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Leonard PELTIER
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: Native
American activist and member of the American Indian Movement
Number of victims: 2
Date of murders:
June 26,
1975
Date
of arrest:
February 6,
1976
Date of birth:
September 12,
1944
Victims profile: Ronald
A. Williams, and Jack R. Coler(FBI
Special Agents)
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Pine Ridge, South Dakota, USA
Status: Sentenced to two
consecutive terms of life imprisonment
on June 2, 1977
Leonard Peltier
(born September 12, 1944) is a Native American activist and member of
the American Indian Movement. In 1977 he was convicted and sentenced to
two consecutive terms of life imprisonment for murdering two FBI Agents
who died during a 1975 shoot-out on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
There has been considerable debate over Peltier’s guilt and the fairness
of his trial.
Peltier's supporters present him as a
political prisoner, although his murder conviction has survived appeals
in various courts. Amnesty International issued this statement: "Although
he has not been adopted as a prisoner of conscience, there is concern
about the fairness of the proceedings leading to his conviction and it
is believed that political factors may have influenced the way the case
was prosecuted." Numerous lawsuits have been filed on his behalf but
none has succeeded.
Peltier is currently incarcerated at the United
States Penitentiary, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. His projected release date
is October 11, 2040.
On July 28, 2009, Peltier was granted a full hearing
before the United States Parole Commission. On August 21, 2009, US
Attorney Drew Wrigley announced that Peltier’s parole request had been
denied. Peltier's next scheduled hearing will be in July 2024
Early life
Peltier was born in Grand Forks, North
Dakota, the eleventh of thirteen children to Leo Peltier and Alvina
Robideau. His father was three-fourths Chippewa and one-quarter French,
and his mother had a Dakota Sioux mother and a Chippewa father. His
parents divorced when he was four years old. At this time, Leonard and
his sister Betty Ann went to live with his paternal grandparents Alex
and Mary Dubois-Peltier in the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation near
Belcourt, North Dakota.
In September 1953, he was enrolled at the Wahpeton
Indian School in Wahpeton, North Dakota, a boarding school run by the
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA). He graduated at Wahpeton in May 1957,
and attended the Flandreau Indian School in Flandreau, South Dakota.
However, he dropped out in the ninth grade and returned to the Turtle
Mountain Reservation to live with his father.
In 1965, Peltier relocated to Seattle, Washington,
and worked for several years as the owner of an auto body station.
Peltier became involved in a variety of causes
championing Native American rights, and eventually joined the American
Indian Movement (AIM). As a member of AIM, he became involved in the
factional difficulties on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South
Dakota between tribal chairman Dick Wilson and his supporters and
traditionalist members of the tribe. Wilson had created a private
militia Guardians of the Oglala Nation (GOON). GOON was reputed to have
been involved in violence on the reservation. The actions of Wilson and
the GOONs were partly responsible for the takeover at Wounded Knee in
1973, in which AIM and others demanded the resignation of Wilson. The
takeover did not however end Wilson's leadership, the actions of the
GOONs or the violence; there were at least 60 murders reported on Pine
Ridge between 1973 and 1975.
Peltier's journey to the Pine Ridge reservation as a
member of AIM was in response to the continued violence on the
reservation
Shootout at Jumping
Bull Ranch
On June 26, 1975,
Special Agents Williams and Coler were allegedly searching for a young
Pine Ridge man named Jimmy Eagle, wanted for questioning in connection
with the recent assault and robbery of two local ranch hands. It is
believed that he had stolen a pair of cowboy boots.
Williams and Coler
observed and approached a vehicle matching the description of a truck
Eagle was said to have been in several days earlier. At the time,
Peltier was a fugitive, with a warrant issued in Milwaukee charging
unlawful flight to avoid prosecution for the attempted murder of an
off-duty Milwaukee police officer (of which he was later acquitted).
Williams radioed that
he and Coler had come under high-powered rifle fire from the occupants
of the vehicle and were unable to return fire to any effect with their
.38 pistols and shotguns. FBI Special Agent Gary Adams was the first to
respond to Williams' call for assistance, and he also came under intense
gun fire from Jumping Bull Ranch.
The FBI, the Bureau of
Indian Affairs (BIA), and the local police spent much of the afternoon
pinned down on Highway 18, waiting for other law enforcement officers to
launch a flanking attack. At 2:30 p.m., a BIA rifleman in the flanking
group got a bead on one of the shooters, Joe Stuntz, and killed him.
At 4:30 p.m.,
authorities recovered the bodies of Williams and Coler at their vehicle,
and at 6 p.m. laid down a cloud of tear gas and stormed the Jumping Bull
houses, finding Stuntz's corpse clad in Coler's green FBI field jacket.
The others, authorities
later reported, had slipped away from the compound after Stuntz's death,
to cross White Clay Creek and hide in a culvert beneath a dirt road.
With police focused on the storming of Jumping Bull, the group made a
break for the southern hills. In the following days, they split into
smaller groups and scattered across the country, setting off a
nationwide manhunt that lasted eight months.
The FBI reported
Williams had received a defensive wound from a bullet which passed
through his right hand into his head, killing him instantly. Coler,
incapacitated from earlier bullet wounds, had been shot twice in the
head execution style.
In total 125 bullet
holes were found in the agents' vehicles, many from a .223 (5.56 mm)
rifle. The FBI investigation concluded the agents were killed at close
range by the same .223 caliber rifle.
Aftermath
On September 5, 1975,
Agent Williams' handgun, and shells from both Agents' handguns, were
found in a vehicle near a residence where Dino Butler was arrested.
On September 9, 1975,
Peltier purchased a Plymouth station wagon in Denver, Colorado. The FBI
sent out descriptions of it and a recreational vehicle (RV) in which
Peltier and associates were believed to be traveling. An Oregon State
Trooper stopped the vehicles based on the descriptions and ordered the
driver of the RV to exit, but after a brief exchange of gunfire, Peltier
escaped on foot.
Authorities later
identified the driver as Peltier. Agent Coler's handgun was found in a
bag under the front seat of the RV, where authorities reported also
finding Peltier's thumbprint. On December 22, 1975 he became the 335th
person named by the FBI to the Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list.
On September 10, 1975,
a station wagon blew up on the Kansas Turnpike near Wichita, and a
burned-up AR-15 was recovered, along with Agent Coler's .308 rifle. The
car was loaded with weapons and explosives which were apparently
accidentally ignited when placed too close to a hole in the exhaust
pipe.
Present in the car
among others were Robert Robideau, Norman Charles, and Michael Anderson,
said to be associates of Peltier.
Peltier fled to Hinton,
Alberta, Canada, where he hid out at a friend's cabin.
He was eventually
apprehended by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) on February 6,
1976. Peltier was not armed at the time of his arrest.
Peltier fought
extradition to the United States, a decision that backfired when Bob
Robideau and Darelle "Dino" Butler, AIM members also present on the
Jumping Bull compound at the time of the shootings, were found not
guilty on the grounds of self-defense by a federal jury in Cedar Rapids,
Iowa. As Peltier fled to Canada and then fought extradition, he arrived
too late to be tried with Robideau and Butler and was tried separately.
At his trial in United
States District Court for the District of North Dakota in Fargo, North
Dakota, a jury convicted Peltier of the murders of Coler and Williams
and the judge sentenced him in April 1977. After a series of appeals,
the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals reaffirmed Peltier's conviction in July
1993.
Alleged trial
irregularities
There has been debate
over Peltier’s guilt and the fairness of his trial. Several allegations
have been made by Peltier’s supporters which they claim point to his
innocence, and all of these have been disputed by the FBI:
An FBI agent who
testified that the agents followed a pickup truck onto the scene (a
vehicle that could not be tied to Peltier) is alleged to have later
changed his account to describe a red and white van, a vehicle type
which Peltier did drive. Further, as the FBI did not record radio
communications in 1975, there was an unresolved discrepancy between
Agents as to whether Williams said he was pursuing a "red and white
truck" or "pickup truck."
Three teenaged Native
American witnesses testified they saw Peltier approach the slain
officers' vehicle, but they later alleged that the FBI had threatened
and forced them to testify. The FBI answered that witnesses' testimony
was in any case not necessary for conviction.
An FBI ballistics
expert testified that a shell casing found near the dead agents' bodies
matched the gun tied to Peltier. Critics argued that an FBI teletype
stating the firing pin of the recovered weapon did not match the shell
casings proved that Peltier’s weapon was not the murder weapon. It was
counter-argued in testimony by the FBI that although the marks from the
firing pin did not match those on the casing, the firing pin had
probably been replaced after the murders, and that the marks made by the
rifle’s extractor were an exact match to the recovered weapon.
Murder conviction
Leonard Peltier was
convicted and is currently incarcerated, serving two consecutive life
sentences, for the murders of FBI Special Agents, Ronald A. Williams,
and Jack R. Coler, who were killed in a 1975 shoot-out on the Pine Ridge
Indian Reservation. Peltier has been in prison since February 6, 1976.
Peltier's conviction
sparked great controversy and has drawn criticism from a number of
sources. Numerous appeals have been filed on his behalf; none of the
rulings have been made in his favor.
Post-trial debate and
developments
Peltier
is considered a political prisoner by some of his supporters and has
received support from individuals and groups including Nelson Mandela,
Rigoberta Menchú, Amnesty International, the U.N. High Commissioner on
Human Rights, Tenzin Gyatso (the 14th Dalai Lama), the European
Parliament, the Belgian Parliament, the Italian Parliament, the Kennedy
Memorial Center for Human Rights, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Coretta Scott
King, and the Rev. Jesse Jackson.
Peltier's supporters
have given two different rationales for a Peltier pardon. One argument
asserts that Peltier did not commit the murders and is innocent, and
that he either had no knowledge of the murders (as he told CNN in 1999),
or that he has knowledge implicating others which he will never reveal,
or (as told in Peter Matthiessen's In the Spirit of Crazy Horse) that he
approached and searched the agents but did not execute them. Another
rationale for pardoning Peltier holds that the killings (no matter who
committed them) occurred during a war-like atmosphere on the reservation
in which FBI agents were terrorizing residents in the wake of the Pine
Ridge standoff in 1972.
Near the end of
President Bill Clinton's presidency in 2000, rumors began circulating
that he was considering granting Peltier clemency. This led to a
campaign against the possibility, culminating in a protest outside the
White House by about five hundred FBI agents and their families, and a
letter opposing clemency from then FBI director Louis Freeh. Clinton did
not grant Peltier clemency; some speculate this was at least partially
due to the pressure from these protests.
In 2002, Peltier filed
a civil rights lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia against the FBI, Louis Freeh, and a long list of FBI agents who
had participated in the campaign against his clemency petition, alleging
that they "engaged in a systematic and officially sanctioned campaign of
misinformation and disinformation." On March 22, 2004, the suit was
dismissed.
No consensus has yet
been reached regarding the events on Pine Ridge in 1975, even in and
among Native American communities. News from Indian Country publisher
Paul DeMain wrote in 2003 that an "unnamed delegation" with knowledge of
the incident told him, "Peltier was responsible for the close range
execution of the agents..." DeMain described the delegation as
"grandfathers and grandmothers, AIM activists, Pipe Carriers and others
who have carried a heavy unhealthy burden within them that has taken its
toll."
In an editorial written
in early 2003, DeMain wrote that the motive for the execution-style
murder of AIM activist Anna Mae Pictou Aquash "allegedly was her
knowledge that Leonard Peltier had shot the two agents, as he was
convicted." DeMain did not accuse Peltier of participation in the
murder. (In 2002 two other AIM members were indicted for the murder.) In
response, Peltier launched a libel lawsuit on May 1, 2003, against
DeMain.
On May 25, 2004,
Peltier withdrew the suit after he and DeMain reached a settlement,
which involved DeMain issuing a statement where he wrote, “…I do not
believe that Leonard Peltier received a fair trial in connection with
the murders of which he was convicted. Certainly he is entitled to one.
Nor do I believe, according to the evidence and testimony I now have,
that Mr. Peltier had any involvement in the death of Anna Mae Aquash.’’
DeMain did not, however, retract his central allegation: That the
murderers' motive for killing Aquash was the fear that she might inform
on Peltier.
In February 2004, Fritz
Arlo Looking Cloud was tried for the murder of Anna Mae Pictou Aquash,
and found guilty. On June 26, 2007, the Supreme Court of British
Columbia ordered the extradition of John Graham to the United States, to
stand trial for his alleged role in the murder of Annie Mae Aquash.
In Looking Cloud's
trial, the prosecution argued that AIM's suspicion of Aquash stemmed
from her having heard Peltier admit to the murders. The prosecution
called as a witness Darlene “Kamook” Nichols, former wife of AIM leader
Dennis Banks. She testified that in late 1975 Peltier confessed to
shooting the FBI agents to a group of AIM activists who were at that
time on the run from law enforcement. The fugitives included Nichols,
her sister Bernie, her husband Dennis Banks, and Aquash, among several
others. Nichols alleged that Peltier said, “The mother fucker was
begging for his life, but I shot him anyway.”
Bernie Nichols-Lafferty
also gave the same account of Peltier’s statement. Other witnesses have
testified that once Aquash came under suspicion of being an informant,
Peltier interrogated her on the matter while holding a gun to her head.
Peltier and David Hill later had Aquash participate in bomb-making so
that her fingerprints would be on the bombs. The trio then planted these
bombs at two power plants on the Pine Ridge reservation.
On February 10, 2004,
Peltier issued a statement: “Kamook's testimony was like being stabbed
in the heart while simultaneously being told your sister just died.”
Peltier denounced Kamook Nichol's courtroom accusations as false, saying
“I loved Kamook as my own family. I can't believe the $43,000 the FBI
gave her was a determining factor for her to perjure herself on the
witness stand. There must have been some extreme threat the FBI or their
cronies put upon her.”
After the Looking Cloud
trial, Darlene Nichols married Robert Ecoffey, Director of the Bureau of
Indian Affairs Office of Law Enforcement Services, who was instrumental
in the investigation that led to Looking Cloud's conviction.
During the trial
Nichols acknowledged receiving $42,000 dollars from the FBI in
connection with her cooperation on the case, money she explained was
compensation for her expenses in travelling to collect evidence by
wearing a wire while visiting her ex-husband, Dennis Banks. Some of the
money was for moving expenses so that she could move because of her fear
of Banks.
Bruce Ellison – who has
been Leonard Peltier's lawyer since the 1970s -- pled the fifth
amendment against self-incrimination and refused to testify at the grand
jury hearings leading up to the Looking Cloud trial in 2003, or in the
trial itself. During the trial, the federal prosecutor named Ellison as
a co-conspirator in the Aquash case. Witnesses state that Ellison
participated in interrogating Annie Mae Aquash on Dec. 11, 1975, shortly
before her murder.
In a February 27, 2006,
decision, U.S. District Judge William Skretny ruled that the FBI did not
have to hand over five of 812 documents relating to Peltier and held at
their Buffalo field office. He ruled that those particular documents
were exempted on the grounds of “national security and FBI
agent/informant protection.”
In his opinion Judge
Skretny wrote, “Plaintiff has not established the existence of bad faith
or provided any evidence contradicting (the FBI's) claim that the
release of these documents would endanger national security or would
impair this country's relationship with a foreign government.”
In response, Michael
Kuzma, a Buffalo lawyer and a member of Peltier's defense team said,
“We're appealing. It's incredible that it took him 254 days to render a
decision.” Kuzma further stated, “The pages we were most intrigued about
revolved around a teletype from Buffalo ... a three-page document that
seems to indicate that a confidential source was being advised by the
FBI not to engage in conduct that would compromise attorney-client
privilege.”
Legal action has been
taken by Peltier’s supporters in an attempt to secure more than 100,000
pages of documents from FBI field offices located throughout the U.S.
claiming that these files should have been turned over at the time of
his trial or following a Freedom of Information Act request filed soon
after.
In 2007, Peltier became
a figure in a political controversy when billionaire David Geffen, a
Peltier supporter, detached his financial support for Hillary Clinton's
presidential campaign and funded Barack Obama's campaign instead. This
caused an immense furor in the Clinton camp, and Geffen admitted he
switched his support because he became disillusioned by Bill Clinton's
refusal to pardon Peltier in circumstances where he pardoned Marc Rich,
a billionaire felon and criminal.
Peltier for President
Peltier was the
candidate for the Peace and Freedom Party in the 2004 Presidential race.
While prison inmates convicted of felonies are sometimes prohibited from
voting in the United States (Maine and Vermont are exceptions), the
United States Constitution has no prohibition against felons being
elected to Federal offices, including President. (Eugene V. Debs
received 913,664 votes (3.4%) in 1920 as the Socialist candidate for
President while in prison for sedition.) The Peace and Freedom Party
secured ballot status for Peltier only in California, where his
presidential candidacy received 27,607 votes, approximately 0.2% of the
vote in that state and approximately 0.02% of the nationwide vote.
Ruling on FBI documents
In a February 27, 2006, decision, U.S. District Judge
William Skretny ruled that the FBI did not have to hand over five of 812
documents relating to Peltier and held at their Buffalo field office. He
ruled that those particular documents were exempted on the grounds of
“national security and FBI agent/informant protection.” In his opinion
Judge Skretny wrote, “Plaintiff has not established the existence of bad
faith or provided any evidence contradicting (the FBI's) claim that the
release of these documents would endanger national security or would
impair this country's relationship with a foreign government.”
In response, Michael Kuzma, a Buffalo lawyer and a member of Peltier's
defense team said, “We're appealing. It's incredible that it took him
254 days to render a decision.” Kuzma further stated, “The pages we were
most intrigued about revolved around a teletype from Buffalo ... a three-page
document that seems to indicate that a confidential source was being
advised by the FBI not to engage in conduct that would compromise
attorney-client privilege.” Legal action has been taken by Peltier’s
supporters in an attempt to secure more than 100,000 pages of documents
from FBI field offices located throughout the U.S. claiming that these
files should have been turned over at the time of his trial or following
a Freedom of Information Act request filed soon after.
2007 political controversy
In 2007, Peltier became a figure in a political
controversy when billionaire David Geffen, a Peltier supporter, detached
his financial support for Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign and
funded Barack Obama's campaign instead. This caused an immense furor in
the Clinton camp, and Geffen admitted he switched his support because he
became disillusioned by Bill Clinton's refusal to pardon Peltier in
circumstances where he pardoned Marc Rich.
Beaten in Canaan
On January 13, 2009, Peltier was severely beaten by fellow inmates
following his transfer from USP Lewisburg to the United States
Penitentiary, Canaan. He was sent back to Lewisburg after the assault.
Wikipedia.org
Appeal
for the release of Leonard Peltier
Amnesty.org
Amnesty
International is appealing for the release from prison of Leonard
Peltier, an Anishinabe-Lakota Indian, who is serving two consecutive
life-sentences for the murders of two Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) agents.
The FBI agents, Ronald Williams and Jack Coler, were shot
at point-blank range after being wounded in a gunfight with Indian
activists on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation on 26 June 1975. Peltier
fled to Canada. He was extradited to the USA and convicted of the
murders in 1977.
Amnesty
International has investigated this case for many years. Although
Amnesty International has not adopted Leonard Peltier as a prisoner of
conscience, the organization remains concerned about the fairness of the
proceedings leading to his conviction and believes that political
factors may have influenced the way in which the case was prosecuted.
Peltier is now in his twenty-second year of imprisonment and has
exhausted all legal appeals against his conviction. He was denied parole
(early release under supervision of the criminal justice system) in 1994
following a parole hearing in 1993 and his case will not be heard again
via a full hearing by the Parole Commission until December 2008. Amnesty
International has for some years been calling on the federal government
to institute an executive review of the case but there is no evidence of
any such action having been taken.
In view of Amnesty International's
continuing concerns about this case, and the fact that available
remedies have been exhausted, Amnesty International is now calling for
Leonard Peltier to be released from prison through an act of
presidential pardon.
Background and Summary of Amnesty International's Concerns
A summary
of the case, describing the circumstances in which the agents were
killed and Peltier's trial and appeals, is contained in the attached
extract from Amnesty International's report USA: Human Rights and
American Indians (AI Index AMR 51/31/92), entitled ''Other
Cases of Concern: Leonard Peltier.''
As outlined in this document, Peltier was a leading activist with the American Indian Movement (AIM)
whose members were involved in a campaign to protect traditional Indian
lands and resources and had come into conflict with both the Pine Ridge
tribal government and the FBI.
Two other AIM members, Darelle (Dino)
Butler and Robert Robideau, were originally charged with the FBI agents'
murder and were tried separately in 1976. They admitted being present
during the gunfight but were acquitted on grounds of self-defence, after
submitting evidence about the atmosphere of fear and terror which
existed on the reservation prior to the shoot-out.
There is
evidence that the government intensified its pursuit of Leonard Peltier
after the acquittal of Butler and Robideau. Peltier was extradited from
Canada partly on the testimony of Myrtle Poor Bear, an American Indian
woman who signed a statement saying she had seen Peltier shoot the
agents at close range.
Poor Bear, who was a notoriously unreliable
witness, later retracted this statement as having been obtained under
duress and said she had never even met Peltier. The prosecution did not
use Myrtle Poor Bear as a witness at Peltier's trial. However, they
introduced ballistics evidence which purported to show that it was
Peltier's gun which killed the agents at close range after they were
already wounded and disabled.
This evidence effectively prevented Peltier from being able to present the same self-defence argument which
had resulted in the Butler/Robideau acquittals. However, serious
questions have since been raised about the reliability of this
ballistics evidence.
The
government has continued to argue that, even if they can no longer prove
that Peltier killed the agents, he is still guilty of ''aiding and
abetting'' in the murders through being in the group involved in the
exchange of gunfire from a distance. However, Amnesty International
believes that the doubts which have been raised about Peltier's role in
the actual killings of the agents undermine the whole case against him,
as ''proof'' that he was the actual killer was a key element in the
prosecution's case at the trial.
Amnesty
International's concerns about various aspects of the case are outlined
in a letter to the US Attorney General dated 23 June 1995, which is also
attached to this action. These concerns include
the following:
The FBI knowingly used perjured
testimony to obtain Leonard Peltier's extradition from Canada to the
USA. The FBI later admitted that it knew that the affidavits of
Myrtle Poor Bear, an alleged eye-witness to the murders, were false.
This in itself casts serious doubt on the bona fides of the
prosecution, even though Poor Bear's affidavits were not used at
Peltier's trial.
Leonard Peltier's attorneys were not
permitted to call Myrtle Poor Bear as a defence witness to describe
to the trial jury how she had been coerced by the FBI into signing
false affidavits implicating Peltier. The trial judge refused to
allow her to appear on the grounds that her testimony could be
''highly prejudicial'' to the government.
Evidence which might have assisted
Leonard Peltier's defence was withheld by the prosecution. This
included a 1975 telex from an FBI ballistics expert which stated
that, based on ballistics tests, the rifle alleged to be Peltier's
had a ''different firing pin'' from the gun used to kill the two
agents. At a court hearing in 1984, an FBI witness testified that
the telex had been merely a progress report and that another bullet
casing tested later had been found to match ''positively'' with the
rifle linked to Peltier. However, the reliability of the
government's ballistics evidence remains in dispute.
The
ballistics evidence presented at Peltier's trial was crucial to the
prosecution's case. It was presented as the main evidence linking
Peltier as the actual point-blank killer of the two FBI agents.
Without this evidence, the case against Peltier would have been no
stronger than the case against Dino Butler and Robert Robideau, who
were also charged with the Pine Ridge killings. Butler and Robideau
were tried separately and permitted to argue that there was an
atmosphere of such fear and terror on the reservation that their
move to shoot back at the agents constituted legitimate
self-defence.
They were acquitted.
The trial judge refused to allow the
defence to introduce evidence of serious FBI misconduct relating to
the intimidation of witnesses (the testimony of Myrtle Poor Bear).
Had such evidence been presented, it may have cast doubt in the
jury's mind about the reliability of the main prosecution witnesses,
three young Indians (Anderson, Draper and Brown) whose testimony
(that Peltier was in possession of an AR-15 rifle during the
shoot-out) was the main evidence linking Peltier to the alleged
murder weapon.
The
United States Court of Appeal for the Eighth Circuit ruled in 1986 that
the prosecution had indeed withheld evidence which would have been
favourable to Leonard Peltier and would have allowed him to cross
examine witnesses more effectively. However, it concluded that this had
not materially affected the outcome of the trial, and it upheld
Peltier's conviction.
However, the judge who wrote this opinion, Judge
Gerald Heaney, has since expressed his concern about the case. In a 1991
letter to Senator Daniel Inouye, Chair of the Senate Select Committee on
Indian Affairs, Judge Heaney expressed his belief that ''the FBI used
improper tactics in securing Peltier's extradition from Canada and in
otherwise investigating and trying the Peltier case. Although our court
decided that these actions were not grounds for reversals, they are, in
my view, factors that merit consideration in any petition for leniency
filed''. He also stressed the need to take into account the background
context to the fire-fight during which the two agents had been killed
(see Amnesty International's letter to the Attorney General of 23 June
1995).
Further
information on the case
Petition for clemency through an act of Presidential pardon
Peltier's
lawyers filed a petition for a presidential pardon several years ago,
urging President Clinton, who visited the Lakota Pine Ridge Reservation
on 7 July 1999, to use his powers of pardon to commute the sentence.
However, they have received no response and are not aware of any
recommendation having been passed to the White House from the office of
the Pardon Attorney (an office within the Justice Department which
reviews the case before making a recommendation to the White House).
Amnesty International has received several replies from the office of
the Pardon Attorney since 1995, stating that Peltier's petition for
commutation of sentence or clemency is still under review.
Parole
application
The
parole Commission decided at Peltier's last full, formal parole hearing
in 1993 that his case would not be formally reviewed again for a further
15 years - setting his next parole hearing for December 2008. Since then
there have been several interim hearings at which the Commission has
refused to reconsider the decision to deny parole on the grounds that
Peltier did not accept criminal responsibility for the murders of the
two FBI agents. This is despite the fact that, after one such hearing,
the Commission acknowledged that, ''the prosecution has conceded the
lack of any direct evidence that you personally participated in the
executions of the two FBI agents ...'' Peltier has always denied that he
was involved in killing the agents.
In June
1999 Peltier's lawyers filed a habeas corpus petition in a
federal district court, claiming that the parole board's decision not to
hear the case again for 15 years was arbitrary and unconstitutional, and
a violation of guidelines which should be applied to the case. The
petition also states that changes in the laws and procedures relating to
parole since 1975 have been wrongly applied retroactively in Peltier's
case, meaning that he has been required to serve far longer in prison
than was the case at the time of his conviction.
Peltier's medical condition
Leonard
Peltier suffers from a congenital problem with his jaw, which has
deteriorated during his imprisonment. At the present time, his jaw is
reportedly frozen open at 13 millimetres and he has difficulty in eating
as well as pain and discomfort. In 1996 he had two operations on his jaw
at the US Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri.
However, these operations were not successful and his condition is
alleged to have worsened.
Currently, his attorneys are asking the
federal Bureau of Prisons to allow further diagnostic tests to be made
so that an oral surgeon from a prestigious outside hospital (the Mayo
Clinic in Minnesota) can review Peltier's medical history and decide if
he is able to provide further treatment. Amnesty International wrote to
the federal prison authorities in March 1999 asking the prison
authorities to provide the records which have been requested.
His attorneys
are continuing to pursue his medical concerns.
Sentencing Statement of Leonard Peltier
June 1, 1977
THE COURT: C77-3003, United States of America versus Leonard Peltier.
Defendant and counsel, please come forward.
Mr. Peltier, do you know of any reason why sentence should not be passed
in your case at this time?
DEFENDANT PELTIER: No legal reason, no.
THE COURT: Mr. Taikeff, do you know of any reason why sentence should
not be passed in this case at this time?
MR. TAIKEFF: No, your Honor, I do not.
THE COURT: Mr. Peltier, do you desire to make a statement in your own
behalf or present any information to the Court which the Court might
consider in mitigation of punishment in your case?
DEFENDANT PELTIER: Yes I do.
Judge Benson, there is no doubt in my mind or my people's you are going
to sentence me to two consecutive life terms. You are and have always
been prejudiced against me and any native Americans who have stood
before you. You have openly favored the Government all through this
trial, and you are happy to do whatever the FBI would want you to do in
this case.
I did not always believe this to be so. When I first {3} saw you in the
courtroom in Sioux Falls, your dignified appearance misled me into
thinking that you were a fair minded person who knew something of the
law and who would act in accordance with the law which meant that you
would be impartial and not favor one side or the other in this lawsuit.
That has not been the case, and I now firmly believe you will impose
consecutive life terms solely because that's what you think will waive
the displeasures of the FBI. Yet my people nor myself do not know why
you would be so concerned about an organization that has brought so much
shame to the American people, but you are. Your conduct during this
trial leaves no doubt, that you will do the bidding of the FBI without
any hesitation.
You are about to perform an act which will close one more chapter in the
history of the failure of the United States Courts and the failure of
the people of the United States to do justice in the case of a native
American. After centuries of murder, of murder of millions of my people,
brothers and sisters, by the white race of America could I have been
wise in thinking that you would break that tradition and, commit an act
of Justice? Obviously not, because I should have realized that what I
detected was only a very thin layer of dignity and surely of not fine
character. {4}
If you think my accusations have been harsh and, unfounded, I will
explain why I have reached this conclusion and why I think my criticism
has not been harsh enough.
First, each time my defense team tried to expose FBI misconduct in their
investigation of this lawsuit and tried to prevent evidence of this, you
claimed it was irrelevant to this trial, but the prosecution was allowed
to present their case with evidence that was in no way relevant to this
lawsuit.
For an example, an automobile blown up on a freeway in Wichita, Kansas;
an attempted murder in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, which I have not been found
guilty or innocent of; a van loaded with legally sold firearms; and a
policeman who claimed someone fired at him in Oregon state.
The Supreme Court of the United States tried to prevent convictions of
this sort by passing into law that only past convictions may be
presented as evidence if it is not prejudicial to the lawsuit and only
evidence of the said case may be used.
This Court was very wrong. I have no prior convictions nor am I even
charged with some of these alleged, crimes. Therefore, they cannot be
used as evidence in order to receive a conviction in this farce called a
trial.
This is why I strongly believe you will impose two {5} life terms
running consecutive on me.
Second, you could not make a reasonable decision about my sentence
because you suffer from at least one of three defects that prevent a
rational conclusion. You plainly demonstrated this in your decision
about the Jimmy Eagle, and Myrtle Poorbear aspects of this case.
In Jimmy's case, for some unfounded reason that only a Judge who
constantly and openly ignores the law, would call it irrelevant to my
trial.
In the mental torture of Myrtle Poorbear you said the testimony would
shock the conscience of the jury and the American people if believed,
but you decided what was to be believed and what was not to be believed,
not the jury.
Your conduct shocks the conscience of what the American legal system
stands for -- the search for the truth by a jury of citizens. What was
it that made you afraid to let that testimony in -- your own guilt of
being part of a corrupted pre-planned trial to get a conviction, no
matter how your reputation would be tarnished?
For these reasons I strongly believe you will do the the bidding of the
FBI and give me two consecutive life terms.
Third, in my opinion anyone who failed to see the relationship between
the undisputed facts of these events surrounding the investigation used
by the FBI in their {6} interrogation of the Navajo youths -- Wilfred
Draper who was tied to a chair for three hours and denied access to his
attorney or the outright threats to Norman Brown's life, the bodily harm
threatened to Mike Anderson, and finally the murder of Anna Mae Aquash
-- must be blind, stupid or without human feeling, so there is no doubt
or little chance that you have the ability to avoid doing today what the
FBI wants you to do which is to sentence me to two life terms running
consecutively.
Fourth, you do not have the ability to see that the conviction of an AIM
activist helps to cover up what the Government's own evidence showed,
that large numbers of Indian people engaged in that fire fight on June
26th, 1975. You do not have the ability to see that the Government must
suppress the fact that there is a growing anger amongst Indian people
and that native Americans will resist any further encroachment by the
military forces of the capitalist Americans which is evidenced by the
large number of Pine Ridge residents who took up arms on June 26th,
1975, to defend themselves.
Therefore, you do not have the ability to carry out your
responsibilities towards me in an impartial way and will run my two life
terms consecutively.
Fifth, I stand before you as a proud man. I feel no guilt. I have done
nothing to feel guilty about. I have {7} no regrets of being a native
American activist. Thousands of people in the United states, Canada and
around the world, have and will continue to support me to expose the
injustice that occurred in this courtroom.
I do feel pity for your people that they must live under such a ugly
system. Under your system you are taught greed, racism and corruption,
and the most serious of all, the destruction of our mother earth. Under
the native American system we are taught all people are brothers and
sisters, to share the wealth with the poor and needy; but the most
important of all is to respect and preserve the earth, to me considered
to be our mother. We feed from her breast. Our mother gives us life at
birth; and when it is time to leave this world, she again takes us back
into her womb; but the main thing we are taught is to preserve her for
our children and grandchildren because they are next who will live upon
her.
No, I am not the guilty one here and should be called a criminal. The
white race of America is the criminal for the destruction of our lands
and my people. To hide your guilt from the decent human beings in
America and around the world, you will sentence me to two consecutive
life terms without any hesitation.
Sixth, there are less than four hundred Federal Judge for a population
of over two hundred million Americans. {8} Therefore, you have a very
powerful and important responsibility which should be carried out
impartially, but you never have been impartial where I was concerned.
You have the responsibility of protecting constitutional rights and laws;
but where I was concerned you neglected to even consider my or native
American's constitutional rights; but the most important of all you have
neglected our human rights. If you were impartial, you would have had an
open mind on all the factual disputes in this case; but you were
unwilling to allow for even the slightest possibility that a law
enforcement officer could lie on the stand. Then how could you possibly
be impartial enough to let my lawyers prove how important it is to the
FBI to convict a native American activist in this case? You do not have
the ability to see that such a conviction is an important part of the
efforts to discredit those who are trying to alert their brothers and
sisters to a new trick from the white man, an attempt to destroy what
little Indian land remains in the process of extracting our uranium, oil
and other minerals.
Again, to cover up your part in this, you will call me a heartless,
cold-blooded murderer who deserves two life sentences consecutively.
Seven, I cannot expect a Judge who has openly tolerated the conditions I
have been jailed under to make an {9} impartial decision on whether I
should be sentenced to concurrent or consecutive life terms. You have
been made aware of the following conditions which I had to endure at the
Grand Forks county jail since the time of the verdict.
One, I was denied access to a phone to call my attorneys concerning my
appeal.
Two, I was locked in solitary confinement without shower facilities,
soap, towels, sheets or pillow.
Three, the food was uneatable, what little there was.
Four, my family, brothers, sisters, mother and father who traveled long
distance from the reservation were denied visitations.
No human being should be subject to such treatment while you parade
around and pretend to be a decent, impartial and law-abiding.
You knowingly allowed your fascist Chief Deputy Marshal to play storm
trooper.
Again, the only conclusion that comes to my mind is you have, and always
knew, you would sentence me to two consecutive life terms.
Finally, I honestly believe that you made up your mind long ago that I
was guilty and that you were going to sentence me to the maximum
sentence permitted under the law, but this does not surprise me because
you are a high-ranking member of the white racist American {10}
establishment which has consistently said "In God we trust" while they
went about the business of murdering my people and attempting to destroy
our culture. The only thing I am guilty of and which I was convicted for
was of being Chippewa and sioux blood and for believing our sacred
religion.
THE COURT: Mr. Taikeff, do you have any statement to make in the
Defendant's behalf or any information to present to the Court?
MR. TAIKEFF: I have nothing to add, your Honor.
THE COURT: Mr. Peltier, you have seen the pre-sentence report in this
case?
DEFENDANT PELTIER: I have just glanced through it.
THE COURT: Do you have any comments or questions regarding it?
DEFENDANT PELTIER: I haven't read it.
MR. TAIKEFF: Counsel did read it in advance, your Honor --
THE COURT: (Interrupting) I beg your pardon?
MR. TAIKEFF: Counsel did read it in advance of showing it to the
Defendant. Counsel did not find anything seriously inaccurate about it.
THE COURT: Mr. Hultman, does the United states have any recommendations
or comments to offer?
MR. HULTMAN: May it please the Court, the Statute {11} has provided, for
the taking of a life, the penalty, that that life likewise be taken.
In this instance, that statute and that law has been under consideration
and its status -- has been in a questionable status for quite some time.
At the outset of this case, as the record indicates, I personally
indicated that -- in the extradition proceedings that the Government
would be bound, that that particular penalty could not and would not
apply; and that is a part of the record today, of which I know the Court,
I am certain, is aware.
That then means that the penalty which is left in effect is the minimum
penalty under the law; and that is a life sentence which, of course, is
a very, very serious sentence.
In this instance there was not one life which was taken, but two; and
because of the prosecution that has taken place in the course of this
trial, because that penalty does indicate that a life term is the
minimum sentence in the case of a life being taken, it seems to me, your
Honor, that is appropriate --
DEFENDANT PELTIER: (Interrupting) Who is going to pay for Anna Mae's
death? It sure stinks. What do you want? Give me your best name. Who is
going to pay for their deaths? You help me -- {12}
MR. CROOKS: (Interrupting) A lot of people would argue with that.
MR. HULTMAN: In the course of the taking of this particular life, your
Honor, not one life was taken as far as this particular trial is
concerned, but the taking of two; and it seems to me that in light of
that, that consecutive terms would be appropriate.
THE COURT: Mr. Peltier, you were convicted as charged --
DEFENDANT PELTIER: (Interrupting) I was railroaded.
THE COURT: (Continuing) -- as charged in the indictments of two counts
of premeditated murder. You were convicted and found guilty on each of
those counts. The evidence is clearly sufficient to support the verdict
of the jury.
You profess an interest and a dedication to the native people of this
country, but you have performed a great disservice to those native
people.
VOICE FROM AUDIENCE: Same to you.
DEFENDANT PELTIER: What about the Gestapo tactics being used on the Pine
Ridge residents? What do you call that? The cold-blooded murder of Anna
Mae Aquash, what do you call that?
VOICE FROM AUDIENCE: What about Joe?
DEFENDANT PELTIER: Are those two just being forgotten {13} about because
they are native people?
THE COURT: On the verdict of the jury, it is adjudged that the Defendant,
Leonard Peltier, has been convicted of the offense of first degree
murder as charged in Count 1 and Count 2 of the indictment in violation
of Title 18, United states Code, Section 2 -- Section 1111 and Section
1114.
It is further adjudged that the Defendant be committed to the custody of
the Attorney General of the United States for imprisonment for life on
Count 1.
It is further adjudged that the Defendant, Leonard Peltier, be committed
to the custody of the Attorney General of the United states for
imprisonment for life on Count 2, the sentence on Count 2 to run
consecutively to the sentence on Count 1.
Mr. Hultman, is there anything more to be presented to the Court?
MR. HULTMAN: The Government has nothing further, your Honor.
THE COURT: Mr. Taikeff?
MR. TAIKEFF: Just one technical matter, your Honor.
The Clerk of the Court has provided me with a form, apparently supplied
originally by the Court of Appeals for the Eighth circuit, which is
basically a notice of appeal form. {14}
I have completed that form and signed it on the assumption that my Court
appointment will continue on into the Eighth circuit, and I lodge that
with the Clerk's office.
It will be served -- I understand the Clerk makes a copy of it and
serves it upon the Government, and then it will be filed pursuant to my
written request ¡ and I trust that I have, therefore, complied with all
of the formalities to preserve Mr. Peltier's right of appeal.
THE COURT: You are advised, Mr. Peltier, that you do have the right of
appeal; and if you were financially unable to pay the cost of the
appeal, you can make application for appeal in forma pauperis.
MR. TAIKEFF: We make that application at this time, your Honor, to
continue the finding of the Court of his status as a person without any
financial means.
THE COURT: The application will be granted.
MR. TAIKEFF: Thank you, your Honor.
THE COURT: Is there anything more?
MR. TAIKEFF: Nothing at this time, your Honor.
THE COURT: Court is adjourned.
(Whereupon, at 4:23 o'clock, p.m., the hearing in the above-entitled
matter was closed.)
Verdict in the Leonard Peltier Trial
April 16, 1977
The jury may be brought in.
(Whereupon, at 4:40 o'clock, p.m., the jury returned to the courtroom;
and the following proceedings were had in the presence and hearing of
the jury:)
THE COURT: The record may show that about 3:30 this afternoon the Court
received a written note signed by Mr. Dallas Rossow, Foreman, which read
as follows:
The jury has reached a verdict and is ready to deliver it.
Mr. Nelson, will you take the verdict?
THE CLERK: The jury will please listen to the verdict as I read it and
as it shall be recorded.
As to Count 1, Ronald A. Williams, the jury finds the Defendant guilty
of first degree murder.
As to the killing of Jack R. Coler, Count 2, the jury finds the
Defendant guilty of first degree murder.
Dated this 18th day of April, 1977.
Signed, Dallas Rossow, Foreman.
Would your Honor like me to poll the jury?
THE COURT: Does the defense desire that the jury be polled?
MR. LOWE: We would, your Honor, subject to my {5282} comments before.
We would ask that the public be included when that is done.
THE COURT: The Clerk will poll the jury.
THE CLERK: Dallas Rossow, is this your verdict as I have read it?
JUROR ROSSOW: Yes, it is.
THE CLERK: Mrs. Peter Reiland, is this your verdict as I have read it?
JUROR REILAND; Yes, it is.
THE CLERK: Mrs. Clayton Hokanson, is this your verdict as I have read
it?
JUROR HOKANSON: Yes, it is.
THE CLERK: Arlene Josal, is this your verdict as I have read it?
JUROR JOSAL: Yes, it is.
THE CLERK: Ida Mickelson, is this your verdict as I have read it?
JUROR MICKELSON: Yes, it is.
THE CLERK: June Kopp, is this your verdict as I have read it?
JUROR KOPP: Yes, it is.
THE CLERK: Gerald P. Bommersbach, is this your verdict as I have read
it?
JUROR BOMMERSBACH: Yes, it is.
THE CLERK: Victoria Haaland, is this your verdict as {5283} I have read
it?
JUROR HAALAND: Yes, it is.
THE CLERK: Shirley Klocke, is this your verdict as I have read it?
JUROR KLOCKE: Yes, it is.
THE CLERK: Ralph McKay, is this your verdict as I have read it?
JUROR MCKAY: Yes, it is.
THE CLERK: Mrs. Irene Hoggarth, is this your verdict as I have read it?
JUROR HOGGARTH: Yes, it is.
THE CLERK: Mrs. Beverly Nielsen, is this your verdict as I have read it?
JUROR NIELSEN: Yes, it is.
THE CLERK: Your Honor, the verdict is unanimous.
THE COURT: Very well.
A pre-sentence report is ordered, and sentencing will be set on a date
to be determined by the Court.
Members of the Jury, it is now a real pleasure for me to advise that you
are discharged and you may return home.
I will just add this: That earlier this afternoon before I knew that
you had reached a verdict, and of course, before I had any idea of what
your verdict would be, I dictated a letter to each of you expressing the
{5284} appreciation of the Court for the service that you have rendered.
You will get that letter in the mail. Is there anything more to be
presented to the Court at this time, Mr. Hultman?
MR. HULTMAN: The Government has nothing, your Honor.
THE COURT: Mr. Taikeff?
MR. TAIKEFF: No, your Honor.
THE COURT: The Court is adjourned.
(Whereupon, at 4:45 o'clock, p.m., the trial of the above-entitled
matter was closed.)