![]() |
US vs LEONARD PELTIER
RESMURS |
From: "LPDC"
Leonard Peltier
Defense Committee
PO Box 583
Lawrence, KS 66044
785-842-5774
To subscribe,to the news letter distributed by the
LPDC click here
To unsubscribe, send a blank message here
In May 2000, the Minneapolis Field Office of
the Federal Bureau of Investigation released a "report" entitled Accounting
for Native American Deaths: Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, South Dakota.
The document, which purports to disprove allegations that the FBI failed
to properly investigate the murders of 57 members and supporters of the
American Indian Movement on
the Pine Ridge Sioux Reservation during the height
of the FBI's anti-AIM operations there (March 1973 through March 1976),
is so full of distortions, half-truths and outright falsehoods that it
literally demands rebuttal.
What follows, therefore, is a point-by-point analysis
of the myriad inaccuracies in the Bureau's polemic. Those few instances
in which it provides additional, clarifying, or otherwise useful information
will also be noted.
The official untruths begin on the very first page of Accounting for Native American Deaths, with a "Forward" provided by Douglas J. Domin, Special Agent in Charge of the Minneapolis Field Office, wherein it is claimed that the document was produced by his agents in response to new information provided to his office by the South Dakota Advisory Committee of the United States Commission on Civil Rights in December 1999. This information, SAC Domin observes, consisted of "a list of fifty-seven names" of individuals who died violently on Pine Ridge during the years 1973-76, along "with allegations that their deaths had not been investigated" by the FBI (which held/holds jurisdiction and primary investigative responsibility within all federal trust territories, including American Indian reservations).
Submission of this list and attendant allegations, SAC Domin continues, "for the first time.provided the FBI with specific information to address" in connection with longstanding "rumors" that the Bureau had, at best, frequently turned a blind eye to the murders of AIM people on Pine Ridge during the mid70s. "The names of murder victims were not attached to the rumors," he claims, and "addressing the allegations could not be [previously] accomplished." Once it was provided the names, he concludes, his office quickly prepared and began to disseminate its report for purposes of clarifying or correcting the record and "protect[ing] the [public] confidence the FBI must have to accomplish its mission."
This presentation of "fact" is pure hogwash from start to finish.
First of all, SAC Domin seems completely unaware that the Bureau itself confirmed its pattern of not investigating the murders of AIM people on Pine Ridge a quarter-century hence, while the deaths were still occurring. This 1975 verification was made by George O'Clock, then Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the FBI's Rapid City Resident Agency, the facility most directly responsible for investigating crimes on Pine Ridge. Responding to press queries as to why so many recent homicides on and around the reservation had gone unsolved, O'Clock announced quite straightforwardly that his office was in general "too shorthanded" to delved into such matters.
Secondly, as the allegations quoted in the report itself make absolutely clear, it is not alleged that "none" of the 57 homicides were investigated by the Bureau. In eight cases the allegations state clearly that an FBI investigation is classified as either "ongoing" or "pending" after 25 years. In a further six cases, it is alleged that investigations were conducted, but that they were marred by severe defects. Hence, Domin's presentation misrepresents 14 of 57 allegations before the "accounting" even begins.
Third, this was by no means "the first time" the FBI has had an opportunity to address the list of names and allegations in question. Along with Jim Vander Wall, I initially assembled it in 1987 from fragmentary records provided by Bruce Ellison, Ken Tilson and Candy Hamilton, all former members of the Wouned Knee Legal Defense / Offense Committee (WKLDOC). A portion of it was then published in my and Vander Wall's 1988 Agents of Repression (pp. 184-88), the first six copies of which book were acquired by the FBI library in Washington, DC. Refined and expanded in 1989, the list was then published again in my and Vander Wall's book The COINTELPRO Papers (pp. 393-4), copies of which were also acquired by the FBI library. The same list was also published as an attachment to an essay included in my 1994 Indians Are Us? (pp. 197-205), and still again in my 1996 From A Native Son (pp. 257-60). It has, moreover, been in continuous distribution by the Leonard Peltier Defense Committee (LPDC) for the past six years. Had the FBI felt the least institutional need to reassure the American public of its integrity by reporting on these particular matters - or believed itself obliged to correct what it sees as inaccuracies in the historical record - it could and should have done so at any point since the names and allegations first came into its possession more than a decade ago.
The Bureau did no such thing, and it follows that the motives underlying the release of Accounting for Native American Deaths at this late date must be other than those described by SAC Domin.
The question at hand is thus what the FBI's real motives might be. To this, the only plausible answer is that in issuing such material now, the Bureau is hoping to undermine prospects that imprisoned AIM member Leonard Peltier, currently in his 24th year of incarceration after being wrongly convicted of killing two FBI agents during a 1975 firefight on Pine Ridge, might receive clemency from President Bill Clinton before the first of the year. To the extent that the list of allegations can be discredited, so the reasoning goes, AIM will be discredited, and so, by extension, will Peltier. Viewed in this light, it is not hard to see that the report has nothing to do with a pursuit of truth or justice. To the contrary, it is difficult to imagine a more vindictive and duplicitous agenda than that prompting its publication. The FBI's document thereby stands revealed for exactly what it is: a patent piece of political propaganda.
Several key aspects of the allegations are carefully avoided in Accounting for Native Americans. They include the fact that the murders occurred amidst a concerted campaign of repression conducted by the FBI against the American Indian Movement on Pine Ridge during the mid-70s, that the 57 victims consist almost entirely of AIM members and supporters (or their children), and that the perpetrators, where they've been identified, consist primarily of known members of the so-called GOON Squad (or GOONs; the self-proclaimed "Guardians of the Oglala Nation," an FBI-alligned paramilitary organization active on the reservation during the period). A major contention of those involved in preparing and disseminating the list to which the FBI report supposedly responds is that he killings often amounted not simply to murders, but to a pattern of officially sponsored terrorism.
AIM as well as several independent researchers have alleged all along that the crux of what happened on Pine Ridge rested upon the FBI's relationship with the GOON Squad, an entity formed in 1972 by then Tribal President Richard "Dickie" Wilson to intimidate his critics, and underwritten through a combination of federal appropriations and the misappropriation of several hundred thousand dollars in funds designated for such purposes as road repair on the reservation. It should be noted that approximately one-third of those employed as BIA police officers on Pine Ridge doubled as member of Wilson's GOON Squad, and that Delmar Eastman, head of the reservation police force, served simultaneously overall as GOON commander.
By March 1973, the Bureau appears to have assumed de facto control over the GOONs, providing them with weapons, ammunition, explosives, communications gear, field intelligence and what amounted to blanket immunity form prosecution so long as they hit the right targets. For the next three years the GOONs served as an anti-AIM death squad functioning under auspices of the FBI. Correspondingly, the Bureau's investigations of murders committed by GOONs, where they were undertaken at all, served mainly to hide the facts and protect the perpetrators. As a matter of record, the Bureau has historically cultivated similar arrangements with rightwing paramilitary / vigilante organizations since at least as early as 1917. Salient examples include nationwide connection with the American Protective League during World War I, various elements of the Ku Klux Klan during the early 1960s, the Secret Army Organization in southern California during the late 1960s / early 1970s, and the Legion of Justice in Chicago during the 1970s.
The FBI has of course pooh-poohed or ignored such allegations from the outset. Much of the mainstream media has followed suite despite repeated findings by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights that many of AIM's charges have merit. The same conclusion was reached by the jury in the 1976 murder trial of AIM members Bob Robideau and Dino Butler, after it had been presented with a broad recounting of the evidence. Indeed, this all-white Middle-American jury found that the "reign of terror" fostered by the Bureau on Pine Ridge was sufficient to warrant any reasonable person using armed force to defend themselves against FBI personnel (Robideau and Butler were acquitted of murdering agents Ron Williams and Jack Coler on the basis that they acted legitimately, in self-defense). Still another substantiation of AIM's contentions concerning the FBI / GOON relationship was offered by Duane Brewer, former second-in-command of the GOON Squad, during a lengthy interview with journalists Kevin McKiernan and Michel DuBois during the mid-80s.
Like the list victims / allegations itself, such material has been published repeatedly over the past decade and has thus been readily available to the Bureau. Insofar as Accounting for Native American Deaths provides no hint that such matters are at issue, it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that the FBI, seeking to lend an aura of credibility to the report's "explanations" of specific cases which would otherwise be lacking, has deliberately misrepresented the situation it purports to address therein.
A few additional points need to be made before going into the FBI's "accountings" in individual cases. One is that the position taken by Vander Wall and I - and consequently by the LPDC and the South Dakota Advisory Committee on Civil Rights - is that no successful murder prosecutions ensued from the FBI is not to say that, under certain circumstances, perpetrators (or their surrogates) were not occasionally charged and convicted of lesser offenses. We discount such outcomes, however, on the grounds that convicting a serial killer of shoplifting in no way "resolves" serial killings.
Another is that, irrespective of the Bureau's technical vernacular, agents actually have to investigate something for an FBI investigation to have occurred. Agents cannot have simply photocopied another agents paperwork and placed it in a file marked "case closed." We realize that such procedures have served the Bureau well in annual statistical summaries of its performance - and in defensive polemics such as the one at hand - but they add up to little more than a conscious deception on the part of those employing them.
Finally, contrary to its customary practice, the FBI is not legitimately entitled to credit itself with convictions accruing from an investigation conducted by another police agency. While it is true that several murder convictions were obtained against the killers of AIM people on Pine Ridge, we hold that none of them resulted from an FBI investigation, per se. There are also serious questions in those instances with respect to the degree of murder charged, the sentence imposed, and the amount of time actually served (the charges and penalties visited upon AIM members like Richard Marshall and Leonard Peltier should be used as a basis of comparison).
With all this said, it is time to move to specifics. Since the itemization of cases in Accounting for Native American Deaths follows no discernable order - it is neither alphabetical nor chronological, nor grouped according to cause of death or investigative outcome - I've taken the liberty of rearranging the sequence of refutations in accordance with my own preferences.
The FBI report states that Aquash's body was discovered
"in September 1976."
It was actually discovered on February 24 of that
year. The report goes on
to state that the cause of death "was determined to
be a gunshot wound to
the head." Unmentioned is the fact that the
official cause of death listed
after the initial autopsy, performed by FBI contract
coroner W.O. Brown, was
"exposure." Only a second autopsy, demanded
by Aquash's family and
performed by independent pathologist Garry Peterson,
revealed the gunshot
wound. Although the allegation to which the
FBI is responding points out
that neither the coroner nor FBI personnel present
during the initial
autopsy have ever been deposed in the Bureau's still
"ongoing" investigation
of the murder, the report observes only that "the
coroner.was not deposed
[because he] died shortly after the autopsy" (in reality,
it was more than a
year later). No mention is made of the FBI personnel
involved, agents David
Price and William Wood. Finally, it is implied
that the victim had been
placed at risk of retribution from AIM members because
of "rumors.that
Aquash had cooperated with the government and was
an FBI informant." The
role played by Douglass Durham and other FBI infiltrators
in fostering these
rumors - and that this is a standard Bureau counterintelligence
technique
known as "badjacketing" (or "snitch-jacketing") designed
to "neutralize" the
political effectiveness of targeted activists - is
neglected altogether.
Lena R. Slow Bear, Delphine Crow Dog, Elaine Wagner and Edward Means, Jr.
The cause of death indicated with respect to each of
these individuals is
"exposure." The autopsy on each of the deceased
was performed by W.O.
Brown. In view of Dr. Brown's performance in
the Aquash case, there is no
reason to accept the validity of his findings at face
value. Other than
filing the coroner's reports, the FBI conducted no
investigation into any of
these deaths.
The FBI report concedes that it was "initially suspected"
that Cut Grass
died as a result of a beating. After an autopsy
performed by W.O.Brown,
however, the charge of death was changed to "overconsumption
of liquor."
The FBI filed Brown's findings and closed the case.
Cause of death is indicated as "carbon tetrachloride
poisoning [leading to]
pneumonia." No suggestion is offered as to why,
if this were so, the body
would have been found outdoors rather than home in
bed. The report goes on
to state than an autopsy revealed "no signs of trauma
to her body,"
neglecting to mention that the autopsy was performed
by the same Dr. W.O.
Brown who managed to "overlook" a bullet fired pointblank
into the head of
Anna Mae Aquash even though, according to the lab
technicians who were
present, the wound was leaking blood onto to the morgue
table. Beyond
filing Brown's paperwork, the FBI conducted no investigation.
In another W.O. Brown cause of death finding
regurgitated as "fact" in
Accounting for Native American Deaths, Good Buffalo
is said to have
succumbed to "carbon monoxide poisoning, acute alcoholism
and other factors"
during a "small fire in her house." The source
of the fire is not
identified, nor is it indicated whether the "other
factors" involved might
include a stab wound to the neck the victim is noted
as having suffered just
before she died. Beyond filing Brown's "accidental
death" report, the FBI
conducted no investigation.
Witnesses stated that Reddy was shot to death and identified
the murderer as
a known member of the GOON Squad. W.O. Brown,
on the other hand, concluded
during the autopsy that the victim had instead been
stabbed twice in the
heart. Absent the slugs which would attend gunshot
wounds, the FBI
concluded that there was "insufficient evidence" to
pursue an investigation
and closed the case. One may perhaps be forgiven
for observing that
collection of otherwise insufficient evidence is supposed
to be precisely
the purpose of an FBI investigation. It should
also be noted that, as a
matter of policy, all unresolved homicides occurring
within FBI jurisdiction
are to retain an "ongoing" status. Closing the
investigation in this
instance amounts to no investigation at all.
Andrew Paul Stewart, Aloysius Long Soldier and John S. Moore
The FBI report offers as plausible propositions advanced
by the BIA police
and other such agencies that each of these individuals
killed himself.
Although each such contention is dubious in its own
right, the most
preposterous is that Moore committed suicide by stabbing
himself in the face
and throat. Self-evidently, there were no homicide
investigations by the
FBI.
In a similar twist, the report contends that Roark
accidentally shot herself
with a .357 magnum revolver and that an FBI
investigation was therefore
unnecessary. While this is of course possible,
it fails to explain why a
1987 inquiry with the FBI's Rapid City Resident Agency
on the disposition of
this case was met with the response that no information
could be provided
because it was the subject of a "pending" investigation.
The report concurs with allegations that Black Elk
died as a result of an
explosion in his home and that there was no FBI investigation.
It claims,
however, that since the blast is attributed to a propane
leak it was
necessarily "accidental" and an investigative follow-up
was consequently
unwarranted. As any good arson investigator
will attest, however, such
logic is faulty at best. Staging the appearance
of accidental detonations
is a common technique commonly employed by arsonists
and assassins alike.
It should be noted that in 1979 AIM leader John Trudell's
entire family was
killed under very similar circumstances, and with
an identical lack of
response from the FBI, on the Duck Valley Paiute Reservation.
Presiding
over the investigation of the Trudell family's death
was local BIA police
chief Benny Richards, a GOON prominent on Pine Ridge
at the time of Black
Elk's death.
Edith Eagle Hawk and Her Two Children
The report observes that the victims died in a "two
car accident" north of
Pine Ridge, and that the "matter was not investigated
by the FBI because it
occurred off the reservation, outside federal jurisdiction."
Unmentioned
are the facts that Eagle Hawk was en route to Rapid
City to testify in
federal court concerning GOON violence on Pine Ridge,
that the driver of the
other vehicle was Albert Coomes, a white vigilante
known to be involved with
the GOONs (witnesses reported that another know GOON
was a passenger in his
car), that witnesses described how Coomes appeared
to have forced Eagle Hawk
's vehicle off the road, and that murder of a federal
witness falls under
FBI jurisdiction, no matter where it occurs.
The report states that "her death was the result of
a car / truck accident,
and no investigation was conducted by the FBI."
No mention is made of
witness accounts of her being beaten up before being
helped into her
vehicle, which was then deliberately rammed by a truck
driven by a member of
the GOON Squad.
The report recounts simply that Eagle Deer was struck
by an automobile and
killed while standing in the middle of a remote stretch
of Nebraska highway
in the dead of night. It is not mentioned that
she was last seen alive in
the car of FBI infiltrator Douglass Durham, or that
he had recently used her
as a pawn in an elaborate counterintelligence gambit
designed to discredit
AIM leader Dennis Banks and was in the process of
trying to cover his
tracks. Also neglected are the facts that the
driver of the car which hit
her described Eagle Deer as appearing to have been
"drunk" immediately prior
to the impact, but that an autopsy revealed no alcohol
or other intoxicants
to have been present in her bloodstream. This
obviously raises the question
of whether her peculiar behavior resulted from having
been beaten senseless
and dumped along the road, presumably by Durham, before
regaining
consciousness and being run over. Whatever the
truth, the FBI displayed
absolutely no interest in investigating one of its
own.
Cleveland Reddest, Priscilla White Plume and Melvin Spider
The cause of death indicated in each of these cases
is "hit and run," a
finding which hardly precludes vehicular homicide.
In the case of Reddest,
it is noted that the victim appeared to have been
"lying in the road before
the accident." As in the Eagle Deer case, however,
an autopsy revealed no
alcohol or other intoxicants to have been present
in his bloodstream, a
matter strongly suggesting he may have been beaten
unconscious before being
run over. It is noted that two suspects were
identified at the time.
Unmentioned is the fact that both were know GOONs.
Neither was prosecuted
because the FBI abandoned its investigation before
"sufficient evidence of
criminal conduct" could be developed. The available
evidence in the Spider
case is more suggestive of blunt trauma injury to
the head caused by a club
than by a car. Again, a known GOON was identified,
but the FBI's
investigation closed at a point when there was still
"insufficient evidence
to charge a person with the death." The White
Plume case follows much the
same pattern.
This is also classified as a hit and run, albeit one
in a conviction of
sorts resulted. No charges were brought against
the driver, a known GOON,
ostensibly because "although he left the scene of
an accident, his actions
were not a violation of federal law." His passenger,
a woman named Arlene
Good Voice whom even the FBI acknowledges as having
deliberately caused the
fatality, was allowed to enter a plea to charges which
resulted in a
sentence of 18 months probation.
The report states that Clearwater "was shot at a road
block at Wounded Knee,
South Dakota, in April 1973 which started when Federal
agents were fired
on." Actually, the victim was sleeping
in the church adjoining the Wounded
Knee gravesite - a considerable distance from any
roadblock - when he was
struck in the head by a heavy machine gun round fired
from the federal
perimeter. Journalists inside Wounded Knee at
the time unanimously agree
that federal agents initiated the firefight.
No mention is made of a
considerable delay in the victim's emergency medical
evacuation precipitated
by federal authorities, or that this was a contributing
factor in his death
nine days later. The slowness of Clearwater's
evacuation should be
contrasted to that provided FBI agent Curtis Fitzpatrick
when he was
slightly wounded in the wrist a few weeks earlier.
It is noted, rather defensively, that "the facts of
the matter, along with
the autopsy report, were reviewed by the U.S. Attorney.
No charges were
filed." This is in response to the allegation
that, after Lamont was hit by
federal gunfire at Wounded Knee, he bled to death
while FBI snipers
prevented AIM medics from reaching him and administering
first aid.
Unmentioned is the fact that several medics, all clearly
identified by red
cross armbands, were actually hit by federal gunfire
during the course of
the 71 day siege. In fact, there is at least
one case - that of medic Ron
Rosen - in which it appears the armband itself was
used as an aiming point
by a sniper.
The BIA police story, accepted in the FBI's "accounting"
with further ado,
is that Bissonette was "killed by a single shotgun
blast to the chest" when
he "advanced on police officers with a raised 30.06
(rifle)". Omitted are
the facts that the weapon supposedly used by Bissonette
was never produced
by the police, or that Joe Clifford, the officer who
fired the fatal round,
moonlighted as a GOON. Nor is it noted that
the shotgun pellets all struck
the victim within a five inch radius, meaning that
Clifford had discharged
his weapon at a range of three feet or less (this
renders the officer's
depiction of Bissonette advancing with a raised rifle
at the time he was
shot utterly implausible). Finally, it is not
mentioned that it took the
BIA police nearly 45 minutes to summon an ambulance
from the nearby Pine
Ridge HIS hospital, and that the victim bled to death
in the interim.
The report states that Killsright was killed during
the FBI's RESMURS
investigation. He was in fact killed during
the June 26, 1975, firefight
which also resulted in the deaths of FBI agents Williams
and Coler and
thereby precipitated RESMURS. Cause of death
is indicated as being a single
long rang gunshot to the head, fired by either an
FBI or BIA police sniper.
The fact that two eyewitnesses - journalist Kevin
McKiernan and South Dakota
Attorney General William Delaney - state that the
victim's torso had been
riddled by an automatic weapon fired at close range
is unmentioned. This is
perhaps because of the implication that Killsright
might have been summarily
executed by an FBI agent enraged over the deaths of
his colleagues. Be that
as it may, the Bureau relies upon yet another autopsy
performed by W.O.
Brown to "confirm" its version of Killsright's death.
Since the murder occurred in the town of Scenic, about
20 miles north of the
Pine Ridge boundary, it is claimed that "the FBI had
no investigative
jurisdiction in the matter." While this is true
in principle, the fact is
that the Bureau not only investigated but provided
key witnesses employed by
state prosecutors in obtaining a first degree murder
conviction and sentence
of life imprisonment against AIM member Richard Marshall.
Correspondingly,
it is left unmentioned that the witness was Myrtle
Poor Bear, the same
psychologically unbalanced woman from whom agents
David Price and William
Wood collected three false and mutually contradictory
affidavits purporting
to incriminate Leonard Peltier in the deaths of agents
Coler and Williams,
and that one of these affidavits was then used to
obtain the fraudulent
extradition of Peltier from Canada. Finally,
nothing is said about the fact
that Poor Bear subsequently recanted her testimony
against both Marshall and
Peltier, claiming it had been coerced by agents Price
and Wood (who
admittedly held her incommunicado and against her
will in a Nebraska motel
room for more than a month). As in the Aquash
case, there is no indication
agents Price and Wood have been so much as questioned
with respect to the
distinct possibility they suborned perjury and otherwise
obstructed justice
in all three of these murder investigations.
An extremely garbled and incomplete recounting of the
aftermath of this
grisly and clearly preplanned atrocity is set forth.
It is true, as the
report states, that GOON commanders / prime culprits
Manny Wilson and Chuck
Richards were acquitted of charges brought against
them (mainly because of
incredibly sloppy evidentiary work by the FBI).
The allegation is also
true, although implicitly denied in the report, that
the first-degree murder
charges against the pair were dropped altogether.
That only a single adult
GOON, Charlie Winters, was ultimately convicted in
this case, and then
merely of having been an "accessory after the fact"
in a "second degree"
murder, tends to speak for itself. That the
sole conviction as an actual
perpetrator was that of a 17-year-old "juvenile" -
who under terms of the
Federal Youth Corrections Act could be sentenced to
no more than five years
imprisonment - is at once laughable and contemptible,
smacking as it does of
a sop to public outrage which might ensue should too
sensational a crime be
left entirely unpunished. No matter how you
slice it, the bottom line is
that of more than a dozen GOONs identified by witnesses
as participating in
the DeSersa murder, two ended up serving less than
six years between them.
The Bureau concurs that Little Crow was beaten to death
by a GOON named Irby
Hand, but points out that Hand was resultantly sent
to prison. Although it
is noted that Hand's sentence was a mere five years
- he served only three -
no mention is made of the fact that this meager punishment
accrued from an
arrangement wherein federal authorities allowed the
murderer to plead guilty
to a charge of voluntary manslaughter. Also
omitted is the fact that
several other members of the GOON Squad identified
by witnesses as having
participated in the beating were not charged at all.
The report recounts that the victim was stabbed to
death by Dorthy Iris Poor
Bear, who then entered a guilty plea to a charge of
voluntary manslaughter.
Since Poor Bear, who was sentenced to only three years,
and since even that
paltry sentence was suspended, there is a clear appearance
of a deal having
been worked out among federal authorities allowing
her to take a painless
"fall" for the person(s) who actually did the killing.
This appearance is
reinforced by the fact that a 1987 inquiry made with
the FBI's Rapid City
Resident Agency produced the response that no information
on the case could
be provided, since it was the subject of an "ongoing"
investigation.
The report acknowledges that AIM member Cortier died
of "numerous bullet
wounds" inflicted by GOON Squad member Jerry Bear
Shield (whom, it is
suggested, "may" have been shot in the neck by Cortier
during an exchange of
gunfire). Any FBI investigation would have been
strictly pro forma since
Bear Shield quickly entered into a plea bargain arrangement
resulting in a
sentence of one year on a charge of voluntary manslaughter.
He ultimately
served less than nine months.
A similar appearance is presented in this case.
The alleged perpetrator,
Kenneth Returns
From Scout, was allowed to plead to reduced charges
that resulted in his
serving less than two years.
Carl Plenty Arrows, Sr., and Frank La Pointe
Both men were shot to death by a GOON named Glen Janis,
who was identified
as the killer by several witnesses and admitted killing
Plenty Arrows, an
AIM member. Janis initially declined, however,
to acknowledge that he'd
also shot La Pointe, who was himself associated with
the GOON Squad (a
matter suggesting La Pointe was killed by accident
or mistake). Although
the murder of Plenty Arrows was plainly in cold blood,
federal authorities
worked out an arrangement in which Janis was allowed
to plead guilty to one
count each of second-degree murder and voluntary manslaughter.
His
sentences were set to run concurrently (rather than
consecutively, like the
double-life term meted out to Leonard Peltier).
He therefore faced a
maximum of 20 years in prison and served a little
over 11. Perhaps because
of the ineptitude he displayed in killing another
GOON in the process, Janis
suffered by far the harshest punishment of anyone
ever convicted of
murdering an AIM member or supporter. The investigative
work on this case
was, however, handled mainly by the BIA police rather
than the FBI.
It is observed that the assailant in this case, Roger
James Cline, was
convicted of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced
to 10 years imprisonment.
Omitted is the fact that the arrest, prosecution,
and conviction resulted
from actions undertaken by the BIA police rather than
the FBI. Nor is
mention made of the fact that no investigation at
all seems to have been
conducted with respect to the possible culpability
of several associates of
Cline, all known members of the GOON Squad, who were
present when the crime
was committed. Finally, the appropriate charge
in a killing of such
barbarity - witnesses said Horse was not only shot
but run over several
times with a car - would be first degree murder rather
than manslaughter.
The report confirms that the victim was beaten to death
with a tire iron by
occasional GOON Squad member Antoine Bluebird.
It is observed that Bluebird
was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced
to serve seven years
in prison. No indication is given as to how
much time he actually served,
or that his arrest and attendant investigation were
carried out by the BIA
police rather than the FBI.
The FBI report confirms that Sitting Up was murdered
by "an individual using
an axe." It goes on to explain that "a suspect
was identified but was not
prosecuted because of impairment caused by a mental
condition." Aside from
begging the obvious question of why the individual
was not prosecuted for
purposes of ensuring his commitment to an institution
for the criminally
insane, the response neglects to mention that he was
notorious as an
especially violent member of a GOON group know at
the "Manson Family." In
his interview with McKiernan and DuBois, former GOON
commander Duane Brewer
recalls the same man as a "freak" who was eventually
"fired" from the GOON
Squad after he set out to cut an intended victim in
half with a crosscut
saw.
The report acknowledges that this case devolves upon
a BIA police rather
than FBI investigation. It is noted that witnesses
identified four known
members of the GOON Squad - Tom Eagle Chief, Cecil
Bear Robe, Fred
Marrowbone and an unnamed juvenile - as having collectively
stomped and
beaten Little to death. The quartet was, however,
charged with voluntary
manslaughter rather than murder. Eagle Chief,
Marrowbone and the juvenile
were convicted and sentenced to a mere six years,
six years and four years
respectively. Only the juvenile served his full
term.
In this case, which like that of James Little is acknowledged
as having
developed upon a BIA police rather than FBI investigation,
a GOON named
George Twiss confessed to having beaten the victim
to death. An arrangement
was quickly worked out by federal authorities in which
Twiss was allowed to
plead guilty to a charge of involuntary manslaughter.
He was sentenced to
three years and served about a year-and-a-half.
The report again concedes that this case devolves upon
a BIA police rather
than FBI investigation. Although the killer,
a GOON named Glenn Three
Stars, admitted shooting the victim to death at close
range, he claimed
self-defense and was charged only with voluntary manslaughter.
Poor
evidentiary work by BIA investigators, apparently
unassisted by the FBI,
resulted in his acquittal.
This is yet another case conceded to have developed
upon a BIA police rather
than FBI investigation. Although the killer,
LeRoy Apple, readily admitted
stabbing Blue Bird to death, he was allowed to enter
into a plea bargain on
a charge of assault with a deadly weapon resulting
in a sentence of just one
year in prison. He served approximately nine
months.
The report indicates that this case involved a combination
of BIA police and
FBI investigations. The police took information
from an eyewitness
identifying a known member of the GOON Squad as having
reinterviewed the
witness and took a statement from the GOON denying
culpability. At this
point, it is observed that an "Assistant U.S. Attorney
[shortly] advised
that a motion and order to dismiss" the charges would
be entered in federal
court. Unmentioned is the fact that the Bureau
recommended such action be
taken. Since the murder remains unresolved for
this reason, it is still
classified as the subject of an "ongoing" FBI investigation.
This one is truly bizarre. The report informs
us that the victim's real
name was David Martin Two Two and that his death was
05/06/76. It then goes
on to announce that "a review of death certificates
in all surrounding
counties in South Dakota and Nebraska reflect no record
of his death."
Meaning what? That Two Two didn't die?
That he did, but the only thing
officially recorded was the date? We are given
to understand that "the FBI
would have addressed this case if Two Two had been
murdered on Pine Ridge."
While this sounds reassuring, simple logic dictates
that since the Bureau
professes to know only when the man died, not how,
it can't possibly be in a
position to know whether he was murdered or not.
The other AIM fatalities
categorized as "non-murders" in Accounting for Native
American Deaths might
be usefully viewed through the Bureau's response in
this case.
The report fails to contradict the allegation.
It does, however, neglect to
mention that the agents inexplicably focused their
investigative attention
on AIM as the probable culprit, or that, in his interview
with McKiernan and
DuBois, GOON commander Duane Brewer candidly admitted
that his men had
killed Bissonette "by mistake." There being
no statute of limitations on
murder, this raises the question of why the FBI has
not reopened its
investigation in this case.
The report does not really address the allegation,
which makes no claim that
the victim died instantaneously. The elderly
Brings Yellow suffered a heart
attack when agents kicked in his door while conducting
a warrantless
no-knock assault upon his home during the early stages
of the RESMURS
investigation. That he died of related causes
a day later in the hospital
is irrelevant.
Since the report confirms the allegation, no further
comment seems
necessary.
Since the report confirms the allegation, no further
comment seems
necessary.
In any endeavor of the sort undertaken by Vander Wall
and I in compiling our list of victims / allegations, there is bound to
be a margin of error (witness the mistakes made by the FBI concerning the
month in which Anna Mae Aquash's body was discovered and the investigative
framework in which Joe Stuntz Killsright was shot to death). I am
therefore pleased to be able to
make the following corrections to our record based
upon information provided in Accounting for Native American Deaths.
Vander Wall and I erroneously recorded Afraid of Bear's
death as having
resulted from a gunshot wound. The FBI report
indicates he was instead
beaten to death. It also notes that an individual
named Rudolph Running
Shield was subsequently allowed to plead guilty to
the murder in exchange
for a reduction in charges and sentence. A second
man, Luke Black Elk, Jr.,
was convicted of second degree murder in February
1978. It is thus implied
that both the guilty plea and the conviction resulted
from an FBI
investigation. To all appearances, however,
the FBI added nothing to a BIA
police investigation resulting in the arrests of both
perpetrators.
The report points out that Standing Soldier was killed
not by "party or
parties unknown," as Vander Wall and I erroneously
stated, but by a GOON
named Gerald Janis. It then proceeds to accept
at face value an improbable
tale about how the victim was killed while engaged
in an armed robbery of
the killer's home. When this "evidence" was
presented to a grand jury, the
report concludes, "a no bill was returned resulting
in no prosecution and
the FBI investigation closed." To all appearances,
the "investigation" was
more of an orchestration of the murder's exoneration.
Vander Wall and I erroneously recorded the victim's
first name as "Kevin."
The report also observes that Hill was murdered not
by "party or parties
unknown," as we wrongly stated, but by four individuals
who stabbed him 19
times. It does not mention that the killers
were known GOONs. It does
observe, however, that, of the four, only one "17-year-old
Indian youth" was
prosecuted and then only for murder in the second
degree.
Vander Wall and I erred when we attributed Bad Heart
Bull's murder to "party
or parties unknown." The FBI report corrects
the record by pointing out
that he was beaten to death by a GOON named Bartholomew
Joseph Long, using a
2x4 studded with nails. It is noted that Long
was subsequently convicted of
second rather than first degree murder and sentenced
to a mere ten years.
No indication is given as to how long he actually
served. Whether the
investigation was conducted by the FBI or the BIA
police is not stated.
Vander Wall and I again wrongly attributed the murder
to "party or parties
unknown." In actuality, according to the report, witnesses
identified the
man who shot Hunter as a GOON named Vern Top Bear.
Top Bear was charged
with second rather than first degree murder and eventually
acquitted. No
mention is made of a botched evidentiary submission
by the FBI as
contributing to this result.
The report points out that Wounded Foot was not killed
by "unknown
assailants," as Vander Wall and I recorded.
She was in fact shot in the
head, execution style, and dumped in a remote section
of the reservation by
a BIA police investigator named Paul Duane Herman,
Jr. Rather than being
prosecuted for the murder, Herman was allowed to plead
guilty to a reduced
charge of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to
just 10 years in prison.
No mention is made of how long he actually served.
Vander Wall and I erroneously listed Michelle Tobacco
as an "AIM supporter."
In actuality, she was the nine-month-old daughter
of an AIM supporter. The
report indicates that she was killed when "a relative
[who] had consumed
liquor, tripped and fell with the baby. When
the relative awoke, Michelle
was dead." The misimpression created is that
the relative was drunk, passed
out, and crushed or smothered the baby. Omitted
are the facts that the
relative was not intoxicated, that she fell when startled
by a bullet being
fired through her window from outside her home (presumably
by GOONs), and
that in the process she struck her head on a coffee
table and knocked
herself out. Under the circumstances, it is
small wonder the federal
prosecutor declined to press charges.
Vander Wall and I erred in describing the victim as
an "AIM supporter" and
that she was killed by "person or persons unknown."
She was in fact beaten
to death by her husband, Norman, a reputed GOON.
Receiving the usual
preferential treatment accorded those of service to
the FBI, the murderer
was allowed to enter a guilty plea on a charge of
voluntary manslaughter and
sentenced to only eight years. He served a little
over five.
Floyd S. Bianis and Yvette Loraine Lone Hill
In this case, which turns out to have been a double
homicide, it seems
Vander Wall and I were simply wrong. Both the
deceased were children,
apparent victims of child abuse, and our contention
that there was an AIM /
GOON connection was erroneous. An appropriate
FBI investigation did by all
accounts take place and resulted in the successful
prosecution of the
perpetrator. Moreover, both the charges and
sentences handed down seem
quite appropriate. The Bureau's exemplary performance
in this obviously
non-political case can, however, be usefully contrasted
to its handling of
every other murder discussed herein.
Inexplicably, a Pine Ridge murder case listed by Vander Wall and I, that of Lorinda Red Paint, is not addressed in Accounting for Native American Deaths. On the other hand, that of John S. Moore, a 1974 AIM casualty whom we didn't include because he was killed in Lincoln, Nebraska, is discussed in the report. While this serves quite well to punctuate the point that there were many other fatalities attending the FBI's repression of AIM than those Jim and I recorded, it is important to remember that the murders are themselves only part of the broader picture of what was done to the American Indian Movement and grassroots population of Pine Ridge during the mid-70's.
There were, for example, nearly 350 nonlethal but nonetheless serious physical assaults against AIM members and supporters on the reservation recorded by WKLDOC during the same period. In nearly every instance, the assailants were identified by the victims and / or other witnesses as members of the GOON Squad. Yet in only a handful of instances did these crimes, all of which were subject to the FBI's jurisdictional authority, result in any sort of prosecution. In most cases, the FBI conducted no investigation at all.
Had he been asked at the time, Rapid City ASAC George O'Clock would undoubtedly have claimed that since his office was already too shorthanded to investigate the wave murders on Pine Ridge, he obviously couldn't spare the manpower to investigate the physical assaults. O'Clock's agents, however, had time available to amass more than 342,000 separate investigative file classifications on the victims concerning such weighty matters as "interference with postal inspectors in performance of their lawful duties" and the alleged theft of a pair of used cowboy boots (not one, but two agents were actually assigned to this last).
While the relatively few investigations of the myriad major crimes committed by the GOON Squad were routinely abandoned because of "insufficient evidence," or resulted in plea bargains and ridiculously light sentences, those opened in AIM cases were pursued with a vengeance and typically "prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law." More than 540 charges were filed against AIM members and supporters as a result of the 1973 confrontation at Wounded Knee alone. These resulted in a grand total of 15 convictions, all on minor charges. In many instances, it turned out that evidence supporting the charges was effectively non-existent.
Such a miniscule percentage of convictions resulting from prosecutions attempted might seem to add up to little more than an astonishingly inept performance on the part of the FBI's vaunted investigators, by far the worst in the Bureau's history. Nothing could be further from the truth. In this instance, charges were filed and prosecutions recommended although agents knew full well there was no possibility that "guilty" verdicts would be attained. The point - as was cleary articulated in 1974 by Col. Volney Warner, an army counterinsurgency specialist assigned as an advisor to the FBI's Pine Ridge operation - was to destroy AIM by tying up its members in endless courtroom proceedings and ultimately bankrupting the movement as it struggled to meet the spiraling costs of bail and legal defense. The strategy was designed, as Warner observed, so that "government wins, even if no one goes to jail."
In this sense, the Bureau's extralegal use of the judicial process was a resounding success. It also speaks volumes in explaining why so much of the massive violence directed against AIM went unpunished during the mid-70's, and continues for all practical intents and purposes to remain uninvestigated to this day. Nothing in Accounting for Native American Deaths alters this harsh reality. Quite the opposite. By releasing this purposefully misleading report, the FBI has demonstrated beyond all reasonable doubt that it has changed little if at all over the past 25 years. The attitudes, ethics and sensibilities exhibited by Douglas Domin and his colleagues in preparing their "report" are indistinguishable from those guiding the agents who operated on Pine Ridge a generation ago.
The premise that this constitutes an eminent danger to the rights and liberties of all Americans is amply corroborated by numerous revelations of comparable FBI misconduct in recent years. Whether it is exposure by its own forensic specialists of the fact that the Bureau's crime lab has systematically fabricated physical evidence for purposes of obtaining the convictions of thousands of possibly innocent people, the release from 27 years imprisonment of former Black Panther Geronimo ji Jaga after a judicial finding that he'd been the victim of a frame-up in which the FBI was plainly complicit, the Bureau's withholding of vital evidence from even the Attorney General in the course of its self-exoneration concerning the 1993 Waco bloodbath, or any of a dozen other examples, the pattern remains consistent.
The FBI is, as it has always been, an agency antithetical
to the democratic ideals of the United States. Subverting
law in pursuit of order, it continues today, as it has since its
inception, to employ the vast resources at its disposal in destroying those
whose viewpoints and activities it deems politically objectionable, and
then to hide the truth of what it has done for the public it supposedly
serves. Should we as citizens prove ourselves willing to accept the
latter subterfuge, and thereby allow the former practice to continue, we
will no longer need to concern ourselves with worries about whether America
is becoming a police state. Instead, we will be compelled to confront
the terrifying fact that it already has.
Leonard Peltier
Defense Committee
PO Box 583
Lawrence, KS 66044
785-842-5774
To subscribe,to the news letter distributed by the
LPDC click here
To unsubscribe, send a blank message here