Leonard Peltier parole hearing update

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https://www.workers.org/2024/06/79210/

The Leonard Peltier Official Ad Hoc Committee posted this statement from Peltier’s attorneys on June 12.

We began this year with a triumphant motto, coined by Brother Dhoruba bin Wahad: “We will not give up the fight.” Fight we will for Leonard’s freedom. The struggle for Leonard’s freedom is not over — until it is over. We will use every available legal mechanism to secure his release, but we know the law and justice are not the same thing, and so the law alone is not sufficient to access meaningful justice. As such, we encourage continued legal support but also social and political support for Leonard.

Leonard had his parole hearing on Monday, June 10, 2024, and we feel that he was as supported as possible. We are aware that the parole process itself, like every part of the criminal penal system, is both a political and legal process, and the flaws in this process specifically concerning Leonard have been meticulously documented by the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention. The appropriate inquiry for the commission is to assess the person who stands before them, not the alleged offense.

Leonard’s parole hearing lasted more than seven hours. There was nothing unexpected about the hearing itself. The surviving loved ones of the agents killed on June 26, 1975, gave impact statements, as did representatives from the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of North Dakota.

Dr. Joel Rene Morrissey and organizer Nick Tilsen, the only two witnesses permitted to testify, spoke compellingly regarding Leonard’s seriously deteriorating medical condition and the plans made to care for Leonard upon his release. Dr. Joel Morrissey, particularly, gave thorough testimony highlighting the ongoing long-term medical neglect to which Mr. Peltier is subjected.

Lead attorney Jenipher Jones, who was present at the parole hearing, devises the overall legal strategy and framing regarding Leonard’s post-conviction relief, civil, and human rights. For the past year, Attorney Jones has been working to ensure Leonard’s medical care is both constitutionally sufficient and in accordance with human rights provisions. Attorney Jones also develops the constitutional analysis with respect to all aspects of Mr. Peltier’s case.

Ms. Jones’ esteemed co-counsel, Attorney Moira Meltzer-Cohen, brilliantly developed and delivered the arguments to support Leonard’s release. Attorney Meltzer-Cohen also, in part, developed the legal framework for Leonard’s parole. Unfortunately, Kevin Sharp was not permitted to deliver arguments to the Hearing Examiner nor present evidence during the hearing.

Leonard’s pride and personality shine through

Leonard was asked about the underlying offenses, but he also had the opportunity to speak about his grandchildren, and his personality and pride really shone through. A massive amount of material was presented, and we hope the hearing examiner has been convinced of the obvious fact that, if released, Leonard is not in danger of violating the law and that, after 50 years, his release will not be seen as promoting disrespect for the law.

Attorneys Jones and Meltzer-Cohen expect a decision within 21 days and are responsible for spearheading any necessary appeals and subsequent litigation, though they hope such action will not be necessary.

We thank everyone who contributed to this process, including families, our mentors, shout out to Attorney Meltzer-Cohen’s students at CUNY School of Law, the National Conference of Black Lawyers (NCBL) and the National Lawyers Guild (NLG), both organizations to which Attorney Jones is a board member. We also express sincere gratitude to the members of the NLG Mass Incarceration Committee Old Law Prisoner Project, Professor Chuck Weisselberg, Attorney Brad Thompson, Professor Audrey Bomse, Dr. Joel Morrissey, Dr. Giselle Dias, Kalonji Jama Changa, Silja Talvi, the Leonard Peltier Official Ad Hoc Committee and the Jericho Movement and all those who have supported their work and advocacy.

This work is part of the long tradition of liberation work for Indigenous peoples everywhere: When we fight, we win.
 
About ten years ago, I worked in a company along with John Trimbach, who had written a book from the FBI's perspective on what happened at Wounded Knee and Leonard Peltier's point-blank execution of two FBI agents. There was an FBI informant in the tribe, she was also executed in 1975 after she was exposed....the killer didn't go to trial until 2005. He had an absolute hatred of what he called the "American Indian Mafia".
 
Meh.

I would support his release even if he was indisputably culpable for bumping off those pigs. They didn't execute or imprison for life everyone who fired a shot at Custer, did they?

(Well, not everyone. Of course I'm sure they would have, under the right circumstances.)
 
The scum who tortured and killed his horse are likely collecting their pensions.


But Allah remembers . . . .
 
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Decades ago when the History Channel did history, it showed a perspective of Jesus: the other guy who was pardoned was a "murderer," which may have meant he killed a Roman soldier, so that could be why the Roman-hating crowd wanted him pardoned instead of Jesus. Jesus and Peltier made no difference in ending the oppression, but all empires eventually fall. Americans will become more like Native Americans as they adapt to living here and drop the European customs that don't work here.
 
Decades ago when the History Channel did history, it showed a perspective of Jesus: the other guy who was pardoned was a "murderer," which may have meant he killed a Roman soldier, so that could be why the Roman-hating crowd wanted him pardoned instead of Jesus. Jesus and Peltier made no difference in ending the oppression, but all empires eventually fall. Americans will become more like Native Americans as they adapt to living here and drop the European customs that don't work here.
Oh would you just shut up, you're no Marshall McLuhan
 
Decades ago when the History Channel did history, it showed a perspective of Jesus: the other guy who was pardoned was a "murderer," which may have meant he killed a Roman soldier, so that could be why the Roman-hating crowd wanted him pardoned instead of Jesus. Jesus and Peltier made no difference in ending the oppression, but all empires eventually fall. Americans will become more like Native Americans as they adapt to living here and drop the European customs that don't work here.
That, or because we find ourselves dominated by the next aggressive civilization to arrive.

I've heard it suggested that eventually we'll be down to America's cities keeping apace of the rest of the imperial core, like in the "nice" parts of Mexico, while the people in "flyover country" start to look like pale(r)-skinned variants of the Indios in Chiapas.
 
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