calculate damages, without comparison to any
of the facts of the Warm Springs case to the facts of the case currently before the court.
Mr. Nunes’ initial expert report, for example, makes reference to the Warm Springs
presumption, but does not describe the holding of that decision or make any assessment
of how to apply that case to the above captioned case. Mr. Nunes explained at trial that

       we are then using the five to ten bounds as the range of prudence and
       applying the Warm Springs presumption. We determined that for these two
       periods, as well as how we used it in the first period, that the ten-year
       targeted term structure used in the Warm Springs presumption would be
       prudent. And, of course, then we looked at the actual investment of the
       funds from the first nonbreach period, the 7.86-year maturity or term
       structure, and we used that to inform us for our Alternative B calculations.

Plaintiffs indicated that “[h]ere, the most profitable maturity structure is the longest one –
10 years – and so RHA selected that structure as the basis for calculating damages.” At
closing argument, plaintiffs reiterated how plaintiffs’ expert calculated the damages

       Rocky Hill didn’t want to impose its own opinion in choosing a particular
       maturity structure between five to ten years. So it came up with two
       alternative maturity structures. The first is a structure of ten years, right at
       the top of the range, and this is based on the legal presumption in Warm
       Springs that the funds would have been invested in the most profitable of
       the plausible alternatives. So there’s no question that taking that top-of-the-
       range maturity structure would yield the most damages, and the justification
       for doing that is not because Rocky Hill says, gee, in our opinion, that’s the
       best. It's because of the Warm Springs presumption. Alternatively, in the
       event the Court concludes that the Warm Springs presumption is
       inapplicable here, Rocky Hill calculated -- used the actual weighted average
       return -- average maturity structure, pardon me, of the 326-K fund during
       the nonbreach period. So for that entire period of about five years, the actual
       weighted average maturity was 7.86 years, and so that became the second

                                            138
      maturity structure that Rocky Hill used. And in their reports, they refer to the
      first as Alternative A and the second as Alternative B.

Even if the court had adopted plaintiffs’ model of damages, it does not necessarily follow
that the court would have adopted the ten year time frame under the Warm Springs
presumption. Although the plaintiffs repeatedly pointed to the language used by the
Federal Circuit in Warm Springs, the factual postures of that case and the above
captioned case are very different. As noted above, the Federal Circuit indicated:

      “Where several alternative investment strategies would have been equally
      plausible, the court should presume that the funds would have been used
      in the most profitable of these. The burden of providing that the funds would
      have earned less than that amount is on the fiduciaries found to be in breach
      of their duty. Any doubt or ambiguity should be resolved against them.”

Warm Springs, 248 F.3d at 1371 (quoting Donovan v. Bierwirth, 754 F.2d at 1056).
Immediately preceding that statement, however, the Federal Circuit noted:

      Although the trial court held that the United States breached its fiduciary
      duty by selling the green timber prematurely, the court denied the Tribes
      any recovery for that breach on two grounds: (1) the Tribes “received full
      value for the green trees cut improperly,” i.e., the Tribes received the full
      domestic price for those trees; and (2) the court could “only speculate on
      what prices in the export market might have been at some hypothetical time”
      in the future. Neither of those grounds justifies refusing to award any
      damages for the improperly harvested green timber. To deny recovery on
      the ground that the Tribes recovered the full value of the trees in the
      unfavorable market in which they were sold ignores the nature of the
      breach, which consisted of harvesting and selling the trees on the domestic
      market rather than waiting to harvest and sell them for export. It also
      disregards the legal principle, recognized by the Court of Claims in the
      Mitchell case, that Indian tribes in a case of improper sales of timber assets
      are entitled to recover “the proceeds of the sales which should have been
      made under proper management—not merely the actual proceeds of actual
      sales.”

Warm Springs, 248 F.3d at 1371 (quoting Mitchell v. United States, 229 Ct. Cl. 1, 10 664
F.2d 265, 271 (1981), aff’d, 463 U.S. 206 (1983)). This court did not preclude any finding
of damages for plaintiffs like the trial court in Warm Springs, to the contrary, the court
permitted extensive expert discovery and held a second phase of the trial devoted to the
damages owed plaintiffs after the court issued its liability Opinion. Moreover, as noted
above, defendant conceded that pursuant to the court’s liability Opinion, plaintiffs would
be owed $74.8 million dollars. In Warm Springs, even after finding error by the trial court
in awarding no damages to the Warm Springs plaintiffs, the holding of the Federal Circuit
was to

                                           139
      vacate the judgment of the Court of Federal Claims and remand for
      determination of damages. The Court of Federal Claims should determine
      the following items in a manner consistent with this opinion: (1) the amount
      that the Tribes would have earned from the sale of the green timber that
      was improperly included in the blowdown sale; (2) the amount of timber, if
      any, that was harvested under the logging contract but is missing from the
      BIA records and did not result in payment to the Tribes; and (3) the amount
      of timber that was harvested in trespass, if any, and whether the BIA
      breached its duty to the Tribes by failing to prevent that trespass. Damages
      should be awarded to the Tribes based on these determinations.

Warm Springs, 248 F.3d at 1375–76.46 Therefore, it does not necessarily follow that under
Warm Springs, even with the expansive language used by the Federal Circuit, plaintiffs
would presumptively have been entitled to the “most profitable maturity structure,” i.e.,
the 10 year calculation by Mr. Nunes. Moreover, as referenced above in Dr. Starks’
testimony, the use of a ten year maturity structure, which Mr. Nunes stated was “right at
the top of the range,” may not be plausible figure. Using a demonstrative she prepared
for the damages trial, Dr. Starks explained

      Demonstrative 30 shows the frequency in months of the different maturities
      between 4.7 years and ten years. And so, for example, the -- the less than
      five years was 19 percent of the month, and only 2 percent was between 9
      1/2 and ten years. And as the chart shows, 80 percent of the months have
      holdings with the weighted average years to call under 7 1/2 years, and, in
      fact, if you look at the first three bars, which shows the percentage of the
      months under six years, it is almost 50 percent.

Defendant’s counsel followed up with Dr. Starks:

      Q. Now, what -- and I’m sorry, Dr. Starks. What percentage of the time
      during the 1992 to ‘97 prudent period did the Government hold a portfolio
      that had a weighted average years to call of 9.5 years or higher?

      A. Two percent of the time.

      Q. Two percent of the time. Did it ever have a weighted average years to
      call of ten years?

      A. No. 9.7 is the highest, and that was only again, that was -- it was 2
      percent of the months that was even close to that.

46 As noted by the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in a subsequent
unpublished decision: “On remand, the Court of Federal Claims made a determination of
the above three issues and assessed the amount of damages owed by the government
to the Tribes for the mismanagement of the Tribes’ timber resources to be $13,805,607.
We affirm.” Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs Rsrv. of Oregon v. United States, 101
F. App’x 818, 819 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (emphasis in original).
                                          140
      Q. Did Rocky Hill pick a maturity structure based on the nonbreach period
      that was actually higher than the maturity structure of the fund during the
      nonbreach period ever really was?

      A. Yes, they did.

      Q. All right. Is Rocky Hill’s evaluation of the plausibility of investment
      strategies as between five years or ten years reasonable in light of finance
      theory?

      A. No, it is not. It is -- again, we have this -- this chart on page 30 that shows
      it wasn’t -- it was -- the -- it was an improbable over the time period. It didn’t
      happen often, but then there are also the case facts that there was a lot of
      uncertainty in the 1980 to 1992 period about what was going to happen with
      the distribution, and, arguably, there's even more uncertainty in that period
      than there was in the 1992 to 1997 period.

Therefore, in selecting a ten year maturity structure to attempt to apply the damages to
the Warm Springs presumption, Mr. Nunes picked a figure that was never reached during
the entire non-breach period in which the government had prudently invested. The court
finds that, based on the model prepared by Mr. Nunes, and reviewing the plaintiffs’ expert
reports, and the testimony at the damages trial, that the investment strategy put forth by
plaintiffs is not equally plausible to the investment strategy offered by defendant and Dr.
Starks. See Warm Springs, 248 F.3d at 1371.

                                      CONCLUSION

        From all the testimony of the multiple experts at both the liability trial and the
damages trial, only one thing is clear: there are a multiplicity of ways to analyze the
investment strategy of a thirty three year period, especially given economic variables,
including varying interest rates, changing market conditions, different policies adopted by
the government during the investment period, and the retrospective theoretical and
alterative choices made by experts to analyze, and account for, the complex history
surrounding the 326-K and 325-A Funds. Based on the testimony at both the liability and
damages trials, the expert reports and trial exhibits at both the liability and damages
phases of trial, the court concludes that plaintiffs are entitled to damages in the above
captioned case, using the methodology put forth by defendant’s expert Dr. Starks at the
damages trial, as Dr. Starks offered the more logical, credible, and plausible method of
calculating damages in this case.

             IT IS SO ORDERED.

                                                  s/Marian Blank Horn
                                                  MARIAN BLANK HORN
                                                           Judge

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