In Martin Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon,” which was nominated for 10 Academy Awards, members of the Osage Nation in Oklahoma faced a murderous conspiracy to steal their wealth.
A century after those crimes, tribe members say their ownership rights were again disregarded.
This time the fight doesn’t center on oil, but rather one of the 21st century’s new energy sources: wind.
In a 13-year battle with Italian utility Enel, a federal judge has sided with the Osage, saying the company’s U.S. subsidiaries trespassed when they built a wind farm on tribal land northwest of Tulsa, Okla. The judge said the project violated the historically valuable mineral estate held in trust for the Osage Nation.
“You come attack a small Indian tribe in Oklahoma and not want to recognize our reservation?” said Everett Waller, chairman of the Osage Minerals Council who also appears in the movie. “I just had to say that I can’t allow that.”
The Wall Street Journal









