A CounterPunch
Exclusive
The
Denial of My Parole
I
Am Barack
Obama's
Political Prisoner Now
By LEONARD PELTIER
The United
States Department of Justice
has once again made a mockery of its lofty and pretentious
title.
After releasing an original and continuing disciple of
death cult leader Charles Manson who attempted to shoot President
Gerald Ford, an admitted Croatian terrorist, and another attempted
assassin of President Ford under the mandatory 30-year parole law,
the U.S. Parole Commission deemed that my release would "promote
disrespect for the law."
If only the federal government
would have respected its own laws, not to mention the treaties that
are, under the U.S. Constitution, the supreme law of the land, I
would never have been convicted nor forced to spend more than half my
life in captivity. Not to mention the fact that every law in this
country was created without the consent of Native peoples and is
applied unequally at our expense. If nothing else, my experience
should raise serious questions about the FBI's supposed jurisdiction
in Indian Country.
The parole commission's phrase was lifted
from soon-to-be former U.S. Attorney Drew Wrigley, who apparently
hopes to ride with the FBI cavalry into the office of North Dakota
governor. In this Wrigley is following in the footsteps of William
Janklow, who built his political career on his reputation as an
Indian fighter, moving on up from tribal attorney (and alleged rapist
of a Native minor) to state attorney general, South Dakota governor,
and U.S. Congressman. Some might recall that Janklow claimed
responsibility for dissuading President Clinton from pardoning me
before he was convicted of manslaughter. Janklow's historical
predecessor, George Armstrong Custer, similarly hoped that a glorious
massacre of the Sioux would propel him to the White House, and we all
know what happened to him.
Unlike the barbarians that bay for
my blood in the corridors of power, however, Native people are true
humanitarians who pray for our enemies. Yet we must be realistic
enough to organize for our own freedom and equality as nations. We
constitute 5% of the population of North Dakota and 10% of South
Dakota and we could utilize that influence to promote our own power
on the reservations, where our focus should be. If we organized as a
voting bloc, we could defeat the entire premise of the competition
between the Dakotas as to which is the most racist. In the 1970s we
were forced to take up arms to affirm our right to survival and
self-defense, but today the war is one of ideas. We must now stand up
to armed oppression and colonization with our bodies and our minds.
International law is on our side.
Given the complexion of the
three recent federal parolees, it might seem that my greatest crime
was being Indian. But the truth is that my gravest offense is my
innocence. In Iran, political prisoners are occasionally released if
they confess to the ridiculous charges on which they are dragged into
court, in order to discredit and intimidate them and other
like-minded citizens. The FBI and its mouthpieces have suggested the
same, as did the parole commission in 1993, when it ruled that my
refusal to confess was grounds for denial of parole.
To claim
innocence is to suggest that the government is wrong, if not guilty
itself. The American
judicial system is set up
so that the defendant is not punished for the crime itself, but for
refusing to accept whatever plea arrangement is offered and for
daring to compel the judicial system to grant the accused the right
to right to rebut the charges leveled by the state in an actual
trial. Such insolence is punished invariably with prosecution
requests for the steepest possible sentence, if not an upward
departure from sentencing guidelines that are being gradually
discarded, along with the possibility of parole.
As much as
non-Natives might hate Indians, we are all in the same boat. To
attempt to emulate this system in tribal government is pitiful, to
say the least.
It was only this year, in the Troy Davis, case,
that the U.S. Supreme Court recognized innocence as a legitimate
legal defense. Like the witnesses that were coerced into testifying
against me, those that testified against Davis renounced their
statements, yet Davis was very nearly put to death. I might have been
executed myself by now, had not the government of Canada required a
waiver of the death penalty as a condition of extradition.
The
old order is aptly represented by Supreme Court Justice Antonin
Scalia, who stated in his dissenting opinion in the Davis case, "This
Court has never held that the Constitution forbids the execution of a
convicted defendant who has had a full and fair trial but is later
able to convince a habeas court that he is 'actually' innocent. Quite
to the contrary, we have repeatedly left that question unresolved,
while expressing considerable doubt that any claim based on alleged
'actual
innocence' is
constitutionally cognizable."
The esteemed Senator from
North
Dakota, Byron Dorgan, who
is now the chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, used
much the same reasoning in writing that "our legal system has
found Leonard Peltier guilty of the crime for which he was charged. I
have reviewed the material from the trial, and I believe the verdict
was fair and just."
It is a bizarre and incomprehensible
statement to Natives, as well it should be, that innocence and guilt
is a mere legal status, not necessarily rooted in material fact. It
is a truism that all political prisoners were convicted of the crimes
for which they were charged.
The truth is the government wants
me to falsely confess in order to validate a rather sloppy frame-up
operation, one whose exposure would open the door to an investigation
of the United States' role in training and equipping goon squads to
suppress a grassroots movement on Pine Ridge against a puppet
dictatorship.
In America, there can by definition be no
political prisoners, only those duly judged guilty in a court of law.
It is deemed too controversial to even publicly contemplate that the
federal government might fabricate and suppress evidence to defeat
those deemed political enemies. But it is a demonstrable fact at
every stage of my case.
I am Barack Obama's political prisoner
now, and I hope and pray that he will adhere to the ideals that
impelled him to run for president. But as Obama himself would
acknowledge, if we are expecting him to solve our problems, we missed
the point of his campaign. Only by organizing in our own communities
and pressuring our supposed leaders can we bring about the changes
that we all so desperately need. Please support the Leonard Peltier
Defense Offense Committee in our effort to hold the United States
government to its own words.
I thank you all who have stood by
me all these years, but to name anyone would be to exclude many more.
We must never lose hope in our struggle for freedom.
In the
Spirit of Crazy Horse,
Leonard Peltier
Leonard Peltier
#89637-132
USP-Lewisburg
US Penitentiary
PO Box
1000
Lewisburg, PA 17837
For more information on Leonard
Peltier visit the Leonard Peltier Defense-Offense Committee website.
http://www.counterpunch.org/peltier09112009.html
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