By Reginald Johnson
In his remaining days in office, President
Obama has the opportunity to bring some measure of justice to
wrongfully-imprisoned Native-American activist Leonard Peltier.
Peltier has been languishing in prison for
over 40 years, following his conviction for murdering two FBI agents during a
shootout between law enforcement officers and Lakota Indians on the Pine Ridge
Indian Reservation in South Dakota in 1975.
Peltier is a political prisoner --- one
whose arrest, conviction and lengthy incarceration was determined not so much
by the facts of the case but by Peltier’s activism in the American Indian
Movement and the government’s desire to suppress a rebellion by Native
Americans in the 1970s.
The entire process by which Peltier was arrested
and tried was fraught with problems.
Witness affidavits supporting Peltier’s extradition from Canada (where
he fled after the shootout) prior to his arrest were gained through coercion; during
the trial the government withheld key documents, such as ballistics
information, that could have aided the defense; witnesses who testified for the
prosecution later recanted and said the FBI had pressured them to implicate
Peltier.
Leonard Peltier, the Native American activist who is asking for clemency from President Obama after 40 years in prison. (Photo courtesy of The Guardian) |
While Peltier was unsuccessful in an appeal of his
conviction, the presiding judge in the appeals hearing, Gerald
Heaney, harshly criticized the prosecution for the FBI’s “improper conduct” and
“clear abuse of the investigative process,” according to a report by the Center
for Constitutional Rights.
It’s also noteworthy, that during the
appeals hearing, the government admitted that they couldn’t prove who actually
shot the agents. But the government still maintained that Peltier was linked to
the murders and therefore was guilty.
The idea that someone could be convicted and
sent to prison for so many years --- based on such a shaky prosecution case,
rife with so many legal problems, is an outrage.
It is not the kind of thing that is supposed
to happen in a democratic republic, with a system that on paper at least provides “liberty and justice for all.” The
Peltier case is more befitting of what happens in a dictatorship.
Obama has a chance to end this outrage by
granting Peltier’s request for clemency. The Native activist has gotten wide support
for his plea --- from human rights groups like Amnesty International to Bishop Desmond Tutu to thousands
of people signing petitions. And just
this week, Peltier got unexpected support from one of the prosecutors in the
original case. Former U.S. Attorney James Reynolds told The Guardian newspaper
that it was time for the government to “call it quits” and grant leniency to
Peltier.
In addition to the facts of the case and the
wide support Peltier has received, Obama should also consider Peltier’s age and
his declining health. Now 72, Peltier has suffered a stroke and
battled diabetes and a heart condition.
This is not the first time Peltier has sought
clemency. In 2000, former President Bill Clinton weighed his request for
leniency (just as Clinton was leaving office) but ultimately denied it after members of the FBI Agents Association
mounted a furious opposition campaign and picketed the White House.
The FBI group --- composed of former agents
of the federal agency --- are again opposing Peltier’s petition.
Hopefully President Obama --- who is ending his tenure in the White House on Jan. 20 --- will see the light in this case and not back down. A good sign is that Obama has recently been
granting leniency for hundreds of other long-time prisoners --- offenders who
were serving excessively long terms for drug convictions.
President Obama needs to grant freedom to Leonard Peltier --- now.
(For more
information on the Leonard Peltier case and to sign a petition calling for his release, go to www.amnestyusa.org. Additional information on Peltier and other political prisoners such as Puerto Rican activist Oscar Lopez Rivera and Army whistle-blower Chelsea Manning as well as NSA whistle-blower Edward Snowden, who is being unfairly accused of espionage, can be found at www.lawanddisorder.org, Dec. 19, 2016 show)
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