Leonard
Peltier: An Unrepented Outrage
BY
ELSA CLARO
In
November 2000, just two months
before the end of his mandate,
U.S. President Bill Clinton said
during a radio interview that he
was going to very seriously
consider the pardon petition
presented by the defense
attorneys of Leonard Peltier.
The U.S. indigenous activist had
been in prison for 23 years then,
in spite of substantial
accumulated evidence pointing to
his innocence. When Clinton left
the Oval Office in late January,
Peltier was not on the list of
presidential pardons.
LEONARD
PELTIER.
The
former president—it appeared—was
afraid of getting entangled in a
situation that could anger the
FBI, the U.S. agency accusing
Peltier and certainly not
interested in the case receiving
further scrutiny, as a new legal
process could lead to an
indictment of that very agency.
Now
history may be repeating itself.
A pardon petition has been
brought before President Barak
Obama and is already circulating
around the world, not so much
calling for an act of
presidential generosity but
demanding that the case be given
the sole and fair outcome it
should have had three decades
ago when, following a rigged
trial, Peltier was sent to
prison. February 6 will be
marking 34 years since the
imprisonment of this activist,
who is unjustly serving two life
sentences.
Even
the judge who once turned down a
request for a case review has
joined outstanding cultural and
political personalities who are
asking for reconsideration.
Peltier suffers from various
ailments resulting not only from
age but also mistreatment and
lack of adequate care. What was
Leonard Peltier’s "crime"? Well,
obviously the number one reason
why he went to jail was for
opposing the acts of hostility
against the native peoples of
North America, to which he
belongs.
Available statistics reveal why
these peoples need to be
defended. Infant mortality rate
among them is, for instance, ten
times higher than the national
average, an unresolved and
outrageous situation that
affects mostly the poor sectors
of society and which in the case
of the native Indian population
is a true tragedy.
But
history is stubborn and old
enough to record the existence
of prominent members of the
Sioux, Apache, Lakota and Nez
Perce communities who struggled
with courage and dignity so that
the then nascent United States
would comply with the covenants
and promises made, which were
routinely violated. Their names
include Geronimo, Crazy Horse,
and Sitting Bull.
The
sadly unsuccessful struggle of
those Native American heroes,
who fought in disadvantage, lies
at the foundations of the 1970
events at the Pine Ridge
reservation, South Dakota, used
to bring before justice several
members of the American Indian
Movement, including Peltier.
Against Peltier the FBI would
later focus its accusations,
after seeing that the court had
acquitted two of the activists,
admitting they had fired in self-defense
against agents who had broken
into their farm, and that there
was a high level of violence by
authorities against the native
communities in the area. An
enraged FBI decided to turn all
the blame on Peltier, who was
the most prestigious and
respected member of that group.
Evidence provided by experts
proved that Peltier’s weapon did
not fire the shots that killed
two police officers. So much so
that the prosecutor was forced
to admit that it was impossible
to prove who shot the agents.
But the test that led to such a
determinant conclusion was kept
in the dark.
The
U.S. justice also overlooked the
fact that one of the former
defendants had admitted that he
had been the gunman who killed
the agents.
The
prosecution presented statements
by a woman, who did not know
Peltier but claimed she was his
girlfriend and had seen him
shoot the agents. The woman was
not even present at the scene of
the shooting and retracted after
a time, saying she had been
threatened and pressured by the
FBI into presenting a false
testimony.
Thus,
the idea of using and keeping
visible a "this-ought-to-teach-you"
prototype, so that others dare
not challenge authority again,
has prevailed over conclusive
evidence such as this
spontaneous self-confession.
Confidence that a president
emerging from another group,
victim of discrimination, could
become sensitized and straighten
up an old infamy is the hope of
those who continue to seek
justice for Leonard Peltier.
Taken from
Granma
Daily