LPDC

UpDates and Announcements!





lp-political-prisoner.gif

Click Here to Subscribe!

Friday, September 23, 2005

 

Leonard Peltier and Yori Van Kahl on American Airlines Sky Radio


American Airlines Sky Radio is airing during the month of September 2005 an interview of Barry Bachrach, Attorney, discussing the cases of Leonard Peltier and Yori Van Kahl!

You can hear the interview under Americas Best Lawyers @ http://www.skyradionet.com

( After entering the website click on Now Airing, then click on American Airlines Channel 1, and scroll to Americas Best Lawyers Part 1)

Posted by Webmaster@AIMSupport.org 7:51 AM

justice-bar.jpg


Tuesday, September 20, 2005

 
Subj: FW: [LP Forum News] Leonard Peltier in his own words 
Date: 9/20/2005 3:41:18 AM Eastern Daylight Time
From: paulaostrovsky@hotmail.com


=+=+= INTERNATIONAL FORUM of VIPs for PELTIER =+=+=
September 19th 2005 :
10818 days of WRONGFUL IMPRISONMENT !
=+=+=+=+=+=

ONLINE PETITION FOR EXECUTIVE CLEMENCY
http://users.skynet.be/kola/lppet.htm
SEE YOUR ONLINE BIRTHDAY WISHES FOR LEONARD...
http://users.skynet.be/kola/lpbd2005.htm
http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2005/643/643p21.htm

  From Green Left Weekly, edition: September 21, 2005.

  Leonard Peltier in his own words

  My Life is My Sun Dance: Prison Writings of Leonard Peltier
  Read by Harvey Arden, music by Reverend Goat and New Orleans Light
  Mi Abuelo Records
  Order at
http://cdbaby.com/cd/harveyarden


  REVIEW BY NORM DIXON

  Leonard Peltier is one of the United States' longest-serving
  political prisoners, jailed in 1976 in a blatantly rigged trial,
  during which the US government and the FBI refused to put any
  limits on the depths they would stoop to see this militant leader
  of the Native American people silenced for life. Almost 30 years
  later, Harvey Arden has done his bit to break that silence with the
  release of My Life is My Sun Dance, a series of readings from
  Peltier's prison writings.

  Arden's expressive voice creates an emotional connection between
  the listener and the author of the words, who has been bricked up
  in high-security prisons and kept isolated from his people and his
  many supporters. Through Arden, accompanied by the smooth jazz
  moods of New Orleans Light, Peltier talks directly to us and you
  can feel and share his humanity, defiance and fears. Peltier's
  writing is conversational and poetic, it is hopeful and inspiring.
  One listen of this CD and you will really care about this humane
  and gentle, but fierce warrior for social justice.

  Peltier tells us about the terrors and uncertainties of prison
  life, about the history of Washington's long oppression of the
  Native American people and how his individual oppression is simply
  a continuation of it. He discusses his people's spirituality and
  how it is bound to the struggle to end the oppression of all
  peoples. And Peltier outlines the specifics of the events that
  landed him in jail, and the details of what must be one of the most
  outrageous frame-ups in US history.
  In the early 1970s, the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South

  Dakota was the scene of a serious conflict between the corrupt,
  pro-government, assimilationist reservation authorities and
  militant reservation residents who were demanding that Native
  Americans control their own affairs. The residents were also
  demanding that they be permitted to continue to practice their
  traditional culture without hindrance.

  It emerged that uranium had been found on the reservation land, and
  the federal government and its Indian puppets were determined to
  crush the militants in order to get their hands on it. Rich
  ranchers were also being allowed to graze the sensitive semi-arid
  country for minimal or no fees.

  In 1973, the residents sought the assistance of the radical
  American Indian Movement (AIM) and together they occupied the
  village of Wounded Knee (the same site where, less than 100 years
  earlier, a horrific US Army massacre of 300 Native Americans had
  taken place). The response of the US government was to launch a
  paramilitary attack in which two residents were killed. The
  stand-off lasted 71 days, before the government promised to
  investigate the residents' complaints. It was another promise made
  to Native Americans that was never kept.

  In the aftermath of the Wounded Knee occupation, the reservation
  authorities outlawed the AIM and banned traditional ceremonies and
  practices. A reign of terror was instigated, in which thugs known
  as Guardians of the Oglala Nation (literally spelled GOON),
  attempted to drive out all opponents of the pro-government
  reservation leaders. Between 1973 and 1976, more than 60
  "traditionalists" were murdered. The FBI refused to investigate
  these deaths and continued to arm the GOONs with weapons and
  information in order to prevent AIM again gaining a foothold at
  Pine Ridge.

  In desperation, Pine Ridge residents again appealed for AIM
  activists to help them defend themselves. Leonard Peltier was among
  the dozens of militants who responded. The traditional people, many
  of whom were elderly, feared for their lives. AIM provided support
  such as cutting fire wood, collecting water and preparing meals, as
  well as offering protection from attacks by GOONs. AIM activists
  were armed for their own protection.

  On June 26, 1975, two unmarked cars chased a red truck onto the
  Jumping Bull ranch at Pine Ridge, the home of a number of families
  being defended by AIM. It later emerged that the cars were driven
  by FBI agents, who were supposedly chasing a person accused of the
  heinous crime of stealing cowboy boots. The agents opened fire on
  the ranch and its residents, who fired back in self defence. Within
  minutes, more than 150 FBI SWAT team members, Bureau of Indian
  Affairs police and GOONs had surrounded the ranch and a fierce,
  largely one-sided fire-fight erupted.

  When the smoke cleared, AIM member Joe Killsright Stuntz and two
  FBI agents were found shot dead. Miraculously, Peltier and the
  other people in the camp escaped. Following the largest hunt in FBI
  history, three AIM activists  Dino Butler, Robert Robideaux and
  Leonard Peltier  were charged with the murder of the agents.
  However Robideaux and Butler were tried in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and
  the jury found them not guilty of murder because they had simply
  returned fire in self-defence when fired upon by unknown
  assailants.

  Meanwhile, Peltier had escaped to Canada knowing that he would
  never get a fair trial in the US  that is if he wasn't gunned down
  by the FBI first. He was captured in Canada on February 6, 1976.
  The US government presented the Canadian court with affidavits
  signed by a woman claiming to be Peltier's companion, who claimed
  that she had seen Peltier shoot the FBI agents. This was a blatant
  lie. The woman had never met Peltier and she was not present at
  Pine Ridge during the shoot-out. She later revealed that the FBI
  forced her to sign the lies written for her by the FBI.

  Peltier was tried before an all-white jury in North Dakota, before
  a hostile judge who refused to allow use of the self-defence
  argument. The FBI created a climate of fear around the proceedings
  in an attempt to convince the jurors that Peltier was a terrorist.
  The government withheld evidence that pointed to his innocence.
  This evidence was finally released from FBI files seven years later
  under the Freedom of Information Act.

  Prosecutor Lynn Crook failed to produce a single witness who could
  identify Peltier as the shooter, and concealed ballistics reports
  that showed that Peltier's rifle could not be linked to shell
  casings found near the scene. Yet in his summation, Crook accused
  Peltier of firing the fatal bullets that killed the agents. The
  jury found him guilty and he was sentenced to two consecutive life
  terms. Seventeen years later, in November 1992, Crook admitted to
  the court reviewing Peltier's case, "We don't know who killed the
  agents".

  Despite Crook's admission, and even though the appeals court found
  that Peltier may have been acquitted had evidence not been
  improperly withheld by the FBI, a new trial was denied.
  In 2000, US President Bill Clinton stated that he was considering
  Peltier's request for clemency. However, the FBI launched a massive
  disinformation campaign, which included a march by more than 500
  FBI agents outside the White House in December 2000. Peltier's name
  was not among those granted clemency by Clinton a month later.
  Peltier may become eligible for parole in 2008, but it will be
  fought tooth and nail by the FBI and other powerful forces who want
  to keep this inspiring liberation fighter silent. The US
  authorities continue to make life difficult for Peltier and his
  supporters. On June 30, he was suddenly transferred from
  Leavenworth prison in Kansas to Terre Haute in Indiana. His lawyers
  were not informed and he has been kept in solitary confinement for
  more than month.

  Yet no matter how hard they try, such repression cannot keep
  Peltier silent, as Harvey Arden's brilliant tribute shows.

  If you'd like to know more, visit http://www.leonardpeltier.org, where Peltier's prison writing in
  book form can be purchased. Peter Matthiessen's classic In the
  Spirit of Crazy Horse (Penguin Books) is well worth searching out,
  as is the documentary Incident at Oglala, produced by Robert
  Redford.

             Official Website: www.leonardpeltier.org

       Online Store: http://www.cafepress.com/leonardpeltier


Posted by Webmaster@AIMSupport.org 8:49 AM

justice-bar.jpg


This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?


Last updated:



Graphics by:
Poison Icons
© Poison's Icons
by Sonny Del Castillo