
Special
Agent
Jack R. Coler |
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Special
Agent
Ronald A. Williams |
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QUICK FACTS
Unknown to
Agents Williams and Coler, Leonard Peltier was present on Pine
Ridge. A warrant was outstanding for the arrest of Leonard Peltier
which had been issued in the Eastern District of Wisconsin for
Unlawful Flight to Avoid Prosecution (UFAP) - Attempted Murder (of
an off-duty police officer).
Peltier and his
supporters allege they had arrived on Pine Ridge with a contingent
of American Indian Movement (AIM) members. They had traveled to Pine
Ridge from Farmington, New Mexico.
At
approximately 11:50 a.m., June 26, 1975, Agent Williams indicated
over his car radio that he had spotted a red and white vehicle.
(Agent personnel overhearing the radio transmission have differing
opinions of the vehicle description, but it was clearly established
that there was only one operable vehicle in the area.)
One of the
occupants of the red and white vehicle was determined later to be an
individual interviewed by Agent Williams and another FBI Agent in
Williams' FBI vehicle the day before.
Soon after
Williams' initial transmission, he radioed information that the
subject vehicle had stopped and that he and Coler had come under
fire. Williams began transmitting directions to Agent Gary Adams who
was approximately 12 miles away. Agent Adams could not reach the
vicinity of Williams and Agent Coler due to gunfire directed at him
as he approached. Contrary to some media reports that gunfire lasted
four hours, trial testimony described the gunfight directed at
Agents Williams and Coler as lasting approximately 10 minutes.
During this ordeal, a combined total of five rounds had been fired
by both Williams and Coler's weapons. The Agents' vehicles alone had
125 bullet holes. This total does not take into account those shots
that hit the Agents, glass, or were not recovered.
At
approximately 4:25 p.m., Agents discovered the bodies of Agents
Williams and Coler lying beside Agent Coler's vehicle. Agent
Williams received bullet wounds to his left arm and side, foot,
right hand, and head. Agent Coler received bullet wounds to the arm
and head.
An examination
of the physical evidence concluded that Agents Williams and Coler
had been killed at close range by a .223 type bullet. According to
witnesses, Peltier was identified as the only person in possession
of a weapon that would fire a .223 type bullet at the time of the
murders. The weapon was an AR-15.
Peltier's
AR-15, Agent Coler's .308 rifle, and an arsenal of weapons were
recovered from associates of Peltier on September 10, 1975, when a
car exploded on the Kansas Turnpike near Wichita, Kansas.|
An examination
by the FBI Laboratory made a positive match with a .223 shell casing
found in the trunk of Agent Coler's car and marks produced by the
extractor of Peltier's AR-15. No match could be made with the firing
pin, because it was too smooth.
On September
11, 1986, Federal Appeals Judge Gerald R. Heaney concluded, "When
all is said and done, however, a few simple but very important facts
remain. The casing introduced into evidence had in fact been
extracted from the Wichita AR-15."
Peltier was
captured in February, 1976, by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP),
while in possession of several loaded weapons. Upon arrest, he
advised the RCMP that two FBI Agents were shot when they came to a
house to serve a warrant on him.
During an
interview on the television show "60 Minutes," aired September 22,
1991, Peltier admitted firing at Agents Williams and Coler. On April
18, 1977, Leonard Peltier was found guilty of the first-degree
murders of Williams and Coler. On June 1, 1977, Chief U.S. District
Judge Paul Benson sentenced Peltier to two consecutive life terms.
One issue
during the appeals was the allegation that the FBI fabricated
statements from a woman named Myrtle Poor Bear who claimed that she
saw Peltier shoot the Agents.
The prosecuting
Assistant United States Attorney determined Myrtle Poor Bear was
incompetent to testify at trial due to obvious mental deterioration
prior to trial and did not use her as a trial witness. Her
affidavits were only used in extradition proceedings against Peltier
in conjunction with other evidence and prior to a determination of
her incompetence.
Arguments that
Peltier did not receive a fair trial have been repeatedly heard by
the U.S. District Court, the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals,
and the U.S. Supreme Court. Peltier's most recent appeal was argued
on November 9, 1992, under the defense grounds that the federal
government changed its prosecutive strategy, to wit; initially
arguing that Peltier shot and killed the Agents, but since claiming
that he aided and abetted in their deaths.
On July 7,
1993, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed Peltier's latest
appeal. The theory that the government had changed its prosecutive
strategy was rejected by the court's review of the trial record.
Other issues raised by the defense were also dismissed as having
been previously decided or bypassed on previous appeals. Peltier's
petition requesting a rehearing on the matter was denied.
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LEONARD PELTIER'S
TRUCK |
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AGENT COLER'S CAR |
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AGENT WILLIAMS'
CAR |
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Pre-incident
Facts
The Pine Ridge Indian Reservation
is located in the southwest corner of South Dakota. Wounded Knee,
South Dakota, is located approximately 18 miles from the Village
of Pine Ridge on the reservation. The incident involving the
FBI at Wounded Knee occurred approximately two years prior to
the murders of Agents Jack R. Coler and Ronald A. Williams. There
is no factual connection between the two. However, the Indian
factionalism that resulted from Wounded Knee possibly contributed
to an atmosphere of tension that existed on the Pine Ridge Reservation.
The factionalism pitted the supporters
of the local tribal government and its then president against
the members of the American Indian Movement (AIM) and Indian
traditionalists. As a result, crime on the reservation had increased.
The jurisdiction assigned to the FBI on the reservation was the
responsibility of the Rapid City, South Dakota, Resident Agency
(RA), assigned to the Minneapolis Field Division. The 12-Agent
complement of the RA had been increased to include 6 additional
temporary duty (TDY) Agents to assist in handling the increased
workload. Victim Jack Coler was one of those TDY Agents.
Neither Leonard Peltier nor members
of his group of associates were from the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
Testimony stated that Peltier and the others in his group came
to the reservation at the request of AIM leaders following an
AIM convention in Farmington, New Mexico. There is evidence Peltier
was the leader of a group of Indians who may have committed burglaries
on the reservation. A British .308 rifle taken in a burglary
on the reservation was fired at the Agents by Norman Charles,
a member of Peltier's group, on the day of the murders.
At the time of the murders, Peltier
was the subject of an outstanding federal warrant for Unlawful
Flight to Avoid Prosecution (UFAP). The UFAP warrant was issued
after Peltier fled Milwaukee to avoid apprehension and prosecution
for the attempted murder of an off-duty police officer in that
city.
On June 25, 1975, the evening
before the murders, Agents Ron Williams and Jack Coler were on
the reservation attempting to locate and arrest Jimmy Eagle.
A federal warrant charging Eagle with robbery was outstanding.
Eagle and companions from the reservation had beaten and robbed
a person on the reservation. Additional charges stemming from
that incident included Assault with a Deadly Weapon. One of the
areas where Agent Williams attempted to locate Eagle was the
Jumping Bull Compound. The Agents were unsuccessful in their
attempts to locate Eagle. However, during that investigation,
the Agents talked with Norman Charles and two others in Agent
Williams' car and advised Charles that the purpose of their visit
was to locate Eagle. It is noted that Norman Charles was with
Peltier at the time of the murders on the following day. The
Agents were told that Eagle had just left in a red vehicle. No
further detail was given concerning that vehicle.
There is no evidence the Agents
were aware that Peltier was in the area.
Facts
of the Incident
On the morning of June 26, 1975,
Agents Coler and Williams returned to the Pine Ridge Reservation
to continue their attempts to locate and arrest Jimmy Eagle pursuant
to a federal arrest warrant. Conversations with numerous persons
earlier that morning made it clear that executing the Eagle warrant
was their purpose for going to the reservation.
At approximately 11:50 a.m.,
other Agents overheard a radio transmission where Agent Williams
advised Agent Coler he had spotted a red and white vehicle and
was going to stop it. Williams and Coler were in separate FBI
vehicles. None of the radio transmissions were recorded because
the FBI did not have a system in place to record any radio transmissions.
Recollections vary as to the description of the vehicle given
by Williams. However, testimony presented at trial made it clear
that there was only one vehicle operational in the area fitting
that general description. It is noted this vehicle stop would
be consistent with the information Williams had received on the
previous day that Jimmy Eagle was reported to have been in a
red vehicle. As later testimony showed, Leonard Peltier, Norman
Charles, and Joe Stuntz were the occupants of the vehicle Williams
was following. Coler then followed Williams in attempting to
stop the suspect vehicle.
In the next radio transmission
overheard, which was only a few seconds later, Williams stated
that the vehicle they were pursuing had stopped, the occupants
had exited the vehicle, and it appeared they were preparing to
fire at the Agents.
These facts are corroborated
by the testimony of Michael Anderson. His testimony indicated
Leonard Peltier's red and white suburban entered the area of
the murders first, followed shortly thereafter by Williams' and
Coler's FBI vehicles. Peltier's vehicle stopped approximately
250 yards in front of the Agents' cars. Peltier, Charles, and
Stuntz got out and started firing at the Agents.
In the last radio transmission
monitored, Williams was giving directions to other Agents on
how to get to his and Coler's location. Williams warned Agent
J. Gary Adams that if he did not get there quickly, they were
dead men. Williams announced that both he and Coler had been
hit, and gunfire could be heard in the background of the transmission.
Upon arrival in the area, Agent Adams was unable to reestablish
radio contact with Williams.
The time frame of the shooting
was established by Williams first transmission being overheard
at approximately 11:50 a.m. Agent Adams, the first Agent to arrive
after Williams and Coler, made a twelve-mile trip at 90 miles
per hour. It is estimated the incident involving Williams and
Coler was over in a maximum of ten minutes.
As Agent Adams and two Bureau
of Indian Affairs police officers arrived in the immediate area,
they also came under fire. Both Adams and the officers had tires
shot out of their vehicles. Agent Adams' car became hung up as
he attempted to maneuver it and he was unable to get to Williams
and Coler. As other Agents and officers from numerous agencies
arrived, they received sniper fire which continued throughout
the afternoon. This hampered rescue attempts and the Agents'
bodies were not discovered until approximately 4:25 p.m. that
afternoon.
Physical
Evidence and Testimony Concerning the Crime Scene
Examination of the Agents' weapons
showed that one round had been fired from Agent Coler's handgun,
two rounds from Agent Williams' handgun, one round from Agent
Coler's .308 rifle, and one round from Agent Coler's shotgun.
The Agents' weapons had fired a total of five rounds during the
incident. The Agents' vehicles contained a total of 125 bullet
holes. This total does not include the rounds that hit the Agents,
the windows, or were misses. Testimony indicated that other persons
from a tent encampment near the Jumping Bull Compound arrived
after hearing the firing and began shooting at the Agents. According
to witnesses, at least seven persons were believed to have shot
at the Agents.
Physical evidence examined by
the pathologist indicated that at least three bullets consistent
with .223 caliber were fired at close range at the Agents. However,
only a single .223 caliber shell casing was recovered from the
open trunk of Agent Coler's car. This indicates that the persons
who were present at the Agents' bodies attempted to remove all
of the shell casings from the scene of the murders and inadvertently
overlooked the .223 casing in Agent Coler's trunk. Testimony
established Peltier was the only person carrying an AR-15 rifle
at the time of the murders. The AR-15 was the only weapon present
which was capable of firing a .223 round. One hundred fourteen
.223 shell casings were found in the general crime scene area,
away from the Agents bodies. All had been fired by the same AR-15.
These 114 shell casings matched the one shell casing found in
the trunk of Agent Coler's car.
Pathology reports disclosed that
Agent Coler had been hit in the arm, which was nearly severed.
The pathologist's opinion was that Agent Coler was disabled upon
receiving that wound and would not have been able to continue
the fight. Physical evidence demonstrated that Agent Coler received
this wound while standing at the open trunk of his car, retrieving
his long guns. Agent Williams' shirt had been wrapped around
Agent Coler's arm as a tourniquet. The shirt had bullet holes
that coincided with wounds Agent Williams had received to his
left arm and side. Additionally, Agent Williams had been shot
in the foot. Neither of Agent Williams' wounds up to this point
would have been fatal, and his right arm was still operational.
The pathology reports also showed
there were three additional wounds delivered to the Agents at
close range. An eyewitness testified that Peltier, Robert Eugene
Robideau, and Darrelle Dean Butler walked down to the Agents'
cars. Robideau and Butler had come from the tent encampment to
join the shooting after it had started.
There is no eyewitness testimony
of what happened at the Agents' cars. However, the physical evidence
showed that Agent Williams had received a defensive wound through
his right hand. The same bullet then traveled through his head
killing him instantly. Agent Coler was lying on the ground, unconscious
or near unconscious, when he was shot once in the top of his
head, but the wound was not fatal. Agent Coler was then shot
a second time near the jaw. This wound was fatal.
At the scene of the murders,
very little was taken from Agent Coler's car. Agent Williams'
car was driven to the location of Peltier's red and white suburban,
and then to the area of the tent camp where it was stripped of
almost everything.
Both of the Agent's handguns
and both of Agent Coler's long guns were stolen from the scene.
Testimony described Butler as carrying out one of the Agents'
handguns, and Peltier the other. Robideau carried out both of
Agent Coler's long guns.
Robideau's fingerprint was found
on the inside door handle of Williams' car.
Aftermath
After the murders, those involved
split up and fled in different directions. On September 5, 1975,
Agent Williams' handgun and shells from both Agents' handguns
were found in a vehicle near the residence where Darrelle Butler
was arrested.
On September 10, 1975, a station
wagon blew up on the Kansas Turnpike near Wichita, and a burned-up
AR-15 was recovered, along with Agent Coler's .308 rifle. The
car was loaded with weapons and explosives which were apparently
ignited when placed too close to a hole in the exhaust pipe.
Present in the car among others were Peltier's associates, Robert
Robideau, Norman Charles, and Michael Anderson, all of whom were
tied to the shooting of the Agents.
On September 9, 1975, Leonard
Peltier purchased a Plymouth station wagon in Denver, Colorado.
Peltier began traveling in a recreational vehicle (RV), accompanied
by associates in the recently purchased Plymouth. The FBI provided
descriptions of the two vehicles to other law enforcement agencies.
An Oregon State Trooper stopped the RV based on the description.
Peltier got out of the RV, fired at the trooper, and fled. Agent
Coler's handgun was found in a bag with Peltier's fingerprint
on it, under the front seat of the RV. Both of the vehicles were
loaded with weapons and explosives, as was the vehicle that blew
up in Kansas. Some of the weapons had obliterated serial numbers.
Peltier then fled to Hinton,
Alberta, Canada, where he hid out at an Indian reservation until
apprehended by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). Peltier
was heavily armed at the time of his arrest, and stated he would
have blown the RCMP out of their shoes if he had known they were
coming for him. When asked if he knew why he was wanted, Peltier
made a statement that two FBI Agents were shot when they came
to a house to serve a warrant on him. He identified the warrant
as the attempted murder charge in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
The
Cedar Rapids Trial
The first trial of suspects in
this case took place in the summer of 1976 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa,
after a motion for a change of venue was granted. Peltier was
in custody in Canada, fighting extradition, and so was not available
for this trial. As a result, only Robideau and Butler went to
trial. Charges against Jimmy Eagle, the only other person charged
in the murders of the Agents, were dismissed voluntarily by the
government for lack of evidence.
There were several issues and
factors in this trial that were substantially different from
the later Peltier trial. Robideau and Butler were not present
when the shooting started. They were in a camp a short distance
away and came with guns to the area of the murders once they
heard the shooting. Unlike Peltier, there was no direct evidence
that they were aware the Agents were law enforcement officers.
As a result, a self defense argument was made by the defense.
A primary difference in the Cedar
Rapids trial was that the government's two best witnesses, Angie
Long Visitor and Michael Anderson, were both missing for the
trial. Despite the best efforts of the government, neither could
be located. However, Long Visitor and Anderson were available
and testified at Peltier's trial.
During the course of the Cedar
Rapids trial, the government was prohibited from introducing
evidence that shell casings fired from Agent Coler's handgun
and casings fired from Agent Williams' handgun were located in
and near the residence where Butler was arrested. During the
Peltier trial, the same evidence was admitted into evidence.
In the Robideau/Butler trial
the jury heard testimony concerning past activities of the FBI
that were arguably unrelated to events on the reservation. The
testimony was offered based on a defense theory that through
such past activities, the FBI had assisted in creating a climate
of fear on the reservation and that climate of fear precipitated
the murders. At the conclusion of the trial, the jury foreman
stated that an important facet to the acquittals was the atmosphere
of fear and violence that did exist on the reservation, and how
that atmosphere arguably contributed to the self-defense theory
of defendants Robideau and Butler.
By contrast, at Peltier's trial,
the trial judge required that any evidence offered to the jury
must be relevant to the guilt or innocence of Peltier. As a result,
much of the information concerning the FBI's past that was arguably
unrelated to events on the reservation, was not presented to
the jury.
At the conclusion of the government's
case, the judge recessed the trial for ten days to attend a judicial
conference. This provided the defense with additional time to
prepare their case and a greater span from the presentation of
the government's case to the time of deliberation by the jury.
Additionally, the jury was not
sequestered and there was no gag order placed on the defense.
As a result, the jury was subject to numerous headlines that
appeared in the local newspaper which were adverse to the FBI.
Conversely, the federal prosecutors were governed by Department
of Justice guidelines which prohibit discussing the facts of
any pending case with the media. The end result was that the
public, which in this case included the trial jury, was subject
to only the defense version of the facts in the media.
The
Fargo Trial of Leonard Peltier
To address problems that impacted
the Cedar Rapids trial, the government asked for, and received,
a sequestered jury, a gag order for lawyers, and a pretrial ruling
that the FBI could not be placed on trial unless the information
offered related to the evidence or witnesses in the case.
Defendant Peltier had been indicted
not only for the murders, but additionally on the theory that
he may have been an aider and abettor in the murders.
Facts argued to the jury identified
Peltier as the leader of the group of Indians that were involved
in shooting at the Agents.
Peltier was aware of Coler's
and Williams' identities as FBI Agents. Unlike the Cedar Rapids
trial, self-defense was not argued effectively by Peltier's attorneys.
Norman Charles was in Peltier's vehicle, with Peltier, when they
first began firing at the Agents. Charles was the subject who
was with Agent Williams the night before, in Williams' Bureau
car, being questioned concerning the whereabouts of Jimmy Eagle.
Angie Long Visitor testified that FBI cars were easily recognizable
on the reservation. She testified that only the FBI drove cars
that looked like that.
Peltier admitted to the RCMP
at the time of his arrest that the persons who were fired upon
were FBI Agents who had come to the reservation to arrest him
for an outstanding warrant. Since the trial, Peltier has admitted,
on the 60 Minutes television program on September 22,
1991, that he had shot at the Agents.
Witness testimony established
that Peltier was the only person carrying an AR-15 rifle at the
time of the murders and Peltier was seen at the location of the
Agents' bodies carrying his AR-15. The .223 shell casing recovered
from the trunk of Agent Coler's car had identifiable extractor
markings which were made by the rifle that fired one of the bullets.
These extractor markings on the casing matched the AR-15 rifle
that was recovered in Kansas, from the car that exploded and
contained Peltier's associates. An AR-15 is a semi-automatic
rifle which fires a .223 caliber bullet. This caliber is a small,
high-velocity bullet, that is consistent with bullet fragments
found in and under the Agents' bodies.
On April 18, 1977, after a five-week
jury trial, Leonard Peltier, was convicted of two counts of first
degree murder. After his incarceration, Peltier was involved
in an armed escape from the federal penitentiary in Lompoc, California.
Another inmate was shot and killed in the escape. Peltier was
recaptured a short time later after a farmer reported to the
sheriff's office that a man had confronted him with a rifle and
took his shoes and truck. Peltier was convicted of the escape
and of being a felon in possession of a firearm. The conviction
was affirmed on appeal.
Defense
Allegations and Rebuttals
The allegations of the defense
are far too numerous to address in a summary fashion. However,
the following are two arguments that appear to have been consistently
raised since Peltier's conviction in 1977.
MYRTLE POOR BEAR
The defense has alleged that
the government fabricated evidence in several instances. One
of those instances is the claim that the Myrtle Poor Bear affidavits
were the result of undue pressure by FBI Agents on Poor Bear.
The government has received criticism because Poor Bear's second
and third affidavits were used in Peltier's extradition from
Canada.
Poor Bear surfaced as a possible
witness during the investigation. As a result, she gave three
sworn affidavits. In the first affidavit she stated she was not
an eyewitness to the murders but, Peltier had told her he had
committed the murders. In her second affidavit, she claimed she
was an eyewitness and provided more detail concerning the incident.
In the third affidavit, Poor Bear provided still more detail.
Poor Bear's second and third affidavits were used in Peltier's
extradition from Canada. To extradite, a showing of probable
cause is the legal standard that is required. Peltier's extradition
was based on evidence other then Poor Bear's affidavits.
After Peltier's extradition from
Canada, subsequent interviews of Poor Bear by the government
established that she was incompetent to testify at trial. As
a result, Poor Bear was never called to testify at trial, and
therefore, her information had nothing whatsoever to do with
Peltier's conviction.
THE SHELL CASING FROM THE
TRUNK
The defense has alleged that
the government fabricated the .223 shell casing recovered from
inside the open trunk of Agent Coler's car. This shell casing
was eventually matched to the AR-15 rifle recovered from Peltier's
associates in Wichita, Kansas.
It was established through witness
testimony that Peltier was the only individual carrying an AR-15,
at the time of the murders. An AR-15 is a semi-automatic rifle
capable of firing a .223 caliber bullet. The only other weapons
capable of firing a .223 caliber bullet present at the crime
scene that day were carried by law enforcement officers who had
assembled later in an attempt to rescue Agents Coler and Williams.
Although there were a minimum of 125 bullet holes in the Agents'
cars, there were only three shots which had been fired at close
range. These were the shots used to execute the Agents. The shell
casings from two of those shots were never found and had been
removed from the area of the bodies prior to the arrival of additional
law enforcement officers. One .223 shell casing, however, was
discovered in the trunk of Agent Coler's car. It was missed by
the person(s) who removed all of the other .223 shell casings
from the area of the Agents' bodies. This shell casing was therefore
crucial in establishing what weapons were fired at close range
causing the Agents' deaths.
The shell casing was recovered
by an Agent examining the car for fingerprints, rather than firearms
evidence. As a result, the shell casing from Agent Coler's trunk
was part of a second shipment of evidence sent to the FBI Laboratory.
The FBI Laboratory made a partial
examination of seven .223 shell casings from the first shipment
of evidence. These casings were government issue and could therefore
be distinguished from those which were later associated with
Peltier's AR-15. In addition, the AR-15 that had been recovered
from the burned up vehicle in Kansas had an extremely smooth
firing pin. The weapon that had fired the seven shell casings
which were examined in the first shipment, on the other hand,
left a very distinct firing pin impression. Because the initial
comparisons of those seven shell casings were negative, the examiner
turned his attention to other evidentiary items.
A laboratory report was written
in October, 1975, which indicated simply that there were no matches
with the AR-15 that had been recovered from the burned-up vehicle
in Kansas, and later associated with Peltier. In fact, not all
of the shell casings from the first shipment of evidence and
none of the shell casings from the second shipment of evidence
had yet been examined. As a result, the October, 1975, laboratory
report could have been misinterpreted to exclude all .223 shell
casings from matching the AR-15 recovered in Kansas.
The balance of the .223 shell
casings (over 100) were not examined until December, 1975, or
January, 1976, when the remainder of the first shipment of evidence
was examined. At that time, the Laboratory did match the extractor
marks from the .223 shell casing taken from the trunk of Agent
Coler's car, and over 100 others found in the general crime scene
area, with the AR-15 recovered in Kansas and later associated
with Peltier.
A hearing was held in 1984, and the FBI firearms examiner testified
for two days concerning the shell casing from Agent Coler's trunk
and his subsequent reports. The short answer to the firearms
issue is found in the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals decision
which affirmed Peltier's conviction the second time, which states,
"When all is said and done, however, a few simple but very
important facts remain. The casing introduced into evidence had
in fact been extracted from the Wichita AR-15. This point was
not disputed."
Legal
History of the Case
On November 17 , 1975, Leonard
Peltier, along with Darrelle Dean "Dino" Butler, Robert
Eugene Robideau, and James "Jimmy" Eagle were charged
in a federal indictment with two counts of first-degree murder
and aiding and abetting.
During the summer of 1976, for
reasons discussed earlier, Butler and Robideau were both acquitted
at trial before the U.S. District Court in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Charges against Jimmy Eagle were voluntarily dismissed by the
government. Peltier was in custody in Canada fighting extradition.
Peltier was eventually extradited
back to the United States. Following a five-week jury trial before
the U.S. District Court in Fargo, North Dakota, he was convicted
on April 18, 1977, of two counts of first-degree murder. He was
sentenced on June 1, 1977, to serve two consecutive life terms
in prison.
Peltier appealed his conviction
to the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals and his conviction was
affirmed in 1978. A Writ of Certiorari was denied by the U.S.
Supreme Court in 1979.
Following this initial appeal,
Peltier made an armed escape from prison, was apprehended, tried
and convicted in the U.S. District Court, for the Central District
of California. He appealed this conviction and it was affirmed
by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in 1982.
In April, 1982, Peltier filed
his first Habeas Corpus petition. It was denied in December,
that same year.
Also in December, Peltier filed
his first motion for recusal of U.S. District Court Judge Benson.
That motion was denied.
Shortly thereafter, Peltier filed
an appeal from both orders, denying the Habeas Corpus and Judge
Benson's recusal and filed a motion to recuse the entire Eighth
Circuit Court of Appeals. In 1984, the motion to recuse the Court
of Appeals was denied and that court also affirmed the U.S. District
Court ruling denying Peltier a new trial and the refusal to recuse
Judge Benson. However, the Court of Appeals did remand the case
back to the U.S. District Court for an evidentiary hearing on
the meaning of an FBI teletype concerning findings of a firearms
examination.
Peltier filed his next motion to dismiss Judge Benson in June,
of 1984. The motion was denied by the District Court and Peltier
sought review by the Court of Appeals, who affirmed the dismissal
of the motion.
In 1985, the U.S. District Court
denied Peltier a new trial as a result of the evidentiary hearing
concerning the FBI Laboratory firearms teletype. He appealed
to the Court of Appeals, and the District Court order denying
a new trial was affirmed. In 1987, the U.S. Supreme Court again
denied certiorari.
On December 3, 1990, a new Habeas
Corpus petition was filed by Peltier with the U.S. District Court.
The petition reargued points that had been previously litigated.
Additionally, the defense asserted that the government had changed
its theory of prosecution in its arguments before the Eighth
Circuit Court of Appeals on the previous appeal.
The defense contended that the
government had originally argued to the trial jury that Peltier
was the person who fired the shots that killed Agents Coler and
Williams execution-style. The defense charged, however, in the
previous appeal the government stated for the first time that
they could not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Peltier was
actually the murderer. The government had then proceeded under
the new theory that Peltier was guilty as an aider and abettor
of others in the murders.
In fact, Peltier had been originally
indicted under Title 18, United States Code, Section 2, aiding
and abetting, in addition to two counts of murder. The prosecutor
presented the aiding and abetting theory to the jury in his closing
arguments at trial. Finally, the jury received instructions from
the trial judge concerning the aiding and abetting charges.
The U.S. Magistrate recommended
dismissal of all issues raised by the defense except the change
of prosecutive strategy argument. The U.S. District Court Judge
agreed. A hearing was held in the fall of 1991, on the issue
that the government changed its prosecutive strategy. As a result
of that hearing the Magistrate issued a recommendation that there
had been no change of prosecution theory from the indictment
to present. On December 30, 1991, the U.S. District Court affirmed
that ruling.
Peltier again appealed this ruling to the Eighth Circuit Court
of Appeals. On July 7, 1993, the Court of Appeals dismissed the
appeal attempt. Peltier's main argument that the government had
changed its theory of prosecution was rejected by the court's
review of the trial record. Other issues contained in the appeal
were also dismissed as having been previously decided adversely
to Peltier or having been bypassed on previous appeals.
Attorneys for Peltier filed a
petition for rehearing before the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals
and the petition was denied.
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Recent Legal Action
On May 6, 1998, the U.S. Parole
Commission provided Peltier a full reconsideration parole hearing
and all facts were considered. He was denied parole and the next
full hearing was set for December of 2008. Every two years a
status parole hearing will consider anything new to change the
status of the December 2008 date.
On June 12, 2000, the U.S. Parole
Commission conducted a status parole hearing and again Peltier
was denied any change in his status with his next full reconsideration
hearing to be set for December of 2008.
On January 20, 2001, President
William Jefferson Clinton considered, but did not grant, Peltier's
presidential pardon.
On February 25, 2002, United
States District Judge Paul A. Magnasen ruled on Leonard Peltier's
Rule 35 Motion to reduce his sentence from two consecutive life
sentences to two concurrent life sentences. Federal Judge Magnasen
found the Motion to be untimely and the justification failed
to allege sufficient changes and circumstances to warrant the
court's consideration. Peliter's Motion was denied.
On April 4, 2002, Peltier filed
a civil lawsuit against former FBI Agents including the current
FBI Director, Robert S. Mueller, III, and former Director Louis
J. Freeh. Peltier alleges that the FBI and its employees violated
his constitutional rights by objecting to his release from prison.
The Government has filed a Motion to Dismiss and to date the
Judge has not ruled.
On July 9, 2002, the U.S. Parole
Commission conducted a status parole hearing looking for any
change in circumstances to move up the December 2008 full reconsideration
hearing. This hearing resulted in no change in that date.
On September 19, 2003, the Tenth
Circuit Court of Appeals heard Peltier's Motion to Accelerate
his full parole reconsideration hearing from December 2008 to
an earlier date. Peltier alleges that the U.S. Parole Commission
erred when it set his full reconsideration hearing date to 2008.
The decision is still pending.
Accusations of government misconduct
and claims that Peltier has not received fair treatment by the
American justice system have continued since he was charged.
A review of the legal defense afforded Peltier conclusively shows
this is not the case.
Normally, a federal criminal
defendant is entitled to a single court-appointed attorney chosen
by rotation. Peltier received five lawyers, two as trial attorneys
and three as investigators. All were chosen by Peltier, rather
than the normal rotation process, and all were paid for by the
government. The defense received almost double the normal number
of preemptory challenges during jury selection. Peltier's lawyers
were allowed to personally question the jury, which is highly
unusual in federal criminal cases. The trial court provided daily
transcripts of testimony to the defense, a very expensive measure
which is rarely allowed. After his conviction, Peltier was allowed
to dismiss four of his five trial attorneys and hire new ones
for his appeals. Peltier's arguments have been presented repeatedly
to a U.S. Magistrate, three U.S. District Court Judges, the Eighth
Circuit Court of Appeals, and the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals.
The U.S. Supreme Court has twice denied requests to hear the
case after reviewing defense arguments.
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