In numerous studies of the outer Galactic halo some evidence for accretion
has been found. If the outer halo did form in part or wholly through merger
events, we might expect to find coherent streams of stars and globular clusters
following similar orbits as their parent objects, which are assumed to be
present or former Milky Way dwarf satellite galaxies. We present a study of
this phenomenon by assessing the likelihood of potential descendant ``dynamical
families'' in the outer halo. We conduct two analyses: one that involves a
statistical analysis of the spatial distribution of all known Galactic dwarf
satellite galaxies (DSGs) and globular clusters, and a second, more specific
analysis of those globular clusters and DSGs for which full phase space
dynamical data exist. In both cases our methodology is appropriate only to
members of descendant dynamical families that retain nearly aligned orbital
poles today. Since the Sagittarius dwarf (Sgr) is considered a paradigm for the
type of merger/tidal interaction event for which we are searching, we also
undertake a case study of the Sgr system and identify several globular clusters
that may be members of its extended dynamical family. (ABRIDGED)Comment: accepted by ApJ, 57 pages, 13 figures, AASTeX forma