On October 15, 2025, while en route to Bermidji, Minnesota, the pilot of a 1946 Stinson 108 light aircraft experienced engine failure at an altitude of 3,500 feet. He managed to make an emergency landing on Minnesota State Highway 89, which runs through the Chippewa Tribal Reservation of Red Lake Nation.
Fortunately, there was no harm done.
However, the Chippewa Tribal Authority impounded the grounded aircraft, citing Tribal Resolution No. Resolution 59-78 of 1978 was adopted by the tribe to protest the Air Force’s use of a training route crossing the airspace of the Indian reservation.
This measure, which is not binding under US federal law, aimed to « prohibit » flights below 20,000 feet in the reservation’s « airspace. »
The FAA, of course, does not recognize this restriction, which, moreover, does not appear on federal aeronautical charts.
The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA) intervened unsuccessfully to try to recover the plane by requesting assistance from the Department of Transportation (DOT).
This is just speculation; if the plane in distress had been a commercial airliner, it is unlikely the Native Americans would have been so belligerent.
The Native Americans are undoubtedly attempting a high-wire act to try to gain an advantage or leverage in their dealings with the federal government.
And of course, this is an opportunistic public relations move.
The dispute is not yet resolved. The war drums are still beating.
The final outcome of this tragicomic little war remains to be seen.
Let’s hope the parties can reach an agreement with mutual respect, bury the hatchet, and smoke the peace pipe.