It may be i don't have all the facts , but it seems you are spreading incorrect information. I don't know why.
MP, the above passages I cut-and-pasted with links are from <http://www.ainc-inac.gc.ca/>, Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, the federal government department in charge of these issues. You can click those links to see that I didn't alter a word. If you don't consider that a "credible website", I can't help you. Why you choose to accuse me of dishonesty for posting these direct quotes and links, I don't know, but it makes saying anything else to you pointless.
With regard to your cited court case, you quote paragraph 6 (on page 3) as though it settled the case. But read paragraphs 49 (on page 9) through 62 (on page 11), which cite the Adult Adoption Act. The court expressly noted that "child" (of a parent) does not always mean "minor", it can (and does in the Adult Adoption Act) include adult offspring and adoptees; and that Parliament could have but did not specify "minor child" in the Indian Act.
[61] Finally, it should also be noted that the Noël case involved an adult adoption in the province of Quebec. There appeared to be no dispute as to the entitlement of an adult adoptee to be added to a Band List but only whether a fraud had been perpetrated in the adoption procedure.
In this case the parents who were adopting (Percy and Betty Johnson) had to prove that they raised Boczek (the adoptee) from the time before his majority status. The status of adoption of a minor remains applicable as they granted a de facto adoption based on the fact that the parents raised him from before the age of 18 until he was able to take care of himself.
When it comes to adult adoptees and the Indian Act in Canada...individuals still have to prove they were raised by status Indians as minors.
I think you've misread a lot Sizzle. I gotta agree with Moma Porcupine on this one, but I will grant you that it is a government program with lots of holes in it and because of previous mistakes in older versions of the Indian Act it is confusing and definitely not a perfect system....however I don't see the ability of new agers or frauds to take advantage of it by being "adopted" into a tribe and the mistakes of the Indian Act tend to be more exlusive rather than inclusive. It's just not there.....it's pretty clear from the links you and MP posted and especially in the court case posted that adult adoptees have to prove they were raised as minors by status Indians to be able to receive a Status card. Custom adoption included.
So, for everyone reading, let's get it clear. Traditional adoption by a band or by individual members as an adult is NOT a pathway to a Status Card in Canada.
Superdog