[Ppnews] Leonard Peltier - UN letter demanding release

Political Prisoner News ppnews at freedomarchives.org
Tue Mar 30 14:23:16 EDT 2010


<http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com/>http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com/



Monday, March 29, 2010




<http://censored-news.blogspot.com/2010/03/lenny-foster-to-un-and-obama-release.html>Lenny 
Foster to UN and Obama: Release Peltier

THE UNITED NATIONS UNIVERSAL PERIDOIC REVIEW
March 26, 2010
San Francisco, California
ILLEGAL IMPRISONMENT OF LEONARD PELTIER

Lenny Foster (Dine')
Navajo Nation Corrections Project
Board of Directors
International Indian Treaty Council

My name is Lenny Foster (Dine') and I am the Program Supervisor for 
the Navajo Nation Corrections Project in Window Rock, Arizona and I 
have been a volunteer traditional Spiritual Advisor for American 
Indian adults and juveniles in the respective state and federal 
prisons for the past thirty years. The Navajo Nation Corrections 
Project is a counseling and advocacy program for Navajo and other 
Native American inmates incarcerated in state and federal prisons. I 
also work with families of incarcerated American Indian prisoners and 
our major activities include spiritual services such as the Sweat 
Lodge Ceremonies, Pipe Ceremonies, Talking Circles, Spiritual 
Gatherings, ecclesiastical visits to Death Row and probation and 
parole advocacy.

I have been a Board Member for the International Indian Treaty 
Council since spring 1992. The International Indian Treaty Council is 
an organization of Indigenous Peoples from North, Central and South 
Americas, the Caribbean, and the Pacific Islands working for the 
Sovereignty and Self Determination of Indigenous Peoples and 
recognition and protection of Indigenous Rights, Treaties, 
Traditional Culture and Sacred Lands.

My submission of this paper will serve to illustrate my support and 
respect for Leonard Peltier #89637-132, Ojibwa-Lakota from Turtle 
Mountain, North Dakota who is presently detained at the United States 
Penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. He has been incarcerated for 
the last thirty four years. His case illustrates the discrimination 
and racist attitudes and human rights violations within the United 
States criminal justice system. His recent denial of his petition to 
be released on parole shows the biased and skewed decisions based on 
lack of compliance for the due process of his release on parole by 
the U.S. Parole Commission. He satisfactorily met the criteria for 
release on parole after thirty years of incarceration and assured by 
the Parole Act of 2005.

I have known Leonard Peltier since November of 1970 when we first met 
in Denver, Colorado when he was 26 years old and I was 22 years old. 
We were young and idealistic about making changes throughout Indian 
Country. I participated in the American Indian Movement with him and 
we both participated in the ancient ceremonial practices of the 
Lakota Sun Dance; Sweat Lodge Ceremonies and Pipe Ceremonies. He was 
a role model and mentor to the younger Indians and he was older 
brother to many of the younger men and women in the movement.

Leonard along with others was implicated in a shootout with the 
Federal Bureau of Investigation on June 26, 1975 in Oglala, South 
Dakota. These turn of events began an illegal and unjust 
incarceration against Leonard Peltier by the U.S. Government. He fled 
to Canada and was arrested in Canada on February 6, 1976 and he was 
extradited from Canada in December based on an affidavit signed by a 
Myrtle Poor Bear, Native American woman who was known to have serious 
mental health problems and a woman Leonard did not know.

Ms. Poor Bear claimed to have been Leonard Peltier's girlfriend was 
not true or factual and yet she claimed to have been present at the 
time of the shooting and was witnessed to the shootings. She later 
confessed she had given false statements after being pressured, 
threaten and terrorized by the FBI agents.

Ms. Poor Bear wanted to testify about her treatment by the FBI agents 
and provide a full detailed report of threats by the FBI agents; 
however, the Federal Judge barred her testimony on the grounds of 
mental incompetence. She provided false testimony to convict Mr. 
Peltier and that fact is now considered moot. This conviction on 
disputed evidence led to a decision that convicted Leonard Peltier to 
two consecutive life terms in federal prison. This conviction was 
based on fabricated evidence and it ruined the confidence for a free 
and unbiased trial.

Leonard has been in the United State Penitentiary in Marion, 
Illinois; Leavenworth, Kansas; and Lewisburg, Pennsylvania and he has 
been an exemplary and model inmate with no incident reports. He has 
been a regular participant in the weekly Sweat Lodge ceremonies and 
Pipe Ceremonies which is a very positive spiritual experience for all 
those young Native prisoners who partake in the ancient cleansing and 
purification ceremony. I have been visiting him as his Spiritual 
Advisor since March 1985 at the United States Penitentiary in 
Leavenworth, Kansas and I have been witness to his changes in his 
demeanor, spirituality and is a serene and a kind and very respectful 
person. He has become a very respected and revered elder. He is now 
sixty-six years old.

It is my opinion that Leonard Peltier is not a threat to the 
community nor would his release jeopardize the community much less 
"depreciate the seriousness of the law" or "promote disrespect for 
the law". I have prayed and conducted the sweat lodge ceremony with 
him and he is a very genuine and exudes humanity. He has expressed 
remorse about the incident and prays for all who were there on that 
day on June 26, 1975 and I believed he has made amends and has made 
his prayers of forgiveness to the Creator. He has helped many and 
encouraged Indian prisoners to rehabilitate themselves by advocating 
a drug and alcohol free lifestyle while encouraging pride and 
learning about their culture and traditions. He is a father, 
grandfather, and a great grandfather. He is considered a wise elder 
among the younger Indian prisoners and I can attest to that fact 
because I have been visiting him for twenty five years and I have 
observed his maturity flourished. He has been experiencing severe 
health problems including high blood pressure, diabetes, losing his 
eyesight due to diabetes and a jaw that needs immediate medical 
attention and I hope and pray this serious condition warrants 
immediate release from prison to serve out his remaining days with 
his great grandchildren and grandchildren on his home reservation in 
North Dakota.

While in prison, Leonard has advocated for peace and respect for the 
rights of others; he has numerous project he has initiated and 
spearheaded a pilot program with Dr. Steward Selkin on the Rosebud 
Sioux Indian Reservation on health care deliver including health care 
delivery and hopefully implement similar programs on Indian 
Reservations throughout the United States; also he has worked with 
Professor Jeffery Timmons on a program to stimulate reservation based 
economics and investments in Native American business enterprises 
including component to teach business ownership and operation to the 
Native youth. Also, he helped established a scholarship at New York 
University for Native American students seeking a law degree. He has 
raised two of his grandchildren from prison and he has sponsored 
young children through various boards and programs. He has sponsored 
and organized emergency food drives and Toys for Tots on the Pine 
Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota.

He has become a very accomplished and self taught painter and has 
donated many of his paintings to worthy causes, human rights and 
social welfare organizations and has worked to develop prisoner art 
programs whereby increasing prisoner's self-confidence. Many of his 
paintings are in demand from many Art Galleries and from art 
collectors throughout the world. Some of the recipients have been 
American Civil Liberties Union, Trail of Hope, World Peace and Prayer 
Day, the First Nation Student Association; and the Buffalo Trust Fund 
along with many others including human rights activists and movie 
actors. His humanitarian and charitable works reaches far into the 
community and programs. Leonard has been widely recognized for his 
humanitarian works and has won several human rights award including 
the North Star Frederick Douglas Award; Federation of Labour in 
Ontario, Canada; Humanist of the Year Award; Human Rights Commission 
of Spain International Human Rights Prize and the 2004 Silver Arrow 
Award for Lifetime Achievement. In 2009 Leonard Peltier was nominated 
for the Nobel Peace Prize for the sixth consecutive year. He 
maintains his dignity and pride in spite of being incarcerated for 
thirty-four years.

I recommend the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Peoples 
seek compliance through the Declaration of Human Rights of Indigenous 
Peoples and demand a congressional investigation into the human 
rights violations of Leonard Peltier. Invitations will be made to the 
United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights 
and Fundamental Freedoms of Indigenous Peoples to visit Leonard 
Peltier at the United State Penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. 
I request his petition for Executive Clemency is approved by the 
United States Justice Department and President Barack Obama. Thank you.
Posted by Brenda Norrell at 
<http://censored-news.blogspot.com/2010/03/lenny-foster-to-un-and-obama-release.html>4:20 
PM




Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110

415 863-9977

www.Freedomarchives.org  
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://freedomarchives.org/pipermail/ppnews_freedomarchives.org/attachments/20100330/5fc93d6b/attachment.htm>


More information about the PPnews mailing list