![]() |
US vs LEONARD PELTIER
TRIAL TRANSCRIPT EXCERPTS Case Number CR77-3003 |
VOLUME 13 SIDE BAR
VOL 13 Apr 1, 1975
before the jury was brought in
MR. TAIKEFF: The other matter, Your Honor, is this: Over
our objection there has been brought into this trial on a number {2629}
of occasions testimony, and indeed sometimes photographs, involving dynamite
or other explosives. I'm not going to re-argue that matter at this time.
I merely wish to indicate that after considering certain facts and factors
which have come to our attention, we believe that there is a possibility
that some or all of these explosive devices were supplied, either by a
federal agent or by a federal informant.
And we would ask that at sometime before this trial is concluded the
United States Attorney's office make appropriate inquiry and certify to
the Court that none of the explosive devices which we have heard about
or seen any photographs of in this case were supplied through or by federal
agents or their informants.
The reason that we ask that, Your Honor, is not out of idle curiosity,
but if the defendant has to suffer the prejudice of such evidence coming
before the jury we believe that the defense at the very least should have
an opportunity to prove to the jury if that is the case that those explosives
were there with the assistance, if not with the encouragement, of federal
agents or their civilian employees.
MR. HULTMAN: Your Honor, again we get a shotgun request
in the middle of the trial and my only response to this is that there is
a proper procedure and a proper showing that must be made. And it isn't
just a bald statement by counsel in the middle of the courtroom have an
infinitesimal possibility {2630} that something somehow may have happened.
I would only indicate to the Court that my response is that the Government
will stand on the position that we object to any such, only such time as
a proper showing with proper evidence has been made by the defense, and
then the Government will respond in whatever proper the Court at that time
will indicate.
But I'm not about again to go out and go on a fishing expedition for
the next month and a half throughout the United States and then being accused
that I didn't check something out in Tubalas, wherever that is.
MR. TAIKEFF: Your Honor, Mr. Hultman has twice in the last
ten minutes suggested that an accusation of the kind of which has not been
heard in this trial is going to be made against him.
The one time that Mr. Hultman did not in fact produce all of the information
that was available was when he himself was not accurately informed by the
Canadian authorities concerning the existence of a wiretap on Mr. Peltier
when he was incarcerated in Canada. And never did we take the position
that he had any complicity in that misstatement of fact. Indeed our position
was clear. He was misinformed by the Canadian authorities and it was only
when we produced certain documentation that the Canadian authorities then
made a complete disclosure to him.
We have not to this date, and we do not anticipate, {2631} making any
accusations against Mr. Hultman that he made any bad faith searches or
otherwise conducted himself in an improper way.
And I wish he would not continue to suggest that such was possible
because we don't think it's possible. I don't know why he thinks it might
be possible. Now, the point is that Mr. Hultman need not make a search
for a month or more. If he wants to go on a fishing expedition I would
be glad to join him. The weather is turning quite nice. However, I would
ask that he pick up the telephone and call the Department of Justice and
say, or the FBI or however it's done, I've never had the privilege of being
privy to the inner chamber, but however it's done he can find out whether
or not there are any Government agents or informants who played an instrumental
role in developing or making available the explosives about which the defendant
has heard a great deal along with the jury in the course of this case.
It does not require extensive effort on his part. I think it would
appropriate for him to ask, and if he's told that there is no such thing,
all he has to do is repeat that to Your Honor and the matter is closed
in this proceeding.
THE COURT: I would
ask counsel, do you have any evidence that any explosive devices were supplied
by federal agents or their civilian employees?
{2632}
MR. TAIKEFF: We have some indication that such is the case,
Your Honor.
I would tell Your Honor that I personally have conducted an investigation
and I have enough information that I think is reliable. To use a phrase
that the Government uses quite often, I have one or two reliable informants
of my own. And I am satisfied that the information I have received warrants
my making the application. I am not in the habit of making a frivolous
application that is not based on some rational reason. I would call to
Your Honor's attention the fact that in Oregon a number of people were
charged in federal court, I believe in connection with the posse d on of
ten cases of dynamite, and it was promptly destroyed by the FBI, or the
federal authorities. And I trust that I'm accurate in saying that it was
the FBI. And as a result a United States District Court judge dismissed
that case because of the improper behavior.
That is one of the factors that I'm taking into consideration in making
the application because I believe the dynamite can be traced. And I believe
what my confidential informants have told me is probably true, that that
dynamite could have been trace and it would have been traced back to a
Government informant.
Now, it is not unheard of for Government informants to act as provocateurs,
particularly in small political {2633} organizations that are not looked
upon with great favor. Because there's nothing better than in one way instigating
people to do things which causes them to cross the line between legality
and illegality and then hustle them off to jail so they can no longer be
a thorn in the side of those don't appreciate their existence. I think
the episode with John Trudell, the national director of the American Indian
Movement, who is now serving sixty days because he said something to the
marshal which the marshal didn't like hearing is a small example of what
I'm talking about.
Now, I believe, Your Honor, that there is a sufficient basis to ask
the Government to make an inquiry --
THE COURT: I might interrupt you at this point and say that I take exception to the suggestion that Judge Davies would have --
MR. TAIKEFF: Not Judge Davies. I was talking about the action of the marshal, Your Honor.
THE COURT: I know, but Judge Davies would not have acted unless there was evidence to convince him that it was a proper act to take.
MR. TAIKEFF: Well, this morning they barred a very important person from the American Indian Movement on the ground that they didn't like the way he closed the door when he left the courtroom. Isn't it amazing that only American Indian Movement people seem to be doing things which the {2634} marshal finds offensive.
THE COURT: I personally witnessed a very hard slamming
of the door by someone when they left the courtroom. I don't care whether
they are members of the American Indian Movement or whether they are members
of any other society or movement.
It is not allowed in this courtroom, and the marshals are instructed
not to permit it to go on. The purpose of this courtroom is try the issues
stated in the indictment without distraction from the audience, without
demonstrations. And demonstrations and distractions will not be allowed.
MR. TAIKEFF: Well, Your Honor, Your Honor was sitting on
the bench and I was in this courtroom when Mr. Trudell was having his exchange
with the marshal. And neither one of us, I'm sure, was aware of what was
going on. So it couldn't have been very disruptive.
In any event the point is that my professional experience over the
last nine years shows that the nature and the quality and the extent of
the things done by people who are in the employee of the United States
Government as informants is outrageous, particularly in connection with
the political cases I'm speaking from actual revelations, not things which
I read, not things which I'm speculating about, but things which I know
because they were revealed in open court.
{2635}
These things do happen, Your Honor, whether they happen in and around
Fargo, whether they happen within Your Honor's professional experience
is not the entire question. I represent to Your Honor that they happen,
they happen regularly. They happen in drug cases, they happen in political
cases.
THE COURT: This is not a political case.
MR. TAIKEFF: This is not a political case?
THE COURT: No.
MR. TAIKEFF: We're dealing with a person, Your Honor, who is politically active in a political organization.
THE COURT: The only issue before the Court in this case is the issue as set out in the indictment.
MR. TAIKEFF: Well, maybe if Your Honor allows the Government or requires the Government to make their inquiry and in fact we get an answer to that inquiry, Your Honor might find that this is indeed a political case.
MR. CROOKS: Your Honor, I would like to rise to one point
which counsel went into, and this is the Oregon matter, the destruction
of dynamite in Oregon.
Counsel misstates the record by not stating it completely. The dynamite
was destroyed in Oregon because it was unstable. It presented a danger
to the community and the officers. The indictment was dismissed by the
district judge and that issue is now up on appeal before the 9th Circuit.
And counsel is {2636} well aware of the circumstances surrounding that
case, and the reason for the problem that arose. And I will not comment
on the court's ruling of the district court ruling, but that is a matter
which is up on the appeal.
The United States has appealed, not only the suppression of the evidence,
but also the dismissal. And that decision has not yet been handed down.
And I think it's unfortunate that counsel tends to bring a matter like
this up which is under litigation because counsel knows full well that
that dynamite was not destroyed for any purpose other than what was stated
by the United States that the dynamite was unstable and could have well
blown up and destroyed the evidence room or wherever else it was stored.
And that is a matter of litigation which has been well established and
is now up on appeal. And I think it's unfortunate that counsel even suggested
something of that kind.
{SEE 76-1906 US vs LOUDHAWK, BANKS, ANNA MAE AQUASH, REDNER, PELTIER, KAMOOKS BANKS AND EASK}