#leonardpeltier

2025-06-27

"The world should know what America has done. I was no more guilty than my co-defendants, and they were found not guilty by reason of self-defense, because the jury heard what was going on, and they said that should not be done to any American."

#NickEstes talks to a now free #LeonardPeltier 50 years on from the #PineRidge shootout #OTD in 1975

newyorker.com/news/the-new-yor
archive.ph/baicD
#Indigenous #NativeAmericans #AmericanIndianMovement #LeonardPeltierFree #politicalPrisoners #USpol

2025-06-26

Today in Labor History June 26, 1975: Two FBI agents and one member of the American Indian Movement (AIM) were killed in a shootout on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Undercover FBI agents framed AIM activist Leonard Peltier for the two FBI deaths. During the trial, some of the government’s own witnesses testified that Peltier wasn’t even present at the scene of the killings. Nevertheless, a judge him to two consecutive life terms. Peltier admitted to participating in the shoot-out in his memoir, “Prison Writings, My Life in the Sundance.” However, he denied killing the FBI agents. He became eligible for parole in 1993. Amnesty International, Nelson Mandela, Mother Teresa, and the Dalai Lama, all campaigned for his clemency. President Obama denied his request for clemency in 2017. On January 19, 2025, the last full day of his presidency, Joe Biden commuted Peltier's life sentence to home confinement. Peltier’s health had been declining for several years.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #americanindianmovement #aim #leonardpeltier #FBI #prison #pineridge #politicalprisoner #indigenous #nativeamerican #memoir #books #author #writer #bookstadon

Free Leonard Peltier sign, March 2009. By kenny - KARPOV THE WRECKED TRAINUploaded by SaltyBoatr, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8540648
2025-06-09

' "GIIWE: Bringing #LeonardPeltier Home" is a #film that underscores the importance of generations of organizing, #activism, philanthropy, power building, and narrative change in the effort to bring Leonard home—not only on his terms but also for all #Indigenous people who are fighting similar battles against the system...' - #NDNCollective

youtube.com/watch?v=fzA3i4JgAS

#LeonardPeltierFree #NativeAmericans #politicalPrisoners #USpol #cinema #courtMétrage @film

anna_lillith 🇺🇦🌱🐖anna_lillith@mas.to
2025-05-28
don’t know how to save the world. I don’t have the answers or The Answer. I hold no secret knowledge as to how to fix the mistakes of generations past and present. I only know that without compassion and respect for all of Earth’s inhabitants, none of us will survive—nor will we deserve to. Leonard Peltier
2025-05-22

Today in Writing History May 22, 1927: Author Peter Matthiessen was born. Matthiessen was an environmental activist and a CIA officer who wrote short stories, novels and nonfiction. He’s the only writer to have won the National Book award in both nonfiction, for The Snow Leopard (1979), and in fiction, for Shadow Country (2008). His story Travelin’ Man was made into the film The Young One (1960) by Luis Bunuel. Perhaps his most famous book was, In the Spirit of Crazy Horse (1983), which tells the story of Leonard Peltier and the FBI’s war on the American Indian Movement. The former governor of South Dakota, Bill Janklow, and David Price, an FBI agent who was at the Wounded Knee assault, both sued Viking Press for libel because of statements in the book. Both lawsuits threatened to undermine free speech and further stifle indigenous rights activism. Fortunately, both lawsuits were dismissed. Peltier spent over 43 years in prison for a crime he did not commit. On January 19, 2025, the last full day of his presidency, Joe Biden commuted Peltier's life sentence to home confinement

#workingclass #LaborHistory #petermatthiessen #indigenous #LeonardPeltier #nativeamerican #aim #fbi #fiction #nonfiction #writer #author #cia #FreeSpeech #censorship @bookstadon

Cover of Matthiessen’s book, “In the Spirit of Crazy Horse,” with a bison on a grassy field. By https://www.amazon.com/Spirit-Crazy-Horse-American-Movement/dp/1433288583, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=32182785
2025-05-08

Today in Labor History May 8, 1973: A 71-day standoff at the Pine Ridge Reservation, at Wounded Knee, ended today, after American Indian Movement (AIM) members surrendered. In 1890, U.S soldiers massacred nearly 300 Lakota people at Wounded Knee. Ever since, native peoples on the Pine Ridge Reservation, where Wounded Knee is located, have faced poverty, and racism by their neighbors. They also had a corrupt local government on the reservation. So, on February 27, 1973, 200 Lakota activists and members of AIM, seized control of Wounded Knee. They demanded the resignation of their corrupt tribal leader. They also demanded that the U.S. government start obeying its treaties with indigenous peoples. Within hours of the occupation, police surrounded the them, marking the beginning of the siege. The cops were joined by federal marshals and national guards, who traded fire with AIM activists on a daily basis. Two native activists died in the conflict and one federal agent was shot and paralyzed. AIM leaders Dennis Banks and Russell Means were arrested, but their case was dismissed by the federal court for prosecutorial misconduct. Two years later, there was another shootout at Pine Ridge. AIM leader Leonard Peltier was wrongfully arrested and imprisoned until 2025.

#LaborHistory #workingclass #massacre #indigenous #WoundedKnee #genocide #AmericanIndianMovement #LeonardPeltier #fbi #racism #genocide #lakota #prison

Burial of the dead after the massacre of Wounded Knee, 1890. U.S. Soldiers putting Indians in common grave; some corpses are frozen in different positions. South Dakota. By Northwestern Photo Co. - This image is available from the United States Library of Congress's Prints and Photographs divisionunder the digital ID cph.3a44690.This tag does not indicate the copyright status of the attached work. A normal copyright tag is still required. See Commons:Licensing., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2193770
2025-04-18

Today in Labor History April 18, 1977: Native American activist Leonard Peltier was found guilty of murdering two FBI agents on the Pine Ridge Reservation. However, he was actually framed by undercover FBI agents who were conducting counterintelligence on the reservation. During the trial, some of the government’s own witnesses testified that Peltier wasn’t even present at the scene of the killings. In 2017, President Obama denied Peltier's application for clemency. He was still in prison in 2025 and his health has deteriored. On June 7, 2022, The UN Human Rights Council's Working Group on Arbitrary Detention found that Peltier’s imprisonment violates the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights. President Biden, as one of his final acts as president, commuted his sentence to indefinite house arrest. In February 2025, he was released and transferred to the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in Belcourt, North Dakota.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #leonardpeltier #fbi #obama #AmericanIndianMovement #indigenous #prison #racism #nativeamerican #politicalprisoner #pineridge #biden

Free Leonard Peltier sign, March 2009, with stenciled image of Peltier. By kenny - KARPOV THE WRECKED TRAINUploaded by SaltyBoatr, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8540648
2025-04-07

#FreeLeonardPeltier Today in Fort Collins, Colorado

"The Free #LeonardPeltier film will be shown in Fort Collins, Colorado, today, Sunday, April 6, at 5:30 p.m. at the ACT Human Rights Film Festival. It can be viewed online [at the link below for $7] April 7 through April 15 from the Colorado State University Libraries, all part of the ACT Human Rights Film Festival."

Source:
bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2025/04

Online viewing:
https://
act2025.eventive.org/schedule/67c8e6c7dd9ab8c88ffc43fb
#IndigenousActivist #LeonardPeltier #AIM #LeonardPeltierMovie

⛏️ 𝔸𝕤𝕥𝕣𝕚𝕕 ℍ𝕚𝕝𝕥 🔨steinmetzin@gruene.social
2025-03-23

Ein besonderes Geburtstagsgeschenk gestern war das Buch "mein Leben ist mein #Sonnentanz" von #leonardpeltier. Nach 50 Jahren Haftstrafe für eine Tat, die es nicht begangen hat, konnte der native Indianer am 20.Januar endlich wieder nach Hause zu seiner Familie ins Turtel Mountain Reservat.
Das Buch hat er 1999 veröffentlicht.

Eine herausragende Lektüre, die eine Reihe an Gedanken und Fragen bei mir aufwirft, die ich bei Gelegenheit gerne mit euch teilen will.

#astridsblog #Aströt

MusiqueNow :pride: ✡️ 🇵🇸 :anarchismhebrew:MusiqueNow@todon.eu
2025-03-12
2025-03-01

NDN Collective, organisation dirigée par des Autochtones/communiqué, 18 février 2025
Leonard Peltier libéré après 49 ans d’incarcération injustifiée
mcinformactions.net/leonard-pe
#LeonardPeltier #Floride

René Merced :vm: 🇵🇷mostaurelius@mas.to
2025-02-28
2025-02-28

Leonard Peltier remains defiant in AP interview, maintaining innocence and vowing continued activism

(AP) #LeonardPeltier #USA #indigenous

apnews.com/article/leonard-pel

Indigenous Political Prisoner Leonard Peltier Welcomed Home After Release

Native American activist Leonard Peltier traveled to Belcourt, N.D., on Tuesday after being released from a Florida prison.

Ron Leith watched as Peltier arrived in Belcourt to the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Reservation.  Leith, an Ojibwe writer and activist, said, “As many people as possible came from the reservation and made this welcoming committee.”

Leith said there was a procession of cars, including the one with Peltier inside, that drove onto the reservation while the welcoming committee gathered along the sides of the road.

“From the boundary, for about a mile onto the reservation, there were cars and people and signs, and on both sides of the highway for a long time, long ways. And it was just a magnificent sight,” said Leith.

Nick Tilsen, founder and CEO of the Indigenous-led organization NDN Collective, was by Peltier’s side as they drove to the reservation. NDN Collective, among other partners, were significant advocates for Peltier’s release. The organization also arranged Peltier’s travel and housing.

Tilsen said of the welcome, “It was so beautiful. And [Peltier] looked at me and he’s like, ‘I did not expect any of this.’”

“Even though it was cold, he kept his window down the entire time and acknowledged and waved at every single person,” said Tilsen. The temperature at the time was below zero degrees.

Tuesday evening, a crowd of Peltier’s supporters and family members came together for a welcome dinner at the Sky Dancer Casino & Resort.

Leith was at the celebration and he estimated at least 300 people were in attendance, with more arriving. Though Leith said that Peltier was not in attendance.

“He went home, you know. He’s had quite the day.”

In 1977, Peltier was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of two FBI agents. Though not a pardon, former President Joe Biden granted him clemency as one of his final official acts. Peltier’s sentence commutation announcement came minutes before Biden left office.

Peltier is an enrolled member of the Turtle Mountain Band and will serve the remainder of his sentence in home confinement on his tribal homelands at Turtle Mountain.

For years, activists and supporters had been petitioning for the release of the 80-year-old, whom they say had been wrongly convicted of killing FBI agents Jack Coler and Ronald Williams in 1975.

In a news release from NDN Collective on Tuesday morning, Peltier said, “Today I am finally free! They may have imprisoned me, but they never took my spirit!”

In the news release, Peltier thanked his supporters all over the world who helped fight for his freedom. “I am finally going home. I look forward to seeing my friends, my family, and my community. It’s a good day today.”

“Leonard Peltier is free! He never gave up fighting for his freedom so we never gave up fighting for him. Today our elder Leonard Peltier walks into the open arms of his people,” said Tilsen in Tuesday’s statement.

“Peltier’s liberation is invaluable in and of itself — yet just as his wrongful incarceration represented the oppression of Indigenous Peoples everywhere, his release today is a symbol of our collective power and inherent freedom.”

The festivities continued Wednesday at the Sky Dancer Casino & Resort event center on the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Reservation. NDN Collective assisted Peltier with travel and lodging arrangements and hosted the event.

The large event space was set up with a tipi in the middle. The welcome started with a song from a drum group, while Peltier was brought into the room. People spoke to the crowd, a prayer was offered, and Peltier was gifted a traditional star quilt.

Korina Barry, the action managing director of NDN Collective, helped lead the welcoming. She has also been a part of the efforts to bring Peltier home.

“Incarcerated people, too often, that reentry back into community is not supported. Often prisons just open the door, give them their bag of stuff and send them on their way. And we’re not going to let that happen to our elder,” she said.

Some relatives whom he has yet to meet were there in celebration.

Robin Clauthier said she is one of those relatives. She grew up learning stories about him, believing in his innocence. Now, she says she looks forward to getting to know Peltier.

“I think he’s going to do good. And I feel like all of this will be, it’s worth something. It’s meaning is more than life,” Clauthier said.

Peltier spoke Wednesday afternoon, as well. He shared personal anecdotes of his time in prison, and the significance of the Indigenous community in their efforts leading up to his release.

“I want to also mention that from the day one, from the first hour I was arrested, Indian people came to my rescue from all over the country … and they’ve been behind me ever since,” Peltier said. “It was worth it for me to be able to sacrifice for you.”

“I want to say thank you. Thank you very, very much for showing me this.  Much pride in being this important. It was surprising. It was a total shock. It was surprising to see all of you lined up there and welcoming me home.”

Peltier then spent some time greeting many of the folks in the room, shaking hands, smiling and getting acquainted with his community and family. He also signed a few autographs.

In January, over 120 tribal leaders across the U.S., including more than a dozen from Minnesota, called on Biden to grant clemency to Peltier.

“For the majority of his life, Leonard Peltier has been serving a sentence based on a conviction that would not hold up in court today and for a crime that the government has admitted it could not prove. Mr. Peltier’s continued incarceration is a symbol to Native Americans of the systemic inequities of the criminal justice system in America,” said the letter published to NDN Collective’s website.

Attorney Kevin Sharp, who was on Peltier’s legal team for five years, echoed the need for justice. He said, “This isn’t just about Leonard Peltier and this one case. This kind of injustice, I hate to say it, happens way too often, right?”

Not everyone supported the commutation. Former FBI Director Christopher Wray expressed criticism in a January letter to Biden, stating that granting “Peltier any relief from his conviction or sentence is wholly unjustified and would be an affront to the rule of law.”

U.S. Rep. Dusty Johnson, R-South Dakota, said in a written statement in January, “This commutation was another unfortunate mistake by the Biden Administration, and I asked the White House not to do this.”

“More than twenty federal judges and Biden’s own FBI Director agree — Peltier’s convictions and sentence must stand.”

Peltier is a member of the grassroots Native American organization the American Indian Movement, or AIM, which was formed in Minneapolis in the late 1960s during a nationwide struggle for civil rights.

In 1975, FBI agents were attempting to serve an arrest warrant for another individual on the Pine Ridge reservation in Oglala, S.D. They spotted and followed a pickup truck in which Peltier and a few other men were inside traveling back to their campsite where fellow AIM members were located. A shootout ensued.

Peltier and others were charged with two counts of first-degree murder of the FBI agents and aiding and abetting. With an already outstanding warrant, Peltier fled to Canada. Later, he was extradited back to the U.S. in 1976 where he faced charges of two counts of first-degree murder. The other men were tried acquitted on the grounds of self-defense.

Peltier was found guilty in 1977 and has been serving two consecutive life sentences. He has acknowledged his presence and shooting a firearm at a distance but maintains his innocence in the killing of agents Coler and Williams.

Peltier’s release marks an end to what he and others have said is his fight for justice. But through it all, Tilsen said he walked out of prison with dignity.

“He walked through the doors, and he shook the hands of all the corrections officers and the transition team over there,” Tilsen said. “All of them, you know, respected him and he respected all of them and they were all happy for him to go home.”

 

 

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=

#indigenousStruggle #leonardPeltier #politicalPrisoner

gmrstudiosgmrstudios
2025-02-26

A Sense of Doubt blog post #3661 - LEONARD PELTIER IS FREE and SoD Reprints of #3100 and #3006 from 2023 - SACRIFICE - Robbie Robertson RIP. sensedoubt.blogspot.com/2025/0

Leonard Peltier freed from prison and Stevie Van Zandt
2025-02-24

Radio Aktiv Berlin - USA: der politische Gefangene #LeonardPeltier ist aus der Haft entlassen

Interview auf Freie Radios: freie-radios.net/133852

#freethemall

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