Leonard Peltier Denied Parole After Nearly 50 Years In Prison
Leonard Peltier was denied parole on Tuesday, meaning there’s likely only one other way the ailing, 79-year-old Native American rights activist will ever be released after serving nearly 50 years in prison: If President Joe Biden intervenes and commutes his sentence.
Peltier has been in prison since 1977 when the U.S. government convicted him for killing two FBI agents in a 1975 shoot-out on Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota.
His trial was full of misconduct, including federal prosecutors hiding evidence that exonerated Peltier and the FBI threatening witnesses into lying to blame Peltier. The government’s case fell apart after these revelations, so it quickly revised its charges against Peltier to aiding and abetting whoever did kill those agents — on the grounds that he was one of dozens of people who were on the reservation when the shoot-out occurred.
There was never evidence that Peltier committed a crime. The FBI and U.S. attorney’s office never did figure out who killed those agents.
The FBI continues to oppose Peltier’s release and is the main reason, if not the only reason, that he’s still in prison. But its reasons for opposing Peltier’s release are full of holes and remarkably easy to disprove.
The FBI has not publicly addressed the key context of that 1975 shoot-out: The FBI was intentionally fueling tensions on that reservation as part of a covert campaign to suppress the activities of the American Indian Movement, or AIM, a grassroots movement for Indigenous rights. Peltier was an active AIM member and an FBI target.
Peltier has maintained his innocence the entire time he’s been in prison. It has almost certainly contributed to him being denied parole.
Prior to Tuesday, the last time Peltier was